Five literary options that make great holiday gifts.
It's not the revelation its predecessor was, but it makes for a perfectly engaging boxing flick.
Don't mistake this breezy drama for Oscar material; it's a well-acted holiday ramble, but not much more.
The entertainment center in Edgewood is a great time with or without little ones.
With the Carnegie International as the backdrop, we feature work by local fashion designer Elaine Healey, who has been morphing from luxury womenswear to a more “non-binary” style.
While Harry Potter diehards will find more than enough sustenance in the sequel, non-devotees may have a rough time following the action.
The Coen Brothers' western anthology is less than the sum of its parts, but it boasts some great tales.
Melissa McCarthy shines in an unconventional tale.
In Netflix's historical epic, Braveheart gets another chapter (and an upgrade).
Great performances lift the family drama. But was a better movie left behind?
A good performance keeps the Freddie Mercury biopic from falling completely flat.
Alex Da Corte’s installation at the Carnegie International combines architecture, light, sound and performance — and even Alex as Mister Rogers — with a dash of devilment.
This month features Fleetwood Mac, Saves The Day, Boz Scaggs and Alan Parsons.
Amid a wave of competition, Pittsburgh ax-throwing pioneers LumberjAxes expands and refines its game.
Reviews of Clean Time: “The True Story of Ronald Reagan Middleton”
by Ben Gwin, “This Darkness Got To Give” by Dave Housley and “Thank Your Lucky Stars” by Sherrie Flick.
Avian art, altruistic alt-rock and more November nights.
The troubling, disorienting remake of the horror classic is a masterpiece.
Your 10 best bets for this month.
Locally-inspired Halloween costumes that you should, under absolutely no circumstances, attempt to wear.
Robert Redford's alleged final performance is a quiet, fitting farewell.
There are actually more than 1,000 different varieties of beer available at the pleasant Warrendale bar and restaurant.
Forty years later, a new "Halloween" resets most of the franchise and returns to form.
"First Man" manages to capture the awe that landing on the moon should — and all but guarantees Ryan Gosling an Oscar nomination.
The Halloween attraction turns the playful park sinister in delightful ways.