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Pisces

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Slow and steady wins the romantic race this December, Pisces. You might have to fight your basic instincts — the ones that make you want to fall head over heels the minute your heart starts fluttering — but rushing into relationships could leave you stuck with the wrong one. Or worse, you could wind up pushing a good person away by applying too much pressure. Good thing your sign has a knack for dancing. Take a couple steps forward, then glide back. With that strategy, you'll have them eating out of the palm of your hand. If you're happily coupled, talks could turn to your shared goals this month. Set a few relationship resolutions together before the 21st.

The best news of the month comes on the 19th. Passionate Mars cruises into Pisces for the first time in two years, activating your love jones in a huge way. You'll be utterly magnetic during this period, but you might prefer to ring in 2017 as a single lady. If you're in a relationship, give yourself a longer leash. Flirting isn't cheating after all, and letting yourself enjoy some witty banter here and there can give you some #fire to bring back home to bae.

To get the details on this look and more, click here.

All products by Revlon®, prices vary by retailer. PhotoReady Insta-Fix Makeup™, $14.49; ColorStay™ Brow Pencil, $8.99; ColorStay™ Crème Eye Shadow in Licorice, $7.99; PhotoReady Eye Art™ Lid + Lash + Line in Cobalt Crystal, $8.99; Super Length Mascara™, $8.99; Insta-Blush™ in Candy Kiss, $12.99; Kiss™ Balm in Sweet Cherry, $4.99; ColorStay Gel Envy™ Nail Enamel in Sky’s The Limit, $7.99; ColorStay Gel Envy™ Diamond Top Coat, $7.99.

Photographed by Nick Eucker; Styled by Laura Pritchard; Hair by Peter Matteliano at Kate Ryan; Makeup by Ashleigh Ciucci; Nails by Holly Falcone at Kate Ryan; Set Design by Hans Maharawal; Modeled by Senait for IMG Models. Model wearing Sass & Bide top and Smith + Mara earrings.

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Sagittarius

Capricorn

Aries


Capricorn

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December's fantasy-fueled star map could make the month feel like a fairytale come true. With the sun floating through your dreamy 12th house, you'll proudly sport rose-colored glasses. Try to keep a wing-woman nearby to confirm your instincts — or to talk some sense back into you. You could be swept away this month, perhaps by someone older than your usual type. With ardent Venus in Capricorn until the 7th, you'll be utterly magnetic the first week of December (and probably not too keen on settling down). But after that, you won't mind getting back into the couple bubble. If you're nursing a heartbreak, be ultra-kind to yourself. That's how you'll heal the fastest.

Everything refreshes on the 21st, when the sun zips into your sign, getting Capricorn season underway. Shake off any mistakes you made earlier in the month. They were learning experiences, Cap! With Mercury retrograde in your sign from the 19th on, you'll need to be a little more cautious about who you let into your life. But with proper pacing, your heart will be back in orbit again before the year is through. Attached? Devoting more time to your personal interests will keep your romantic life in balance. Absence does in fact makes the heart grow fonder.

To get the details on this look and more, click here.

All products by Revlon®, prices vary by retailer. PhotoReady™ Perfecting Primer, $12.99; PhotoReady Insta-Fix Makeup™, $14.49; ColorStay™ Brow Pencil, $8.99; ColorStay™ Creme Shadow in Creme Brûlée, $7.99; Ultimate All-In-One Mascara™, $8.99; Insta-Blush in Candy Kiss, $12.99; Ultra HD™ Matte Lipcolor™ in HD Infatuation, $8.99; ColorStay Gel Envy™ Nail Enamel in Black Jack, $7.99; ColorStay Gel Envy™ Diamond Top Coat, $7.99.

Photographed by Nick Eucker; Styled by Laura Pritchard; Hair by Peter Matteliano at Kate Ryan; Makeup by Ashleigh Ciucci; Nails by Holly Falcone at Kate Ryan; Set Design by Hans Maharawal; Modeled by Senait for IMG Models. Model wearing Maje dress and Marra earrings.

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Sagittarius

Pisces

Aries

Sagittarius

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Move over Dasher and Dancer. You're in full-on Vixen mode this December as the sun soars through Sagittarius until the 21st. Although serious Saturn has calmed your wild side considerably in 2016, you could truly enjoy your single status this month. With Mars and Venus flitting through your friendly, flirtatious third house throughout the month, you could charm anyone from the hot barista to the buttoned-up banker type. Dating apps could turn up a lucky swipe from the 7th through the 19th. Group hangs are magic for your mojo, too. Just make sure your GF hasn't called dibs on the "friend" she invited along to the holiday happy hour.

On the 13th, the full moon in Gemini puts commitment in your crosshairs. Don't let a good one slip away by being fickle. The grass isn't always greener on the other side of Cupid's fence. Settling down becomes more palatable when the sun sinks into Capricorn for a month on the 21st, making you long for stability again. With Mars moving on to your domestic quarters after the 19th, you may be inspired to make more space for bae at your place, or to discuss a co-signed lease for 2017.

To get the details on this look and more, click here.

All products by Revlon®, prices vary by retailer. PhotoReady™ Color Correcting Primer, $13.99; PhotoReady Insta-Fix Makeup™, $14.49; ColorStay™ Brow Pencil, $8.99; ColorStay™ Crème Eye Shadow in Chocolate, $7.99; Ultimate All-In-One Mascara™, $8.99; Insta-Blush in Candy Kiss, $12.99; Super Lustrous Lipstick™ in Chocolicious, $8.49; ColorStay Gel Envy™ Nail Enamel in 2 Of A Kind, $7.99; ColorStay Gel Envy™ Diamond Top Coat, $7.99.

Photographed by Nick Eucker; Styled by Laura Pritchard; Hair by Peter Matteliano at Kate Ryan; Makeup by Ashleigh Ciucci; Nails by Holly Falcone at Kate Ryan; Set Design by Hans Maharawal; Modeled by Senait for IMG Models. Model wearing Maje dress and Marra earrings.

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Capricorn

Pisces

Aries

Kanye West & Kim Kardashian Don't Have Marriage Troubles, Source Says

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Kanye West and Kim Kardashian have been through a lot in the past two months. That doesn't mean they'll be going through a divorce, too, at least not according to People 's source close to the couple.

"There are frustrations and problems, like any relationship, but they love each other deeply," the source said.

This week's issue of Us Weekly claims that marital disputes following Kardashian's robbery in Paris were a factor in West's hospitalization. Part of this sounds feasible, in that trauma and stress go hand in hand, and West was likely stirred by the violent incident and disappointed that his wife decided not to accompany him on tour while recovering from it. At the same time, People 's source emphasized that Kardashian has barely left his side since he was taken to the ER last week.

The rapper was released from UCLA Medical Center on Wednesday, and is said to be resting at home with his wife and children. While the rumor is that exhaustion and stress lead to his apparent breakdown, some reports indicated he was suffering from paranoia as well. Whatever the case, hopefully they're getting the down time they need, just in time to commemorate Saint's first birthday on December 5.

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Gigi Hadid Uses The Same Face Scrub We Do — & It's $4

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News flash! Contrary to what you may have read at the nail salon or in the checkout line, celebrities are not just like us. Last time we checked, we didn't have a private chef, driver, or trainer — although we're totally open to all three — nor do we live in a gated community or vacation on yachts. (Again, we wouldn't mind...) But one way celebrities — even the richest, the most famous, the most successful, and the most otherworldly — actually do seem relatable? They love cheapie beauty scores that actually work.

Yes, even Gigi Hadid hits up her local CVS. Even Beyoncé runs out of shampoo. And when you're filming or singing or appearing in some random corner of the world, drugstores are likely your most reliable bet. What's more, celebrities are surrounded by the absolute best hairstylists and makeup artists in the world. You better believe that crew knows its way around a drugstore aisle.

That's why we're rounding up the products the rich and famous rave about and that we can actually afford. (Important note: None of the products that follow are ones the celebrity is paid to endorse. This is the real deal, people.) So check 'em out in the slides ahead. Yet another reason to frequent the drugstore: You never know who you'll meet in aisle 4.

Amanda Seyfried

Photo: Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images.

Amanda Seyfried recently told us that she prefers a rich, gourmand fragrance to satiate her sweet-tooth. But her biggest must-have scent happens to be way more accessible — and affordable. "I love those Yankee candles [in] Buttercream Frosting or Angel Food Cake. I mean, who doesn’t put a vanilla-scented candle out in their kitchen? [Those scents] relate to the child in me, which will live on forever. That's also probably the pregnancy talking; I’ll blame it on that."

Yankee Candle Buttercream Large Jar Candles, $27.99, available at Yankee Candle.

Gigi Hadid

Photo: Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images.

In an interview with Allure, Hadid revealed the reason this drugstore scrub has remained a long-standing staple in her beauty routine. "It's been around because it's the best," she said. We love the gentle exfoliator, too — especially because it uses natural powders from the walnut shell, so it's never irritating — but Hadid's stamp of approval definitely serves as a reminder to use it more religiously.

St Ives Fresh Skin Apricot Scrub, $3.49, available at Target.

Kendall Jenner

Photo: Jason LaVeris/Getty Images.

Yesterday, if you had told us that shiny-haired Kendall Jenner's favorite shampoo is under four dollars, we would have laughed. But it turns out the joke's on us because she recently told Allure, "Kim likes Finesse shampoo, and now so do I. I’ve tried all the expensive things, too. It just works for my hair and makes it so silky." BRB — running out to pick up this old-school classic now.

Finesse Moisturizing Shampoo, $3.69, available at Target.

Beyoncé

Photo: Kevin Mazur/WireImage.

Back in 2011, when Beyoncé was rising to her Queen B status, she told Allure that this product is a must-have. “I wear it with my lipstick. I did this trick last summer, when I was on vacation: I used it to prime my lashes before curling. It was like a natural mascara. It made the lashes hold the curl and look shiny. I use it for everything!” In that case, point us in the nearest direction to buy this magic in a tin, stat.

Smith’s Rosebud Salve, $6, available at Sephora.

Khloé Kardashian

Photo: Jason LaVeris/Getty Images.

Khloé is the next Kardashian sister to divulge her affordable picks, including this no-frills dry shampoo. "Old school does it best," she told Health and we know firsthand she's right. Bonus? This travel size is perfect for tucking away in your bag. Amen, KoKo.

Psssst ! Travel Size Instant Dry Shampoo Spray, $2.99, available at Ulta Beauty.

Selena Gomez

Photo: Denise Truscello/Getty Images.

Gomez saves a few bucks on beauty favorites from time to time, including this standout shaving cream. She told Into The Gloss that she uses this formula because "it isn't too thick" — and we agree.

EOS Shave Cream in Lavender Jasmine, $3.99, available at Ulta Beauty.

Kim Kardashian

Photo: Mike Marsland/WireImage.

Kim’s beauty routine comes with a hefty price tag; happily, we can all afford the facial wipes she stands by. She’s even Snapchatted her morning routine and these double-duty towelettes made an appearance. “But 1st I scrub with these wipes! #obsessed,” she captioned the snap.

Kiko Pure Clean Scrub & Peel, $9, available at Kiko.

Zoe Saldana

Photo: Mindy Small/FilmMagic/ Getty Images.

This gentle drugstore cleanser is Zoe’s everyday staple. “My skin’s not very sensitive," she told us. "But because I travel so much, it sometimes reacts to the change in environments.”

Cetaphil Moisturizing Lotion, $13.99, available at Ulta Beauty.

Eva Mendes

Photo: Angela Weiss/Getty Image.

“Those are amazing drugstore buys!” Eva told us about the Queen Helene face masks. “You know, when I am shooting in the middle of nowhere you can always find a drugstore...and those are great to get.” With 11 types of masks in the range, these picks are seriously #key.

Queen Helene Mint Julep Masque, $3.99, available at Walgreens.

Kylie Jenner

It’s hard to beat King Kylie when it comes to an Insta-worthy aesthetic, but luckily for us she spilled her secrets. When getting her makeup done professionally, she told The New York Times that fake lashes are a go-to — specifically Ardell’s Natural Wispies, which are believable, soft, and fluttery.

Ardell Demi Wispies Natural Multipack, $9.99, available at Ulta Beauty.

Photo: JB Lacroix/WireImage.

Lupita Nyong'o

Photo: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images.

The award-winning actress told InStyle that for her, nothing works better than avocado oil. “This is what I use to wash off my makeup,” she said. “It's gentle and natural, and my skin tends to be pretty dry, so I need the extra oil.”

Now Solutions Avocado Oil, $7.69, available at GNC.

Anna Kendrick

Photo: Robin Marchant/Getty Images.

One of Anna's top picks is a throwback some of us can appreciate — hello, annoying razor burn — especially if we want silky skin. "If you're not using Intuition razors, you're wasting everybody's time," she told The New York Times. "Whenever I hear someone is still using a separate shave gel, it's like hearing they still use dial-up internet.” (For the record, the Intuition has a built-in shaving-cream cartridge.)

Schick Intuition Sensitive Care with Natural Aloe Women’s Razor, $9.97, available at Walmart.

Shay Mitchell

Photo: George Pimentel/WireImage.

This badass actress tends to keep her makeup light and fresh. She told Teen Vogue: “In the morning, I only use CoverGirl Lash Blast (I purchase 10 at a time in case they discontinue!). It just works really well.”

CoverGirl LashBlast Volume Mascara, $8.99, available at Ulta Beauty.

Mindy Kaling

Photo: Jerod Harris/WireImage.

"It’s the greatest texture and evens your lip tone, so any lipstick looks perfect over it. I have like 30 shades of brown and pink in my natural lips. It’s maddening. This is super-helpful,” Mindy posted on Li.st. So basically, she's giving us BFF-worthy tips — because if we met in real life, we'd obviously be BFFs.

CoverGirl LipLiner in Sublime, $7, available at Drugstore.com.

It seems as though this product has a lot of fans among the celebrity community. Joining Zoe, Mindy told us she loves Cetaphil, too — she even called it her “old faithful” cleanser. Although for her, it's not just a cleanser. “I use it to loosen up my makeup," she said.

Cetaphil Cleanser, $14.49, available at Ulta Beauty.

Emma Watson

Photo: Karwai Tang/WireImage.

“A makeup artist I met recently used a nude pencil around my lips to give them a perfect outline that’s not as obvious as a red liner,” Emma told Marie Claire a couple years back.

L’Oreal Colour Riche Anti-Feathering Lip Liner & Sharpener Pencil, $8.29, available at Walgreens.

Olivia Wilde

Photo: Ilya S. Savenok/Getty Images.

Olivia swears by this true-blue winner. “I’ve been using the same hippie shit my whole life,” she told Byrdie. “It’s the greatest! You can even use it in your hair when you go camping.”

Dr. Bronner’s Pure Castile Soap, $16.29, available at Target.

Viola Davis

Photo: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images.

Viola is a self-proclaimed skin-care and makeup obsessive. And she swears by Vaseline. She told Elle that she dabs it under her eyes to blur wrinkles and fine lines.

Vaseline 100% Pure Petroleum Jelly, $4.17, available at Walmart.

Lucy Hale

Photo: George Pimentel/WireImage.

“At the end of a long day, wiping my makeup off and feeling so clean, it’s the best feeling in the world,” Lucy told Into the Gloss. She praised the wipes' ability to “take everything off without irritating [my skin]."

Neutrogen a Makeup Remover Cleansing Towelettes, $8.99, available at Ulta Beauty.

Laverne Cox

Photo: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images.

It's certainly not an easy task to find an SPF that works for you, but Laverne has it on lock. She told InStyle that she swears by this non-greasy face and body sunscreen.

Neutrogena Ultra Sheer Dry-Touch Sunblock SPF 55, $11.99, available at Ulta Beauty.

Easy to use, matte, and hydrating? Sign us up. As she told InStyle, Laverne credits her your-lips-but-better look to this chubby balm.

Revlon Colorburst Matte Balm in Sultry, $9.49, available at Ulta Beauty.

Jessica Alba

Photo: Gary Gershoff/WireImage.

You're not the only one who's been strangely tantalized by As Seen On TV beauty scores. Jessica told Into the Gloss that she lives for the Turbie Twist. "It’s the greatest thing in the world," she raved. "It’s like a towel that you pull your hair up in after the shower."

The Original Turbie Twist Super-Absorbent Hair Towel, $9.99, available at Bed Bath & Beyond.

Like this post? There's more. Get tons of beauty tips, tutorials, and news on the Refinery29 Beauty Facebook page. Like us on Facebook — we'll see you there!

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Lazy Girls, This Insane New Gadget Was Made For You

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I guess I didn't get the memo that making your bed in the morning is a key part of being a high-functioning adult. I'd much rather put those two minutes — or however long it takes to make a bed — toward getting just a tiny bit more sleep. But apparently, a lot of people care about having a nicely made bed. In fact, a coworker recently told me she'd rather be late to work than not make her bed. I didn't understand that on any level, but luckily, Tina Cayouette and her team did, which is why they created the Smartduvet.

The Smartduvet will transform any bed into a self-making one, and the design is so straightforward, it's hard to believe no one thought of it before now. It's simply a lightweight, inflatable sheet that you place between your regular duvet and its cover. With the touch of a button, you can activate the Smartduvet using an app on your phone or you can schedule when you want your bed to make itself ahead of time, so you never forget. When the Smartduvet is turned on, it sheet fills with air, which pushes your covers back into their proper position.

Because it's so easy to use, it's great for both bed-making enthusiasts and for those who never even thought to perform the chore. If you fall into either of these categories and want the Smartduvet, you can back the product through its Kickstarter campaign. There are still 26 days left to help the team reach its $22,369 goal — and if the goal is met, the expected delivery date is May of next year. The Smartduvet will help you avoid being late to work, or having to peel yourself off the mattress any earlier, and you'll never again have to sacrifice the wonderful feeling (so I hear) of slipping into a well-made bed after a long day.

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42 Celebs You Totally Forgot Were In Gap Ads

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Go back in time for a moment.

Do you remember when everyone was ready to “fall into the Gap”? There was a time when Gap commercials were exciting and cool — a Gap ad held such high pop culture status, in fact, that it could make or break a celeb’s career.

To book a Gap commercial was like winning a spot on the Mickey Mouse Club. It was the foot in the door a celeb needed to propel himself or herself to superstardom.

It may be hard to believe, but lots of your favorite celebrities once starred in print ads and TV commercials for the mall chain. Can you remember who? Check out every single one in the slideshow, ahead. We bet you'll find more than a few that you forgot about.

Cindy Crawford

Cindy Crawford was in a lot of Gap ads. Probably because she's so photogenic that you thought you could pull off this denim-on-denim look, too.

Sarah Jessica Parker & Lenny Kravitz

Once upon a time, Carrie Bradshaw was the queen of style. So it was a pretty big deal when SJP joined Lenny Kravitz for a Gap commercial. We're not going to lie: A lot of these outfits are still pretty dope.

Jessica Alba

Before she was the head of a billion-dollar company, she was posing in Gap ads.

Claire Danes & Patrick Wilson

Who knew Claire Danes and Patrick Wilson could dance? Who knew that she would look so good in his pants?

Kirsten Dunst

I'm not going to lie: Kirsten Dunst looks so carefree and cool in these khaki pants, it's low-key convincing me that maybe they aren't as terrible as I think they are.

Rashida Jones

You see that pretty young woman in the orange vest and gray top looking at the camera? Yes, it's Rashida Jones. She was actually in a few Gap commercials in 1999 ("Everybody in Vests," seen here, and "Everybody in Cords "), singing and modeling.

Salma Hayek

Honestly, Salma Hayek can make anything look good. So this isn't as much as an endorsement of Gap clothing as it is an endorsement of her ability to slay.

Juliette Lewis & Daft Punk

This is a real commercial that someone paid money to make. Someone wanted that hat in there. No, really.

Norman Reedus

Before he was Daryl on The Walking Dead, Norman Reedus was a model. Seriously, he even modeled for Prada. This is a Gap ad with him wearing flares. It's beautiful.

Madonna & Missy Elliott

What's better than Madonna singing "Get Into The Groove"? Madonna singing a "Get Into The Groove" remix with Missy Elliott. Thank you, Gap, for making this a thing that really happened once.

Chris Evans

Long before he was Captain America, he was showing off his biceps in a Gap ad. Not sure what the crutch has to do with anything, but why not?

Scarlett Johansson, Zooey Deschanel, Ashton Kutcher, & Jay Hernandez

For some odd reason, Gap gathered together this motley crew of fresh-faced actors to have them ride bikes in London. For Gap. What are they even selling?

John Mayer

Look, everyone! It's your singer-songwriter boyfriend from 15 years ago, brooding in a Gap ad, as singer-songwriters in the year 2000 often did.

Audrey Hepburn

Okay, so Audrey Hepburn had been dead and gone long before this Gap commercial came out, but she's still the star. And she managed to give AC/DC and skinny black pants a major comeback.

Naomi Campbell

GIRL, you sold those shorts! I'm going to Gap.com right now to try and find the 2016 version.

Laura Prepon

Long before Orange Is The New Black, Laura Prepon was the girl of every teen boy's dreams on That '70s Show. And her Gap commercial is a testament to the power of Donna.

Anjelica Huston & Michael K. Williams

I approve of this pairing! I'd watch these two in any movie, TV show, or Broadway play. Get to it, Hollywood! Trust Gap!

Aerosmith

I'm not sure why someone thought Joe Perry and Steven Tyler playing guitar, drums, and a harmonica would convince people to buy "easy fit" pants. But they did. The '90s were such a strange time.

James Marsden

This Gap ad is extremely important, because it's from the chain's holiday 2007 campaign. And it's just further proof that James Marsden does not age.

LL Cool J

Is this a Gap commercial? Just asking, because you gave a F.U.B.U. shoutout, LL. In any case, this is a thing that happened in 1999.

Mila Kunis

Yes, even Mila Kunis fell into the Gap at one point.

SJP, Josh Duhamel, & Mary J. Blige

What a strange group of celebrities to assemble for a Gap holiday commercial. Yet, here they are. It kinda works.

Zoe Saldana

Zoe Saldana posed with her sister for one of Gap's 2007 holiday ads. They are wearing colors that no one would wear together IRL, but it's still adorable.

Orlando Bloom & Kate Beckinsale

Not really sure who thought to put these two together. It's a Gap commercial you probably forgot about. Not because of time, but because it's a little dull.

Amy Poehler & Will Forte

Remember when these two crazy kids were in love? Doesn't this ad just hit you right in the feels?

Run-D.M.C.

This is one of the coolest Gap commercials, ever. Because of Run-D.M.C. And because Rev Run ends it by singing, "Fall into the Gap."

Joan Didion

Bet you didn't know that Joan Didion was in a Gap ad. Now you do.

Common

There was a Gap commercial called "Holiday in your Hood." It featured Common — in a hoodie. Get it?

Amy Adams

If you want to sell warm-and-cozy things, Amy Adams seems like a good fit, mostly because she's adorable and seems like a warm person. No, we don't know her personally. It's just a feeling.

Aubrey Plaza & Nas

Yes, you read that correctly. No, we don't know what either Aubrey Plaza or Nas have to do with this ad. Especially Aubrey Plaza, who seems to just be dancing with herself.

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Get To Know All The Models Walking The VS Fashion Show

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Now that the Angels have descended upon Paris and strutted on the glittery Victoria's Secret runway, let's review all the faces that you'll be seeing during the December 5 broadcast. There's a total of 51 ( fifty-one!) models this year, so you'll want to study up to cheer them on when the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show airs in a few days.

This story was originally published on November 21, 2016.

It's the time of year when the glitter sparkles brighter, the #fitspo gets (way too) intense, and the wings are dusted off: Yes, the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show is right around the corner.

This year, the lingerie giant is flying its angels to Paris to film a catwalk spectacular at the end of the month, which will air during primetime on December 5. However, the whole thing has become way more than just a televised runway show. And considering that ratings were way down last year, the event has evolved to encompass a months-long journey where social-media savvy models share every single event (and photo opportunity) that leads up to the actual show — from casting to fitting to run-through and every workout in between.

It's certainly no small operation: So far, there are more than 50 models confirmed to board a pink jet to France. There are the Angels, of course (sans Candice Swanepoel and Behati Prinsloo, both of whom seem to be on maternity leave), and other high-profile gets, such as Gigi Hadid, Joan Smalls, and Liu Wen. There are also a bunch of very exciting newcomers, from Gigi's sister, Bella, to industry-favorite Dilone, who'll be joining the gang on the glittery catwalk this year.

These models have more in common than just being part of the Victoria's Secret model lineup. They've all mastered the art of social media, as evidenced by their tear-inducing posts announcing they'd been picked for the pink plane to Paris — and of course several lifetimes' worth of very professional selfies.

There are still a few uncertainties leading up to the show — will Cara Delevingne accept Ed Razek's invitation to come back to the catwalk? And we may not know until the show airs next month. Until then, we rounded up all the models we can expect to see light up our television screens with their megawatt smiles (and bedazzled lingerie) come December 5.

Dilone

During Fashion Month, it felt as if there wasn't a catwalk Dilone didn't strut down. So, unsurprisingly, she charmed the folks at Victoria's Secret, too. If you haven't yet fallen hard for Dilone, just read her heartfelt note about the casting: "This ones for the outcasts that get told they can't do something, be someone, go somewhere [because] they're just a little different. I'm so so happy to announce that I will be a part of the 2016 [Victoria's Secret Fashion Show]! Never in a million years did I think this would be happening! So unbelievable, fun and something I've never done before!" (Bonus: She already has her mini-wings.)

Photo: Via @_dilone.

Alanna Arrington

When you go from opening the fall '16 Altuzarra show to walking the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show in the same year: Yeah, 2016 has treated Alanna Arrington pretty well, we'd say.

Photo: Via @alannaarrington.

Jourdana Phillips

From Saint Laurent exclusive to Victoria's Secret Fashion Show newbie, Jourdana Phillips has had quite the season. Clearly, Paris is her city to shine in.

Photo: Via @jourdanaelizabeth.

Bella Hadid

She may be a newcomer to the Victoria's Secret catwalk, but she's far from a newbie. Bella Hadid continues her fashion-world domination by joining sister Gigi in Paris for what will probably be the most watched runway she'll ever strut down. "There is no better feeling than being confirmed for the [Victoria's Secret Fashion Show]," she wrote on Instagram. Just wait until showtime, Bella.

Photo: Via @bellahadid.

Georgia Fowler

Victoria's Secret has a rep for making models' dreams come true when it announces its newest faces. (It's sort of like the Disney World of fashion in that way.) Georgia Fowler couldn't dim that smile when she confirmed that she will indeed be walking for the lingerie giant, thanking the Victoria's Secret crew for checking off one of her longtime goals.

Photo: Via @georgiafowler.

Lameka Fox

This model's agency surprised her with the news of her casting (and got her balloons!). The Washington, D.C., native actually got her start on Instagram, according to Vogue, so it's only fitting she'd take to the platform to share this very exciting development. "I can't believe it," she wrote. "I've been dreaming about this since I was a little girl. This is such an incredible feeling. I'm on cloud nine right now."

Photo: Via @lamekafox.

Luma Grothe

Watch out, Izabel Goulart — looks like Luma Grothe is already coming after one of your signature moves. The fellow Brazilian gave her best hair-flip to the camera when she announced she'd be flying to Paris with the Angels.

Photo: Via @thelumagrothe.

Lais Oliveira

This'll be Brazilian model Lais Oliveira's first Victoria's Secret Fashion Show, although she's modeled for the brand for some time now. Nonetheless, she's understandably psyched about the casting, thanking everyone from her management to the show's producers to the flurry of fan pages that have already lent their support.

Photo: Via @laisoliveiraofficial.

Megan Williams

"Can't take the smile off my face," Megan Williams wrote on Instagram two weeks ago, when she got the call. "Is this real?!" Her first casting for the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show may have been hard to believe at first — but it'll be very real come November 30.

Photo: Via @meganmayw.

Xiao Wen

If you enjoy watching Victoria's Secret's emotional casting videos, we definitely recommend Xiao Wen's: The model was understandably overwhelmed by the news, so she walked to the nearest corner and just buried her face in the wall — later asking her management, "Really?" Wen once called the glittery catwalk one of her professional dreams — and now she's checking it off her bucket list.

Photo: Via @jujujuxiaowen.

Grace Elizabeth

Grace Elizabeth couldn't even get through the sentence "I'm walking in the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show" without tearing up. "When I first went in to my agency before I even signed, they asked me my goal, and I told them... I want to walk for Victoria Secret," she wrote on Instagram. "At the time, I laughed about it; I never knew I would go this far." Fast-forward to 2016. Cue the aww s.

Photo: Via @lovegrace_e.

Zuri Tibby

Zuri Tibby made history earlier this year when she became the first Black spokesperson for Victoria's Secret Pink in the diffusion line's 14-year history. Now, she's riding that momentum all the way to the City of Lights. Tibby's definitely come a long way from that mall she was discovered in.

Photo: Via @angelzuri.

Keke Lindgard

From Hawaii to Paris, Lindgard is certainly going places. She jumped for joy when she got the news that she booked the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show — and seemingly hasn't stopped jumping since. (Hey, we wouldn't, either.)

Photo: Via @kekelindgard.

Maggie Laine

She has New York Fashion Week under her belt. Next, Maggie Laine will walk the most glittery runway on the planet. This'll be the Georgia native's first-ever show for Victoria's Secret.

Photo: Via @maggievlaine.

Kelly Gale

Swedish-Australian model Kelly Gale might have the best idea of the bunch for the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show: She tagged her official social announcement with #croissants — because she has her priorities in order.

Photo: Via @kellybellyboom.

Herieth Paul

Herieth Paul will join fellow Maybelline spokesperson Gigi Hadid on the Paris catwalk this year. The Tanzanian-born, Ottowa-based model has a flurry of high-fashion credits to her name, including Brandon Maxwell, 3.1 Phillip Lim, and Jonathan Simkhai this past season — and all before her 21st birthday.

Photo: Via @heriethpaul.

Gigi Hadid

Guess who's back, back again: Gigi Hadid is taking her sophomore strut down the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show catwalk — and alongside her younger sister, no less.

Photo: Via @gigihadid.

Liu Wen

We couldn't get enough of Liu Wen's shimmy during her cameo in Vogue's rendition of "Freedom" — so, let's see what dance moves she brings out on the Victoria's Secret runway when she struts to the tunes of Lady Gaga, The Weeknd, and Bruno Mars.

Photo: Via @liuwenlw.

Kate Grigorieva

After a solid spring '17 season (walking shows like Balmain and Cushnie et Ochs), Russian model Kate Grigorieva comes back home to Victoria's Secret.

Photo: Via @_kate_g_.

Irina Shayk

She may be an industry veteran compared to many in this year's crop, but even Irina Shayk has room for firsts on her résumé. This marks the first trip down the Victoria's Secret catwalk for the Russian model — and it's probably not the last.

Photo: Via @irinashayk.

Valery Kaufman

Valery Kaufman's ready for round two: The Russian model's been gearing up for her sophomore Victoria's Secret Fashion Show, after quite the spring '17 season as a Gucci exclusive, Dior feminist, and Stella McCartney stan.

Photo: Via @valerykaufman.

Leomie Anderson

Coming off the launch of her feminist brand, Leomie Anderson returns to the Victoria's Secret crew for the brand's Paris affair.

Photo: Via @leomieanderson.

Bridget Malcolm

Australian model Bridget Malcom shows off her side-plank skills in some Victoria's Secret Sport before slipping into her catwalk wings.

Photo: Via @bridgetmalcolm.

Ming Xi

Design student turned model Ming Xi began working with Victoria's Secret back in 2013. Now, she's going on year four of walking the show — one of the many catwalks she's trotted down in Paris this year alone.

Photo: Via @mingxi11.

Joan Smalls

Joan Smalls may have kept a relatively low profile this Fashion Month, but the model will be bringing her smolder back to the Victoria's Secret extravaganza.

Photo: Via @joansmalls.

Kendall Jenner

Kenny's back, baby. Jenner may have deleted her Instagram while most of her fellow Victoria's Secret models posted their show confirmations on social media, but the social superstar was very much present when the crew boarded the pink jet to Paris.

Photo: Via @kendalljenner.

Barbara Fialho

Barbara Fialho walked her first Victoria's Secret Fashion Show with a sparkling Eiffel Tower on her head as part of the 2013 "Parisian Nights" segment — so, what could be more full circle than traveling with the brand to France's capital this year?

Photo: Via @barbarafialho1.

Brooke Perry

This longtime Victoria's Secret Pink model is graduating to the bedazzled catwalk this year. Look out for the Montana native during the diffusion label's segment of the broadcast.

Photo: Via @brookeperry92.

S anne Vloet

Sanne Vloet is doing what we always say we're going to do, which is go from the airport straight from the gym to stretch our legs a bit. Maybe all we're missing is a Victoria's Secret Fashion Show booking to really motivate us...

Photo: Via @sannevloet.

Camille Rowe

Add Rowe to the list of models to follow on Instagram. She grew up between Paris and New York, and now calls L.A. home — but she's returning to her birthplace for her first-ever turn on the Victoria's Secret runway.

Photo: Via @fingermonkey.

Sui He

She just walked a Victoria's Secret runway in her native China — but that was just a warm-up for Sui He. The model returns to the lingerie brand's highly anticipated event this year.

Photo: Via @hesui923.

Devon Windsor

She may be a Victoria's Secret regular, but even Devon Windsor still gets emotional when it comes to this particular catwalk. "So four years ago I was walking around Zara in Soho trying to find some scarves for the brutal NYC winter when @imgmodels called me," she recalled on Instagram of the first time she booked the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show. "I literally screamed out loud in disbelief and had to leave the store to call my mom and tell her the news." This'll be her fourth time walking in the show, and she notes that "the feeling of getting confirmed is exactly the same, if not better."

Photo: Via @devwindsor.

Maria Borges

Last year, Maria Borges made a gorgeous statement (and a first for the brand) when she walked the Victoria's Secret Fashion show with an afro. Frankly, we can't wait to see how she wows us in 2016.

Photo: Via @iammariaborges.

Izabel Goulart

This will be Izabel Goulart's 12th — 12th! — time walking the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show. Such an achievement merited a signature of the brand's Angels Walk of Fame.

Photo: Via @iza_goulart.

Lily Donaldson

Lily Donaldson's always a favorite on the Victoria's Secret runway, so we're glad to see her join the gang once again in Paris.

Photo: Via @lilydonaldson.

Daniela Braga

She samba'd when she was first confirmed to walk two years ago, and now Daniela Braga's coming back for her third Victoria's Secret Fashion Show. This time, there are more crunches.

Photo: Via @bragadany.

Cindy Bruna

The first time she got a callback for the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show, Cindy Bruna thought she blew it for one very specific reason. "I had my eyebrows bleached from the Prada Campaign I had just shot," she wrote on Instagram a few weeks ago. "You can just imagine how I look without eyebrows." As the story goes, Bruna did in fact book the show that year. ("When my agency told me I confirmed the show, I kept on asking 'Are you sure they want me? Are you sure I am the one they confirmed?,'" she added.) Well, now she's going back to her hometown to walk the glittery runway once again.

Photo: Via @cindybruna.

Flávia Lucini

You may have last spotted Brazilian model Flavia Lucini walking around New York covered in paint in Pete Yorn's music video for "She Was Weird," as Vogue reported. Now, you'll see her joining the Victoria's Secret gang once again at the annual fashion show.

Photo: Via @flavialucini.

Rachel Hilbert

Rachel Hilbert, the super smiley face of Pink, is gearing up for Paris, as seen through her workout Instagrams.

Photo: Via @rachelhilbert.

Josephine Skriver

She's done the glittery lap many a time, but this marks Skriver's first Victoria's Secret Fashion Show as a bona fide Angel. Not only that, but she'll be doing it in bedazzled glory, wearing this year's Swarovski-designed get-up. How festive!

Photo: Via @josephineskriver.

Alessandra Ambrosio

It wouldn't be a Victoria's Secret Fashion Show without Alessandra Ambrosio, now would it?

Photo: Via @alessandraambrosio.

Lais Ribeiro

Soak in all the downtime now, Lais Ribeiro: The longtime Victoria's Secret model is back at it again for the 2016 show.

Photo: Via @laisribeiro.

Taylor Hill

When she's not taking the industry by storm, Taylor Hill comes home to her Victoria's Secret family. This'll be the Denver native's second year walking as an Angel.

Photo: Via @taylor_hill.

Lily Aldridge

Behati Prinsloo may not be there for more twinning opportunities, but Lily Aldridge will be back on the Victoria's Secret runway, reprising her title as Angel.

Photo: Via @lilyaldridge.

Elsa Hosk

At the end of the rainbow is.... Swedish model (and Angel extraordinaire) Elsa Hosk, taking her talents to the City of Lights for the 2016 spectacle.

Photo: Via @hoskelsa.

Sara Sampaio

As an Angel, Sara Sampaio gets dibs on some of the most show-stopping garments that make their way down the Victoria's Secret runway. Off-duty, the Portuguese model takes her costuming just as seriously — just check out her Halloween look. Let's see how the 2016 Parisian duds compete.

Photo: Via @sarasampaio.

Jasmine Tookes

All eyes will be on Jasmine Tookes this year: The Angel will have the distinct honor of wearing this year's Fantasy Bra — which, in Victoria's Secret World, is the biggest of deals. The 2016 garment is called the Bright Night Fantasy Bra, and it's valued at $3 million. Toto, we're not in Beautiful by Victoria's Secret territory anymore.

Photo: Via @jastookes.

Romee Strijd

Get that glow, Romee Strijd! The Dutch Angel will once again be breaking out her wings.

Photo: Via @romeestrijd.

Adriana Lima

At this point, we don't need more proof of Adriana Lima's badass-ery, but here she is doing the Mannequin Challenge while holding a punch on set.

Photo: Via @adrianalima.

Martha Hunt

Martha Hunt will also be reporting for duty on the Victoria's Secret catwalk. With so many members of The Squad decamping to Paris for the event, will Taylor Swift make an appearance?

Photo: Via @marthahunt.

Stella Maxwell

Watch out, Paris: The Angels are coming to town.

Photo: Via @stellamaxwell.

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No, Liev Schreiber Does Not Want Your Matchmaking Services

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Photo: David Fisher/REX/Shutterstock

Everyone's least-favorite post-breakup activity? Having to tell friends "No, really, I'm okay" when they offer to set you up with literally anyone mere weeks after your split. When you're famous and your breakup is broadcast around the world, well, things get even trickier. Liev Schreiber awkwardly dodged Gayle King's matchmaking services during an interview on CBS This Morning Thursday, and you'll want to cringe for him.

The Ray Donovan star split from his partner of 11 years, Naomi Watts, back in September, so some might consider that wound a little fresh. King, however, decides to ask the actor about his recent breakup, which, though amicable, doesn't seem like the topic that gets Schreiber super excited. When she asks about whether the change is difficult or scary, Schreiber replies with a very diplomatic answer:

“Yeah. Of course it is," says the Spotlight actor. "We’re parents together, so we’ll be together for the rest of our lives no matter what, and we’re very close. Hopefully that never changes, and I don’t think it will.”

Considering Schreiber didn't seem so gung-ho about discussing the breakup, you would think the issue might be dropped. Instead, King offers up her matchmaking services:

"Would you like me to set you up with someone, or are you okay?" asks Oprah's BFF of Schreiber's singledom.

"I'm busy with a 15-year-old [son]," replied the clearly not-thrilled actor of the offer.

While I'm sure King intended for the comment to come off as lighthearted, it's probably not a great idea to bring up what was likely a painful split, on television, when you could be talking about one of the actor's several projects. It's not that celebrity breakups are totally off the table in interviews —King probably should have just read her subject a bit better. Schreiber's clearly going through some family stuff right now, so maybe we can stick to chatting about his Showtime series instead?

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15 Times Bo & Sunny Obama Stole Our Hearts

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"If you want a friend in Washington, get a dog," is a piece of advice often misattributed to one former U.S. president.

The Obamas agreed so much, they got two: Bo and Sunny, both Portuguese water dogs. Bo, the one with the white belly, is 8 years old and became part of the family following the first inauguration of President Barack Obama. He was a gift from the late Sen. Ted Kennedy, a friend of the family, and fulfilled Obama's pledge to his daughters to get them a pet once they moved into the White House. Sunny, the 4-year-old, all-black critter, joined the first family in the spring of 2013.

The fluffy pair has captured the hearts of many Americans because, who wouldn't love those playful grins? They're incredibly popular, to the point where they have a schedule of appearances that Michelle Obama has to approve, and a North Dakota man allegedly plotted to kidnap them earlier this year.

Luckily, that nefarious scheme failed. But we're kind of losing the first dogs anyway, when the Obamas leave the White House next year. And unless they hire a photographer to be on their tail (pun intended) 24/7, it's unlikely that photos of Bo and Sunny will lighten our days once they become private (four-legged) citizens.

So, to celebrate their furry lives, we rounded up 15 times the pups stole our hearts. (This slideshow might induce hardcore squealing. Don't say we didn't warn you.)

Early in President Obama's first term, we saw him running with Bo in the hallways and we knew that this friendship was going to melt our hearts.

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

And then the Obamas brought a second dog to the White House. On her first day living there, Sunny got all the belly rubs from the president. AND SHE SEEMED SO HAPPY.

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

Just so you know, Bo has an official White House portrait. No biggie.

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

This picture of the first lady with the duo is everything… and you can't convince us otherwise!!!

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

Bo apparently loves the snow. Same Bo, same.

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

We just want to hug Sunny and Bo. FOREVER.

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

Can you imagine Bo asking, "What you doiiing?" outside of the Oval Office? We can.

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

These two look so carefree and so adorable, we just can't…

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

You can just imagine what Michelle Obama is saying: "Barack, stop playing with Sunny, we're late already!" But secretly thinking, "I wanna play with her, too."

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

Can you imagine Bo interrupting the president while he is in the Oval Office? "Err, yes, Joe, I was absolutely listening. No, that's not Bo, I just didn't have lunch yet and I'm hungry."

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

Main takeaway from this picture of the president and former chief of staff Rahm Emanuel showering Sunny with attention: She's a sucker for belly rubs.

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

A great nostalgic Halloween idea for 2017: Dress your dogs as "Bo and Sunny, state dinner version." You're welcome.

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

Just a casual picture of the most powerful man in the world having to walk his dog.

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

In between his busy schedule, Bo finds time to chill in the West Garden. Work hard, lounge hard.

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

Bo and Sunny look incredibly presidential in this one. We will miss all of them so much.

Photo: Pete Souza/The White House.

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The 15 Most Popular Bakeries Of 2016, According To Instagram

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What's almost as good as eating a real pastry? Scrolling through food porn photos of pastries on Instagram. The shots might make our stomachs grumble as a result, but our searches often lead to new culinary hotspots to try.

After all, other than cute animal pics, our favorite thing to Instagram is dessert. And we're definitely not the only ones. Today, Instagram shared its annual list of the year's top 'grammed bakeries in the country. The list of 15 sweet shops features some iconic classics as well as a few newcomers. Some were on last year's list, while changing trends bumped a few of 2015's big names off the list entirely.

Click through to see how many of the nation's most-socialed bakeries you've visited. Maybe you've even instagrammed them yourself!

15. Randy's Donuts, Inglewood, CA

Photo: via @maizarsadias.

14. Five Daughters Bakery (12 South), Nashville, TN

Photo: via @five_daughters_bakery.

13. Tartine Bakery, San Francisco, CA

Photo: via @thereshecooks.

12. Leonard’s Bakery, Honolulu, HI

Photo: Via @The96815.

11. Extraordinary Desserts, San Diego, CA

Photo: via @extraordinary_desserts.

10. Jo's Hot Coffee Good Food (aka Jo's), Austin, TX

Photo: via @joscoffee.

9. Spot Dessert Bar, NYC

Photo: via @spotdessertbar.

8. Donut Bar, San Diego, CA

Photo: via @donutbar.

7. Balthazar Bakery, NYC

Photo: via @feedyoursoull.

6. Carlo's Bakery, Hoboken, NJ

Photo: via @carlosbakery.

5. Levain Bakery, NYC

Photo: Via @Foodiesday.

4. Georgetown Cupcake, Washington, D.C.

Photo: via @laselmastyle.

3. California Donuts, Los Angeles, CA

Photo: via @ihsagram.

2. Voodoo Doughnut, Austin, TX

Photo: via @b_morgan18.

1. Café du Monde, New Orleans, LA

Photo: via @parkjudypark.

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30 Gifts For Your Introvert Friend Who Just Wants To Be Alone

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By definition, an introvert is someone who tends to turn their attention inwards to their own thoughts, and who tends to prefer their own company or the company of a small group of friends, as opposed to interacting with large groups of people.

Contrary to popular belief, not all of us introverts are shy. Many of us can be, though shyness and introversion aren't interchangeable terms. Nor do all of us hate talking to people, though many of us might hate small talk. In fact, a lot of us love interacting with people; we just also may need to take a break from said interactions. Whereas extroverts gain energy from being around other people, we introverts often need time alone to recharge from social situations.

For the most part, though, we often just like to spend a lot of time in our own heads — which is great for us, but sometimes (understandably) baffling and frustrating for the people around us. If you've got an introverted friend for whom you're struggling to find the perfect gift (because they haven't responded to your texts for five days, and you can't read minds), allow us to help.

Ahead, we've compiled a gift guide full of everything an introvert might want, whether it's for some uninterrupted time alone, or for (begrudgingly) getting through social interactions.

In case your friend wants to wear his heart on his sleeve.

CultureFlockClothing, $10.00, available at EtsyPhoto: Courtesy of Etsy.

Or, y'know, she might prefer to wear something a little more instructional.

In God We Trust, $40.00, available at In God We TrustPhoto: Courtesy of In God We Trust.

Perhaps not as ubiquitous as the iconic Diptyque candles, but your friend will love this unique take on your average "here's a candle" gift.

Ladurée, $68.00, available at Lucky ScentPhoto: Courtesy of Laduree.

A cuddling pillow for the introvert who loves to snuggle — alone.

Leahco, $49.99, available at AmazonPhoto: Courtesy of Amazon.

One free "coupon " that allows your friend to flake out on a social event.

Photo: Courtesy of Amazon.

This literary subscription box comes with a book, snacks, tea, and a candle, because nothing says "I love you, introvert" better than the perfect kit for a night of self-care-and-chill.

Novel Tea, $35.99, available at Crate JoyPhoto: Courtesy of Novel Tea Club.

Do people still use the word "fangirl"? Because we fangirl so hard over Issa Rae, and after reading this book, so will your friend.

The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl, $12.45, available at AmazonPhoto: Courtesy of Atria.

What better way to recharge than with a charged-up electric warming blanket?

Sunbeam, $70.67, available at AmazonPhoto: Courtesy of Amazon.

And of course, a reading lamp to go with those books. This one comes with five color modes according to time of day, so that the introvert in your life can stay in bed all day with a book.

TaoTronics, $39.99, available at AmazonPhoto: Courtesy of Amazon.

Noise-canceling headphones, because there will come a point when your friend has to spend time in the company of others, whether they like them or not, and may need these for sanity.

Sony, $29.97, available at AmazonPhoto: Courtesy of Amazon.

This projector will turn any home into an introvert's movie-watching haven.

Crenova, $99.99, available at AmazonPhoto: Courtesy of Amazon.

Record players are perfect for the introvert who wants to host a listening party and needs the downtime afterwards to listen to whatever the hell she wants.

Jensen, $43.99, available at AmazonPhoto: Courtesy of Amazon.

A yoga starter kit for the friend who wants to get fit without having to deal with other people at the gym.

Sivan, $39.99, available at AmazonPhoto: Courtesy of Amazon.

A fondue-maker just for one (though it comes in a set of two if your friend feels inclined to invite you over).

Kovot, $14.99, available at AmazonPhoto: Courtesy of Amazon.

This slow-cooker makes cooking for one way less of a pain.

Black + Decker, $, available at AmazonPhoto: Courtesy of Amazon.

Help your friend avoid dropping a brand new iPhone 6s into the bathtub during a long, solitary soak.

Bath Dreams, $24.99, available at AmazonPhoto: Courtesy of Amazon.

If your favorite introvert wants to spend all their time inside and away from people, they'll need a pretty lamp.

WBM, $27.99, available at AmazonPhoto: Courtesy of Amazon.

The best part of spending time alone is wearing whatever the hell you want, such as chic monogrammed pajamas.

J.Crew, $95.00, available at J.CrewPhoto: Courtesy of J. Crew.

These cashmere sweatpants are comfy enough to sleep in, but luxe enough to wear on a Sunday errand run.

Everlane, $140.00, available at EverlanePhoto: Courtesy of Everlane.

Nothing goes better with cozy sweats or PJs like a pair of fuzzy socks.

Gap, $7.95, available at GapPhoto: Courtesy of Gap.

If he doesn't already have Netflix, you'll be his hero. You may never see him again, but at least he'll love you forever, even when he's too busy marathoning Black Mirror to respond to your texts.

Netflix subscription, prices vary, available at Netflix.

Photo: Courtesy of Netflix.

Should your friend want a break from the screen, this therapeutic coloring book will give them a moment of peace and quiet.

Classic Colouring, $8.72, available at AmazonPhoto: Courtesy of Amazon.

Meditation is one of our favorite ways to decompress and reenergize, and the Headspace app is a great way to get started.

Headspace subscription, prices vary, available at Headspace.

Photo: Courtesy of Headspace.

A place to put all the thoughts that she'd rather not have to tell anyone else.

Moleskine, $14.63, available at AmazonPhoto: Courtesy of Moleskine.

Not all introverts want to be inside all the time — some of us like to go out and take long walks away from people, thank you very much.

PUMA, $65.00, available at PUMAPhoto: Courtesy of Puma.

Treat your friend to a mini-spa session that she can do all by herself.

Sephora, $25.00, available at SephoraPhoto: Courtesy of Sephora.

Show your love with a subscription to one of her favorite magazines.

The New Yorker magazine subscription, prices vary, available at The New Yorker.

Photo: Courtesy of The New Yorker.

A sleek teapot that brews just enough tea for one.

Harney & Sons, $24.95, available at Harney & SonsPhoto: Courtesy of Harney and Sons.

For the perfect solo cup of coffee or tea.

Anthropologie, $10.00, available at AnthropologiePhoto: Courtesy of Anthropologie.

A wine bottle so chic, he won't even feel guilty for not sharing it.

Sofia Coppola, $19.00, available at Francis Ford Coppola WineryPhoto: Courtesy of Coppola Wine.

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Now There's One More Reason To Love Your Cat

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Ah, cats. Whether you think of them as the ideal low-maintenance pets or the source of everything bad in the world, there’s no arguing that felines have it easy. They nap, chase birds, and sleep. Then there's the topic of their very diligent self-care routines: Cats spend a significant part of their waking hours using their sandpapery tongues to tend to their fur, and it's not just so they look well-groomed in your next Instagram — the hygienic benefits are plenty.

If spending half a day sleeping (and the other half grooming) isn't enough to make you jealous, researchers at Georgia Tech have discovered one more reason to envy your furry friend. As The Washington Post reported, cats' rough, pink tongues are essentially self-cleaning hair brushes that can detangle better than a $150 Mason Pearson — or any other brush, for that matter.

The study, conducted by PhD candidate Alexis Noel, found that with just “a single grooming sweep,” the barbs of a cat tongue move in four directions, acting as a flexible comb for hair.

“When the tongue glides over fur, the hooks are able to lock onto tangles and snags,” Noel explained. “When it encounters a tangle, it is able to maintain contact, unlike a standard hair-brush bristle, which would bend and let the tangle slide off the top.”

If only researchers could somehow use this discovery to revolutionize the world of hair brushes made for humans. Oh wait — they can: Noel and her colleagues are hard at work patenting their 3-D-printed cat tongue, and the team plans to pitch various uses for its model in several fields. May we suggest the beauty industry as a starting point?

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Amazon Cancels Good Girls Revolt In Clinton-esque Snub

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Amazon has decided to cancel its female-led show Good Girls Revolt after only one season on the digital streaming platform, according to The Hollywood Reporter. The cancellation comes as a bit of a surprise, given that show was met with positive reviews and more viewers than any other Amazon Original after its debut in October.

Good Girls Revolt follows the lives of three young women attempting to advance their careers in the sexist publishing industry of 1969. The show is based on the book by Amy Povich of the same title, which documents the landmark sexual harassment lawsuit brought against Newsweek by female employees in the '60s. The show came as a nod to second-wave feminist struggles and a struck a chord with viewers. So why the snub?

THR says that Roy Price, head of Amazon Studios, simply “wasn’t a fan,” (I can’t help but wonder why) and didn’t think that the series would be competitive in awards season. When the second season was pitched to him, he passed. The rebuff feels like a micro version of last month’s presidential election, when feminist visions were crushed right in front of those who believed in them most. And I wasn’t the only one to take notice.

Series creator Dana Salvo made a reference to the election and controversy over the popular vote when she responded to the decision on Twitter.

A cast member credited the show's supporters for helping her cope with the November 8 election.

But all is not lost. Sony Pictures Television is fighting for a recount reacquisition of rights to Good Girls Revolt, so it can shop the show around to other networks.

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Movie Review Roundup: What You Should See This Weekend

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Few things bring cinephiles joy quite like spending the weekend holed up in a movie theater, devouring the latest silver screen debuts. Though the biggest question is always, How exactly does one choose what to see? Well, that's where we come in.

Obviously, there will be certain movies throughout the year that feel like must-sees just because everyone is talking about them — can a film named White Girl actually give a compelling look at race and privilege in America? However, if you want to be a more discerning moviegoer, you can visit this cheat sheet. Here we'll give you the lowdown on new releases — and the critics' verdicts on them. Then, you'll be able to determine which one is right for you.

This post will be continually updated, so don't forget to check back each week!

Jackie

Starring: Natalie Portman, Peter Sarsgaard,Greta Gerwig, Billy Crudup, John Hurt

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 89%

Synopsis: Chronicles Jackie Kennedy's transition from first lady to national widow.

What’s The Word: Another attempt to understand the enigmatic political figure — except this one works. A New York Time s critic's pick, Manola Dhargis calls Jackie "Intensely affecting and insistently protean." Note: no one thinks this film is cheery. Scott Tobias of NPR praises Portman's performance, saying that it "suggests Jackie as a ghostly figure who's haunting the wreckage of her own life." The Nerdist says, bluntly, "Jackie is not a feel-good movie." It's not a date night movie, but it's definitely worth a watch.

Released December 2

Man Down

Starring: Shia LaBoeuf, Gary Oldman, Kata Mara, Jai Courtney

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 13%

Synopsis: After returning home from war, a soldier (Shia LaBeouf) searches for his son and wife (Kate Mara).

What’s The Word: This movie is receiving the type of scathing reviews that are probably more entertaining than the movie itself. The film's nonlinear storyline has been declared confusing and unreliable to the point of exasperation. The New York Times called it "a sadistic and ghoulish spectacle," so there's that. The real reason to see this movie is Shia LaBoeuf, looking sullen, shaven, and really in love with Kate Mara.

Released December 2

Miss Sloane

Starring: Jessica Chastain, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, John Lithgow, Michael Stuhlbarg, Jake Lacy, Sam Waterston

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 69%

Synopsis: Jessica Chastain is Miss Sloane, a femme fatale in the guise of a Washington lobbyist.

What’s The Word: Miss Sloane can't be blamed for its flaws. Meant to be a high-stakes political thriller, the film premiered on the heels of the 2016 election, and the story misses its mark. To be fair, the mark has been blown to pieces and scattered across the country. Lindsey Bahr, a writer for The Associated Press, says the film "already feels woefully out of date." Miss Sloane takes no prisoners, and adheres to no moral compass. All of this would be permissable if it weren't for the out-of-whack moral compass in the country.

Sheila O'Malley of Rogerebert.com calls the film "old-fashioned." According to O'Malley, Miss Sloane comes from " a more innocent time (say, three weeks ago) when politics as usual actually had some meaning." The country has had all the political entertainment it could possibly want — why would we need to watch a movie?

Chastain, a critical darling, remains above reproach, but with the movie's faulty time, an Oscar nod is doubtful.

Released November 24

Allied

Starring: Brad Pitt, Marion Cotillard

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 62%

Synopsis: Max (Brad Pitt), a Canadian wing fighter in World War II, is tasked with assassinating his wife, Marianne (Marion Cotillard), when she is suspected to be a German spy.

What’s The Word: It's a steamy spy movie starring Brad Pitt — and that may be where the story ends. Writing in the New York Times, A.O. Scott calls Allied a "deft and diverting" film that "offers the comfort of elegant escapism." The same accolades have not been awarded to Pitt's performance, which Scott compares Pitt's performance to that of a wooden canoe — ouch.

Anthony Lane of The New Yorker shares the sentiment. He declares, "Rarely have I seen a movie star look tenser or more unhappy than Brad Pitt does in Allied." Nevertheless, critics have praised Cotillard's performance as the enigmatic Marianne, equal parts femme fatale and engénue.

The movie explores familiar territory — many have complained that it stinks of Casablanca — but it still manages to deliver. It's sleek, efficient, and sexy, like a brand new car. You'll enjoy the vehicle, but it's just a machine.

Released November 22

Lion

Starring: Dev Patel, Nicole Kidman,

Rated: PG-13

Tomatometer: 76%

Synopsis: Based on a true story, this epic follows the adopted Saroo (Dev Patel) as he uses Google Earth to track down his birth family.

What’s The Word: It's a tear-jerker, but that compliment is decidedly not backhanded. A.O. Scott says it best in The New York Times: " If you have ever been a child, raised a child, lost a child or met a child — or a mother — this movie will wreck you." Young Saroo, played by Sunny Panwar, is separated from his family by way of a train that takes him all the way across India. Deposited in the streets of Calcutta, he survives long enough to find a pair of Australian expats, who end up adopting him. Peter Travers of Rolling Stone praised Nicole Kidman for her "unglam" portrayal of Saroo's adopted mother. Saroo's search for his parents begins in his late twenties, when he's busy romancing Lucy (Rooney Mara). From there, the mawkish journey begins. (Mawkish here, is not an insult.)

The movie is generating Oscar buzz for Dev Patel, of Slumdog Millionaire fame. The BAFTA-nominated actor is maturing out of his youthful cheer (I refer you to The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel), and Lion puts his "serious actor" drama chops on display.

Released November 22

Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them

Starring: Eddie Redmayne, Ezra Miller, Katherine Waterston

Rated: PG-13

Tomatometer: 74%

Synopsis: This Harry Potter spin-off focuses on Newt Scamander and his time working on the Hogwarts textbook.

What’s The Word: We definitely don’t need four more Fantastic Beasts movies, but this one manages to pull off a magic adventure. At Us Weekly, Mara Reinstein wrote that the movie “has layered a sophisticated and surprisingly dark origin story that will appeal more to grownups than the younger set.” Eddie Redmayne is also good, Cath Clarke wrote for Time Out: “I'm not sure which is more adorable, Eddie Redmayne as Newt Scamander, or the creatures he smuggles into the U.S. in his battered leather briefcase.” Empire’s Helen O’Hara wasn’t too impressed, but said the movie lays an important foundation for future good work: “With this heavy lifting done, there's every reason to hope for an even more magical adventure next time,” she wrote.

Released November 18

Divines

Starring: Oulaya Amamra, Déborah Lukumuena

Rated: NR

Tomatometer:80%

Synopsis: After meeting a dreamy dancer, two teen girls experience life outside of their Paris ghetto.

What’s The Word: Netflix snatched this debut feature after it got a standing ovation at Cannes. At Variety, Catherine Bray wrote that “Houda Benyamina bursts onto the scene with a punchy, pacy directorial debut, playing as gangster thriller and female buddy movie.” At Screen International, Lee Marshall wrote that it “crackles with attitude, anger, and lust for life.” The Guardian ’s Peter Bradshaw was also impressed: “The overwhelming impression is that Dounia has ambition and vision, a conviction that she might still be able shape her own future. It's an exhilarating film.”

Released November 18

The Edge Of Seventeen

Starring: Hailee Steinfeld, Woody Harrelson, Kyra Sedgwick

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 89%

Synopsis: A coming-of-age movie about Nadine, whose life falls apart when her best friend starts dating Nadine's cool-kid older brother.

What’s The Word: It’s true to the drama and tragedy of being a teenage girl. “This hilarious teen comedy is directed by Kelly Fremon Craig and stars Hailee Steinfeld as Nadine, a charming, yet neurotic teenager on the edge of adulthood,” Valerie Complex wrote for Black Girl Nerds. At The Film Stage, Dan Schindel advised viewers to ignore the John Hughes comparisons — “it’s much more honest than that.” NPR’s Ella Taylor wrote that director Kelly Fremon Craig "writes fresh, sharp dialogue, knows what she's doing around actors and is unafraid to get out on a ledge."

Released November 18

Manchester By The Sea

Starring: Casey Affleck, Michelle Williams, Kyle Chandler, Lucas Hedges

Rated: R

Tomatometer:99%

Synopsis: After his brother dies, Lee Chandler (Casey Affleck) has to move home and care for his teenage nephew. He's marred by an unknown grief, which makes his transition to life in his old hometown difficult.

What’s The Word: It’s wounding and imperfect, but brutal in the most endearing ways. Casey Affleck is also spectacular. BuzzFeed’s Alison Willmore called it “the finest possible incarnation of the sort of starry, delicate drama that is a festival standard.” At The Playlist, Noel Murray wrote that “by the time the film ends, we know so much about these people and their town that they don't even need to articulate their feelings for us to understand them.” Writing for Film Journal, Tomris Laffly called it a “quietly devastating film, which affirms Casey Affleck as one of the finest actors working today.”

Released November 18

Bleed For This

Starring: Miles Teller, Aaron Eckhart, Ciarán Hinds

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 64%

Synopsis: The true story of Vinny "The Pazmanian Devil" Pazienza, a boxer who fought to come back into the ring after a near-fatal car wreck.

What’s The Word: At The Wrap, Claudia Puig wrote that the movie reduces Pazienza’s story, leaving Bleed for This feeling “overly simplified and lacking in heft.” At the Boston Globe, Ty Burr praised the lead performance: “Teller is cornering a market on recklessness in the roles he chooses — the energy from that demonic drum solo at the end of Whiplash seems to carry over into the ferocity with which Vinny pounds at life.”

Released November 18

Nocturnal Animals

Starring: Amy Adams, Jake Gyllenhaal, Michael Shannon, Aaron Taylor-Johnson

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 72%

Synopsis: When Susan Morrow sits down to read the manuscript of her ex-husband’s book, the plot — which follows a grieving man’s fight to bring his family’s murderer to justice — forces her to see what went wrong in their failed marriage.

What’s The Word: Tom Ford's latest film is stylish (sometimes to a fault), but some parts are too hollow to feel remotely real. “In the end, Nocturnal Animals barely feels like a film made by a human being. You could just dub it a 'stylish exercise' and call it a day. But I just can't shake the fact that Ford somehow wants it to be more,” wrote Time ’s Stephanie Zacharek. At Hot Press, Roe McDermott found it all a part of the director’s allure: “Ford's heightened approach to storytelling may alienate some viewers. But his style isn't just for show: It embodies how the characters in his films are concealing truths, wearing masks, reciting social scripts,” she wrote. It has an appeal that is very different from A Single Man, though: “It’s as gratuitously cruel as A Single Man was tender,” wrote Manuela Lazic for Little White Lies.

Released November 18

Arrival

Starring: Amy Adams, Jeremy Renner, Forest Whitaker, Michael Stuhlbarg

Rated: PG-13

Tomatometer:96%

Synopsis: A lauded linguist is recruited to investigate the language used by an alien life form that has just touched down on earth.

What’s the Word: It’s thrilling and smartly written. “For fans of dark, cerebral, Christopher Nolan type sci-fi or even time-related sci-fi this will be right up your alley,” wrote Lauren Warren for Black Girl Nerds. At International Business Times, Amy West said the movie “pushes the boundaries on what a sci-fi film really can be.” Arrival is complicated, but still deft: “It's a monolith, a megalith, but like the gigantic alien craft that comes to rest somewhere above Montana at the start of the film, despite its immensity it hovers elegantly overhead. The film defies gravity,” wrote Jessica King for The Playlist.

Released November 11

Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk

Starring: Kristen Stewart, Vin Diesel, Garrett Hedlund, Steve Martin

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 46%

Synopsis: After fighting in Iraq, a 19-year-old army private adjusts to life at home.

What’s the Word: Reviews are mixed on Ang Lee’s latest offering. At Consequence of Sound, Nina Corcoran called it “a war story that should be felt, but instead tells you how to feel.” Us Weekly ’s Mara Reinstein suggested that “every person who puts on the special glasses will be able to see that expensive effects can't cover for clunky dialogue and a story more tired than a college student with mono.” Variety ’s Owen Gleiberman saw something in it, though: “The film isn't simply a technological experiment; it's also a highly original, heartfelt, and engrossing story. And part of the power of it lies in the way that those two things are connected,” he wrote.

Released November 11

Almost Christmas

Starring: Gabrielle Union, Omar Epps, Kimberly Elise, Mo’Nique

Rated: PG-13

Tomatometer:41%

Synopsis: Family drama comes to a head during the holidays.

What’s the Word: It's fine. "In all, it's a pleasant enough way to spend two quiet hours with the extended family, but Almost Christmas probably won't be your next holiday tradition," wrote Devan Coggan for Entertainment Weekly. At Village Voice, Melissa Anderson said it "follows formula for the overcrowded and overplotted Noel-season movie, ladling out too-generous portions of churchiness, multigenerational dance-off, and Mars vs. Venus sermonizing." At IndieWire, Aramide A Tinubu called it satisfying: "It embraces every opportunity for the warm, inviting feelings conjured up by the memories of that perfect slice of sweet potato pie — and anyone who knows what that tastes like won’t be disappointed."

Released November 11

Loving

Starring: Ruth Negga, Joel Edgerton

Rated: PG-13

Tomatometer: 91%

Synopsis: An intimate biopic about the Lovings, whose interracial marriage changed American politics forever.

What’s The Word: Ruth Negga is spectacular, but sometimes there’s the sense that there’s not a lot to Loving 's narrative. Read our interview with producer Nancy Buirski. “ Loving is modest, quiet, and deep. Like all [Jeff] Nichols' work with his long-time cinematographer, Adam Stone, the film highlights the lush beauty of the rural American South,” wrote Ella Taylor for NPR. “It's a patient film, and it requires some patience from its audience. But its rewards are gentle and winning, and for once, a cinematic history lesson that doesn't feel artificial and processed in every pore,” wrote Tasha Robinson for The Verge. “It doesn't trumpet its importance obnoxiously, and it's packed with performances of quiet power, with Negga as the breakout,” wrote Alison Willmore for BuzzFeed.

Released November 4

Doctor Strange

Starring: Benedict Cumberbatch, Tilda Swinton, Rachel McAdams, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Mads Mikkelsen, Michael Stuhlbarg

Rated: PG-13

Tomatometer:91%

Synopsis: Stephen Strange, a former surgeon, becomes a sorcerer.

What’s The Word: It's the Inception -est Marvel movie yet, in a good way. Marvel didn’t make good on their promise for equity for minority actors: “For a film that has promised diversity and wanting to move from harmful Asian stereotypes, this movie fails to bring in people of color in a meaningful way,” wrote Joelle Smith for Black Girl Nerds. At the Los Angeles Times, Justin Chang called it “playful and distinctive enough to throw a wrench into the grinding gears of the Marvel assembly line.” At The New York Times, Manohla Dargis called it “so visually transfixing, so beautiful and nimble that you may even briefly forget the brand.”

Released November 4

Peter And The Farm

Starring: Peter Dunning

Rated: NR

Tomatometer: 100%

Synopsis: This doc looks into the life of a crotchety farmer who is plagued by regret and alcoholism.

What’s The Word: It’s not sentimental, but still moving. “Documentary portraits live or die on the subject at hand — and in his debut documentary Peter and the Farm, filmmaker Tony Stone has a hell of a character to keep you engaged,” wrote Nigel M. Smith for The Guardian. “The film evokes the natural world with a grand poetic awareness of the primal connectedness of things. From the rapturous to the gross, you can't have one without the other,” wrote Stephen Holden for The New York Times. At IndieWire, Noel Murray found Peter Dunning to be a compelling (but sometimes irascible) subject: “He went 'back to the land' presuming that if he respected nature, the Earth would provide. Instead, nothing’s come easy. If he doesn’t keep detailed notes on his sheep, he can’t keep them alive. If he doesn’t drink rum in the middle of the night, he gets the shakes. If he doesn’t tell his family he loves them, they leave,” Murray wrote.

Released November 4

Hacksaw Ridge

Starring: Andrew Garfield, Sam Worthington, Vince Vaughn

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 87%

Synopsis: The true story of Desmond Doss, a World War II soldier who saved 75 men without carrying a gun.

What’s The Word: Once you get past the inevitable controversy of a movie directed by a figure as polarizing as Mel Gibson, reviews are mixed. “Once you get to the actual war, the movie becomes respectable, serious, even thoughtful,” wrote Eric D. Snider for his own site. At Baltimore Magazine, Max Weiss was unimpressed: “Man, I thought most of this film was a load of hooey — right down to Garfield's tremulous, moist-eyed performance and that sing-songy cornpoke accent of his.” At the very least, it might be entertaining, even if it is one-dimensional: “ Hacksaw Ridge winds up being a rousing piece of entertainment that also happens to be an affecting portrait of spiritual faith and simple human decency,” wrote Matt Zoller Seitz for RogerEbert.com.

Released November 4

By Sidney Lumet

Starring: Sidney Lumet

Rated: NR

Tomatometer: 67%

Synopsis: An expansive interview with the director of iconic movies like Dog Day Afternoon, 12 Angry Men, Serpico, and Network.

What’s The Word: This could've easily turn into a melodramatic deep dive for those annoying film bros you avoided in college. But Nancy Buirski’s perspective invites new and familiar fans, and Lumet seems knowledgable and warm under her lens. “Mr. Lumet comes across as a mensch, but he was also a complex artist whose often literally dark films were filled with shadows, rage and spit, not just nobility,” wrote Manohla Dargis for The New York Times. “The movie is simply Lumet and his films,” wrote Owen Gleiberman for Variety, “which turns out to be an astonishingly satisfying experience, because he's an incredible talker, with the same earthy electric push that powers his work.” At Metro, Matt Priggee suggested this was Lumet at his most open: “Coming away from By Sidney Lumet, you see a master filmmaker as he'd likely have presented himself: a man as complex as his movies and the worlds they explored.”

Released October 28

Before The Flood

Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Barack Obama, John Kerry, Bill Clinton

Rated: PG

Tomatometer:67%

Synopsis: It’s like Around The World in 80 Days, only starring Leonardo DiCaprio and his cargo shorts. (Just kidding! This is a very serious movie about climate change.)

What’s The Word: It’s not boring. “ Flood 's filmmakers are intelligent in their use of the biggest asset they have: Not only do they keep their movie star onscreen, they work hard to tie viewers' concern for the environment up with his biography,” wrote John DeFore for The Hollywood Reporter. At The Village Voice, Amy Brady called it “frustrating but frequently compelling.” Variety ’s Andrew Barker appreciated its sense of purpose: “ Before the Flood may not tackle too much new ground, but given the sincerity of its message, its ability to assemble such a watchable and comprehensive account gives it an undeniable urgency.”

Released October 30

Inferno

Starring: Tom Hanks, Felicity Jones, Ben Foster, Omar Sy

Rated: PG-13

Tomatometer:20%

Synopsis: Tom Hanks reprises his role as the Dan Brown protagonist. This time the mystery is wrapped up in Dante’s Divine Comedy.

What’s The Word: Are they serious? “The story may not make any sense, but they're going to throw so much at you — so many jumpy moves, so many tangled threads — that you might not notice (or care),” wrote Manohla Dargis for The New York Times. At Tribune News Service, Katie Walsh was less forgiving: “Will make you, too, feel like you’re experiencing head trauma.” At The Boston Globe, Ty Burr likened it to a cheap airport thriller: “ Inferno is the exact cinematic equivalent of an airport paperback, which is what's fine and forgettable about it.”

Released October 28

Moonlight

Starring: Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monae, Naomie Harris, Andre Holland

Rated: R

Tomatometer:99%

Synopsis: A young, queer Black man moves through life in a drug-addicted community while being raised by an abusive mother.

What’s The Word: See this movie. Not only because it’s spectacular — which it is — but also because truly no one can ever get enough of Mahershala Ali. “Leaves you feeling both stripped bare and restored, slightly better prepared to step out and face the world of people around you, with all the confounding challenges they present. There's not much more you can ask from a movie,” offered Time ’s Stephanie Zacharek. At The New Yorker, Hilton Als positioned the film within a larger conversation about Black masculinity: “As we watch, another movie plays in our minds, real-life footage of the many forms of damage done to Black men, which can sometimes lead them to turn that hateful madness on their own kind, passing on the poison that was their inheritance.” Speaking to The Ringer, the two Black men behind Moonlight — director Barry Jenkins and Tarell Alvin McCraney, who wrote the play that served as the movie's source material — perfectly summarized its central question: “We know, thanks to popular media, that Black men can be sexual,” McCraney said. “Can they be intimate? Can they care for each other? Can they be vulnerable? That is a story less told.”

Released October 21

The Handmaiden

Starring: Ha Jung-woo, So-ri Moon, Min-hee Kim, Tae-ri Kim

Rated: NR

Tomatometer:94%

Synopsis: A Korean woman working as a handmaiden is involved in a conman’s plot to steal her employer’s inheritance. With surrealist Park Chan-wook at the helm, things will get interesting.

What’s The Word:The Handmaiden is sexy and twisty and so compelling...lodging itself in the points of view of two women who are constantly underestimated by the men around them, and who learn to take advantage of how they're misjudged,”wrote BuzzFeed’s Alison Willmore. “By replacing the class system of Victorian England with the dynamic of the occupier and occupied, Park has tapped into something uniquely complex about a chapter of history that is rarely explored,” wrote Emily Yoshida for The Verge. “ The Handmaiden is part romance, part gothic fairy tale and part psychosexual chamber piece, an initially beguiling film whose heavy-handed love scenes work to undermine its dramatic power,” wrote Nikki Baughan for The List.

Released October 21

American Pastoral

Starring: Ewan McGregor, Jennifer Connelly, Dakota Fanning, Uzo Aduba, David Strathairn

Rated: R

Tomatometer:16%

Synopsis: The film based on Philip Roth's book about a seemingly perfect Jewish family whose life is tested when their daughter becomes a rebel protesting the Vietnam war.

What’s The Word: Ewan McGregor’s directorial debut is a miss. “The filmmaking is prosaic when it should crackle with tension and disruptive undercurrents,” suggested Todd McCarthy of The Hollywood Reporter. “Even McGregor's palpable sincerity cannot obscure the film's smug misogyny,” wrote Nell Minow for Beliefnet. “ American Pastoral the novel is a primal scream,” wrote Laura Clifford for Reeling Reviews. “ American Pastoral the movie is a whimper.”

Released October 21

Jack Reacher: Never Go Back

Starring: Tom Cruise, Cobie Smulders, Aldis Hodge

Rated: PG-13

Tomatometer: 38%

Synopsis: Jack Reacher is still on the run; this time he comes into contact with his unknown child.

What’s The Word: Skip it. “ Jack Reacher: Never Go Back is the second movie that Tom Cruise has starred in as this title character. Let's hope it's the last,” wrote Manohla Dargis for The New York Times. At GQ U.K., Helen O’Hara called it predictable: “There's a point in every Reacher book...where the case seems unsolvable. This film never finds that point — and worse, you'll be screaming the answer at Reacher through a key third-act scene while he thinks furiously.” Perhaps Kimberley Jones from the Austin Chronicle said it best: “ Never Go Back is boilerplate action-thriller, filmed with an anonymous style and scripted so that characters talk in catchphrases. It clears the bar of competency, but what kind of recommendation is that?”

Released October 21

The Accountant

Starring: Ben Affleck, Anna Kendrick, J.K. Simmons, Jeffrey Tamboor

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 50%

Synopsis: A math savant is a freelance accountant for some criminals.

What’s the Word: This movie looks like it will be a mash up of The Town and Good Will Hunting. Alas — Ben Affleck needs a win. “This is a real thing starring real people and made with real money,” Indiewire’s David Erlich pointed out. “A frequently frustrating but surprisingly entertaining genre mishmash that's at least upfront about its central conceit: Ben Affleck is definitely, 100% going for it as Hollywood's first autistic assassin,” wrote Jen Yamato for The Daily Beast. "There are parts of The Accountant that are so deeply ridiculous and melodramatically overwrought that people laughed out loud during the screening," wrote R29's Elizabeth Kiefer. "One of those people was me, and for a while, I honestly wondered if maybe the director was just pulling our chain."

Released October 14

Christine

Starring: Rebecca Hall, Michael C. Hall, Tracy Letts, Timothy C. Simons

Rated: R

Tomatometer:83%

Synopsis: Based on the true story of Christine Chubbuck, a news anchor in Sarasota, Florida who committed suicide live on air.

What’s the Word: Rebecca Hall is remarkable. “Hall, in one of her best performances, embodies Christine with searing intensity,” wrote Jordan Raup for The Film Stage. At Buzzfeed, Alison Willmore wasn't convinced, calling it “excruciating, by design and in its very concept.” At The New York Times, Manohla Dargis thought the movie talked around Christine's suicide, instead of through it: "Even as Ms. Hall’s performance makes you believe that something profound is at stake, the movie noncommittally nibbles at the edge of larger meaning, nodding at current events," Dargis wrote. "[These references] embroider the picture, as does Christine’s mental health and girlish bedroom, but none of this gets at why she pulls the trigger."

Released October 14

Certain Women

Starring: Kristen Stewart, Michelle Williams, Laura Dern

Rated: R

Tomatometer:95%

Synopsis: Three women achieve independence in small-town America.

What’s the Word: Kelly Reichardt doesn’t make slow movies, she makes deliberate ones. If the pacing bothers you, take a breath: She’s a master at work. “Reichardt likes stories that unfold slowly and simply,” wrote Stephen Whitty for the New York Daily News. “Sometimes she'll just let the camera run, making us watch the awkwardness of people who can't connect.” The movie is a “kind, loving, and deeply moving portrait of big-hearted small-town people,” suggested April Wolfe in The Village Voice. “There are no verbose emotional arias or chest-beating screaming matches,” wrote Jason Bailey for Flavorwire. “It's a collection of the tiniest moments, which accumulate into a kind of devastation.”

Released October 14

The Girl on the Train

Starring: Emily Blunt, Justin Theroux, Haley Bennett, Allison Janney

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 46%

Synopsis: Rachel is an alcoholic who rides the train between New York City and a suburb, fantasizing about a woman who lives in her old neighborhood. When the woman turns up dead, Rachel becomes the prime suspect.

What’s the Word: It’s like one of those old Lifetime movies, but more lame. Fans of the book might be disappointed. “ The Girl on the Train is an absorbing, page-turning (or page-swiping) whodunit,” wrote Rebecca Murray for Showbiz Junkie, “but it doesn't have quite the same impact as a feature film.”

At Globe and Mail, Kate Taylor agreed: “Whatever the locomotive power of the novel, this film adaptation only limps into the station.” At least Emily Blunt is talented: “About the only good call in The Girl on the Train was the casting, which gives us two hours of Emily Blunt shredding her soul, soaking it in vodka, and then setting it on fire. The rest is a mawkish, retrograde misfire,” wrote Vox’s Alissa Wilkinson.

Released October 7

The Birth of a Nation

Starring: Nate Parker, Jackie Earle Haley, Armie Hammer, Gabrielle Union

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 77%

Synopsis: The story of Nat Turner and his slave uprising.

What’s the Word: It’s mostly campy with a lot of lecturing. R29’s own Arianna Davis breaks it down: “Frankly, it's not a very good film at all. So much so that after seeing the movie, I walked out of the screening room relieved, a weight lifted off my chest that I no longer had to figure out how, as a Black woman (and alumnus of the same college as Parker), I was going to separate this Black artist from this Black art. Because, in my opinion, The Birth of a Nation was not art.”

As a cinematic telling of Turner’s story, Slate’s Dana Stevens wrote that Parker’s rendering of him isn’t compelling: “There's a deliberate myth-making quality to Parker's reconstruction of the real-life Nat Turner, who was a much more morally complex figure than the righteous avenger Parker writes, directs, and plays him as.”

Released October 7

American Honey

Starring: Shia LaBeouf, Sasha Lane, Riley Keough, McCaul Lombardi

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 82%

Synopsis: Star, a free-spirited girl from a troubled home in Oklahoma, meets Jake in a supermarket. The next day, she joins his crew of magazine salespeople, teens who lives on America’s fringes and crisscross the country, living an American outlaw fantasy.

What’s the Word: It’s excellent. And the music — E-40, Rihanna, Juicy J — is pretty good, too. When I saw it, I noticed a beautiful religious undertone to the way it was filmed.

“Yes, it depicts teenagers doing things the grown-ups would rather not admit they actually do,” wrote Ty Burr for The Boston Globe, “but it does so with a poetic curiosity and a sense of what it's like to be young, poor, and rootless — both futureless and free.” Also, Shia LeBeouf is pretty hot.

Released September 30

Goat

Starring: Nick Jonas, James Franco, Ben Schnetzer, Gus Halper

Rated: R

Tomatometer:75%

Synopsis: After a harrowing assault, a college guy is hazed during fraternity pledging. Drunkenness reveals the frat’s toxic masculinity.

What’s The Word: It’s good — chillingly so. “This isn't an easy film to watch,” wrote Stephanie Merry for The Washington Post. “But it's even harder to forget.” Schnetzer is especially great, suggested Katie Walsh in the Tribune News Service: “ Goat wouldn't be as strong as it is without the strength of Schnetzer's lead performance, which provides the emotional anchor around which the rest of the film orbits.” It’s compelling, wrote Jordan Raup for The Film Stage, but “its themes are a bit muddled, and certainly not unique.”

Released September 23

The Lovers and the Despot

Starring: Shin Sang-ok, Choi Eun-hee

Rated: NR

Tomatometer:75%

Synopsis: A documentary following a stranger-than-fiction true story: A Korean actress fell in love with a famous director, and was kidnapped by Kim Jong-il. The director was later kidnapped as well, but the couple was reunited by Kim, a movie buff, and forced to be his “personal filmmakers.”

What’s The Word: First of all, can you imagine? Filmmakers Ross Adam and Robert Cannan give this wacky (and, at times, heartbreaking) tale a deep resonance. “Juxtaposing archival footage with a tension-building collection of interviews, Cannan and Adam approach the outlandish crime as a puzzlement, all but wondering aloud how two celebrities could be turned into a dictator's puppets,” wrote Dave White for The Wrap. At the Village Voice, Alan Scherstuhl wrote that the film makes the most of the talking-head style: “Cannan and Adam's interviewees — Choi, intelligence agents, film critics — tell the story with more suspense than talking heads usually muster. The film is brisk and fascinating, ultimately moving, but also less rich than it might have been.” Writing for The Film State, Dan Schindel called the story compelling, but said the movie can feel skin-deep: “The most frustrating aspect of The Lovers and the Despot is its refusal to do more than simply recite its tale, ignoring the interesting concepts lurking within it,” Schindel wrote.

Released September 23

The Dressmaker

Starring: Kate Winslet, Judy Davis, Liam Hemsworth

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 53%

Synopsis: A dressmaker working in Paris returns to the Australian backwoods where she grew up, and causes a ruckus.

What’s The Word: Is it avant-garde? Experimental? Tired? Trash? Everyone is divided. At Four Three Film, Isobel Yeap wrote that it is “a fascinating feminist film. It prioritizes Tilly’s relationship with her mother over her romantic relationship.” The plotting is strong, wrote Elise Nakhnikian for Slant, but “the frequent contemptuousness the film displays toward its characters keeps the audience at arm's length, making all the angst and intrigue on display in Dungatar read as strenuous playacting.” Regardless of the movie's other qualities, the best performance comes from Judy Davis — it’s worth seeing for her alone. Davis’ performance “provides a much-needed anchor in the middle of a whirlpool of discordant, clanging nonsense,” wrote Rebecca Pahle for Film Journal International.

Released September 23

My Blind Brother

Starring: Jenny Slate, Adam Scott, Nick Kroll, Zoe Kazan

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 79%

Synopsis: A funny lady dates a blind sports star and his seeing brother.

What’s The Word: Slate, Scott, and Kroll make a winning team. At Variety, Andrew Barker called it a “winningly featherweight romantic comedy.” It’s also a part of a new-ish genre of comedies: “The studio-produced romantic comedy may be flatlining, but who cares, so long as snappy indies like this one step up to fill the void?” asked Kimberly Jones in the Austin Chronicle. At the Arizona Republic, Barbara VanDenburgh found its humor very respectful: “It's a slight film, but one that hits all the tricky emotional and comedic notes without a hint of cruelty,” she wrote.

Released September 23

Bridget Jones's Baby

Starring: Renée Zellweger, Colin Firth, Patrick Dempsey

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 78%

Synopsis: Bridge is back — this time with a bundle of joy and a pair of men who could both be the father.

What's the Word: Bridget Jones would be charming if she were reading a phone book — this movie does right by her and by women who have grown up with the trilogy. "The movie's mores can feel cluelessly retro as the ever-dithering Bridget lurches between one man and another," wrote Dana Stevens for Slate. At Consequence of Sound, Allison Shoemaker wrote that it definitely makes good "on the smooshy stuff, to be sure, but it's the stuff in between that really delivers." At NPR, Ella Taylor got at the heart of what really matters: "Zellweger has precision comic timing, her British accent is close to flawless, and she's having a great time."

Released September 16

Blair Witch

Starring: James Allen McCune, Valorie Curry

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 42%

Synopsis: A group of college kids face a horrifying ghost in the Black Hills Forest in Maryland.

What’s the Word: A fine reboot that is true to a well-known franchise. “If you must reboot a classic, this is how you do it,” wrote Rosie Fletcher for Digital Spy. At Variety, though, Guy Lodge wasn’t as impressed: “A significantly more accomplished and entertaining sequel than 2000's woeful cash-in Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2, [this] nonetheless reps something of a missed opportunity.” The Hollywood Reporter ’s Leslie Felperin wrote that the movie was too bound by its source material to ever become something unique and interesting: “By sticking so slavishly to the original Blair Witch film's template, the result is a dull retread rather than a full-on reinvention, enlarging the cast numbers this time but sticking to the same basic beats.”

Released September 16

Miss Stevens

Starring: Lily Rabe, Oscar Nunez, Lili Reinhart, Timothee Chalamet

Rated: NR

Tomatometer: 86%

Synopsis: A teacher chaperones three students on a weekend trip, and finds herself growing up in the process.

What’s the Word: Just because the teacher befriends one of her male students, don’t expect it to devolve into some tawdry illicit romance. “While her bond with the troubled, inquisitive Billy becomes the script’s emotional core, coaxing forth insights and revelations that neither character is fully prepared to deal with, the story mercifully avoids the predictable route of nudging them into an inappropriate relationship,” wrote Variety’s Justin Chang, “instead raising honest, hard-to-answer questions about what happens when the mentor unexpectedly becomes the mentee.” At The New Yorker, Richard Brody saw little beyond the story’s loose outline: “Rachel is a lonely woman in mourning for her mother, with a fragile veneer of quiet yearning and awkward energy; when that veneer cracks, the effect is powerful despite its air of calculation.” Lily Rabe is great in it, according to Consequence of Sound’s Randall Colburn. “Rabe’s performance here is nothing short of stunning,” Colburn wrote. “The sharp, lived-in tics and details of her character work are instantly endearing, an open window into her vulnerabilities and passions.”

Released September 16

Other People

Starring: Jesse Plemons, Molly Shannon, Bradley Whitford

Rated: NR

Tomatometer: 84%

Synopsis: A young gay man navigates being out to his family while caring for his cancer-stricken mother.

What’s the Word: This is your annual excuse to watch Molly Shannon in anything, because she’s always so charming. “Inherently melodramatic,” wrote Daniel M. Gold for the New York Times, “the film belongs to Ms. Shannon, who vividly etches Joanne in a full end-of-life range: funny, loving, angry, regretful, exhausted, resigned.” At the A.V. Club, A.A. Dowd saw the movie’s heart in spite of its moments of melodrama: “It's a little easy, a little obvious, but there's still an undeniable specificity to it — the sense that it comes from someplace genuine.” The Guardian ’s Nigel Smith highlighted Shannon’s deft performance: “Shannon shows new shades in her deft handling of a tragedy she's tasked with bearing. Further proof that when it comes to drama, comedy actors are often the experts.”

Released September 9

White Girl

Starring: Morgan Saylor, Brian Marc, Chris Noth, Justin Bartha

Rated: NR

Tomatometer: 68%

Synopsis: A wild, optimistic blonde from Oklahoma moves to New York. She does a lot of drugs, has a lot of sex, and tries to get her Puerto Rican lover out of jail. (It's similar to another movie about NYC youth, Kids)

What’s the Word: Here’s an important bit of context, taken from director Elizabeth Wood’s interview with R29: A frequent critique of her script was that her protagonist ought to have had a depressing or abusive childhood to somehow legitimize her drug use or wantonness.

“[I told people] ‘Actually, I think so often a young person that’s white and privileged and acting out is not the result of a bad background,” Wood said. “It’s the result of a really good background where everything has been so protected that they’re willing to take insane risks just to feel alive.’”

Morgan Saylor — you might remember her from Homeland — gives an astonishing performance: “Saylor plays the kind of wild child who acts out because she came from a good background — it takes a certain fearlessness to portray a character who’s never had to be afraid of anything, and the actress steps into the part like she’s running into traffic,” wrote David Ehrlich of Indiewire. “As someone who graduated from a New York liberal arts college known for its wealthy, white student body, who lived a block south of Ridgewood off the M train, and who has been well-acquainted with Leah-types,” wrote Erin Whitney for Screencrush, “I can attest to how honestly and bluntly White Girl captures that culture.”

Released September 2

Southside With You

Starring: Tika Sumpter, Parker Sawyer

Rated: PG-13

Tomatometer: 92%

Synopsis: The story of the president and first lady’s first date.

What’s The Word: “Michelle Obama is [who she is today],” actress and producer Tika Sumpter told Refinery29. “But Michelle Robinson is the girl from South Side. She’s the girl figuring it out still, she’s a second-year associate at a law firm. She went to Princeton and Harvard and is successful in her own right.” The movie showing Mrs. Obama’s first date with the president is a little like Before Sunrise, suggested Detroit News ’ Adam Graham, “if those two characters had a really epic epilogue.” Southside With You is largely unconcerned with who its leads grow up to be, wrote Leah Greenblatt for Entertainment Weekly: “It delivers something more modest: a tender, unrushed love story.” At The Wrap, Sam Adams wrote that the movie shows a deficiency: Hollywood’s lack of love stories that star Black people. “Its near-total lack of precursors suggest that if it weren't about one of the most famous Black couples, it would likely not have been made at all.”

Released August 26

The Intervention

Starring: Melanie Lynskey, Clea DuVall, Cobie Smulders, Vincent Piazza, Natasha Lyonne, Alia Shawkat, Jason Ritter

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 78%

Synopsis: Four couples take a weekend away to stage an intervention of one couples’ marriage.

What’s The Word: Clea DuVall, who has been acting in Hollywood for some time, produced and directed a script that’s been on her mind for a while. “I thought, What if there was a story about someone who is so convinced that they knew what was right for everybody else? And they actually tried to put one of their plans in action?" DuVall told Refinery29. "That idea would be so ridiculous, because you don’t really ever know what is going on in someone else’s life.” At The Village Voice, April Wolfe called it an “honest, intimate portrayal of three couples who endure a weekend of emotional maintenance while trying to convince a fourth couple to get a divorce.” At The Guardian, Nigel M. Smith said that it’s a miss because it struggles to balance humor and seriousness: “The problem for The Intervention lies in its misjudgment of tone. It's played for feel-good laughs (the cornball ending feels especially unearned), when DuVall should have instead dug deeper to exploit her characters for the messed-up people that they are.”

Released August 26

The Hollars

Starring: John Krasinski, Anna Kendrick, Richard Jenkins

Rated: PG-13

Tomatometer:50%

Synopsis: John Krasinski is a disenchanted NYC professional whose mother’s illness brings him back home to his small town.

What’s The Word: The plot’s convention — about a boring man needing a trip home to put his life in perspective — has been done many times before, and in more interesting ways. It’s “just good enough to make you wish that it were better,” wrote Matt Zoeller Seitz for RogerEbert.com. “One minute Richard Jenkins is emphatically crying over his wife's illness which is apparently a running gag,” wrote Matt Prigge for Metro. ”The next Wilco is playing over earnest montages of people staring into space.” The movie’s highlight is Margo Martindale, who “proves again that she is one of the best actors on the planet,” according to Rolling Stone ’s Peter Travers.

Released August 26

War Dogs

Starring: Jonah Hill, Miles Teller, Bradley Cooper, Kevin Pollack

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 59%

Synopsis: Bros sell guns to war lords, basically.

What’s the Word: Measure your expectations: This is an installment into the bro canon, but a seemingly fun one. “People are overthinking War Dogs — essentially it's the second best movie in the Hangover franchise,” tweeted Toronto-based critic Jason Gorber. At NPR, Mark Jenkins commented that sticking closer to the true story would have been better, “but they manage to slip a fair amount of interesting commentary between the blunders, bong hits and wartime near-misses.” The movie tries to mimic the style and skill of an iconic talent, and the strain shows: “Everything in this film, from the voiceover narration, to the familiar rock 'n' roll and Sinatra musical cues, to the freeze frames, to the tale of reckless and ambitious young men behaving badly, seems lifted directly from the Scorsese playbook,” wrote Max Weiss for The Baltimore Sun.

Released August 19

Morris From America

Starring: Craig Robinson, Markees Christmas, Carla Juri

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 92%

Synopsis: When a Black father and son move to Germany, the son adapts to life abroad, with white German friends who expect him to have a stereotypical Black identity.

What’s the Word: “In the end, this is Morris’ story,” wrote Tomris Laffly for Film Journal International. “And he is perhaps the most disarmingly lovable young teen to come of age in American independent cinema (which has no shortage of such fare) in recent years.” At The Ringer, K. Austin Collins wasn’t really feeling it, but was into one aspect of Morris’ character, that the kid raps about a lifestyle of drugs and jail time that he really knows nothing about. “But the fantasy [Morris’ lyrics] lay bare is valuable,” Collins wrote. “They’re the movie’s greatest insight into who Morris thinks he is, who he wants to be, and what’s at stake for him in hip-hop. For a middle-class expat going through puberty, it’s a fantasy of manhood that feels and sounds distinctly African American.” More than a coming-of-age story, it’s a touching look at the relationship between Black fathers and Black sons, suggested The New Yorker ’s Anthony Lane: “The highlight is not Morris’s worst scrape, when he gets stranded out of town without cash or a phone, but the speech that [his dad] gives after he comes to the rescue. Robinson delivers it in long takes and with tremendous style. ‘We’re the only two brothers in Heidelberg,’ he says. ‘We gotta stick together.’”

Released August 19

Ben-Hur

Starring: Jack Huston, Toby Kebbell, Morgan Freeman, Nazanin Boniadi

Rated: PG-13

Tomatometer:30%

Synopsis: It’s the same plot as the old version, only worse.

What’s the Word: Nah. Ben-Hur has been adapted before, and this new version isn’t an improvement, wrote Philadelphia Inquirer Tirdad Derakhshani: “Dominated by CGI effects, it's a soap opera better fit for basic cable.” The lack of real plot points and star turned Ben-Hur into a dollar store version of the bigger, gutsier movies of its kind. “It needed a star like the Russell Crowe of Gladiator to provide dramatic heft. What is Ben-Hur without a platform of moral grandeur? Not much,” wrote Stephen Holden for the New York Times. At Christianity Today, critic Alissa Wilkinson had a particularly moving take: It’s not a good movie, but it tells a meaningful story. “Give me [this] Ben-Hur — with its pulsating battles and chariot races, its proclamation that mercy and sacrifice are more revolutionary than anything you can cook up with swords or chariots — over any of this summer's exhausting superhero movies,” she wrote.

Released August 19

Spa Night

Starring: Joe Seo

Rated: NR

Tomatometer: 91%

Synopsis: A shy 18-year-old explores his sexuality in the spas and karaoke bars in Los Angeles’ Koreatown.

What’s the Word: It’s a delicate and difficult movie about the tug of war between parental expectations and self-love. “[The film's directors] approach moments of sensuality subtly, as the camera languidly wades into the steamy saunas and the monochromatic showers where David’s interest in the unknown begins to percolate. He’s simultaneously frightened and enlivened by the possibilities of touching a man,” wrote Sam Fragoso for The Wrap. For writer Noel Murray at the A.V. Club, it’s a little too indirect. He said, “ Spa Night does a fine job of articulating the existential ennui of someone who loves his parents but knows he can never be what they were expecting.” At The Guardian, Nigel M. Smith felt that the the movie belonged more to the protagonist’s parents than his own inner crisis. “[Andrew] Ahn is more successful at relaying the emotional complexity of David’s parents’ plight as Korean immigrants fighting for a better life for their son. It’s their story that resonates in the end.”

Released August 19

Pete’s Dragon

Starring: Bryce Dallas Howard, Robert Redford, Oakes Fegley, Karl Urban

Rated: PG

Tomatometer:85%

Synopsis: A boy and his dragon best friend go on the adventure of a lifetime.

What’s The Word: The childhood classic gets the modern-day revisitation it deserves. “As with its equally charming The Jungle Book back in April, the Mouse House has skillfully rummaged through its mothballed back catalog and given a 21st-century makeover to one of its lesser, goofier titles, with magical results,” wrote EW ’s Chris Nashawaty. At Brooklyn Magazine, Jesse Hassenger likened it to a “kiddie [Terrence] Malick” film. Pete’s Dragon ’s labor for love was too visible, wrote Will Leitch at The New Republic: “It works and works to move us because there’s an empty story at its core.”

Released August 12

Little Men

Starring: Greg Kinnear, Jennifer Ehle, Alfred Molina, Theo Taplitz

Rated: PG

Tomatometer: 95%

Synopsis: A young boy’s new friendship is in jeopardy when his parents raise the rent of his new pal’s mother’s store.

What’s the Word: It’ll sneak up on you with its sincerity. “[Director Ira] Sachs, a clear-eyed humanist, honors all his characters' pained perspectives,” wrote Alan Scherstuhl for Village Voice.

At Christianity Today, Alissa Wilkinson praised the film's depiction of the quiet awkwardness of growing up: “ Little Men captures that Brooklyn perfectly while quietly meditating on some universal experiences: the anxiety of discovering who you are as you grow up; the trouble of preserving friendships when the things that kept you together fall apart; the fraught parent-child relationship where nobody is really to blame.”

The Film Stage’s Dan Schindel suggested that L i ttle Men 's power comes from the contrast of adult and child friendships: “The contrast between the straightforwardness of these kids and the roiling, mixed emotions of the adults is simple, even archetypal, and it works.”

Released August 5

The Land

Starring: Moises Arias, Jorge Lendeborg Jr, Erykah Badu, Rafi Gavron, Machine Gun Kelly

Rated: NR

Tomatometer:64%

Synopsis: A group of teens accidentally become involved with a drug queenpin, risking their lives and friendships.

What’s the Word: It’s a big summer for Cleveland, and The Land taps into the city’s unique vibe. Steven Caple Jr. is the latest contemporary of Creed director Ryan Coogler to deserve a big studio’s support. “Caple emphasizes the desperation that breeds street crime, and he never tries to puff his kids up into heroes. They're just kids who feel insulted by the few prospects that seem available to them,” wrote Alan Scherstuhl for Village Voice. At Guff.com, Fred Toppel compared the movie to Goodfellas, and I hope he’s not still sore from that reach. He got something right: “ The Land is a crime film that is also a love letter to Cleveland culture.” One standout to watch: star and rapper Ezzy, whose voice shines on the track “Goodbye ” — a good end of summer song reminiscent of "old Kanye West."

Released July 29

Don’t Think Twice

Starring: Keegan-Michael Key, Gillian Jacobs, Kate Micucci, Mike Birbiglia

Rated: R

Tomatometer:100%

Synopsis: A member of an improv group gets a big break on an SNL -like show, and others in the troupe begin to worry that they’ll be left behind.

What’s The Word: You don't have to be an alum of a college comedy troupe to feel the movie’s deeper messages about success and jealousy in close friendships. “ Don’t Think Twice is a candid film about the division between enthusiasm and talent, the unbridled passion for an art form versus one’s actual ability,” wrote Sam Fragoso for The Wrap. The writing is smart on friendships, but Mike Birbiglia’s directing shouldn’t go unnoticed. “During the improv scenes, his camera freely roams among the performers while they conjure bits from nowhere,” wrote Andrew Lapin for NPR. “It's alternately hysterical and heartbreaking, comedy by way of John Cassavetes, who gets an appropriate shout-out.” This is a movie about the comedy industry that’s removed enough to not feel like it’s licking its own wounds, according to BuzzFeed’s Alison Willmore. “It’s tender and believable while maintaining enough distance on its material to give it form, telling a story rather than a series of anecdotes,” Willmore wrote.

Released July 22

Captain Fantastic

Starring: Viggo Mortensen, Frank Langella

Rated: R

Tomatometer: 75%

Synopsis: A couple raises their children in an intellectually stimulating wilderness home, a setup that’s threatened when the family has to engage with the real world after the mother’s suicide.

What’s The Word: The movie has a “wonderful wryness,” according to R29’s own Elizabeth Kiefer. Some of it is charming, wrote The Hollywood Reporter ’s Leslie Felperin, but most of it is overdone movie magic: “This is really a movie for upper-middle class hipsters who once fancied themselves firebrands and status quo-challengers in college, but now consider only buying organic food at Whole Foods and not vaccinating their kids to be radical acts.” Viggo Mortensen is the flick’s undisputed star. “He’s totally believable as a man who’s set his own moral code and lived by it for years,” wrote Ed Frankl at Little White Lies. “As he realizes that he stands to lose his children to the outside world, Mortensen’s performance shifts up a gear, becoming more sensitive and moving.”

Released July 8

The Innocents

Starring: Lou de Laage, Agata Buzek

Rated: NR

Tomatometer: 85%

Synopsis: At the end of the Holocaust, a young doctor arrives at a convent to find several nuns pregnant and in the throes of a religious crisis.

What’s the Word: It’s a movie that treats rape and religiosity with graceful nuance. “Those women are painted as full, complex characters in a few deft strokes — women who are struggling after rape to know whether they believe in something anymore, to understand their vows of chastity, to live in the problem of theodicy every day,” wrote Christianity Today ’s Alissa Wilkinson. These serious topics are treated with an insightful degree of delicacy: “Laced with intensely emotional situations, it refuses to force the issue by pushing too hard,” wrote the Los Angeles Times ’ Kenneth Turan. “And it proves, yet again, that though moral and spiritual questions may not sound spellbinding, they often provide the most absorbing movie experiences.” At Variety, Justin Chang was struck by the give and take of each sister's piousness: “In the process, the sisters — despite wearing identical habits and seeming to radiate the same stiff severity — emerge as individuals with their own unique feelings, convictions, personal histories, and varying degrees of faith.”

Released July 1

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This Is The Only Running Playlist You Need This Week

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If you ask us, no workout is complete without a killer playlist — and running is no exception.

Whether you prefer the trails or the treadmill, the right songs can make the difference between a good run and great run. (No, that isn't just your addiction to pop talking.)

Plus, music has actually been found to improve people's performance during cardio workouts. A 2009 study, for example, suggested that music helps us power through fatigue more easily. See, even science wants you to run for your life with Yeezy at full volume.

We asked R29 staffers to share their favorite running songs, and they did not disappoint. This week, we've added five new tracks from Childish Gambino, Nicki Minaj, and more.

Below, we've rounded up some of the most motivational, energizing tracks out there all in one amazing playlist.

Check back in the following weeks for more of your favorite tracks — and don't forget to check out our regular workout playlist, too.

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Keira Knightley On Her Stalker: "I Am Scared Every Time I Go Outside"

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Revelations on just how deeply actress Keira Knightley has been rattled by her stalker have been revealed in court this week. Last month, musician Mark Revill pled guilty to stalking the actress at her house in north London for three months beginning in August, according to The Telegraph. This week, Knightley's lawyer read aloud her troubling victim impact statement in court. The perp has not only threatened the security of Knightley, but that of her husband James Righton — who chased him off their doorstep one time — and their one-and-a-half year-old daughter Edie.

"[Revill's] actions have had a severe impact on my life and the lives of my family," Knightley's statement read, per The Telegraph. "This man has caused me a lot of stress and panic. I am scared every time I go outside. When I return home I have to look behind me concerned, I don't know who might be on the shadows."

Knightley explained in the statement that although she and her family love their London neighborhood and hoped to raise their family there, they are now planning to move elsewhere as a direct result of the 49-year-old stalker's bizarre actions. According to The Telegraph, the man not only repeatedly waited outside Knightley's home, but drew an arrow pointing to her front door using chalk, meowed through her letterbox, and bombarded her with mail — including photos of cats, handwritten notes, and a USB containing images of cats and cat-themed music he recorded.

"I have had fan mail through the door in the past but never has it been God strange or concerning," the statement continues. "The thought of him being in he [ sic] other side of the door has left me quite shaken. If I was to see this man again I wouldn't know what to do. If I was with my child we wouldn't be able to run away easily. The thought of my daughter being at risk is my worst nightmare."

Revill has been handed an eight-week sentence, suspended for one year, as well as a court order to participate in a six-month mental health rehabilitation program. As for Knightley and her family, they shouldn't have to worry for the time-being. Revill has been slapped with an indefinite restraining order that bans him from going near or contacting Knightley or her family members.

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Your Mind Will Be Completely Blown By This Japanese Gift-Wrapping Method

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If you're currently sitting in your living room staring at an Everest-sized mountain of gifts that need to be wrapped, don't panic. First of all, the fact that you've already done all your holiday shopping is something to celebrate. I'm impressed! Second of all, there's a hack that's going to help you get all those presents packed up nice and pretty in no time at all.

A couple of years ago, a video of presents being wrapped at the Takashimaya Department Store in Japan went viral. The wrapper is impressively speedy with this method and only uses two pieces of tape. Think of how easy and fast it would be for you to wrap all those gifts that are currently barricading you into your bedroom if you could follow this special Japanese method. Lucky for you, YouTube exists, so you can find plenty of video tutorials like this one.

Now you, too, can employ this efficient gift-wrapping trick at home. Or, at least you can watch the videos over and over to relax — they're mesmerizing, no? Either way, the Japanese method will change your life, or at least your holiday season.

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Cuba Gooding Jr. Gives Drunk, Expletive-Ridden Speech At Award Show

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Cuba Gooding Jr. may be wishing he didn't have that last drink.

According to Page Six, Gooding took the stage at the Footwear News Achievement Awards in New York earlier this week to honor his designer friend John Varvatos. But, before giving Varvatos

the Social Impact Award he had some NSFW things he had to get off his chest. This included the lack of food served at the awards.

"Nothing says I love you like fucking sugar,” Gooding told the crowd in a video uploaded onto Instagram. “Fucking boxed lunched. I’m drunk now, motherfuckers. Deal with it.”

The people in attendance seemed to agree with him, laughing along. But the People v. O.J. Simpson actor wasn't done airing his grievances. Gooding continued his jokey rant, saying, "I thought the BET Awards were cheap. In the words of Spike Lee, excuse my language but, they can fuck you too, Spike.”

After delivering that line, even Gooding himself raised an eyebrow.

Gooding hasn't commented on his rant, but we did learn an important lesson from this: Always eat before you leave the house.

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Lady Gaga's Victoria's Secret Performance Gives Us A "Million Reasons" To Watch

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We still have to wait until Monday, December 5, to see just how well the superstars, super-lingerie, and supermodels mixed at this year's Victoria's Secret Fashion Show, but someone on the internet has given us a little sneak peek. A leaked video of Lady Gaga 's performance of "Million Reasons" shows that Mother Monster could be the highlight of the evening.

In a full-body-hugging, full-length semi-transparent gown adorned with roses, and an elegant updo, Gaga walks onstage to begin the melancholy Joanne single. She seems more the Gaga of those Tony Bennett duets than her weirder, wilder self. She's all class as she sings her heart out completely live (with a couple of wobbly, flat notes to prove it).

But the weirdness is there, if you look for it — and if we know Gaga, it's completely by design. This is the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show, an exuberant display of "perfect" bodies in elaborate costumes designed to get everyone in the mood to buy more this holiday season. We're used to seeing upbeat, flashy performances by pop stars to accompany the Angels' struts. Each model wears wings made up of flowers or giant pheasant feathers, and accompanying their delicate bras and underwear are billowing sleeves, floral embroidered skirts, and even lederhosen that seem to be an homage to ... Bavarian barmaids? They're also wearing superhero boots. None of that is strange in this context, of course.

And then there, in the middle of this Carnaval Oktoberfest Slumber Party on Mars, is Gaga, looking at them all mournfully, reaching out to their alien flower-feather-wings, and singing in a slight country twang about how badly she needs to cut herself free from her deceitful lover. CBS, if you cut this, you do not understand the human condition.

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