Netflix, Hollywood and Warner Bros.
Digest more
A multilayered political thriller, a dark-comedy salute to radical resistance, a ping-pong picaresque and a bluesy vampire tale set in Jim Crow Mississippi are among THR film reviewers’ favorites of the year.
Several Hollywood unions, including the Writers Guild of America and Teamsters, have expressed serious concerns over a potential sale of Warner Bros. Discovery or its assets to Netflix or Paramount.
The business of Hollywood was in trouble long before the earth-rattling news that Netflix had inked a $72 billion takeover of Warner Bros. And while the deal is widely seen as a coup by Netflix, once a scrappy startup that had to fight to be taken seriously,
There's a good chance that his reign in entertainment is about to come to a close when Warner Bros. Discovery sells. The only question is his legacy.
Hollywood director Carl Erik Rinsch has been found guilty of stealing $11 million from Netflix and using it for his luxurious personal expenses, the U.S. Attorney’s Office announced in a release on Thursday,
At the dawn of this century, Al Pacino starred in "S1m0ne," a satire about a down-on-his-luck director who creates a computer-generated "star" that conquers Hollywood. Fast forward nearly 25 years, and it appears that real life has caught up with the movies, with the introduction of an AI-generated actress named Tilly Norwood.
The future of Hollywood depends in part on a battle between two Davids: Zaslav, who has agreed to sell Warner Bros. and HBO to Netflix; and Ellison, who has opposed the sale and launched a hostile takeover bid.
The 93rd Annual Hollywood Christmas Parade is airing tonight, Friday, December 12, 2025, from 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM ET/PT, on the CW, featuring Grand Marshal Luke Wilson and supporting Toys for Tots. You can catch the festive event, filled with stars, floats, and bands, by checking your local CW listings.
Residents say electric bikes are speeding through the Broadwalk despite a ban, raising safety concerns amid more than 100 bike‑related accidents this year.
Hollywood commissioners give another green light to a developer planning to build a 27-story luxury condo on the beach. So far, critics have not been able to stop the $375 million project.
The star, located outside the Ovation Entertainment Complex on Hollywood Boulevard, was recommended by a Connecticut eighth-grade student, Eniola Taiwo, who wrote a letter as part of a class