Jesse Eisenberg is very aware of Mark Zuckerberg’s latest moves, and he’s not loving what he’s seeing. ( The Daily Beast) Lainey breaks down Justin Baldoni leaking the It Ends With Us footage — which she predicted would happen — as only Lainey can. ( Lainey Gossip)
Jason Reitman ('Saturday Night'), Jesse Eisenberg ('A Real Pain'), Justin Kuritzkes ('Challengers' and 'Queer') and Payal Kapadia ('All We Imagine as Light') join The Hollywood Reporter for our Writer Roundtable.
Jesse Eisenberg will forever be associated with Mark Zuckerberg after earning an Oscar nomination for portraying the Facebook founder and CEO in the 2011 film The Social Network. But after watching who Zuckerberg has become over the past decade and a half,
Eisenberg's film follows two cousins on a Jewish heritage tour of Poland, which includes a stop at the Majdanek death camp. The story draws on his own family history — and his struggle with OCD.
Topping the streaming charts is Jesse Eisenberg's comedy-drama film A Real Pain, starring Eisenberg alongside Kieran Culkin, which is available now in Canada on Disney+.
The Graham Norton Show now has a new Thursday slot on 10.
A Real Pain (now streaming on Hulu, in addition to VOD services like Amazon Prime Video) is the highlight of a strange year for Jesse Eisenberg: He writes, directs and stars in this prickly comedy-drama that’s almost certain to score co-star Kieran Culkin an Oscar nomination – and reasonable consideration for Best Picture and Screenplay.
Chopin’s much-loved solo piano music takes centre stage in ‘A Real Pain’, a new film by Jesse Eisenberg out now in cinemas.
Actor and filmmaker Jesse Eisenberg respectfully plumbs some very sensitive territory in “A Real Pain,” about two cousins traveling to Poland to honor their
A Real Pain follows two Jewish American cousins who travel through Poland after their grandmother dies, with the hopes of better understanding her by
Sasquatch Sunset premiered to strong reviews at last year's Sundance Film Festival, though despite releasing in an unexpectedly sizable 856 U.S. theaters back in April - more than Azrael, bizarrely - it grossed just $1 million.
Seeing about 150 new movies in a year might seem like a lot, but it’s one of the best ways to really grasp the cinematic calendar that was. The year 2024 will not go down as a banner one for film in a vacuum because of how the Hollywood strikes impacted the release calendar.