Rochelle Oliver, who starred on Broadway in Lillian Hellman’s Toys in the Attic and Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and taught acting at New York’s respected Hb Studio since the 1970s, has died. She was 86.
Oliver died April 13, the Hb Studio announced. “Those who knew Rochelle will know what a luminous artist, sensitive and passionate teacher she was,” it said in an Instagram post. She died two days shy of her birthday.
For the big screen, Oliver starred in the Horton Foote-written 1918 (1985) and Courtship (1987) and appeared in such other films as The Happy Hooker (1975), Paul Mazursky‘s Next Stop, Greenwich Village (1976), John Sayles’ Lianna (1983), An Unremarkable Life (1989), Martin Brest’s Scent of a Woman (1992) and Woody Allen’s Hollywood Ending (2002).
She also recurred as Judge Grace Larkin on Law & Order from 1993-03.
A protégé of Uta Hagen — who also taught for decades at Hb and...
Oliver died April 13, the Hb Studio announced. “Those who knew Rochelle will know what a luminous artist, sensitive and passionate teacher she was,” it said in an Instagram post. She died two days shy of her birthday.
For the big screen, Oliver starred in the Horton Foote-written 1918 (1985) and Courtship (1987) and appeared in such other films as The Happy Hooker (1975), Paul Mazursky‘s Next Stop, Greenwich Village (1976), John Sayles’ Lianna (1983), An Unremarkable Life (1989), Martin Brest’s Scent of a Woman (1992) and Woody Allen’s Hollywood Ending (2002).
She also recurred as Judge Grace Larkin on Law & Order from 1993-03.
A protégé of Uta Hagen — who also taught for decades at Hb and...
- 5/7/2024
- by Mike Barnes
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Aaron Stanford is returning to the MCU, as it was revealed in the Deadpool & Wolverine trailer released during the Superbowl on Sunday. He is reprising the role of Pyro which he portrayed in X2 and X-Men: The Last Stand.
“I’m very excited to be revisiting this role, and couldn’t think of a better place for Pyro’s resurrection than the Deadpool universe,” Standford tells Deadline in a statement.
While details as to the plot of the film have thus far been under wraps, director Shawn Levy told Deadline at last year’s Toronto Film Festival that the goal was for the film to feel “grounded” and “real” — more like “a descendant of Midnight Run, and 48 Hours, and Planes, Trains and Automobiles” than “a descendant of Airplane.”
In a recent appearance on BroBible’s Post-Credit podcast, Matthew Vaughn, the filmmaker behind Marvel titles like X-Men: First Class,...
“I’m very excited to be revisiting this role, and couldn’t think of a better place for Pyro’s resurrection than the Deadpool universe,” Standford tells Deadline in a statement.
While details as to the plot of the film have thus far been under wraps, director Shawn Levy told Deadline at last year’s Toronto Film Festival that the goal was for the film to feel “grounded” and “real” — more like “a descendant of Midnight Run, and 48 Hours, and Planes, Trains and Automobiles” than “a descendant of Airplane.”
In a recent appearance on BroBible’s Post-Credit podcast, Matthew Vaughn, the filmmaker behind Marvel titles like X-Men: First Class,...
- 2/13/2024
- by Rosy Cordero
- Deadline Film + TV
Actor Treat Williams died in a motorcycle accident near his southern Vermont home on Monday. As per The New York Times, Williams – who was wearing a helmet at the time of the accident – suffered critical injuries and was pronounced dead at a medical center in Albany, New York, after being airlifted there. The driver of the other vehicle was not hospitalized, and a police investigation is underway. Williams was 71 years old.
The film, television, and theater performer first came to prominence in the original production of “Grease” in the role of Danny Zuko. In 1979, he starred in Milos Forman’s film version of the musical “Hair” and, in 1981, he played the lead role in Sidney Lumet’s epic NYPD film “Prince of the City,” based on an actual investigation into police corruption. (Both roles landed him Golden Globe nominations.) In 1996, he was nominated for an Emmy for the HBO film “The Late Shift,...
The film, television, and theater performer first came to prominence in the original production of “Grease” in the role of Danny Zuko. In 1979, he starred in Milos Forman’s film version of the musical “Hair” and, in 1981, he played the lead role in Sidney Lumet’s epic NYPD film “Prince of the City,” based on an actual investigation into police corruption. (Both roles landed him Golden Globe nominations.) In 1996, he was nominated for an Emmy for the HBO film “The Late Shift,...
- 6/13/2023
- by Jordan Hoffman
- Gold Derby
Acoustic trio Nickel Creek have reunited to announce a new album and release their first new music in nine years. Celebrants, the follow-up to Chris Thile, Sean Watkins, and Sara Watkins’ 2014 release A Dotted Line, will arrive March 24.
The album’s first single is “Strangers,” which revolves around a swift finger-style guitar part and lead vocal from Sean Watkins. The lyrics describe the awkwardness of meeting a long-lost friend after some time. “It’s been too long, stranger/Guess even hard times fly/And leave us speechless in the darkness,...
The album’s first single is “Strangers,” which revolves around a swift finger-style guitar part and lead vocal from Sean Watkins. The lyrics describe the awkwardness of meeting a long-lost friend after some time. “It’s been too long, stranger/Guess even hard times fly/And leave us speechless in the darkness,...
- 1/24/2023
- by Jon Freeman
- Rollingstone.com
It appears people have finally had enough of the Harvey Weinstein story: “Hollywood Ending,” the new book from media reporter Ken Auletta, has fizzled in its first three weeks of sales with only 2,600 copies sold. Npd BookScan, which tracks print book sales in the U.S., reported Thursday that 690 copies were sold last week, the book’s third week of publication. A total of 1,533 copies were sold in the first week, which dropped to 375 the following week. That brought total sales to 2,598. It’s “a pretty weak debut for a book from a writer of this caliber, on a topic that was this significant at the time that it happened,” Npd analyst Kristen McLean told TheWrap. Even on Martha’s Vineyard, where Weinstein once spent summers at a sprawling vacation home, the local Edgartown bookstore has sold only three copies. “If you want to know why I think it hasn’t sold,...
- 8/4/2022
- by Harper Lambert
- The Wrap
Entering the “likely a money-laundering scheme for Spanish businessmen” part of his European travelogue era, Woody Allen turns uniquely narrow-minded and bitter with Rifkin’s Festival, which takes aim at the film culture that’s both alienated and abandoned him this past decade. Exciting though it is to see the proverbial gloves come off, the hands, sadly, don’t get very dirty.
Beginning on the therapist couch, film critic, professor, and failed novelist Mort Rifkin recounts the story of how he accompanied his wife Sue (Gina Gershon) to the prestigious San Sebastián International Film Festival, where she was handling publicity for Philippe (Louis Garrel), a socially conscious, classic-American-cinema-loving filmmaker diametrically opposed to Mort’s own cinephilic principles. It’s hard to pinpoint what straw man Allen’s exactly going after here—perhaps Phillippe is just a stand-in for all the millennial A24 directors who’ve pissed him off in recent years—but regardless,...
Beginning on the therapist couch, film critic, professor, and failed novelist Mort Rifkin recounts the story of how he accompanied his wife Sue (Gina Gershon) to the prestigious San Sebastián International Film Festival, where she was handling publicity for Philippe (Louis Garrel), a socially conscious, classic-American-cinema-loving filmmaker diametrically opposed to Mort’s own cinephilic principles. It’s hard to pinpoint what straw man Allen’s exactly going after here—perhaps Phillippe is just a stand-in for all the millennial A24 directors who’ve pissed him off in recent years—but regardless,...
- 1/27/2022
- by Ethan Vestby
- The Film Stage
Giovani Borba’s “Empty House,” Mar Pescio’s “That Weekend” and Martin Desalvo’s “El Ciego, Border With Death” will feature in a notable Sanfic Goes to Cannes pix-in-post showcase at July’s Marché du Film.
Two further films, both psychological dramas, bring large breath to the selection: Flavio Botelho’s tragic but ultimately life-celebratory “The Life That’s Left”; and “Patient(ly),” a searing critique of Chile’s healthcare system.
A new talent springboard, Sanfic Goes to Cannes is the first time Sanfic has made the Marché’s Goes to Cannes films-at-rough-cut strand. That marks just the latest expansive move for Sanfic, Chile’s Santiago Intl. Film Festival. Framing five titles which all screened at Sanfic Industria’s Work in Progress in March, the Cannes lineup also marks fruit of a bold, counter-intuitive move by Sanfic Industria.
As other festivals pushed back to later in 2021, Sanfic’s industry arm moved into the breach,...
Two further films, both psychological dramas, bring large breath to the selection: Flavio Botelho’s tragic but ultimately life-celebratory “The Life That’s Left”; and “Patient(ly),” a searing critique of Chile’s healthcare system.
A new talent springboard, Sanfic Goes to Cannes is the first time Sanfic has made the Marché’s Goes to Cannes films-at-rough-cut strand. That marks just the latest expansive move for Sanfic, Chile’s Santiago Intl. Film Festival. Framing five titles which all screened at Sanfic Industria’s Work in Progress in March, the Cannes lineup also marks fruit of a bold, counter-intuitive move by Sanfic Industria.
As other festivals pushed back to later in 2021, Sanfic’s industry arm moved into the breach,...
- 7/9/2021
- by John Hopewell
- Variety Film + TV
Brazil’s “The Life That’s Left,” Costa Rica’s “Crono-Capsulas” and Chilean drama series “Silver Bridge” and “La Vida de Nosotros” ran out as four of the big winners at a vibrant and packed online 2021 Sanfic Industria that also underscored the depth of new talent in Latin America.
Running March 18-25, Sanfic Industria, the constantly expanding industry arm climaxed a day later with the announcement of a huge haul in industry prizes, the largest from Mexico’s genre powerhouse Mórbido, plus the lineup for Sanfic Goes to Cannes, a new Cannes Film Market project event, and notification that the two biggest winners at Santiago Series Lab, another new initiative, had scored pitching berths at Series Mania and Conecta Fiction.
Gearing up for its 17th edition this August, Sanfic is still expanding, bidding to become the biggest film festival in industry terms in Latin America. It is also well placed,...
Running March 18-25, Sanfic Industria, the constantly expanding industry arm climaxed a day later with the announcement of a huge haul in industry prizes, the largest from Mexico’s genre powerhouse Mórbido, plus the lineup for Sanfic Goes to Cannes, a new Cannes Film Market project event, and notification that the two biggest winners at Santiago Series Lab, another new initiative, had scored pitching berths at Series Mania and Conecta Fiction.
Gearing up for its 17th edition this August, Sanfic is still expanding, bidding to become the biggest film festival in industry terms in Latin America. It is also well placed,...
- 3/26/2021
- by John Hopewell and Jamie Lang
- Variety Film + TV
In “Darkness by Day,” Argentine Martin Desalvo‘s 2013 breakthrough, a reported rabies outbreak gradually creeps nearer to two women cousins, stuck in their isolated family home. Violence will let reign, but for most of its going, Desalvo seems more interested on building tension and the relationship between the two women.
Eight years later, Desalvo returns with “El Ciego,” another mix of suspense drama, horror beats and character study. Juana, mid-teens, tends a charcoal pit with her drunk, morose father Rubén, and by night slips out to attend house parties with her rap loving friends. One day, she stumbles on El Ciego, a forbidden thicket which, superstition has it, reveal dark secrets. Anybody who enters, moreover, will get lost forever. After penetrating El Ciego, Juana becomes obsessed with knowing more about her mother who died mysteriously when she was a child.
In other hands, this could have become a whodunnit. Desalvo...
Eight years later, Desalvo returns with “El Ciego,” another mix of suspense drama, horror beats and character study. Juana, mid-teens, tends a charcoal pit with her drunk, morose father Rubén, and by night slips out to attend house parties with her rap loving friends. One day, she stumbles on El Ciego, a forbidden thicket which, superstition has it, reveal dark secrets. Anybody who enters, moreover, will get lost forever. After penetrating El Ciego, Juana becomes obsessed with knowing more about her mother who died mysteriously when she was a child.
In other hands, this could have become a whodunnit. Desalvo...
- 3/23/2021
- by John Hopewell
- Variety Film + TV
Nearly three decades since he departed this mortal coil, Federico Fellini will now be featured in a new film. Fear not, some sort of CGI recreation is not planned for Slovakian filmmaker Matej Mináč’s forthcoming feature Never Give Up. Rather, the film will incorporate never-before-seen footage of the Italian maestro in the meta road trip tale.
Cineuropa reports the project, inspired by Mináč’s own experiences, will follow a “young and hapless film director traveling to Italy to do an interview with the titan of world cinema” in the year 1989, accompanied by a seven-person crew. Told with a comical touch, “the film will explore the hard life of filmmakers set against the backdrop of three ideologies – socialism, nationalism and early capitalism,” says producer Jana Motyčková.
As to how Fellini precisely figures in, never-before-seen unused footage shot for Mináč’s 1989 documentary The Portrait of Director will be used. For the documentary,...
Cineuropa reports the project, inspired by Mináč’s own experiences, will follow a “young and hapless film director traveling to Italy to do an interview with the titan of world cinema” in the year 1989, accompanied by a seven-person crew. Told with a comical touch, “the film will explore the hard life of filmmakers set against the backdrop of three ideologies – socialism, nationalism and early capitalism,” says producer Jana Motyčková.
As to how Fellini precisely figures in, never-before-seen unused footage shot for Mináč’s 1989 documentary The Portrait of Director will be used. For the documentary,...
- 3/23/2021
- by Jordan Raup
- The Film Stage
Pushed back from last August and now held online as Covid-19 still rages in Chile, Sanfic Industria, the high-energy industry part of Santiago de Chile’s Sanfic festival, runs March 18-26. Given its context, it bids to play an even more crucial role in Latin America’s industry re-set after experiencing a more punishing pandemic impact than any other part of the world.
Sanfic Industria: More Growth, Despite Covid-19
Over the last 12 months, film and TV events, whether virtual or on-site, have almost all slimmed. Sanfic Industria, in contrast, is expanding, adding a much-awaited Series Lab showcase. Santiago Lab has already evolved massively over the last two-to-three years, blossoming from a tight-knit niche launchpad for promising titles to a can’t-miss event for many of the region’s most ambitious projects.
Further growth, and a move into drama series, looked inevitable. Over the last five years, high-end drama series production...
Sanfic Industria: More Growth, Despite Covid-19
Over the last 12 months, film and TV events, whether virtual or on-site, have almost all slimmed. Sanfic Industria, in contrast, is expanding, adding a much-awaited Series Lab showcase. Santiago Lab has already evolved massively over the last two-to-three years, blossoming from a tight-knit niche launchpad for promising titles to a can’t-miss event for many of the region’s most ambitious projects.
Further growth, and a move into drama series, looked inevitable. Over the last five years, high-end drama series production...
- 3/18/2021
- by John Hopewell and Jamie Lang
- Variety Film + TV
Mark Webber likes to go his own way, animated by a peaceful yet intense desire to make cinema out of the emotional landscape of real life. In addition to a solid acting career, which has seen him cross paths with Gus Van Sant, Jim Jarmusch (Broken Flowers), Woody Allen (Hollywood Ending) and Edgar Wright (Scott Pilgrim vs. the World), he is now five movies deep into his own filmography as director, with his latest (The Place of No Words) being presented at the American Film Festival in Wroclaw, where he also received the Indie Star Award at the 10th edition of the Festival.…...
- 10/19/2020
- by Tommaso Tocci
- IONCINEMA.com
Bob Dorian, actor, magician (The Amazing Dorian) and the first prime-time host of American Movie Classics, died June 15, his family announced. He was 85.
Born in Brooklyn, NY, Dorian performed on the stage, radio, television and film. He appeared in features including Woody Allen’s Hollywood Ending and The Curse of the Jade Scorpion, and lent his voice to Sam Raimi’s 1981 horror classic The Evil Dead as an archaeologist whose tape-recorded readings from an ancient text resurrect a demon.
He also had a recurring role on one of AMC’s first original series, Remember WENN, which premiered in 1996, but it is as American Movie Classics’ first prime-time host for which he is best known. The network launched in 1984 as a premium channel focused on classic movies. Dorian introduced the films in the comfortable setting of a living room, providing viewers with Hollywood history and behind-the-scenes trivia.
An avowed movie buff,...
Born in Brooklyn, NY, Dorian performed on the stage, radio, television and film. He appeared in features including Woody Allen’s Hollywood Ending and The Curse of the Jade Scorpion, and lent his voice to Sam Raimi’s 1981 horror classic The Evil Dead as an archaeologist whose tape-recorded readings from an ancient text resurrect a demon.
He also had a recurring role on one of AMC’s first original series, Remember WENN, which premiered in 1996, but it is as American Movie Classics’ first prime-time host for which he is best known. The network launched in 1984 as a premium channel focused on classic movies. Dorian introduced the films in the comfortable setting of a living room, providing viewers with Hollywood history and behind-the-scenes trivia.
An avowed movie buff,...
- 6/25/2019
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
Starcrawler sound like they’re caught between two worlds on “Hollywood Ending,” a glittery L.A. interzone between Seventies riff-rockers like Cheap Trick and the rougher, ponderous melodies of Dinosaur Jr. It’s an unusual pairing — not nearly as natural as the way grunge artists blended Aerosmith with Black Flag — but the band figured out a clever way of rolling it out, starting with jittery, Tom Petty-ish verses before going off on a loose and jammy outro that really has nothing to do with the rest of the song.
- 1/15/2019
- by Kory Grow
- Rollingstone.com
Despite horror’s thematic binding to the world’s most prominent fears – this a year of parental devastation and horrors inside family units – my top genre films from 2018 still revel in variety: arachnid puppets, Nazi experiments, zombie musicals alike. Such morbid creativity would stick out like a sore severed thumb any other year, but in 2018? You could drown out aforementioned absurdity with Nicolas Cage’s descent into occult revenge madness alone.
As I said, it’s been a wild year for horror – and a damn fine one at that.
My ranking comes after killing many darlings, given my final tally of 118 seen horror movies this year. Dig deeper, past these listed twenty, and you’ll still find plenty of gems. The following treasures just shine a little brighter and demand more attention. Feature debuts, streaming darlings, mainstream nightmares, they’re all here. It’s time for another end of year horror countdown,...
As I said, it’s been a wild year for horror – and a damn fine one at that.
My ranking comes after killing many darlings, given my final tally of 118 seen horror movies this year. Dig deeper, past these listed twenty, and you’ll still find plenty of gems. The following treasures just shine a little brighter and demand more attention. Feature debuts, streaming darlings, mainstream nightmares, they’re all here. It’s time for another end of year horror countdown,...
- 12/29/2018
- by Matt Donato
- We Got This Covered
We’re accustomed to horror movies using creativity and artistry to cover up their low budgets; a filmmaker can create plenty of scares with one set and a cast of four. The low-budget musical, on the other hand, is expected to provide splashy razzle-dazzle and grandeur with the same economy of means, and it’s a tougher genre to make succeed on a dime. That said, if you’re willing to overlook a little scruffiness at the edges, it’s a Christmas miracle that the Scottish import “Anna and the Apocalypse” works so well as both a horror movie and a musical.
And “Christmas miracle” should be taken literally, because this is a holiday movie as well. And if you don’t think the undead mix well with musical numbers and gaudy Yuletide decor, “Anna” might be the movie to change your mind.
It’s a film that the protagonist...
And “Christmas miracle” should be taken literally, because this is a holiday movie as well. And if you don’t think the undead mix well with musical numbers and gaudy Yuletide decor, “Anna” might be the movie to change your mind.
It’s a film that the protagonist...
- 11/29/2018
- by Alonso Duralde
- The Wrap
Sometimes, you are so excited about a film that you just have to do a flash mob. Ahead of the November 30th release of Anna and the Apocalypse from Orion Pictures, a group of Austinites and zombies participated in a flash mob in downtown Austin, Texas. Also: The Rainbow Experiment VOD and DVD release details, and Death Kiss is coming to DVD as well.
Details on the Anna and the Apocalypse Flash Mob in Austin: "To celebrate the critically-acclaimed Christmas zombie high-school musical Anna And The Apocalypse, the movie came to life in Austin, TX with a flash mob dance in downtown at the popular Lamar Pedestrian Bridge to get the holidays started with a bloody bang (and possibly a bite).
In anticipation of Orion Pictures' new holiday film, a group of Austinites & zombies participated in a Surprise flash mob to the original song from the film, "Hollywood Ending" while...
Details on the Anna and the Apocalypse Flash Mob in Austin: "To celebrate the critically-acclaimed Christmas zombie high-school musical Anna And The Apocalypse, the movie came to life in Austin, TX with a flash mob dance in downtown at the popular Lamar Pedestrian Bridge to get the holidays started with a bloody bang (and possibly a bite).
In anticipation of Orion Pictures' new holiday film, a group of Austinites & zombies participated in a Surprise flash mob to the original song from the film, "Hollywood Ending" while...
- 11/28/2018
- by Tamika Jones
- DailyDead
Chicago – Tiffani Thiessen’s career has been “cooking” lately, as she’s been hosting “Dinner at Tiffani’s” for the Cooking Channel and has a new recipe book out called “Pull Up a Chair.” The former “Saved by the Bell” and “Beverly Hills 90210” star recently appeared at Anderson’s Bookshop in Naperville (Illinois).
Tiffani Thiessen at Anderson’s Bookshop for “Pull Up a Chair”
Photo credit: Joe Arce of Starstruck Foto for HollywoodChicago.com
She was born Tiffani Amber Thiessen in Long Beach, California, and began her career as a teenager. After being crowned Miss Junior America in 1987, she was named Cover Girl Magazine’s “Model of the Year” in 1989, the same year she began her four season stint on “Saved by the Bell” as Kelly Kapowski. There were spin-offs of the original show (“The College Years” and “Wedding in Las Vegas”), until she graduated to “Beverly Hills 90210” in 1994, where she...
Tiffani Thiessen at Anderson’s Bookshop for “Pull Up a Chair”
Photo credit: Joe Arce of Starstruck Foto for HollywoodChicago.com
She was born Tiffani Amber Thiessen in Long Beach, California, and began her career as a teenager. After being crowned Miss Junior America in 1987, she was named Cover Girl Magazine’s “Model of the Year” in 1989, the same year she began her four season stint on “Saved by the Bell” as Kelly Kapowski. There were spin-offs of the original show (“The College Years” and “Wedding in Las Vegas”), until she graduated to “Beverly Hills 90210” in 1994, where she...
- 11/6/2018
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
A prominent commercial filmmaker in Hong Kong since the mid-80s, the career path and status of Johnnie To is distinctive from contemporaries such as John Woo, Tsui Hark, and Wong Kar-wai. Solely committed to his national cinema, he made a point of never venturing to Hollywood and even formed his own production company, Milkyway Image, in 1996. Only in the mid-2000s when films like Breaking News (2005) and Election (2006) premiered at the Cannes Film Festival was Johnnie To given auteur consideration by Western critics and audiences. Even then, it was only his crime and action genre work, characterized by their elegant style and directorial control, that found critical success and was seen as commercially viable for international markets. With over 50 features under his belt, Johnnie To has a massive oeuvre not bound to any single mode and while he is one of contemporary cinema’s greatest formalist filmmakers, his fluency in visual storytelling transcends genre.
- 10/28/2017
- MUBI
Lights, camera…it's A Night at the Movies night! Dancing With the Stars took inspiration from the big screen for its show on Monday night, with the remaining couples performing songs to convey a specific movie genre. And guess who turned up as a guest judge? Shania Twain...who has never been in a movie, but whatever! She's got an album to promote and who doesn't love Shania?! Sadly, it wasn't a Hollywood ending for one couple, as Nick Lachey and Peta Murgatroyd, Terrell Owens and Cheryl Burke, and Victoria Arlen and Val Chmerkovskiy (For real?!),found themselves in jeopardy. And the couple to leave the competition? Nick and Peta. "I enjoyed it," the 98 Degrees...
- 10/24/2017
- E! Online
As a massive fan of happy-go-not-so-lucky genre hybrids, it should come as no shock that I abso-f$%king-lutely dig John McPhail’s Anna And The Apocalypse – his Scottish Christmas horror musical zombie invasion flick with a heart of solid gold (co-written by Ryan McHenry). High School Musical meets Footloose meets Shaun of the Dead, with all the yuletide yucks you could want. Each song so deliberate in message – warnings about social media hypnotism to escaping small-town mentalities – and each zombie interaction coated in appropriate amounts of bloodshed. Gremlins, Anna And The Apocolypse, Black Christmas – my new favorite X-Mas triple feature.
Ella Hunt stars as Anna, a high school teen who dreams of jet-setting before her university stint and the pursuit of a successful career. Father Tony (Mark Benton) disagrees with his daughter’s decision – as any protective parent would – but a freak event keeps Anna from fleeing her simple little community – the zombie apocalypse.
Ella Hunt stars as Anna, a high school teen who dreams of jet-setting before her university stint and the pursuit of a successful career. Father Tony (Mark Benton) disagrees with his daughter’s decision – as any protective parent would – but a freak event keeps Anna from fleeing her simple little community – the zombie apocalypse.
- 9/25/2017
- by Matt Donato
- We Got This Covered
By Peter Belsito
Two Gay Dads. One Meddling Tiger Mom. What Could Go Wrong?
Coming out on DVD, Blu-ray & VOD in the U.S. & Canada August 15 from Gravitas Ventures.
Starring: Grace Guei, Barney Cheng and Michael Adam Hamilton
I really enjoyed this feature length comedy about modern international gay and family life and what modern parenthood can involve.
Oscar-winning producer Li-Kong Su (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon) and Stephen Israel (Swimming With Sharks, G.B.F.), give us Baby Steps, a comedy-drama directed, written and starring Barney Cheng about gay family issues in complicated dynamic of a cross-cultural and multi-generational Taiwanese-American family.
Danny, a Taiwanese-American man, longs to have a baby with his American boyfriend Tate, but their attempts at international surrogacy are complicated by Danny’s meddling mom, who wants to control every aspect of the process — all the way from Taipei. She descends upon them and their life together and proceeds...
Two Gay Dads. One Meddling Tiger Mom. What Could Go Wrong?
Coming out on DVD, Blu-ray & VOD in the U.S. & Canada August 15 from Gravitas Ventures.
Starring: Grace Guei, Barney Cheng and Michael Adam Hamilton
I really enjoyed this feature length comedy about modern international gay and family life and what modern parenthood can involve.
Oscar-winning producer Li-Kong Su (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon) and Stephen Israel (Swimming With Sharks, G.B.F.), give us Baby Steps, a comedy-drama directed, written and starring Barney Cheng about gay family issues in complicated dynamic of a cross-cultural and multi-generational Taiwanese-American family.
Danny, a Taiwanese-American man, longs to have a baby with his American boyfriend Tate, but their attempts at international surrogacy are complicated by Danny’s meddling mom, who wants to control every aspect of the process — all the way from Taipei. She descends upon them and their life together and proceeds...
- 8/16/2017
- by Sydney Levine
- Sydney's Buzz
There’s a classic movie and TV scene we’ve seen a thousand times — a courtroom or hearing room playing the role of battlefield for our heroes, who are armed only with their intelligence and the truth. With wit and skill, the righteous challenge their opponents, and the scene climaxes in a moment which spells clear victory for those on the side of good.
Read More: As Trump Withdraws from The Paris Agreement, Al Gore Just Became the Biggest Movie Star of the Summer
The classy versions of this scene will end with subdued silence and murmurs; the more cliched versions will probably see the room erupt with thunderous applause after the gavel rings out. But if you think we’re going to see either version of that scene when former FBI director James Comey appears before the Senate Intelligence Committee to testify regarding his interactions with the Trump administration,...
Read More: As Trump Withdraws from The Paris Agreement, Al Gore Just Became the Biggest Movie Star of the Summer
The classy versions of this scene will end with subdued silence and murmurs; the more cliched versions will probably see the room erupt with thunderous applause after the gavel rings out. But if you think we’re going to see either version of that scene when former FBI director James Comey appears before the Senate Intelligence Committee to testify regarding his interactions with the Trump administration,...
- 6/8/2017
- by Liz Shannon Miller
- Indiewire
Update with photo: Nat Geo just got its Hollywood ending. Rock climber Alex Honnond today pulled off the first-ever free solo climb of famed El Capitan’s 3,000-foot vertical rock face at Yosemite National Park, with National Geographic Documentary Films shooting the historic feat for a new docu feature. Tentatively titled Solo, the pic is from filmmakers Jimmy Chin and E. Chai Vasarhelyi, the team behind the 2015 Sundance audience award winner Meru. The pic will get a…...
- 6/3/2017
- Deadline
Need to catch up? Check out our previous Fargo recap here.
Things started to unravel in a hurry for both Stussy boys this week on Fargo, while Gloria got a new clue in Ennis’ murder — and a new friend!
Ray’s latest get-rich scheme is to impersonate his brother Emmit, shaving his mustache and putting on a curly wig to go down to Emmit’s bank and open that safe-deposit box. “Emmit” tells the bank manager he lost his key, and when he threatens to take his money elsewhere, the manager scrambles to get the box opened with a drill.
Things started to unravel in a hurry for both Stussy boys this week on Fargo, while Gloria got a new clue in Ennis’ murder — and a new friend!
Ray’s latest get-rich scheme is to impersonate his brother Emmit, shaving his mustache and putting on a curly wig to go down to Emmit’s bank and open that safe-deposit box. “Emmit” tells the bank manager he lost his key, and when he threatens to take his money elsewhere, the manager scrambles to get the box opened with a drill.
- 5/11/2017
- TVLine.com
Walter Bishop is becoming an actual bishop.
Fringe vet John Noble will appear in The Librarians‘ Season 4 premiere as Monsignor Vega, a Vatican bishop who is the secret leader of the Heretical Order of the Shadows, EW.com reports.
RelatedYoung Shakespeare Series Gets TNT Date
Additionally, the TNT series has tapped Rachel Nichols (Continuum) to recur as Nicole Noone, the mysteriously resurrected guardian of Flynn (played by Noah Wyle).
Ready for more of today’s newsy nuggets? Well…
* Mary McDonnell (Major Crimes) will guest-star in Fargo‘s May 17 episode as “the so-called storage queen of The Great Lakes region, Ruby Goldfarb,...
Fringe vet John Noble will appear in The Librarians‘ Season 4 premiere as Monsignor Vega, a Vatican bishop who is the secret leader of the Heretical Order of the Shadows, EW.com reports.
RelatedYoung Shakespeare Series Gets TNT Date
Additionally, the TNT series has tapped Rachel Nichols (Continuum) to recur as Nicole Noone, the mysteriously resurrected guardian of Flynn (played by Noah Wyle).
Ready for more of today’s newsy nuggets? Well…
* Mary McDonnell (Major Crimes) will guest-star in Fargo‘s May 17 episode as “the so-called storage queen of The Great Lakes region, Ruby Goldfarb,...
- 5/10/2017
- TVLine.com
FX’s forecast calls for Snowfall this summer.
RelatedHilary Swank Boards FX’s New Trust Drama
The John Singleton-produced drama series chronicling the start of the crack epidemic in Los Angeles will premiere on Wednesday, July 5 at 10/9c, the cabler has announced.
Created by Singleton (Boyz n the Hood), Eric Amadio and showrunner Dave Andron (Justified), who will executive-produce alongside Thomas Schlamme, Michael London and Trevor Engelson, Snowfall is set in Los Angeles circa 1983, where “A storm is coming and its name is crack,” says the synopsis.
RelatedRegina King, John Ridley Team for FX Series About Atlanta...
RelatedHilary Swank Boards FX’s New Trust Drama
The John Singleton-produced drama series chronicling the start of the crack epidemic in Los Angeles will premiere on Wednesday, July 5 at 10/9c, the cabler has announced.
Created by Singleton (Boyz n the Hood), Eric Amadio and showrunner Dave Andron (Justified), who will executive-produce alongside Thomas Schlamme, Michael London and Trevor Engelson, Snowfall is set in Los Angeles circa 1983, where “A storm is coming and its name is crack,” says the synopsis.
RelatedRegina King, John Ridley Team for FX Series About Atlanta...
- 5/8/2017
- TVLine.com
Donald Trump may not be appearing in American Horror Story‘s upcoming seventh season, but it looks like his political party will be well-represented.
RelatedAmerican Crime Story: Max Greenfield in Versace Season — See Photo
Series creator Ryan Murphy on Friday shared a chilling “tease” from Season 7, which he recently revealed to be inspired by the 2016 presidential election. Ready or not, here it comes:
–
Aside from its political theme, little is known about Ahs‘ seventh installment, save for a few inspired castings: Billie Lourde (Scream Queens) and Billy Eichner (Difficult People). As for which previous Ahs cast members are expected to return,...
RelatedAmerican Crime Story: Max Greenfield in Versace Season — See Photo
Series creator Ryan Murphy on Friday shared a chilling “tease” from Season 7, which he recently revealed to be inspired by the 2016 presidential election. Ready or not, here it comes:
–
Aside from its political theme, little is known about Ahs‘ seventh installment, save for a few inspired castings: Billie Lourde (Scream Queens) and Billy Eichner (Difficult People). As for which previous Ahs cast members are expected to return,...
- 5/5/2017
- TVLine.com
Let’s all pray there are no addiction demons in this one.
New Girl‘s Max Greenfield will be part of American Crime Story‘s third season, executive producer Ryan Murphy announced Friday via social media.
Greenfield later shared the news via Twitter.
PhotosA-List TV Titans’ Best & Worst: Every Ryan Murphy Series Ranked
No word yet on who Greenfield will play. Fans of American Horror Story will recall that the actor showed up in anthology series’ Hotel season as Gabriel, a drug addict who was raped by the horrifying Addiction Demon while at the Cortez.
The 10-episode FX drama centers...
New Girl‘s Max Greenfield will be part of American Crime Story‘s third season, executive producer Ryan Murphy announced Friday via social media.
Greenfield later shared the news via Twitter.
PhotosA-List TV Titans’ Best & Worst: Every Ryan Murphy Series Ranked
No word yet on who Greenfield will play. Fans of American Horror Story will recall that the actor showed up in anthology series’ Hotel season as Gabriel, a drug addict who was raped by the horrifying Addiction Demon while at the Cortez.
The 10-episode FX drama centers...
- 5/5/2017
- TVLine.com
“Sometimes, making evil duck and find another hole is the best that we can do.”. On tonight’s episode of Madam Secretary, Elizabeth, and her staff attempt to stop human trafficking in Kyrgyzstan. It’s a mission that hits too close to home. One that doesn’t have that classic Hollywood ending. The issue of human trafficking is an important one. I have seen situations like this either on the news or from other crime drama shows. Sometimes it ends well, but other times, it ends in tragedy. When the FBI’s hostage extraction team found the truck that held the captive girls, my heart
Madam Secretary: Team Gets Rattled. Henry Finds Cult Bomb.
Madam Secretary: Team Gets Rattled. Henry Finds Cult Bomb.
- 4/10/2017
- by Tiffany C. Lockhart
- TVovermind.com
Director Ry Russo-Young forgot to feel the pressure. The Sundance ingénue's latest feature, Before I Fall, is an adaptation of the best-selling Y.A. novel about a somewhat reluctant high school mean girl, Samantha (Zoey Deutch), who meets her early demise in a car wreck, only to wake up the next day...and the next day and the next day on a seemingly endless loop.
Despite tween fans' rabid protection of their most beloved books and the fact that they can live in her Twitter mentions for the rest of time, Russo-Young isn't fazed -- or wasn't. "Uhh, you're freaking me out!" she joked during a recent call with Et, before explaining, "I actually took great comfort in the fact that I could look online and see what fans connected to about the book, what lines they were holding dear to their hearts, what moved them. Then those things, to me, were like, 'I...
Despite tween fans' rabid protection of their most beloved books and the fact that they can live in her Twitter mentions for the rest of time, Russo-Young isn't fazed -- or wasn't. "Uhh, you're freaking me out!" she joked during a recent call with Et, before explaining, "I actually took great comfort in the fact that I could look online and see what fans connected to about the book, what lines they were holding dear to their hearts, what moved them. Then those things, to me, were like, 'I...
- 3/3/2017
- Entertainment Tonight
These were supposed to be the Academy Awards of Trump. These were supposed to be the Oscars where every joke, every speech, every absent nominee (except for Natalie Portman) was in reference to the two-bit reality television star who — despite claiming that he wouldn’t be tuning in — probably had a television installed in the Oval Office just so he could watch the broadcast. And, for almost four hours, they kind of were. And then someone handed Warren Beatty the wrong envelope and the night was given a Hollywood ending unlike anything we had ever seen.
But, as much as “La La Land” producer Jordan Horowitz’s urgent, eminently generous handoff of the Best Picture prize end up becoming the defining story, Trump still loomed over a large part of the evening. If anything, the mix-up spared him an additional burn after he had been charred by one celebrity after another.
But, as much as “La La Land” producer Jordan Horowitz’s urgent, eminently generous handoff of the Best Picture prize end up becoming the defining story, Trump still loomed over a large part of the evening. If anything, the mix-up spared him an additional burn after he had been charred by one celebrity after another.
- 2/27/2017
- by David Ehrlich
- Indiewire
She’s played a fairytale princess on Once Upon a Time and a teenager with supernatural powers in the Hallmark channel’s Good Witch, but actress Bailee Madison needed some real life magic (and a little help from Wayfair) to transform her run-of-the-mill garage into a fabulous hangout spot.
“After months of filming on location or a long day of travel it’s the best feeling to be able to look forward to walking into my own space where I get to be me!” says Madison, 17. To create the chic and cozy space she’s dubbed her “lady cave,” the...
“After months of filming on location or a long day of travel it’s the best feeling to be able to look forward to walking into my own space where I get to be me!” says Madison, 17. To create the chic and cozy space she’s dubbed her “lady cave,” the...
- 1/25/2017
- by Mackenzie Schmidt
- PEOPLE.com
Patrick Downes and Jessica Kensky had only been married for seven months when they headed to the finish line of the Boston Marathon on April 15, 2013, to cheer on the runners.
But then two homemade bombs exploded, killing three and wounding countless others at the race — including Downes and Kensky, who have had “30 to 40” surgeries on their limbs (and even their ears, which were ruptured in the explosions).
“The bombing did not leave one part of our lives untouched,” Kensky tells People.
“When you get married, you’re on this high,” she says. “You feel unstoppable. You have so many hopes and dreams and goals.
But then two homemade bombs exploded, killing three and wounding countless others at the race — including Downes and Kensky, who have had “30 to 40” surgeries on their limbs (and even their ears, which were ruptured in the explosions).
“The bombing did not leave one part of our lives untouched,” Kensky tells People.
“When you get married, you’re on this high,” she says. “You feel unstoppable. You have so many hopes and dreams and goals.
- 11/21/2016
- by kcbakerpeoplemag
- PEOPLE.com
Effie Brown, producer of such movies as “Real Women Have Curves” and “Dear White People,” began her keynote address Sunday at the Film Independent Forum with cheerful, loving appreciation for the organization. “I’ve been here at Film Independent for 23 years,” said Brown, adding, “That is the longest relationship I’ve ever had, besides my parents and they can’t kick me out either.”
Brown noted that many of the conversations that affected her the most were ones that featured real people with the careers she wanted who unmasked themselves to show the truth about working and living in Hollywood. Keeping to that truth, Brown recalled some of her own shame and failures, hoping to inspire listeners with lessons she wished she’d known years ago.
Don’t Waste Time Comparing Yourself
“Compare and despair is a useless time suck,” said Brown. She recalled questioning herself as she compared her...
Brown noted that many of the conversations that affected her the most were ones that featured real people with the careers she wanted who unmasked themselves to show the truth about working and living in Hollywood. Keeping to that truth, Brown recalled some of her own shame and failures, hoping to inspire listeners with lessons she wished she’d known years ago.
Don’t Waste Time Comparing Yourself
“Compare and despair is a useless time suck,” said Brown. She recalled questioning herself as she compared her...
- 10/25/2016
- by Zipporah Smith
- Indiewire
The Boston Red Sox getting knocked out of the post season by the Cleveland Indians on Monday wasn’t the Hollywood ending that fans had hoped for David “Big Papi” Ortiz, but it didn’t quell the outpouring of love for the adored designated hitter. Ortiz, 40, had his farewell tour at the end of the regular season, and despite the unceremonious end to his 20-year career, he still went out on a high note. “We want Papi,” fans at Fenway chanted long after the game ended, according to USA Today, even though their 2016 season was cut short after the Indians beat the Sox 4-3 in.
- 10/11/2016
- by Debbie Emery
- The Wrap
It was 2013 and they stood near the finish line on a crisp April afternoon: Mothers and children, newlyweds, brothers, all cheering on friends and family who were running in the Boston Marathon. Then the unthinkable happened: Two bombs exploded, killing three people and wounding more than 250 others at the marathon in what the nation and the world would soon learn was a terrorist attack - on U.S. soil. On Nov. 21, HBO will debut Marathon: The Patriots Day Bombing, a documentary that details the emotional and physical challenges survivors have faced ever since. The documentary's first trailer premiered Friday, exclusively on People.
- 9/30/2016
- by K.C. Baker, @kcbaker77777
- PEOPLE.com
It’s 1977 and you’re the lead soprano in your first international concert. Rapturous applause and a flawless performance later you find yourself hobnobbing with classmates and audience members alike, the famed German composer Thomas Zielinski (Rafael Stachowiak) even enters to the crowd’s delight. But rather than let the electricity of the moment overwhelm you and bask in the glory of a successful evening, you can’t help noticing an older woman walking towards you with a scowl on her face. She asks your name, inquires whether your father is Dr. Baruch Milch (Doron Tavory), and subsequently grabs your arm while screaming in German about meeting the daughter of a murderer. Your name is Sephi Milch (Joy Rieger) and everything you’ve known about your parents is about to change.
You cannot deny the intrigue in what Avi Nesher has crafted with Past Life, a Holocaust film that takes...
You cannot deny the intrigue in what Avi Nesher has crafted with Past Life, a Holocaust film that takes...
- 9/12/2016
- by Jared Mobarak
- The Film Stage
"I mope around for a little while," says Adele of her post-breakup routine. "I do embrace the fact that I'm heartbroken. I don't move on quickly. I don't know if that's because it seems that I'm only really creative when I'm a bit momentarily depressed." The songs born out of these "momentarily depressed" states are among the most emotionally powerful the pop music canon. As long as the newly single nurse their shattered psyches with endless pints of ice cream, her music will live forever. Adele, 28, is the queen of breakup songs, but what are some tracks that helped her through those ruined relationships?...
- 6/27/2016
- by Jordan Runtagh, @jordanruntagh
- PEOPLE.com
"I mope around for a little while," says Adele of her post-breakup routine. "I do embrace the fact that I'm heartbroken. I don't move on quickly. I don't know if that's because it seems that I'm only really creative when I'm a bit momentarily depressed." The songs born out of these "momentarily depressed" states are among the most emotionally powerful the pop music canon. As long as the newly single nurse their shattered psyches with endless pints of ice cream, her music will live forever. Adele, 28, is the queen of breakup songs, but what are some tracks that helped her through those ruined relationships?...
- 6/27/2016
- by Jordan Runtagh, @jordanruntagh
- PEOPLE.com
The Croissette has been tuned and the red carpet swept. The giant poster unfurled above the Theatre Lumiere that fronts the great Palais du Cinema with an image taken from Le Mepris, Jean Luc Godard's acid-inked love/hate letter to cinema will greet the far breezier delights of Woody Allen's Café Society, starring Jesse Eisenberg and Kristen Stewart. A stalwart of the festival and much loved by the French - "Thank God for the French!" his temporarily blind director cries at the conclusion of Hollywood Ending - Allen is a fitting opener for a line up full of familiar faces and the promotion of a few up-and-comers.
- 5/11/2016
- by CineVue UK
- CineVue
Wednesday night was historic for the NBA fans in many, many ways. Not only did Kobe Bryant play his last game for the Los Angeles Lakers after an iconic 20-year career, the Golden State Warriors won their 73rd game to become all-time winningest team for one season. But according to Espn host Rachel Nichols, the biggest surprise may have been the fact that Kanye West got “out-celebritied” for Bryant’s final game, forced to sit in (gasp!) the third row at the Staples Center. Also Read: Kobe Bryant's Hollywood Ending: See Which Stars Went to Lakers Legend's Last...
- 4/16/2016
- by Debbie Emery
- The Wrap
Fox Sports’ Jason Whitlock was not among those impressed by Kobe Bryant’s Hollywood ending, when the Los Angeles Lakers legend dropped 60 points in his final NBA game. “His narcissism and selfishness destroyed a franchise,” Whitlock said a day later. “The Lakers are a laughing stock, and just had the most embarrassing season we’ve pretty much ever seen an NBA team have.” Then he accused Bryant of really only doing a pretty good Michael Jordan impersonation, one that apparently spanned his entire 20-year career: “The most fraudulent superstar celebrity athlete we have ever seen,” was how Whitlock summed the future Hall-of-Famer up.
- 4/15/2016
- by Tony Maglio
- The Wrap
Los Angeles (AP) — Kobe Bryant went out with a Hollywood ending to his remarkable career. Bryant scored 60 points in his final game Wednesday night, wrapping up 20 years in the NBA with an unbelievable offensive showcase in the Los Angeles Lakers' 101-96 victory over the Utah Jazz. He scored 23 points in the fourth quarter, posting his first 50-point game since February 2009 and rallying the Lakers from a 15-point deficit to win the final game of the worst season in franchise history. "It's hard to believe it happened this way," Bryant said. "I'm
read more...
read more...
- 4/14/2016
- by The Associated Press
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Rumors had been swirling for awhile that Woody Allen‘s next film, titled Cafe Society, would open the 2016 Cannes Film Festival. Today an official announcement confirmed those rumors, making this the third time Allen has opened the French film festival. Hollywood Ending and Midnight in Paris had the honor in 2002 and 2011 respectively. Cafe Society, […]
The post Woody Allen’s ‘Cafe Society’ Confirmed to Open Cannes 2016, New Photo Revealed appeared first on /Film.
The post Woody Allen’s ‘Cafe Society’ Confirmed to Open Cannes 2016, New Photo Revealed appeared first on /Film.
- 3/29/2016
- by Ethan Anderton
- Slash Film
It's been announced that Woody Allen's latest movie, Cafe Society, has been selected to open the 69th annual Cannes Film Festival. This will be the third time that the event has kicked off with an Allen-directed flick (with 2002's Hollywood Ending and 2011's Midnight In Paris being the other two), and his fourteenth film to screen out of competition at the long-running festival.... Read More...
- 3/29/2016
- by Jesse Giroux
- JoBlo.com
Woody Allen‘s new movie “Cafe Society” will open this May’s Cannes Film Festival, organizers announced Tuesday. The movie, starring Kristen Stewart and Jesse Eisenberg, will screen on May 11 out of competition for the Palme d’Or and other top prizes at the festival along the French Riviera. This will be the director’s 14th movie to screen at Cannes and the third to open the prestigious French festival, after “Hollywood Ending” in 2002 and “Midnight in Paris” in 2011. Also Read: 2016 Cannes Film Festival Poster Inspired by Jean-Luc Godard's 'Contempt' (Photo) Allen’s 2015 movie “Irrational Man” with...
- 3/29/2016
- by Thom Geier
- The Wrap
As expected, Cannes director Thierry Fremaux has selected Woody Allen's latest, "Café Society," to open the 69th Festival International du Film de Cannes (May 11 to 22). The film will make its world premiere on Wednesday 11 May in the Palais des Festivals’ Grand Théâtre Lumière, per usual for Woody Allen, as an Official Selection Out of Competition title. It’s a record-breaking coup for the New York director who has already opened the Festival twice, with "Hollywood Ending" (2002) and "Midnight in Paris" (2011). The Competition Jury will be presided over by George Miller, and the Official Selection titles are due to be announced on April 14 (Indiewire takes a stab at what they might be here). Cannes veteran Jesse Eisenberg, who starred in last year's Competition entry, Joachim Trier's "Louder than Bombs" (April 8), moves from Lex Luthor in franchise blockbuster "Batman v Superman:...
- 3/29/2016
- by Anne Thompson
- Thompson on Hollywood
The director’s third Cannes opener, featuring Jesse Eisenberg as a 1930s screenwriter, will usher in a programme rumoured to contain films from Spielberg, Almodóvar and Refn
Woody Allen’s Cafe Society will open this year’s Cannes film festival.
Allen’s 49th film, which is screening out of competition, will be his third to kick off Cannes. Hollywood Ending began the festival in 2002, Midnight in Paris launched the 2011 event.
Continue reading...
Woody Allen’s Cafe Society will open this year’s Cannes film festival.
Allen’s 49th film, which is screening out of competition, will be his third to kick off Cannes. Hollywood Ending began the festival in 2002, Midnight in Paris launched the 2011 event.
Continue reading...
- 3/29/2016
- by Henry Barnes and agencies
- The Guardian - Film News
The director’s third Cannes opener, featuring Jesse Eisenberg as a 1930s screenwriter, will usher in a programme rumoured to contain films from Spielberg, Almodóvar and Refn
Woody Allen’s Cafe Society will open this year’s Cannes film festival.
Allen’s 49th film, which is screening out of competition, will be his third to kick off Cannes. Hollywood Ending began the festival in 2002, Midnight in Paris launched the 2011 event.
Continue reading...
Woody Allen’s Cafe Society will open this year’s Cannes film festival.
Allen’s 49th film, which is screening out of competition, will be his third to kick off Cannes. Hollywood Ending began the festival in 2002, Midnight in Paris launched the 2011 event.
Continue reading...
- 3/29/2016
- by Henry Barnes and agencies
- The Guardian - Film News
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