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The Weeknd's first feature film is a surrealist vanity project, writes Associated Press Music Writer Maria Sherman.
More from IndieWire 'Hurry Up Tomorrow' Review: The Weeknd's Emotionally Threadbare Vanity Project Is All Skips, No Repeats ...
Parker originally rocked the dress in the first season of the beloved show and at the 1997 VH1 'Vogue' Fashion Awards ...
The widow of an Arkansas airport director who was killed during a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives raid on ...
Hurry Up Tomorrow is a magical, terrifying odyssey that finally elevates Tesfaye as an actor to watch, alongside an ...
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 ...
Jenna Ortega and Barry Keoghan co-star in this film about a tormented pop star, which doubles as a feature-length promotion ...
A filmic companion to the Weeknd’s latest album, this meta psychological thriller is all style and no substance.
It's not like a pop exploitation film needs to have a diamond-sharp screenplay like The Usual Suspects. Hell, A Hard Day's ...
Directed by Trey Edward Shults. Starring Abel Tesfaye, Jenna Ortega, Barry Keoghan, Riley Keough, Paul L. Davis, Gabby Barrett, and Olga Safari. SYNOPSIS: An insomniac musician encounters a mysterious ...