The best entertainment and arts this fall, according to our experts
From streaming a new entry in the Marvel Cinematic Universe to enjoying a reimagined Go-Go’s musical, there’s plenty of entertainment and arts to enjoy this fall.
Our culture experts break down the most anticipated TV shows, books, movies, art and music to keep on your radar. And for more about the performers and creators behind this transformative fall season, read full coverage from our critics and reporters.
The Times TV team picks the series we’re most looking forward to this season.
Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya in “Dune,” Daniel Craig’s final outing as James Bond in “No Time to Die” and Chloé Zhao directing Marvel’s “Eternals” highlight the fall movie slate.
Delta variant be damned, many of our favorite artists are either performing at star-studded festivals, headlining concerts or releasing new albums this fall.
Sally Rooney, Anthony Doerr, Maggie Nelson, Richard Powers, Jonathan Franzen — the list goes on. Four critics on kicking off a big, bookish fall.
“The Band’s Visit,” “Everybody’s Talking About Jamie,” “My Fair Lady” and, yes, “Hamilton.” Where and when to catch the biggest touring shows this fall.
Dominique Morisseau, the Go-Go’s musical, a Liza Minnelli-Aristophanes mash-up and — at long last — “The Band’s Visit”: your guide to the new season.
Yo-Yo Ma reprises his Bach marathon, the Ojai festival returns at long last and San Diego gathers at the new Rady Shell. Let the season begin.
A guide to the most promising art shows in the season ahead: Peter Paul Rubens, LaToya Ruby Frazier, Hans Holbein the Younger, Thonet chairs and more.
Times TV critic and avid true-crime watcher Lorraine Ali highlights the films and TV series to keep an eye on this fall.
Beyond “Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy” and new “Life Is Strange,” “Metroid” and “WarioWare” games are the stylistic “Deathloop,” the de-stressing fantasy “Lake” and more.
Venice, Telluride, Toronto and New York have full slates of movies, many holdovers from 2020. Bring your mask.
Critic Paula Woods is eagerly awaiting five mysteries by a diverse group of authors, including Colson Whitehead, that deserve your undivided attention.
Academy Museum, Chicano Moratorium, Japanese American graphic memoir. Compelling exhibitions are queued up for the season ahead.
Big releases probe COVID-19’s origins, Anthony Bourdain’s life, Tarana Burke’s survivor story, the Vanderbilts and one last serving of Trump.