Members of the Reagan family dedicate their careers to protecting the people of New York City in this new episode of the popular police drama. Tom Selleck leads the cast as Frank Reagan, a New York City police commissioner.
When his millennial co-workers distract Jack (Joel McHale) with their juvenile antics, Brooke (Susannah Fielding) decides to install cubicles in the bullpen in this new episode. An adventure reporter struggles to adjust to a desk job in this comedy.
There's an easy answer to this: "Noble House" isn't a movie at all.
The first two books in James Clavell's Asian Saga series were produced as films, albeit more than two decades apart ("King Rat" was released in 1965, while "Tai-Pan" was released in 1986). But the next two books in the series were made as TV miniseries instead. "Shogun" aired in 1980, while "Noble House" aired in 1988.
Ashe (Sanaa Lathan) and Preston (Stephan James) investigate the leak of a controversial video featuring Deputy Beck (Tristan Mack Wilds) in this new episode. The pair must determine whether it was a setup, while Beck deals with the fallout of the video.
After 12 seasons of crime solving, prime-time supercouple Dr. Temperance Brennan (Emily Deschanel) and Agent Seeley Booth (David Boreanaz) tackle their final case in this series finale. Brennan is forensic anthropologist who reads clues left behind in victims' bones.
After 12 seasons of crime solving, prime-time supercouple Dr. Temperance Brennan (Emily Deschanel) and Agent Seeley Booth (David Boreanaz) tackle their final case in this series finale. Brennan is forensic anthropologist who reads clues left behind in victims' bones.
Sarah Jessica Parker's "Sex and the City" character once referred to the "exquisite pain" of being in love. It's a feeling that HBO fans know well: The network makes us fall in love with a show, and then, a few weeks later, it's gone, and we're left wondering what happened.
A very special guest checks into the hotel in this new episode, which sees Rihanna guest star as Marion Crane. Elsewhere, Dylan (Max Thieriot) struggles to deal with some devastating news. Freddie Highmore also stars as Norman Bates.
The wondrous world of Harry Potter returns to the screen in this spinoff film. Newt Scamander (Redmayne), a British wizard and expert on magical creatures, arrives in New York City in 1926 on his way to Arizona to return a beast to its natural habitat. When a magical creature escapes from his briefcase, it causes a mixup with unlucky non-wizard Jacob Kowalski (Fogler), and the situation escalates quickly, with many of the beasts disappearing into the city. Because of the escaped beasts, Newt finds himself in trouble with the local wizarding authorities, but with the help of Kowalski and a disgraced dark wizard hunter named Tina (Waterston) at his side, he sets out to dodge the authorities and recapture the escaped beasts before the magical community becomes exposed to the public at large.
When Ned's (Cranston) daughter Stephanie (Deutch) invites her family to meet her boyfriend, Laird (Franco), what she hoped would be a happy meet-and-greet turns into an explosive fireworks display. A straight-laced Ned immediately dislikes the eccentric and off-the-wall -- but exceptionally wealthy -- Laird, who is planning to ask Stephanie to marry him. When Ned refuses to give the union his blessing, the disappointment causes Laird to go all out in his mission to make Ned want to be his future father-in-law.
The events of the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing unfold in this story of terror and heroism. After brothers Tamerlan (Melikidze) and Dzhokhar (Wolff) Tsarnaev detonate two bombs at the iconic race, FBI Special Agent Richard DesLauriers (Bacon) and Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis (Goodman) launch a massive manhunt to find the suspects, while Officer Tommy Saunders (Wahlberg) works the front lines to get to the truth.
Jenna Elfman stars in "Imaginary Mary"
A pair of well-known comedians teams up for ABC's latest addition to its family-friendly prime-time lineup. Jenna Elfman, best known for playing the titular Dharma in "Dharma & Greg," and Rachel Dratch, famous for her years-long turn on "Saturday Night Live," star in the alphabet network's "Imaginary Mary," a new comedy that premieres Wednesday, March 29.