American Film Market
Read Variety's AFM extra edition for this year's market

Chris McCarthy and Nina Diaz, the leaders of MTV, VH1, Comedy Central and other cable stalwarts, are tasked with reinventing the TV ecosystem with which they grew up.
Jeffrey Toobin has been fired by The New Yorker following an investigation into last month’s incident in which he exposed himself on a work Zoom call. Toobin announced his dismissal in a tweet on…
On Nov. 8, Norman Lloyd celebrates his 106th birthday, which is just one more accomplishment for a man whose nearly-100-year career is filled with amazing milestones.
In honor of Leonardo DiCaprio's 46th birthday, we take a look at his 10 best performances of his career.
FX on Hulu's drama, starring Nick Robinson and Kate Mara, details the beginning, middle and endless end of a teacher abusing her student.
Bravo is expanding the reliably entertaining "Real Housewives" universe with its first new installment in four years.
The new Netflix series "Dash & Lily" is a charming fantasy straight out of the most hopeful fanfic dreams.
"The Crown" Season 4 introduces Princess Diana and Margaret Thatcher in its splashiest and least subtle season yet.
Amy Adams and Glenn Close act with down-home flamboyance in Ron Howard's otherwise overly safe adaptation.
Gary Oldman is delectably droll as the screenwriter of "Citizen Kane" in David Fincher's time-machine trip through '30s Hollywood.
Diane Lane and Kevin Costner give it their all in a genre film that fuses suspense with honest emotion.
Jack O'Connell and Charlie Hunnam play a boxer and his manager-brother in this well-crafted but overly derivative drama.
Kylie Minogue's most consistent and cohesive album since her oughts-era heyday, "Disco" is a welcome blast of sugar-rush anthems.
Ariana Grande's "Positions," while less a tour de force than its predecessors, wins by focusing on upbeat, down-tempo romanticism.
Puscifer, the side project of Tool's Maynard James Keenan, has come back with the Halloween-ready "Existential Reckoning" album.
Gorillaz returns to party mode with "Song Machine," where Damon Albarn is joined by Beck, St. Vincent, Schoolboy Q, 6lack & others.
Starring "Hamilton's" Michael Balogun and performed on the eve of England's second lockdown, the play is sure to be seen again.
This smart revival of Jason Robert Brown's musical plays in a London theater cleverly redesigned for COVID-era safety.
Kristin Scott Thomas and Rochenda Sandall headline two Alan Bennett monologues, which even under social distance pack a punch.
David Hare's monologue at the Bridge Theatre in London recounts the playwright's battle with COVID-19.
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