News
As The Weeknd, Abel Tesfaye is a Grammy-winning, Super Bowl-playing phenom. The longtime movie lover fulfills a new dream ...
Abel Tesfaye, the singer and sometime actor (“The Idol”) better known as the Weeknd, has called “Hurry Up Tomorrow” a “love ...
Jenna Ortega and Barry Keoghan co-star in this film about a tormented pop star, which doubles as a feature-length promotion ...
The Weeknd's first feature film is a surrealist vanity project, writes Associated Press Music Writer Maria Sherman.
Pop star The Weeknd enlists director Trey Edward Shults for a fictionalized recreation of the circumstances around a ...
In Trey Edward Shults' thinly drawn portrait of the artist, it would appear both star and subject is trading old indulgences ...
Two years after he starred in and co-created the much-derided HBO original series, "The Idol," Abel Tesfaye, a.k.a. The ...
Abel Tesfaye says the 1990 psychological horror film "Jacob’s Ladder" was a major inspiration for his "Hurry Up Tomorrow." ...
Abel “The Weeknd” Tesfaye stars with Barry Keoghan and Jenna Ortega in director Trey Edward Shults’ new psychological thriller. It’s a shiny but hollow critique of fame and fandom.
The Weeknd's new movie is not quite a music video, and not quite a movie. Instead, it's arcane, obtuse and boring — a ...
An exciting vanity project with surrealist imagination but stiff writing, no stakes, limited emotional weight and an unclear narrative.
It's not like a pop exploitation film needs to have a diamond-sharp screenplay like The Usual Suspects. Hell, A Hard Day's ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results