AMC Theatres to offer open caption showtimes in more than 100 U.S. markets
Markets with at least two AMC theaters will offer some open caption showtimes for every newly-released film each week, according to the company.
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Markets with at least two AMC theaters will offer some open caption showtimes for every newly-released film each week, according to the company.
Rotten Tomatoes scores reveal which 007 films the critics really liked — and which ones they really didn't.
Among the festival's closing weekend's high points is Denis Villeneuve's visually stunning adaptation of Frank Herbert's sci-fi classic, which builds splendid worlds that amaze the eyes (and leaves us waiting for Part Two).
After five films in which he starred as Ian Fleming's secret agent 007, the actor is saying bon voyage to the character with the release of "No Time to Die." Does he care who carries on with the role?
Jane Campion's masterful story of a sadistic Montana rancher is one of this week's notable premieres.
Johansson filed the lawsuit in Los Angeles Superior Court two months ago, saying the streaming release of the Marvel movie breached her contract and deprived her of potential earnings.
After a pandemic-prompted virtual festival last year, movies return to the big screen at the annual NYC celebration of world cinema.
He was best known for "Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song," one of the most influential movies of its time.
From the return of James Bond to the sci-fi epic "Dune" and the musical remake of "West Side Story," Hollywood is aiming big this fall. Check out our list of coming attractions.
Oscars season is over, but spring is nearly here, bringing with it a fresh crop of new movies. This year, they include more of the major releases we're used to seeing in summer or during the holidays. ScreenCrush.com editor-in-chief Matt Singer joins "CBS This Morning: Saturday" to preview the films.
Summer blockbuster season is upon us. Marvel kicked things off with an all-star cast in “The Avengers: Age of Ultron,” and this big budget sequel is just one of the 86 new releases due out in the next few months. Managing editor and critic for the movie website screencrush.com joins “CBS This Morning: Saturday” to preview the upcoming films.
The people of Haiti are voting for a new president tomorrow. Their current president is Michel Martelly, the outlandish pop-star who is also known as "Sweet Micky." Martelly's road to presidency in 2011 is the subject of a new documentary, "Sweet Micky for President." It follows Pras Michel, the Grammy-winning rapper and founder of the hip-hop group "The Fugees," as he returns to his homeland after the 2010 earthquake that left Haiti in shambles. Pras Michel, who produced the movie, joins "CBS This Morning."
4D movies are the latest innovation aimed at getting Americans off their couches and back in the theaters. Is it the next big thing for Hollywood? Brandon Scott reports.
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences just announced sweeping changes designed to make the Academy's membership and voting body significantly more diverse. This comes in response to a week of intense criticism over the lack of diversity among this year's Oscar nominees. VInita Nair reports.
The summer movie season is well under way, but last week’s box office results surprised Hollywood -- and not in a good way. Now, the movie mecca may be forced to transition from big-budget releases to smaller budget, independent movies. Fandango managing editor Erik Davis joins “CBS This Morning: Saturday” to preview indie films that could make a big splash at the box office.
Susan Lacy, the producer and director of new documentary "Spielberg" about the Academy Award-winning director Steven Spielberg, is best known as the creator and executive producer of the PBS series "American Masters." Lacy joins "CBS This Morning: Saturday" to discuss getting the iconic director to open up and what almost led Spielberg to give up his dreams of directing.
A new documentary brings the quiet life and vivid photos of Vivian Maier to light. Anthony Mason shares the story of a woman who may be the greatest photographer you’ve never heard of.
Biopics have been a movie mainstay for over a century, and the genre has undergone plenty of changes since then. Several high profile films are due out in the coming months. Matt Singer, managing editor and film critic for ScreenCrush.com, joins "CBS This Morning Saturday" to discuss.
This week marks 50 years since the release of “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.” Today, it's an American classic and one of the most influential movies ever made, setting a new bar for buddy movies and screenwriting. Jeff Glor reports.
Best-selling author James Patterson has sold more than 350 million books worldwide. His latest project is not another book, but rather a documentary he wrote and hosted, called "Murder of a Small Town." It is about communities that have been left behind by the 20th century, a subject close to his heart. Patterson joins "CBS This Morning: Saturday" to discuss his film.
South by Southwest, or SXSW, started almost 30 years ago as a funky little music festival in Austin, Texas. Today, it’s a sprawling showcase for new music, emerging technology and independent film. Fandango.com managing editor and critic Erik Davis joins “CBS This Morning: Saturday” to discuss this year’s offerings at the film festival.
The latest installment in Marvel's comic book universe, "Thor: Ragnarok," hits theaters next weekend marking the unofficial kickoff to Hollywood's holiday movie season. Erik Davis, managing editor of Fandango.com, joins "CBS This Morning: Saturday" to discuss some of the most anticipated new movies.
Last October, we brought you the astonishing story of Bernie Webber, who six decades ago, led a crew of four Coast Guardsmen on a water rescue off Cape Cod, Massachusetts. They saved 32 mariners from death in a horrendous storm. That tale of heroism hit the big screen this weekend. Mark Albert reports.
Thomas Edison and the Lumiere Brothers have been hailed the pioneers of film and cinema, but what if they weren’t actually the first to capture moving images? What if an unknown Frenchman working in England actually beat them to it? Jonathan Vigliotti tells us the little known story of Louis Le Prince, a filmmaker and inventor, whose mysterious disappearance in Paris meant the world never got to see his vision for the future.
One of the biggest questions to come from the cyberattack is how it might effect Hollywood. Derek Thompson, senior editor of "The Atlantic Magazine" joins "CBS This Morning: Saturday" to discuss the potential consequences of the attack.
"SWIM" by K-pop super-group BTS is taking the world by storm. It's their first single after a four-year hiatus, kicking off the comeback of one of the world's biggest bands. Billboard News host Tetris Kelly joins "The Daily Report" to discuss.
CBS News announced Friday that CBS News Radio will be shutting down this spring after nearly 100 years of broadcasting, citing "challenging economic realities."
Bodycam video footage of Justin Timberlake's June 2024 DWI arrest on Long Island was released to the media Friday.
Action star Chuck Norris has died at age 86, his family announced Friday. CBS News' Mugo Odigwe reports.
Reality TV star Taylor Frankie Paul's booking photo for an apparent incident in 2023 has emerged. Entertainment Tonight's Nischelle Turner joins with more details.
Chuck Norris' family said his death at 86 was sudden, but did not share any details on the cause.
"All the Empty Rooms," which follows CBS News' Steve Hartman and photographer Lou Bopp as they document the empty bedrooms of children killed in school shootings, won an Oscar for Best Documentary Short Film. Hartman and the film's director, Joshua Seftel, talk about what that moment meant to the families of the victims and having Gloria Cazares, the mother of a 9-year-old girl killed in Uvalde, deliver the acceptance speech.
Ryan Gosling and Sandra Hüller, stars of "Project Hail Mary," speak with "CBS Mornings" about the highly-anticipated movie, what it was like acting alongside the puppeteers behind alien Rocky and why Hüller chose a Harry Styles song to sing in a scene in the movie.
Unmade beds and overdue books. That's some of what CBS News correspondent Steve Hartman found in his Oscar-winning documentary "All the Empty Rooms," which looks at the bedrooms of children killed in school shootings. Hartman joins "The Takeout" to discuss the making of the film.
ABC has canceled its already filmed season of "The Bachelorette" starring Taylor Frankie Paul after video surfaced of a 2023 incident in which she was charged with assault.
Val Kilmer was originally set to star in "As Deep as the Grave" before he died last year, never shooting a scene of the movie. But Kilmer will still star in the film thanks to generative AI, which is artificial intelligence that can generate new content by analyzing existing content. Jo Ling Kent has more.
Spoiler alert! The latest contestant eliminated from "Survivor 50: In the Hands of the Fans" joins "CBS Mornings" to discuss his surprising elimination and if he has any regrets about how he played the game.
David Margolick's biography of Sid Caesar explores how the 1950s comic reinvented the art of comedy in the new medium of television.
Grammy-nominated singer and actor Demi Lovato speaks with "CBS Mornings" co-host Gayle King about her healing journey and how she found joy in cooking after her recovery from anorexia and bulimia. Lovato says food used to bring her "discomfort and fear" but she has since learned to find "freedom with food." Her new cookbook is called "One Plate at a Time."
Afroman spoke to CBS News after he won the case, which tested the limits of parody and the license artists can take in social commentary directed at public figures.
Nicholas Brendon was best known for his role as Xander Harris on all seven seasons of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer."
The separate narco-trafficking investigations, based out of New York's Southern and Eastern districts, didn't set out to target Petro, but his name has come up during the course of the probes, one source said.
A federal judge has struck down some of the Defense Department's strict controls on how journalists with access to the Pentagon are allowed to report — ending a policy that caused many news outlets to leave the Pentagon.
A jury has found Elon Musk liable for misleading investors by deliberately driving down Twitter's stock price in the tumultuous months leading up to his 2022 acquisition of the social media company.
Transcript: Siamak Namazi, Emad Shargi, Roger Carstens, Neda Sharghi on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," March 22, 2026
A jury has found Elon Musk liable for misleading investors by deliberately driving down Twitter's stock price in the tumultuous months leading up to his 2022 acquisition of the social media company.
CBS News announced Friday that CBS News Radio will be shutting down this spring after nearly 100 years of broadcasting, citing "challenging economic realities."
Security lines are stretching up to 2 hours at some airports amid TSA staffing shortages. Here's how to check wait times before you leave.
With gas closing in on $4 a gallon, the Trump administration is pulling multiple levers to tame energy prices. The results have been mixed.
A pharmaceutical company issued the recall after receiving complaints of "gel-like mass and black particles" in the product, the FDA said.
The Trump administration has been strategizing methods and options to secure or extract Iran's nuclear materials, according to multiple sources, as the military campaign against Tehran enters a more uncertain phase.
The separate narco-trafficking investigations, based out of New York's Southern and Eastern districts, didn't set out to target Petro, but his name has come up during the course of the probes, one source said.
The U.S. Treasury has authorized the purchase of Iranian oil that's already at sea, exempting buyers from the tight sanctions that have restricted Iran's oil industry for years, as the Trump administration grapples with high oil prices.
A federal judge has struck down some of the Defense Department's strict controls on how journalists with access to the Pentagon are allowed to report — ending a policy that caused many news outlets to leave the Pentagon.
Transcript: Siamak Namazi, Emad Shargi, Roger Carstens, Neda Sharghi on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," March 22, 2026
A judge blocked a set of changes to the childhood vaccine schedule recommended by allies of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, dealing a setback to the Trump administration's efforts to overhaul federal vaccine policy.
Patchwork state policies and limited federal oversight have led to a fragmented system for tracking organ donor status.
Spencer Laird was diagnosed with colon cancer at 26. At 30, he was told it had returned and spread to his lungs, with one tumor the size of a golf ball.
The Trump administration's Medicare boss reacts to CBS News investigation into California's hospice fraud problems.
Even people with six-figure incomes are making financial sacrifices to pay for medical care, a new study finds.
The Trump administration has been strategizing methods and options to secure or extract Iran's nuclear materials, according to multiple sources, as the military campaign against Tehran enters a more uncertain phase.
The U.S. Treasury has authorized the purchase of Iranian oil that's already at sea, exempting buyers from the tight sanctions that have restricted Iran's oil industry for years, as the Trump administration grapples with high oil prices.
Transcript: Siamak Namazi, Emad Shargi, Roger Carstens, Neda Sharghi on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," March 22, 2026
Siamak Namazi, who was released from Iran's Evin prison in 2023, said "it's important" that President Trump "hears that there are innocent Americans being held like we were as political pawns."
With gas closing in on $4 a gallon, the Trump administration is pulling multiple levers to tame energy prices. The results have been mixed.
"SWIM" by K-pop super-group BTS is taking the world by storm. It's their first single after a four-year hiatus, kicking off the comeback of one of the world's biggest bands. Billboard News host Tetris Kelly joins "The Daily Report" to discuss.
CBS News announced Friday that CBS News Radio will be shutting down this spring after nearly 100 years of broadcasting, citing "challenging economic realities."
Bodycam video footage of Justin Timberlake's June 2024 DWI arrest on Long Island was released to the media Friday.
Action star Chuck Norris has died at age 86, his family announced Friday. CBS News' Mugo Odigwe reports.
Reality TV star Taylor Frankie Paul's booking photo for an apparent incident in 2023 has emerged. Entertainment Tonight's Nischelle Turner joins with more details.
A jury has found Elon Musk liable for misleading investors by deliberately driving down Twitter's stock price in the tumultuous months leading up to his 2022 acquisition of the social media company.
The White House unveiled a national framework for how it wants Congress to address concerns about artificial intelligence. Technology journalist Jacob Ward joins CBS News to discuss the outline and AI concerns.
From labor shortages to environmental impacts, farmers are looking to AI to help revolutionize the agriculture industry. One California startup, Farm-ng, is tapping into the power of AI and robotics to perform a wide range of tasks, including seeding, weeding and harvesting.
Val Kilmer was originally set to star in "As Deep as the Grave" before he died last year, never shooting a scene of the movie. But Kilmer will still star in the film thanks to generative AI, which is artificial intelligence that can generate new content by analyzing existing content. Jo Ling Kent has more.
More than 80% of adults say they go online at least several times per day and research indicates that even adults' fully-formed brains can suffer negative consequences from excessive screen time. Dr. Sue Varma breaks down risks, tips to reduce your screen time and why adults are spending more time on screens.
The song is that of a humpback whale and was recorded by scientists in March 1949 in Bermuda, researchers said.
A new study in the journal Nature says most sea level rise research may have underestimated coastal water heights by an average of 1 foot.
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman announced significant changes to the agency's Artemis program, which aims to land on the moon in 2028.
Documents might help scientists shed light on unexplained phenomena and government secrets, experts said.
A large shark was caught on camera for the first time in Antarctica's waters, surprising researchers. "There's a general rule of thumb that you don't get sharks in Antarctica," one said.
Five people who were charged in connection to the Feeding Our Future scheme pleaded guilty to wire fraud this week.
Bodycam video footage of Justin Timberlake's June 2024 DWI arrest on Long Island was released to the media Friday.
Federal prosecutors in Miami subpoenaed former FBI Director James Comey as part of a probe into Obama-era intelligence officials, two sources familiar with the investigation tell CBS News. Jake Rosen reports.
The failure to protect explicit case evidence in Denise Huskins' kidnapping and sexual assault case is driving reform at the State Capitol. New developments exposed a little-known gap in state law that could expose videos of sexual assault victims.
Several Minnesota families saw justice served on Thursday morning after five young women were killed in a high-speed crash two summers ago in Minneapolis.
After a trip back out to the launch pad, NASA's Artemis II rocket will be readied for a historic flight to the moon.
A meteoroid was spotted streaking across the sky in 10 states. In some areas, there was also a loud boom, similar to an explosion. NASA says the meteor, which was traveling 45,000 mph in the sky, fragmented - causing the bright fireball and loud boom.
Some residents immediately feared the sound was an explosion, according to CBS affiliate WOIO, but weather service officials say it appears to have been a meteor.
Bill Nye the Science Guy sits down with CBS News chief Washington correspondent Major Garrett to talk about his life and career.
NASA's huge Space Launch System rocket has been repaired and is ready for rollout back to the launch pad next week.
A look back at the esteemed personalities who've left us this year, who'd touched us with their innovation, creativity and humanity.
Does the evidence show a cover-up, or was Todd Kendhammer wrongfully convicted for the murder of his wife?
Christy Salters-Martin dominated in the boxing ring but faced her toughest challenger at home.
Family seeks answers in death of newlywed who disappeared in 2005 while on Mediterranean honeymoon cruise.
Meet the tattooed beauty charged in the death of Google executive Forrest Hayes.
On March 20, 2003, a coalition of U.S.-led forces invaded Iraq, marking the start of the eponymous war. Watch the full "CBS Evening News" broadcast from that day.
Years after the Vietnam War, a veteran who suffered from PTSD found hope and joy in an old carousel he brought back to life. When a recent fire destroyed the businesses around it, he stepped in to give back. Steve Hartman has the update.
Action star and martial artist Chuck Norris has died, his family said. He was 86. Mark Strassmann looks back at his life and career.
Thousands more U.S. Marines and three more warships are headed toward the Middle East, two U.S. officials told CBS News, as the war nears the three-week mark with no signs of letting up. Charlie D'Agata has the latest.
The NCAA women's basketball tournament is officially underway. Shea Ralph, head coach for the Vanderbilt Commodores women's basketball team, joins "The Daily Report" to discuss the team's historic season and securing the two seed in the tournament.