News

Filmmaker Celine Song isn't religious, but that doesn't stop her from seeing certain dead insects as signs in her life and treating a good meal like prayer.
The filmmaker also talk about the most romantic lines in the film, living in New York and Baby Rose’s soundtrack.
Celine Song's films, "Past Lives" and "Materialists," invite the viewer to just slow down. To take in the silence, a gaze, the moments in between words. In her conversation with Rachel, Celine ...
The star was welcomed with a huge ovation as she received the Karlovy Vary President’s Award before a screening of ...
This place looks Disneyland,” says Dakota Johnson admiringly. It’s her first visit to Karlovy Vary, and her attempts to take ...
Dakota Johnson, Chris Evans and the ubiquitous Pedro Pascal star in "Materialists," the latest from Celine Song, the director ...
Celine Song is speaking out on how rom-coms are written off by critics and audiences alike. The Oscar-nominated filmmaker was ...
The director of this summer's biggest conversation-starter unpacks her subversive rom-com starring Dakota Johnson, Pedro ...
While “Tom & Eliza” also centers on a romantic relationship, it’s more eccentric and experimental than Song’s budding film ...
Celine Song’s new “Materialists” takes a deep look at love and value via a rom-com, a genre that she argues is wrongfully dismissed: “What is more important than love?” ...
Lucy (Dakota Johnson) is a professional matchmaker. Harry (Pedro Pascal), is the handsome, rich guy she meets at a wedding.
Celine Song’s follow-up to Past Lives explores the capitalist trappings of modern romance, without subverting them.