The light comedy stars Diane Keaton, Jacki Weaver and Pam Grier.
The Lawrenceville pinball cafe offers new and classic games for you to play solo, or (as we were surprised to learn) in competition with a friend.
The UglyDolls are the latest line of toys to get the big-screen treatment.
Short film reviews of "Her Smell," "Ask Dr. Ruth" and "Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile."
Pittsburgh Opera's latest production moves the Italian classic to Tinseltown.
Charlize Theron and Seth Rogen star in a political romcom.
Sean Collier, PM nightlife editor, drops in on two places guaranteed to keep you entertained for an evening.
Books Editor Kristofer Collins reviews "Appalachia North" by Matthew Ferrence and "Shale Play: Poems and Photographs from the Fracking Fields."
Enjoy a walk on the literary side with Arlan Hess of City Books.
Your 10 best bets for this month include the Water Lantern Festival, Eric Church, and a Taco Takeover.
Powerful punk, premiere panelists and other May happenings.
May is JAMpacked with great shows, from The Mountain Goats to Kim Gordon.
The massive "Infinity Saga" concludes with Marvel's most ambitious, and longest, cinema spectacular.
Pittsburgh Magazine shares what’s taking shape with the sculpture collection at Hartwood Acres.
A bizarre new release headlines a group that includes three Oscar nominees.
PM intern Amanda Myers recounts the radio-rock adventures that life as a Downtown student has made possible.
The latest chapter in the Hong Kong martial-arts franchise gets a Pittsburgh release.
The latest chapter in the Conjuring franchise concerns a sinister spirit from folklore.
The cult comic character gets a reboot in this R-rated action flick.
Netflix's new horror film has a plot unfortunately similar to a giant hit. Can it succeed in spite of that bit of bad luck?
This (very) dark indie comedy stars Matthew Broderick and Géza Röhrig.
The new version of Stephen King's darkest novel makes some changes to the familiar story.
It's a race drama based on a remarkable true story. But does the tale hold up to a film adaptation?
In this postwar drama, Keira Knightley is swept up in a politically dicey romance.