In 1990, Atkinson introduced "Mr Bean," a nearly silent comedy series built around visual humour and universal situations. The show ran until 1995 and quickly became a cultural phenomenon, beloved ...
The new "SpongeBob Movie" arrives in theaters Friday, Dec. 19. There's a fair amount of bathroom humor and some scary images of a zombie sailing crew and Underworld monsters. Parents will appreciate ...
Bleecker Street’s Crosswalk will release 'Stray Kids: The dominATE Experience' in North America, with Universal handling most international territories. By Patrick Brzeski Asia Bureau Chief Bleecker ...
Kids of all ages know you have to go to a pineapple under the sea to find SpongeBob SquarePants. And in his new movie, the little yellow dude travels to uncharted territory: the Underworld! The ...
Rowan Atkinson is in his element as a school caretaker who gets stuck caring for the “Baby Jesus” from the Christmas pageant when the infant is left behind. His chances of a calm and bright holiday ...
Rowan Atkinson is not particularly flattering about one of his most famous comic creations. The British actor has described Mr Bean as a “selfish, self-serving, anarchic child,” despite the character ...
Time is flying by almost as fast as a certain North Pole-dweller’s sleigh. Somehow, we’re already almost halfway through November. Although we all surely love Thanksgiving (I mean, between all the ...
With so many options available on streaming services, family movie night was getting stressful. Choosing a few DVDs from the library limited my kids' options and streamlined family movie night. This ...
Christmas has always been the season that brings out the best version of our family. With four kids spanning every major age range, including a toddler, an early-elementary kid, a tween, and a full ...
Studiocanal and Heyday Films, who last teamed on the hugely successful “Paddington” franchise, are partnering up again on another prestige British family IP with blockbuster potential, “Mr. Men Little ...
2025 was a year that posed a lot of questions for movie lovers: Did the success of Sinners prove that there was still a mass audience hungry for original (read: non-IP) stories on a blockbuster level?