Celebrities’ love life often garners much public interest. While some are instantly able to find the love of their lives, others often have to struggle a bit before achieving the same.
But when it comes to Drew Barrymore, she has been lacking a bit in the romantic love department. Although she has received much love and support from family and fans, enjoying a healthy romantic relationship is something she has gotten only temporarily.
Drew Barrymore in Everyone Says I Love You
She once revealed how her dates went completely off as several people ghosted her but many might be unaware that she once left Christian Bale heartbroken after they went on a date.
Drew Barrymore Recalled Getting Ghosted on Her Dates! Drew Barrymore in Scream
Drew Barrymore has a lot of experience when it comes to romantic relationships. Having split up with her third ex-husband, Will Kopelman in 2016, she has been publicly single ever since.
But when it comes to Drew Barrymore, she has been lacking a bit in the romantic love department. Although she has received much love and support from family and fans, enjoying a healthy romantic relationship is something she has gotten only temporarily.
Drew Barrymore in Everyone Says I Love You
She once revealed how her dates went completely off as several people ghosted her but many might be unaware that she once left Christian Bale heartbroken after they went on a date.
Drew Barrymore Recalled Getting Ghosted on Her Dates! Drew Barrymore in Scream
Drew Barrymore has a lot of experience when it comes to romantic relationships. Having split up with her third ex-husband, Will Kopelman in 2016, she has been publicly single ever since.
- 3/2/2024
- by Priya Sharma
- FandomWire
It's hard to imagine anyone besides Alyson Hannigan as the unforgettable sidekick-turned-superpowered Willow Rosenberg in the hit series "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," but the casting directors almost went in a completely different direction. Indeed, the role nearly went to another accomplished television actor — Melanie Lynskey, the Emmy-nominated star of the acclaimed Showtime series "Yellowjackets."
The New Zealand actor kicked off her career with a leading role in Peter Jackson's 1994 film "Heavenly Creatures" opposite "Titanic" star Kate Winslet. She had also appeared in Jackson's 1996 horror-comedy "The Frighteners" -- which, like "Heavenly Creatures," was filmed in New Zealand — when she got the opportunity to audition for "Buffy the Vampire Slayer."
"It was kind of a visa issue, but not really," she told The Hollywood Reporter in 2023. "I also was not sure about doing television at that time. It was very early in my career. I had a very old-school agent who was like,...
The New Zealand actor kicked off her career with a leading role in Peter Jackson's 1994 film "Heavenly Creatures" opposite "Titanic" star Kate Winslet. She had also appeared in Jackson's 1996 horror-comedy "The Frighteners" -- which, like "Heavenly Creatures," was filmed in New Zealand — when she got the opportunity to audition for "Buffy the Vampire Slayer."
"It was kind of a visa issue, but not really," she told The Hollywood Reporter in 2023. "I also was not sure about doing television at that time. It was very early in my career. I had a very old-school agent who was like,...
- 2/18/2024
- by Shae Sennett
- Slash Film
Actress Natalie Portman doesn’t encourage young people to become child actors. The ‘Black Swan’ star, 42, launched her career at age 12 when she starred in the action film ‘Leon: The Professional’ in 1994.
She admitted that it’s only down to “luck” and having “overprotective parents” that she wasn’t “harmed”, reports ‘Female First UK’.
She told Variety: “I would not encourage young people to go into this. “I don’t mean ever; I mean as children. I feel it was almost an accident of luck that I was not harmed, also combined with very overprotective, wonderful parents.”
The ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ star is hopeful that the industry is looking after young performers better these days. She said: “I’ve heard too many bad stories to think that any children should be part of it. Having said that, I know all the conversations that we’ve been having these past few years.
She admitted that it’s only down to “luck” and having “overprotective parents” that she wasn’t “harmed”, reports ‘Female First UK’.
She told Variety: “I would not encourage young people to go into this. “I don’t mean ever; I mean as children. I feel it was almost an accident of luck that I was not harmed, also combined with very overprotective, wonderful parents.”
The ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ star is hopeful that the industry is looking after young performers better these days. She said: “I’ve heard too many bad stories to think that any children should be part of it. Having said that, I know all the conversations that we’ve been having these past few years.
- 11/26/2023
- by Agency News Desk
Actress Natalie Portman doesn’t encourage young people to become child actors. The ‘Black Swan’ star, 42, launched her career at age 12 when she starred in the action film ‘Leon: The Professional’ in 1994.
She admitted that it’s only down to “luck” and having “overprotective parents” that she wasn’t “harmed”, reports ‘Female First UK’.
She told Variety: “I would not encourage young people to go into this. “I don’t mean ever; I mean as children. I feel it was almost an accident of luck that I was not harmed, also combined with very overprotective, wonderful parents.”
The ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ star is hopeful that the industry is looking after young performers better these days. She said: “I’ve heard too many bad stories to think that any children should be part of it. Having said that, I know all the conversations that we’ve been having these past few years.
She admitted that it’s only down to “luck” and having “overprotective parents” that she wasn’t “harmed”, reports ‘Female First UK’.
She told Variety: “I would not encourage young people to go into this. “I don’t mean ever; I mean as children. I feel it was almost an accident of luck that I was not harmed, also combined with very overprotective, wonderful parents.”
The ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ star is hopeful that the industry is looking after young performers better these days. She said: “I’ve heard too many bad stories to think that any children should be part of it. Having said that, I know all the conversations that we’ve been having these past few years.
- 11/26/2023
- by Agency News Desk
- GlamSham
Kicking October to the curb and bringing in some November goodness is a fresh slate of new content headed to Paramount Global’s streamer Paramount+, including the sequel to the hit 1997 film “Good Burger.”
Paramount+ started off November by adding more than 30 titles to its library, some of which include “Above the Rim,” Season 15 of “Ink Master,” “Gladiator” and “The Color Purple.”
And if you’re looking for some holiday movies to watch with the family, you can deck the halls with “Happy Christmas,” “Mistletoe Ranch” or “Christmas Eve.” When the kids go to sleep, adult-friendly treats like “Bad Santa” and “Bad Santa 2” are also available.
The highly-anticipated “Good Burger 2,” which stars Kel Mitchell, Keenan Thompson, Shar Jackson, Carmen Electra, Josh Server, Alex R. Hibbert, Lori Beth Denberg and Lil Rel Howery, hits the platform on Nov. 22
Here’s everything coming to Paramount+ this November, from “The Truman Show” to “Paw Patrol.
Paramount+ started off November by adding more than 30 titles to its library, some of which include “Above the Rim,” Season 15 of “Ink Master,” “Gladiator” and “The Color Purple.”
And if you’re looking for some holiday movies to watch with the family, you can deck the halls with “Happy Christmas,” “Mistletoe Ranch” or “Christmas Eve.” When the kids go to sleep, adult-friendly treats like “Bad Santa” and “Bad Santa 2” are also available.
The highly-anticipated “Good Burger 2,” which stars Kel Mitchell, Keenan Thompson, Shar Jackson, Carmen Electra, Josh Server, Alex R. Hibbert, Lori Beth Denberg and Lil Rel Howery, hits the platform on Nov. 22
Here’s everything coming to Paramount+ this November, from “The Truman Show” to “Paw Patrol.
- 11/3/2023
- by Raquel 'Rocky' Harris
- The Wrap
Natasha Lyonne is dishing on some iconic roles she was close to landing early in her career.
While on Thursday’s episode of Watch What Happens Live, host Andy Cohen asked the Poker Face star to name a role that another actress got that she thinks should have been hers. She quickly responded in a playful manner, “Oh, gosh, there’s a lot … I mean, how far back do you want to go?”
“Well, I didn’t get Six or Blossom. I didn’t get Sabrina the Teenage Witch,” she said, taking Cohen by surprise. Lyonne then added that she didn’t get a role in John Hughes’ 1991 film Curly Sue.
Cohen seemed to be most taken aback by the Orange Is the New Black actress saying she did not get the role of Six in the ’90s hit series Blossom. “Wow! I would have loved to see you as Six,...
While on Thursday’s episode of Watch What Happens Live, host Andy Cohen asked the Poker Face star to name a role that another actress got that she thinks should have been hers. She quickly responded in a playful manner, “Oh, gosh, there’s a lot … I mean, how far back do you want to go?”
“Well, I didn’t get Six or Blossom. I didn’t get Sabrina the Teenage Witch,” she said, taking Cohen by surprise. Lyonne then added that she didn’t get a role in John Hughes’ 1991 film Curly Sue.
Cohen seemed to be most taken aback by the Orange Is the New Black actress saying she did not get the role of Six in the ’90s hit series Blossom. “Wow! I would have loved to see you as Six,...
- 2/10/2023
- by Carly Thomas
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Natasha Lyonne’s career could have turned out very differently.
This week, the “Poker Face” star appeared on “Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen” and revealed some of the big roles she missed out on early in her career.
Read More: Natasha Lyonne’s ‘Poker Face’ Is Connected To Daniel Craig’s ‘Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery’, Rian Johnson Reveals
The host asked Lyonne to “name one fellow actress who beat you out for a role that should have been yours.”
“I didn’t get Six on ‘Blossom’,” she continued. “I didn’t get ‘Sabrina the Teenage Witch’.”
Lyonne added, “Oh, hold on a second. I didn’t get Curly Sue.”
But Cohen was fixated on her losing the role of Six in the classic sitcom.
“I would have loved to see you as Six. What a reinterpretation of the part,” he said, to which the actress joked.
This week, the “Poker Face” star appeared on “Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen” and revealed some of the big roles she missed out on early in her career.
Read More: Natasha Lyonne’s ‘Poker Face’ Is Connected To Daniel Craig’s ‘Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery’, Rian Johnson Reveals
The host asked Lyonne to “name one fellow actress who beat you out for a role that should have been yours.”
“I didn’t get Six on ‘Blossom’,” she continued. “I didn’t get ‘Sabrina the Teenage Witch’.”
Lyonne added, “Oh, hold on a second. I didn’t get Curly Sue.”
But Cohen was fixated on her losing the role of Six in the classic sitcom.
“I would have loved to see you as Six. What a reinterpretation of the part,” he said, to which the actress joked.
- 2/10/2023
- by Corey Atad
- ET Canada
Drew Barrymore told Dylan Farrow yesterday that she was “gaslit” into working with Woody Allen in the 1996 comedy Everyone Says I Love You, and that she now regrets it.
“I worked with Woody Allen,” Barrymore told Farrow during an interview on The Drew Barrymore Show Monday. “I did a film with him in 1996 called Everyone Says I Love You and there was no higher career calling card than to work with Woody Allen.
“Then I had children, and it changed me because I realized that I was one of the people who was basically gaslit into not looking at a narrative beyond what I was being told. I see what is happening in the industry now, and that is because of you making that brave choice. So, thank you for that.”
In response, Farrow says, “Hearing what you just said, I’m trying not to cry right now. It’s...
“I worked with Woody Allen,” Barrymore told Farrow during an interview on The Drew Barrymore Show Monday. “I did a film with him in 1996 called Everyone Says I Love You and there was no higher career calling card than to work with Woody Allen.
“Then I had children, and it changed me because I realized that I was one of the people who was basically gaslit into not looking at a narrative beyond what I was being told. I see what is happening in the industry now, and that is because of you making that brave choice. So, thank you for that.”
In response, Farrow says, “Hearing what you just said, I’m trying not to cry right now. It’s...
- 5/18/2021
- by Greg Evans
- Deadline Film + TV
While speaking with Dylan Farrow on “The Drew Barrymore Show,” the actor and talk show host said that she was “gaslit” about the narrative surrounding Woody Allen when she accepted the role in the 1996 film “Everyone Says I Love You.”
“There was no higher career calling card than to work with Woody Allen,” Barrymore said. “Then I had children, and it changed me because I realized that I was one of the people who was basically gaslit into not looking at a narrative beyond what I was being told. And I see what’s happening in the industry now and that is because of you making that brave choice. So thank you for that.”
Allen was recently the subject of the new HBO docuseries “Allen v. Farrow,” which examines the events that led up to 7-year-old Farrow, the daughter of Allen and Mia Farrow, accusing her father of sexually abusing...
“There was no higher career calling card than to work with Woody Allen,” Barrymore said. “Then I had children, and it changed me because I realized that I was one of the people who was basically gaslit into not looking at a narrative beyond what I was being told. And I see what’s happening in the industry now and that is because of you making that brave choice. So thank you for that.”
Allen was recently the subject of the new HBO docuseries “Allen v. Farrow,” which examines the events that led up to 7-year-old Farrow, the daughter of Allen and Mia Farrow, accusing her father of sexually abusing...
- 5/18/2021
- by Antonio Ferme
- Variety Film + TV
Drew Barrymore admitted that she now regrets working with Woody Allen on his 1996 movie Everyone Says I Love You during an interview with Dylan Farrow on The Drew Barrymore Show Monday, May 17th.
Farrow was on-hand to discuss her new young adult novel, Hush, grappling with trauma, and the recent HBO docuseries, Allen v. Farrow, which examined Farrow’s allegations of sexual abuse against Allen, her adopted father. (Allen has denied the allegations and called the docuseries a “hatchet job.”) Along with delving into the allegations, the film looked at...
Farrow was on-hand to discuss her new young adult novel, Hush, grappling with trauma, and the recent HBO docuseries, Allen v. Farrow, which examined Farrow’s allegations of sexual abuse against Allen, her adopted father. (Allen has denied the allegations and called the docuseries a “hatchet job.”) Along with delving into the allegations, the film looked at...
- 5/18/2021
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Drew Barrymore had a moment of reflection during a sit-down interview with Dylan Farrow on her syndicated talk show. Farrow, who is the daughter of Woody Allen, has made claims of incest against her father that were explored in HBO's Allen v. Farrow docuseries earlier this year. Barrymore, who has in Allen's 1996 film Everyone Says I Love You, took the opportunity…...
- 5/18/2021
- by Gaius Bolling
- JoBlo.com
When sitting down with Dylan Farrow for an interview on her eponymous talk show, host Drew Barrymore expressed regret over working with Woody Allen in her past.
“I worked with Woody Allen. I did a film with him in 1996 called, Everyone Says I Love You, and there was no higher career calling card than to work with Woody Allen,” Barrymore told Farrow about the disgraced Hollywood director, Farrow’s adoptive father, and co-starring in the New York-set film among an A-list cast. “Then I had children, and it changed me because I realized that I was one of the ...
“I worked with Woody Allen. I did a film with him in 1996 called, Everyone Says I Love You, and there was no higher career calling card than to work with Woody Allen,” Barrymore told Farrow about the disgraced Hollywood director, Farrow’s adoptive father, and co-starring in the New York-set film among an A-list cast. “Then I had children, and it changed me because I realized that I was one of the ...
- 5/17/2021
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
When sitting down with Dylan Farrow for an interview on her eponymous talk show, host Drew Barrymore expressed regret over working with Woody Allen in her past.
“I worked with Woody Allen. I did a film with him in 1996 called, Everyone Says I Love You, and there was no higher career calling card than to work with Woody Allen,” Barrymore told Farrow about the disgraced Hollywood director, Farrow’s adoptive father, and co-starring in the New York-set film among an A-list cast. “Then I had children, and it changed me because I realized that I was one of the ...
“I worked with Woody Allen. I did a film with him in 1996 called, Everyone Says I Love You, and there was no higher career calling card than to work with Woody Allen,” Barrymore told Farrow about the disgraced Hollywood director, Farrow’s adoptive father, and co-starring in the New York-set film among an A-list cast. “Then I had children, and it changed me because I realized that I was one of the ...
- 5/17/2021
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
The National Board of Review has named Spike Lee’s “Da 5 Bloods” as the year’s best film and ensemble. Lee also won the prize for directing, becoming only the second Black director to receive the honor, following Barry Jenkins for 2016’s “Moonlight.”
Over the last 30 years, the winner of best film has gone on to receive an Oscar nomination for best picture, with exceptions once every decade — 2014’s “A Most Violent Year,” 2000’s “Quills” and 1998’s “Gods and Monsters.” In the 1980s, there were technically two misses with 1987’s “Empire of the Sun” and 1983’s “Betrayal,” which tied with “Terms of Endearment.” Nbr’s last best film selections were Martin Scorsese’s “The Irishman,” Peter Farrelly’s “Green Book” and George Miller’s “Mad Max: Fury Road.”
In the acting races, the group averages two of their winners moving on to Oscar nominations. In the major categories of picture,...
Over the last 30 years, the winner of best film has gone on to receive an Oscar nomination for best picture, with exceptions once every decade — 2014’s “A Most Violent Year,” 2000’s “Quills” and 1998’s “Gods and Monsters.” In the 1980s, there were technically two misses with 1987’s “Empire of the Sun” and 1983’s “Betrayal,” which tied with “Terms of Endearment.” Nbr’s last best film selections were Martin Scorsese’s “The Irishman,” Peter Farrelly’s “Green Book” and George Miller’s “Mad Max: Fury Road.”
In the acting races, the group averages two of their winners moving on to Oscar nominations. In the major categories of picture,...
- 1/26/2021
- by Clayton Davis
- Variety Film + TV
Natalie Portman was just 11 years old when she was cast in “Léon: The Professional” by director Luc Besson, and her child stardom quickly rose thanks to films like “Heat,” “Beautiful Girls,” and “Everyone Says I Love You.” But for Portman, she knew that because of her age she was being portrayed as a “Lolita” figure, as she told Dax Shephard in a recent episode of his Armchair Expert podcast (via People).
“I was definitely aware of the fact that I was being portrayed … as this ‘Lolita’ figure,” she told Shepard. “Being sexualized as a child, I think took away from my own sexuality because it made me afraid, and it made me [feel] like the way I could be safe was to be like, ‘I’m conservative,’ and ‘I’m serious and you should respect me,’ and ‘I’m smart,’ and ‘don’t look at me that way.'”
The Oscar winner,...
“I was definitely aware of the fact that I was being portrayed … as this ‘Lolita’ figure,” she told Shepard. “Being sexualized as a child, I think took away from my own sexuality because it made me afraid, and it made me [feel] like the way I could be safe was to be like, ‘I’m conservative,’ and ‘I’m serious and you should respect me,’ and ‘I’m smart,’ and ‘don’t look at me that way.'”
The Oscar winner,...
- 12/13/2020
- by Ryan Lattanzio
- Indiewire
2019 will go down as the year of Florence Pugh, for in quite a short time, the Oxfordshire, UK native has blown us away with quite a range. Some have called a Florenaissance. It’s a breakout year reminiscent to when Edward Norton strode into the 1996 award season with Everyone Says I Love You, The People vs. Larry Flynt and Primal Fear, the latter which scored him his first Oscar nom. Back at Sundance in January, Pugh demonstrated her kickass in the MGM Dwayne Johnson production Fighting with My Family in which she played real-life British wrestler Saraya Knight. That morphed into playing the anguished and tormented teenager Dani in Ari Aster’s absurdist Swedish folk horror Midsommar in July, and is climaxing this Christmas in Greta Gerwig’s revisionist remake of Little Women in which Pugh dons puffy satin Parisian dresses as Amy March, the privileged sister to Saoirse Ronan’s Jo March.
- 12/5/2019
- by Anthony D'Alessandro
- Deadline Film + TV
Viacom-owned streamer Pluto TV has inked a deal with Signature Entertainment for a collection of Woody Allen movies from the 1990s and will put them out in a dedicated season on its Avod service in the U.K.
Woody Allen Fridays start on the service this week, with the filmmaker’s pictures playing on the Pluto TV Movies channel. The first double-bill will comprise comedy-drama “Celebrity” and crime comedy “Bullets Over Broadway.”
Pluto TV has a suite of themed online channels, spanning general and special interests. With a linear schedule, it is positioned as an online alternative to traditional TV and a straightforward lean-back alternative to the Svod platforms.
The Woody Allen double-bills will play each Friday for four weeks. Films that will feature include “Mighty Aphrodite,“ “Sweet and Lowdown,” “Everyone Says I Love You,” and “Deconstructing Harry.” Barbara Kopple’s portrait of the auteur himself, “Wild Man Blues,...
Woody Allen Fridays start on the service this week, with the filmmaker’s pictures playing on the Pluto TV Movies channel. The first double-bill will comprise comedy-drama “Celebrity” and crime comedy “Bullets Over Broadway.”
Pluto TV has a suite of themed online channels, spanning general and special interests. With a linear schedule, it is positioned as an online alternative to traditional TV and a straightforward lean-back alternative to the Svod platforms.
The Woody Allen double-bills will play each Friday for four weeks. Films that will feature include “Mighty Aphrodite,“ “Sweet and Lowdown,” “Everyone Says I Love You,” and “Deconstructing Harry.” Barbara Kopple’s portrait of the auteur himself, “Wild Man Blues,...
- 11/21/2019
- by Stewart Clarke
- Variety Film + TV
Three-time Oscar nominee Edward Norton does not think small. After years of uncredited rewriting and editing room consulting (“American History X”), he directed “Keeping the Faith” in 2000. And over nine years of trying to make an adaptation of Jonathan Lethem’s 1999 novel “Motherless Brooklyn”, which he wrote and produced, he decided to direct himself in the ambitious drama, which launched in Telluride and Toronto to upbeat reviews and closes the New York Film Festival on Friday. Whatever happens to this movie, it’s Norton’s baby.
At age 50, Norton is always in demand as a canny character actor, but it took nine years to develop, finance and produce “Motherless Brooklyn,” because he wanted to take the helm of a smart, ambitious drama for adults that evokes 50s period film noir New York, complete with a dissonant jazz soundtrack. Whether smarthouse crowds are ready to go there with him remains to be seen.
At age 50, Norton is always in demand as a canny character actor, but it took nine years to develop, finance and produce “Motherless Brooklyn,” because he wanted to take the helm of a smart, ambitious drama for adults that evokes 50s period film noir New York, complete with a dissonant jazz soundtrack. Whether smarthouse crowds are ready to go there with him remains to be seen.
- 10/10/2019
- by Anne Thompson
- Thompson on Hollywood
Three-time Oscar nominee Edward Norton does not think small. After years of uncredited rewriting and editing room consulting (“American History X”), he directed “Keeping the Faith” in 2000. And over nine years of trying to make an adaptation of Jonathan Lethem’s 1999 novel “Motherless Brooklyn”, which he wrote and produced, he decided to direct himself in the ambitious drama, which launched in Telluride and Toronto to upbeat reviews and closes the New York Film Festival on Friday. Whatever happens to this movie, it’s Norton’s baby.
At age 50, Norton is always in demand as a canny character actor, but it took nine years to develop, finance and produce “Motherless Brooklyn,” because he wanted to take the helm of a smart, ambitious drama for adults that evokes 50s period film noir New York, complete with a dissonant jazz soundtrack. Whether smarthouse crowds are ready to go there with him remains to be seen.
At age 50, Norton is always in demand as a canny character actor, but it took nine years to develop, finance and produce “Motherless Brooklyn,” because he wanted to take the helm of a smart, ambitious drama for adults that evokes 50s period film noir New York, complete with a dissonant jazz soundtrack. Whether smarthouse crowds are ready to go there with him remains to be seen.
- 10/10/2019
- by Anne Thompson
- Indiewire
British actor Tim Roth is to receive the Honorary Heart of Sarajevo Award in recognition of his “exceptional contribution to the art of film.” The ceremony at the Sarajevo Film Festival will be held on Tuesday. He will hold a masterclass on the same day.
His first screen role was the lead in the controversial Prix Italia award-winning TV movie “Made in Britain.” Roth’s second project came immediately after, starring in Mike Leigh’s critically acclaimed film “Meantime.” As his success continued, Roth starred in more than 15 film and television projects including Stephen Frears’ “The Hit,” for which he won the Standard Award for best newcomer, Peter Greenaway’s “The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her Lover,” Tom Stoppard’s “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead” and Robert Altman’s “Vincent and Theo,” in which he portrayed Vincent Van Gogh.
Roth gained worldwide recognition for his roles in two Quentin Tarantino films,...
His first screen role was the lead in the controversial Prix Italia award-winning TV movie “Made in Britain.” Roth’s second project came immediately after, starring in Mike Leigh’s critically acclaimed film “Meantime.” As his success continued, Roth starred in more than 15 film and television projects including Stephen Frears’ “The Hit,” for which he won the Standard Award for best newcomer, Peter Greenaway’s “The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her Lover,” Tom Stoppard’s “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead” and Robert Altman’s “Vincent and Theo,” in which he portrayed Vincent Van Gogh.
Roth gained worldwide recognition for his roles in two Quentin Tarantino films,...
- 8/19/2019
- by Leo Barraclough
- Variety Film + TV
Two decades before her turn as the gruff-voiced, sardonic Nadia on the existential dramedy “Russian Doll,” a teenage Natasha Lyonne played DJ, the
chirpy narrator in Woody Allen’s 1996 whimsical romantic-comedy musical “Everyone Says I Love You.” Lyonne’s name first appeared in Variety on Dec. 2, 1996, in a review of the Allen film.
In the next few years she went on to star in a number of raunchy teen comedies, including “American Pie,” “But I’m a Cheerleader” and “Scary Movie 2.”
She recently wrapped up her role as Nicky Nichols (aka Junkie Philosopher) on the final season of “Orange Is the New Black.”
“Russian Doll,” which she stars in and co-created alongside Amy Poehler and Leslye Headland, has 13 Emmy nominations and is set for a second season.
When you look back at teenage Natasha Lyonne in “Everyone Says I Love You,” what do you see that’s changed?
I was attending Yeshiva.
chirpy narrator in Woody Allen’s 1996 whimsical romantic-comedy musical “Everyone Says I Love You.” Lyonne’s name first appeared in Variety on Dec. 2, 1996, in a review of the Allen film.
In the next few years she went on to star in a number of raunchy teen comedies, including “American Pie,” “But I’m a Cheerleader” and “Scary Movie 2.”
She recently wrapped up her role as Nicky Nichols (aka Junkie Philosopher) on the final season of “Orange Is the New Black.”
“Russian Doll,” which she stars in and co-created alongside Amy Poehler and Leslye Headland, has 13 Emmy nominations and is set for a second season.
When you look back at teenage Natasha Lyonne in “Everyone Says I Love You,” what do you see that’s changed?
I was attending Yeshiva.
- 8/16/2019
- by Dano Nissen
- Variety Film + TV
Anyone can be a multi-talent. But to be a major star with a big heart and a social conscience means even more.
Tonight at 8 p.m. Et/5 p.m. Pt on TNT and TBS, Alan Alda — who 83rd birthday is on Monday — will be honored by his thespian peers as he receives a Screen Actors Guild life achievement award for his body of work on stage, in film and especially on TV. That includes his 11 seasons on “M*A*S*H” (1972-83), both in front of and behind the camera, along with his activism and other landmarks in his seven-decade career.
The award predates the 25-year-old competitive awards by more than 30 years. The first recipient: Eddie Cantor in 1962. More recently, the guild has presented its honorary prize to such performers as Morgan Freeman, Lily Tomlin, Carol Burnett, Debbie Reynolds, Rita Moreno and Dick Van Dyke. Here are five reasons why Alda is fully...
Tonight at 8 p.m. Et/5 p.m. Pt on TNT and TBS, Alan Alda — who 83rd birthday is on Monday — will be honored by his thespian peers as he receives a Screen Actors Guild life achievement award for his body of work on stage, in film and especially on TV. That includes his 11 seasons on “M*A*S*H” (1972-83), both in front of and behind the camera, along with his activism and other landmarks in his seven-decade career.
The award predates the 25-year-old competitive awards by more than 30 years. The first recipient: Eddie Cantor in 1962. More recently, the guild has presented its honorary prize to such performers as Morgan Freeman, Lily Tomlin, Carol Burnett, Debbie Reynolds, Rita Moreno and Dick Van Dyke. Here are five reasons why Alda is fully...
- 1/27/2019
- by Susan Wloszczyna
- Gold Derby
Although many actors have recently expressed regret at having worked with Woody Allen in the past, Alan Alda is standing by the filmmaker.
“I’d work with him again if he wanted me,” the 82-year-old actor, who has appeared in three of Allen’s films, recently told The Hollywood Reporter, ahead of receiving the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Screen Actors Guild Awards on Sunday
“I don’t know all the facts, I don’t know if he’s guilty or innocent. But you can be uncertain — that’s what I go on,” Alda continued, referencing the accusations of sexual...
“I’d work with him again if he wanted me,” the 82-year-old actor, who has appeared in three of Allen’s films, recently told The Hollywood Reporter, ahead of receiving the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Screen Actors Guild Awards on Sunday
“I don’t know all the facts, I don’t know if he’s guilty or innocent. But you can be uncertain — that’s what I go on,” Alda continued, referencing the accusations of sexual...
- 1/25/2019
- by Maria Pasquini
- PEOPLE.com
Netflix's Russian Doll is the Natasha Lyonne showcase long in the waiting...and an interesting little sci-fi yarn to boot.
Russian Doll co-creator and star Natasha Lyonne has been working as an actor since the age of six when she appeared Pee-Wee’s Playhouse. At age 16 she appeared in Woody Allen’s Everyone Says I Love You. She’s been a part of the American Pie, Scary Movie, and Blade franchises before finally popping up in her now most famous role as Nicky Nichols on Orange is the New Black.
Still for as long as Lyonne has been working, it’s taken a minute to get to this point - where her name and face is displayed prominently over the marketing material for her very own show. In fact, the splash page for Netflix’s Russian Doll currently features Lyonne’s visage no fewer than seven times (though that...
Russian Doll co-creator and star Natasha Lyonne has been working as an actor since the age of six when she appeared Pee-Wee’s Playhouse. At age 16 she appeared in Woody Allen’s Everyone Says I Love You. She’s been a part of the American Pie, Scary Movie, and Blade franchises before finally popping up in her now most famous role as Nicky Nichols on Orange is the New Black.
Still for as long as Lyonne has been working, it’s taken a minute to get to this point - where her name and face is displayed prominently over the marketing material for her very own show. In fact, the splash page for Netflix’s Russian Doll currently features Lyonne’s visage no fewer than seven times (though that...
- 1/22/2019
- Den of Geek
More than two decades after accepting his first SAG Award for his role in Forrest Gump, Tom Hanks is returning to the stage this year to present legendary actor and writer Alan Alda with a Life Achievement Award during the ceremony.
Alda, 82, will accept SAG-AFTRA’s highest accolade from his former Bridge of Spies co-star for his outstanding career, which includes starring in 11 seasons of M*A*S*H as Dr. Hawkeye Pierce.
The renowned actor is one of only six people to receive Oscar, Tony and Emmy nominations in the same year. On film, he is best...
Alda, 82, will accept SAG-AFTRA’s highest accolade from his former Bridge of Spies co-star for his outstanding career, which includes starring in 11 seasons of M*A*S*H as Dr. Hawkeye Pierce.
The renowned actor is one of only six people to receive Oscar, Tony and Emmy nominations in the same year. On film, he is best...
- 1/8/2019
- by Deirdre Durkan
- PEOPLE.com
Natalie Portman shows up in the second half of “Vox Lux” like a hurricane, bursting into writer-director Brady Corbet’s mesmerizing portrait of self-absorbed pop star and overtaking the story. As Celeste, a beloved singer who survived a mass shooting in her youth and has been corrupted by fame, Portman embodies the sheer lunacy of modern popular culture.
At the Q&A for the movie at the Toronto International Film Festival, Portman described her performance as “this commodification of everything, where violence becomes something you sell, news becomes something you sell, even private life does.” She singled out a scandal in the movie’s plot that finds armed gunmen wearing masks from one of Celeste’s music videos in a terrorist attack. “What brings a terrorist and a pop star in alignment is that people paying attention to them makes them valuable and gives them power,” she said. “That kind...
At the Q&A for the movie at the Toronto International Film Festival, Portman described her performance as “this commodification of everything, where violence becomes something you sell, news becomes something you sell, even private life does.” She singled out a scandal in the movie’s plot that finds armed gunmen wearing masks from one of Celeste’s music videos in a terrorist attack. “What brings a terrorist and a pop star in alignment is that people paying attention to them makes them valuable and gives them power,” she said. “That kind...
- 9/8/2018
- by Eric Kohn
- Indiewire
The drama in Litchfield is “better than ever” (The Boston Globe) in the fourth season of the groundbreaking hit series, Orange Is the New Black: Season Four, arriving on Blu-ray™ (plus Digital HD), DVD, and Digital HD May 9 from Lionsgate.
Now you can own the Orange Is The New Black: Season 4 Blu-ray. We Are Movie Geeks has Four copies to give away. All you have to do is leave a comment answering this question: What is your favorite movie featuring Natasha Lyonne ? (mine is Everyone Says I Love You!). It’s so easy!
Good Luck!
Official Rules:
1. You Must Be A Us Resident. Prize Will Only Be Shipped To Us Addresses. No P.O. Boxes. No Duplicate Addresses.
Winner of three consecutive Screen Actors Guild Awards for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series, Orange Is the New Black: Season Four features an all-star cast including:
Taylor Schilling – 2014 Emmy® Nominee,...
Now you can own the Orange Is The New Black: Season 4 Blu-ray. We Are Movie Geeks has Four copies to give away. All you have to do is leave a comment answering this question: What is your favorite movie featuring Natasha Lyonne ? (mine is Everyone Says I Love You!). It’s so easy!
Good Luck!
Official Rules:
1. You Must Be A Us Resident. Prize Will Only Be Shipped To Us Addresses. No P.O. Boxes. No Duplicate Addresses.
Winner of three consecutive Screen Actors Guild Awards for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series, Orange Is the New Black: Season Four features an all-star cast including:
Taylor Schilling – 2014 Emmy® Nominee,...
- 5/5/2017
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Here at Et, we love an anniversary -- whether it’s the 20th anniversary of Scream or Clueless, 10 years in the life of The Hills or the magical time making No Doubt’s Magic Kingdom 20 years later. And as we settle in 2017, it’s time to look ahead at all those upcoming moments that will have you saying, “I remember when…”
Here’s a brief look at our favorite TV and film milestones of 2017:
Jan. 25, 2002: A Walk to Remember (15 Years)
While fans are crying over Mandy Moore’s Golden Globe-nominated performance on NBC’s hit new series This Is Us, it was just 15 years ago that they cried over her performance in the weepy adaptation of Nicholas Sparks’ book about a girl with cancer who falls in love with a rebellious classmate.
Let’s not also forget that 2002 gave us Naomie Harris in 28 Days Later, Barbershop, Ryan Gosling in Murder by Numbers, My Big Fat Greek Wedding, [link...
Here’s a brief look at our favorite TV and film milestones of 2017:
Jan. 25, 2002: A Walk to Remember (15 Years)
While fans are crying over Mandy Moore’s Golden Globe-nominated performance on NBC’s hit new series This Is Us, it was just 15 years ago that they cried over her performance in the weepy adaptation of Nicholas Sparks’ book about a girl with cancer who falls in love with a rebellious classmate.
Let’s not also forget that 2002 gave us Naomie Harris in 28 Days Later, Barbershop, Ryan Gosling in Murder by Numbers, My Big Fat Greek Wedding, [link...
- 1/1/2017
- Entertainment Tonight
Fern Buchner, a makeup artist who worked on Barry Sonnenfeld's two Addams Family movies and nearly two dozen films directed by Woody Allen, from Annie Hall through Everyone Says I Love You, has died. She was 87. Buchner, whose credits also include Oliver Stone's Wall Street (1987), Tim Burton's Edward Scissorhands (1990) and Jon Avnet's Fried Green Tomatoes (1991), died Sept. 23 in Henderson, Nev., her friend Diane Salzberg told The Hollywood Reporter. Buchner was nominated for BAFTA Awards for her work on Allen's Zelig (1983) and on the Addams Family films released in 1991 and 1993. She started out
read more...
read more...
- 11/1/2016
- by Mike Barnes
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The director of Whiplash delivers a musical romance that rushes from first love to heartache via showtunes, love songs and free jazz. Propelled by charming performances from its leads, it’s a sweet-natured drama that’s full of bounce
The seasons of a love affair are played out beguilingly in this wonderfully sweet, sad, smart new movie from Damien Chazelle – the director of Whiplash – and the Venice film festival could not have wished for a bigger sugar rush to start the proceedings. It’s an unapologetically romantic homage to classic movie musicals, splashing its poster-paint energy and dream-chasing optimism on the screen. With no little audacity, La La Land seeks its own place somewhere on a continuum between Singin’ in the Rain and Woody Allen’s Everyone Says I Love You, with a hint of Alan Parker’s Fame for the opening sequence, in which a bunch of young kids with big dreams,...
The seasons of a love affair are played out beguilingly in this wonderfully sweet, sad, smart new movie from Damien Chazelle – the director of Whiplash – and the Venice film festival could not have wished for a bigger sugar rush to start the proceedings. It’s an unapologetically romantic homage to classic movie musicals, splashing its poster-paint energy and dream-chasing optimism on the screen. With no little audacity, La La Land seeks its own place somewhere on a continuum between Singin’ in the Rain and Woody Allen’s Everyone Says I Love You, with a hint of Alan Parker’s Fame for the opening sequence, in which a bunch of young kids with big dreams,...
- 8/31/2016
- by Peter Bradshaw
- The Guardian - Film News
Gorgeous. Damien Chazelle’s got a lot of eyes on him as he prepares his follow-up to Whiplash for release, and based on today’s first trailer for La La Land, he’s got precious little to worry about. When you cast Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling as young pretty people falling in love, you’re already halfway done with your work, but when you add in the surreal and beautiful take on Los Angeles, a city that is plenty surreal and beautiful on its own, you might end up with something really special. I started laughing today when I saw some dude on Twitter dismiss this because he thought it looked too much like Woody Allen’s Everyone Says I Love You. Hi, random dude. Please see more movies. Musicals have always been one of the most expressionistic forms of mainstream film, with song and dance standing in for...
- 7/13/2016
- by Drew McWeeny
- Hitfix
Tony Sirico has strong-armed his way into the next Woody Allen picture. The actor who menaced as “Paulie Walnuts” Gualtieri on The Sopranos will play Vito in Allen’s untitled feature, which is being kept under wraps but also stars Parker Posey, Blake Lively, Kristen Stewart, Jesse Eisenberg, Bruce Willis and others. Sirico also appeared in Allen’s pre-Sopranos films Deconstructing Harry, Everyone Says I Love You and Bullets Over Broadway. Recent credits include Touched, Fr…...
- 8/10/2015
- Deadline
Natalie Portman Says Mike Nichols Saved Her Career After 'Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace'
Let's say you're an actress who has just landed one of the key roles in a new "Star Wars" trilogy. Before that, you had turned some heads as a kid in "Leon: The Professional," and had small appearances in films by directors like Michael Mann ("Heat") and Woody Allen ("Everyone Says I Love You"). But "Star Wars" was your key to the big time, and the future looked bright. But that's not quite how it turned out for Natalie Portman. And she reveals that the late, great Mike Nichols was the one who saved her career from a possibly skidding off the rails before the entire trilogy had hit theaters (Portman later starred in his 2004 effort "Closer"). " 'Star Wars' had come out around the time of [her performance in 'The Seagull' in Central Park], and everyone thought I was a horrible actress. I was in the biggest-grossing movie of the decade, and no director wanted to work with me,...
- 12/18/2014
- by Kevin Jagernauth
- The Playlist
By Anjelica Oswald
Managing Editor
Edward Norton hasn’t been nominated for an Oscar in fifteen years — since 1999’s lead actor nomination for American History X — but his supporting role in Alejandro G. Inarritu’s Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) may result in a third Oscar nomination for the actor.
The film stars Michael Keaton as a washed-up actor trying to reclaim his glory by writing, directing and starring in a Broadway show. Norton costars as Mike, an arrogant actor who has been cast in the play. The New York Times’ Manohla Dargis said Norton was “pitch-perfect, perfectly cast.” The Hollywood Reporter’s Todd McCarthy described Norton as “crackerjack as the bad boy actor whose gigantic ego does constant battle with equally large insecurities.”
Norton told NPR, “I think it was one of the most creatively satisfying experiences I’ve had — and I think it’s an incredibly audacious and very rare movie.
Managing Editor
Edward Norton hasn’t been nominated for an Oscar in fifteen years — since 1999’s lead actor nomination for American History X — but his supporting role in Alejandro G. Inarritu’s Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) may result in a third Oscar nomination for the actor.
The film stars Michael Keaton as a washed-up actor trying to reclaim his glory by writing, directing and starring in a Broadway show. Norton costars as Mike, an arrogant actor who has been cast in the play. The New York Times’ Manohla Dargis said Norton was “pitch-perfect, perfectly cast.” The Hollywood Reporter’s Todd McCarthy described Norton as “crackerjack as the bad boy actor whose gigantic ego does constant battle with equally large insecurities.”
Norton told NPR, “I think it was one of the most creatively satisfying experiences I’ve had — and I think it’s an incredibly audacious and very rare movie.
- 11/5/2014
- by Anjelica Oswald
- Scott Feinberg
Make people laugh and they won't even realize you're making them think. Over the past 50 years, women have broken through the glass ceiling time after time, shattering stereotypes and thumbing their noses at the old chestnut that "Women aren't funny." Fact: Anybody who says women aren't funny doesn't want them to be funny. We're looking back on the 50 funniest women of the past 50 years, their contributions to comedy, and their enduring legacies that inspire men and women alike. These are the 50 women who have helped (and are helping) to introduce the next class of hilarious women, which will inevitably include Amy Schumer, Lena Dunham, Mindy Kaling, Tig Notaro, Chelsea Handler, Maria Bamford, Aubrey Plaza, and Kate McKinnon. Keep in mind this list only includes women who are primarily performers in movies, television, and standup comedy. That's why you don't see legends like Nora Ephron, Anne Beatts, and Elaine May here.
- 10/15/2014
- by Louis Virtel, Chris Eggertsen, Donna Dickens
- Hitfix
View Photo Gallery
By Christopher Rosa
If you watched Woody Allen‘s latest film, Magic in the Moonlight over the weekend, you may have noticed something interesting about its romantic leads: Emma Stone and Colin Firth have a 28-year age difference between them. This example of a May-December romance is drastic but — surprise, surprise — not uncommon in Allen’s films.
The director must have a fascination with the older man, younger woman affair because this sort of pairing runs rampant in his filmography. From his critically acclaimed musical-comedy Everyone Says I Love You (1996) to kooky crime fare like Small Time Crooks(2000), several of his pictures feature at least one cradle-robbing encounter, no matter how brief. We’ve assembled 10 particularly salacious pairings with the approximate age each actor or actress was at the time of filming. Some have 20, 30 or even 40-year age gaps. In other words, some of these actors could...
By Christopher Rosa
If you watched Woody Allen‘s latest film, Magic in the Moonlight over the weekend, you may have noticed something interesting about its romantic leads: Emma Stone and Colin Firth have a 28-year age difference between them. This example of a May-December romance is drastic but — surprise, surprise — not uncommon in Allen’s films.
The director must have a fascination with the older man, younger woman affair because this sort of pairing runs rampant in his filmography. From his critically acclaimed musical-comedy Everyone Says I Love You (1996) to kooky crime fare like Small Time Crooks(2000), several of his pictures feature at least one cradle-robbing encounter, no matter how brief. We’ve assembled 10 particularly salacious pairings with the approximate age each actor or actress was at the time of filming. Some have 20, 30 or even 40-year age gaps. In other words, some of these actors could...
- 7/28/2014
- by VH1
- TheFabLife - Movies
View Photo Gallery
By Christopher Rosa
If you watched Woody Allen‘s latest film, Magic in the Moonlight over the weekend, you may have noticed something interesting about its romantic leads: Emma Stone and Colin Firth have a 28-year age difference between them. This example of a May-December romance is drastic but — surprise, surprise — not uncommon in Allen’s films.
The director must have a fascination with the older man, younger woman affair because this sort of pairing runs rampant in his filmography. From his critically acclaimed musical-comedy Everyone Says I Love You (1996) to kooky crime fare like Small Time Crooks(2000), several of his pictures feature at least one cradle-robbing encounter, no matter how brief. We’ve assembled 10 particularly salacious pairings with the approximate age each actor or actress was at the time of filming. Some have 20, 30 or even 40-year age gaps. In other words, some of these actors could...
By Christopher Rosa
If you watched Woody Allen‘s latest film, Magic in the Moonlight over the weekend, you may have noticed something interesting about its romantic leads: Emma Stone and Colin Firth have a 28-year age difference between them. This example of a May-December romance is drastic but — surprise, surprise — not uncommon in Allen’s films.
The director must have a fascination with the older man, younger woman affair because this sort of pairing runs rampant in his filmography. From his critically acclaimed musical-comedy Everyone Says I Love You (1996) to kooky crime fare like Small Time Crooks(2000), several of his pictures feature at least one cradle-robbing encounter, no matter how brief. We’ve assembled 10 particularly salacious pairings with the approximate age each actor or actress was at the time of filming. Some have 20, 30 or even 40-year age gaps. In other words, some of these actors could...
- 7/28/2014
- by VH1
- VH1.com
A clip from director Woody Allen's latest comedy Magic in the Moonlight has been unveiled.
Colin Firth stars in Magic in the Moonlight as Stanley, a stage magician hired to investigate a spiritualist (Emma Stone) for possibly swindling a wealthy family.
This new clip centres on Stanley and the spiritual medium debating who has more to lose if either is proved incorrect in their quest.
Allen returned to France for Magic in the Moonlight, having previously filmed Everyone Says I Love You and the Oscar-winning Midnight in Paris in the European country.
His ensemble cast for Magic in the Moonlight includes Marcia Gay Harden, Jacki Weaver and Hamish Linklater.
Allen's latest film is now playing on limited release in the Us and opens on September 19 in the UK. Watch a trailer below:...
Colin Firth stars in Magic in the Moonlight as Stanley, a stage magician hired to investigate a spiritualist (Emma Stone) for possibly swindling a wealthy family.
This new clip centres on Stanley and the spiritual medium debating who has more to lose if either is proved incorrect in their quest.
Allen returned to France for Magic in the Moonlight, having previously filmed Everyone Says I Love You and the Oscar-winning Midnight in Paris in the European country.
His ensemble cast for Magic in the Moonlight includes Marcia Gay Harden, Jacki Weaver and Hamish Linklater.
Allen's latest film is now playing on limited release in the Us and opens on September 19 in the UK. Watch a trailer below:...
- 7/28/2014
- Digital Spy
To celebrate the DVD release of The Woody Allen Collection on 7th July, we’re giving away 1 box set a lucky winner.
Kaleidoscope Home Entertainment is pleased to announce the UK release of The Woody Allen Library boxset – a collection of classic Woody Allen films that are also releasing individually on DVD on 7th July 2014; the films will be available digitally from 23rd June 2014.
The Box set includes: Bullets Over Broadway, Deconstructing Harry, Mighty Aphrodite, Celebrity, Everyone Says I love You, Small Time Crooks, Sweet And Lowdown and Wild Man Blues. From directing, to writing, to acting, these eight titles are arguably some of Allen’s most classic and successful pieces of work, featuring outstanding cast lists.
Please note: This competition is open to UK residents only
a Rafflecopter giveaway
The Small Print
Open to UK residents only The competition will close 10th July at 23.59 GMT The winner will be...
Kaleidoscope Home Entertainment is pleased to announce the UK release of The Woody Allen Library boxset – a collection of classic Woody Allen films that are also releasing individually on DVD on 7th July 2014; the films will be available digitally from 23rd June 2014.
The Box set includes: Bullets Over Broadway, Deconstructing Harry, Mighty Aphrodite, Celebrity, Everyone Says I love You, Small Time Crooks, Sweet And Lowdown and Wild Man Blues. From directing, to writing, to acting, these eight titles are arguably some of Allen’s most classic and successful pieces of work, featuring outstanding cast lists.
Please note: This competition is open to UK residents only
a Rafflecopter giveaway
The Small Print
Open to UK residents only The competition will close 10th July at 23.59 GMT The winner will be...
- 6/30/2014
- by Competitions
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
The trailer for director Woody Allen's new romantic comedy Magic in the Moonlight has premiered.
Colin Firth stars as an investigator attempting to figure out whether an enchanting spiritual medium (Emma Stone) is defrauding a prominent family.
Hamish Linklater, Academy Award winner Marcia Gay Harden and Oscar nominee Jacki Weaver also feature in the movie, which is set in the 1920s on the French Riviera.
Allen previously shot Everyone Says I Love You and the box office smash Midnight in Paris in France.
Allen has penned the screenplay for Magic in the Moonlight, and will partner once again with cinematographer Darius Khondji.
Magic in the Moonlight will open on July 25 in the Us and on September 19 in the UK.
It was announced earlier in May that Joaquin Phoenix is to begin shooting Allen's next movie this summer.
Colin Firth stars as an investigator attempting to figure out whether an enchanting spiritual medium (Emma Stone) is defrauding a prominent family.
Hamish Linklater, Academy Award winner Marcia Gay Harden and Oscar nominee Jacki Weaver also feature in the movie, which is set in the 1920s on the French Riviera.
Allen previously shot Everyone Says I Love You and the box office smash Midnight in Paris in France.
Allen has penned the screenplay for Magic in the Moonlight, and will partner once again with cinematographer Darius Khondji.
Magic in the Moonlight will open on July 25 in the Us and on September 19 in the UK.
It was announced earlier in May that Joaquin Phoenix is to begin shooting Allen's next movie this summer.
- 5/21/2014
- Digital Spy
Kaleidoscope Home Entertainment (Khe) has secured a catalogue of classic Woody Allen titles for release this summer.
The deal was negotiated by Nadine Rothschild for Westend Films and Spencer Pollard for Khe.
The collection will be released as a DVD boxset entitled ‘The Woody Allen Library’ on July 7 and will also be available digitally from June 23. The films include Bullets Over Broadway, Celebrity, Deconstructing Harry, Everyone Says I Love You, Mighty Aphrodite, Small Time Crooks, Sweet and Lowdown, and Wild Man Blues.
Michael Chapman, Acquisitions Executive of Khe, said: “Given the recent success of Blue Jasmine, this is the perfect time to release some of Allen’s past works.”
London-based Khe has released more than 250 films such as Joss Whedon’s Much Ado About Nothing; The Reluctant Fundamentalist starring Riz Ahmed; and Ray Winstone gangster thriller Lords of London.
The deal was negotiated by Nadine Rothschild for Westend Films and Spencer Pollard for Khe.
The collection will be released as a DVD boxset entitled ‘The Woody Allen Library’ on July 7 and will also be available digitally from June 23. The films include Bullets Over Broadway, Celebrity, Deconstructing Harry, Everyone Says I Love You, Mighty Aphrodite, Small Time Crooks, Sweet and Lowdown, and Wild Man Blues.
Michael Chapman, Acquisitions Executive of Khe, said: “Given the recent success of Blue Jasmine, this is the perfect time to release some of Allen’s past works.”
London-based Khe has released more than 250 films such as Joss Whedon’s Much Ado About Nothing; The Reluctant Fundamentalist starring Riz Ahmed; and Ray Winstone gangster thriller Lords of London.
- 4/28/2014
- ScreenDaily
Living in 2014 means I am constantly surrounded by musical TV shows, even when I don’t want to be. It all started with Glee. Then there was Smash, and now I’ve got Nashville. I realize that I could change the channel if I wanted, but what’s the point? Even my non-musical shows have started including musical numbers. For example, I recently started binge-watching Hart of Dixie, and even that show has Scott Porter behind a mic every couple of episodes! The lesson: There’s no escaping the music.
The good news is that it’s not the music...
The good news is that it’s not the music...
- 1/15/2014
- by Samantha Highfill
- EW.com - PopWatch
Review Billy Grifter 10 Jan 2014 - 16:23
Regrettably, Revolution's version of The Three Amigos does not contain Steve Martin, Chevy Chase or even Martin short...
This review contains spoilers.
2.10 The Three Amigos
There was me thinking I’d seen the last of turkey, and then Revolution came back.
What The Three Amigos reminded me of most is how far from the original premise this show has wandered. Because people have entirely given up even mentioning the power outage issue and their focus is decidedly south of the border.
Our three Amigos in this instance are Miles, Rachel and Bass, who head to Mexico to hang out with Bass’s long lost son. It’s as simple and as dumb as that statement makes it sound, as when you leave people for decades they’re invariably either not where you left them or the same person when you come back.
But...
Regrettably, Revolution's version of The Three Amigos does not contain Steve Martin, Chevy Chase or even Martin short...
This review contains spoilers.
2.10 The Three Amigos
There was me thinking I’d seen the last of turkey, and then Revolution came back.
What The Three Amigos reminded me of most is how far from the original premise this show has wandered. Because people have entirely given up even mentioning the power outage issue and their focus is decidedly south of the border.
Our three Amigos in this instance are Miles, Rachel and Bass, who head to Mexico to hang out with Bass’s long lost son. It’s as simple and as dumb as that statement makes it sound, as when you leave people for decades they’re invariably either not where you left them or the same person when you come back.
But...
- 1/10/2014
- by louisamellor
- Den of Geek
August: Osage County takes two minutes to prove that Meryl Streep, still racking up Oscar nominations like Skee-Ball tickets at age 64, will brutalize herself and you for the sake of a movie. As the loopy Oklahoma grandmama Violet in the new adaptation of Tracy Letts‘ Pulitzer-winning play, she stumbles around almost gratuitously, gargles profanities at Julia Roberts, and basically refuses to endear us for the movie’s entire duration. If you thought June Squibb was broad in Nebraska, you’ll be shocked at the kabuki-type insanity of Meryl’s work. She practically draws a sword and impales Margo Martindale for disgracing the emperor.
As such, August: Osage County polarizes. But who doesn’t love when Meryl gives us polarizing work? After all, her weirdest, kookiest, and potentially funniest movie of all time is also her most divisive: Death Becomes Her. The dark 1992 farce may feel like the snobbish Hollywood cousin...
As such, August: Osage County polarizes. But who doesn’t love when Meryl gives us polarizing work? After all, her weirdest, kookiest, and potentially funniest movie of all time is also her most divisive: Death Becomes Her. The dark 1992 farce may feel like the snobbish Hollywood cousin...
- 1/8/2014
- by Louis Virtel
- The Backlot
It is the perfect festive film genre but today's romcoms are often the tired leftovers of a great idea. We need a new Nora Ephron
As the winter onslaught of stollen, goose fat and sloe gin risks leaving you feeling like the Jabba the Hutt of your living room sofa, the television set fulfils an almost medical role at Christmas. Switch off your mulled brain, remain very still and be entertained by moving light. For children this is a holiday for toys and chocolate. For adults there is alcohol, love and regret. No finer genre exists to aid the digestion of turkey curry, day-old devils on horseback and half-price cava than the romantic comedy – but just as Christmases do not improve with age, the romantic comedy is also a vehicle that often feels like it has run its course.
Watching a modern romcom is the closest most of us will...
As the winter onslaught of stollen, goose fat and sloe gin risks leaving you feeling like the Jabba the Hutt of your living room sofa, the television set fulfils an almost medical role at Christmas. Switch off your mulled brain, remain very still and be entertained by moving light. For children this is a holiday for toys and chocolate. For adults there is alcohol, love and regret. No finer genre exists to aid the digestion of turkey curry, day-old devils on horseback and half-price cava than the romantic comedy – but just as Christmases do not improve with age, the romantic comedy is also a vehicle that often feels like it has run its course.
Watching a modern romcom is the closest most of us will...
- 12/25/2013
- by Rupert Myers
- The Guardian - Film News
Review Billy Grifter 22 Nov 2013 - 06:31
Has Stockholm Syndrome set in, or did Billy just really enjoy an episode of Revolution? Here's his latest review...
This review contains spoilers.
2.9 Everyone Says I Love You
It’s not easy for me to say this, given what a hard time I’ve given this show in the past. But episode nine of this season rocked on a number of significant levels, and we may have witnessed a transformation that few series ever manage to achieve.
It started out so typically Revolution, i.e. dumb. Miles, Charlie and Rachel enter the Patriot compound to discover that everyone is already unconscious. Charlie and Miles have automatic weapons, where Rachel is ready for anything with… a knife. It looks stupid, and someone should have at least handed her a pistol.
Not finding Aaron, they enter the seemingly endless collection of secret tunnels that pervades the world of Revolution.
Has Stockholm Syndrome set in, or did Billy just really enjoy an episode of Revolution? Here's his latest review...
This review contains spoilers.
2.9 Everyone Says I Love You
It’s not easy for me to say this, given what a hard time I’ve given this show in the past. But episode nine of this season rocked on a number of significant levels, and we may have witnessed a transformation that few series ever manage to achieve.
It started out so typically Revolution, i.e. dumb. Miles, Charlie and Rachel enter the Patriot compound to discover that everyone is already unconscious. Charlie and Miles have automatic weapons, where Rachel is ready for anything with… a knife. It looks stupid, and someone should have at least handed her a pistol.
Not finding Aaron, they enter the seemingly endless collection of secret tunnels that pervades the world of Revolution.
- 11/22/2013
- by louisamellor
- Den of Geek
Revolution, Season 2, Episode 9: “Everyone Says I Love You”
Written by Trey Callaway & Paul Grellong
Directed by Steve Boyum
Airs Wednesdays at 8pm (Et) on NBC
One of the golden rules in TV is that you can never really be sure someone’s dead if you’ve only heard about their demise. In Revolution, even that trope isn’t always surefire, since we’ve seen Aaron come back from the dead and Monroe reemerge from a buried casket after a heavy dose of drugs made him appear dead. So it shouldn’t be too much of a surprise to see that Julia is alive and well and (gasp!) remarried, in the belief that Neville was actually deceased himself. She managed to escape Atlanta long before the bombs dropped at the end of Season 1, and found a new husband to provide her with food, shelter, and security.
That would, to some degree,...
Written by Trey Callaway & Paul Grellong
Directed by Steve Boyum
Airs Wednesdays at 8pm (Et) on NBC
One of the golden rules in TV is that you can never really be sure someone’s dead if you’ve only heard about their demise. In Revolution, even that trope isn’t always surefire, since we’ve seen Aaron come back from the dead and Monroe reemerge from a buried casket after a heavy dose of drugs made him appear dead. So it shouldn’t be too much of a surprise to see that Julia is alive and well and (gasp!) remarried, in the belief that Neville was actually deceased himself. She managed to escape Atlanta long before the bombs dropped at the end of Season 1, and found a new husband to provide her with food, shelter, and security.
That would, to some degree,...
- 11/21/2013
- by Kris Holt
- SoundOnSight
New Revolution season 2,episode 9 intense spoilers & clips hit the net. Last night, NBC served up the new spoilers and sneak peek/spoiler clip (below) for their upcoming 'Revolution" episode 9 of season 2. The episode is entitled, "Everyone Says I Love You," and it appears to be quite interesting and intense as a ton of dead bodies are discovered by Charlie,Miles,and the crew, and more. In the new "Everyone Says I Love You" episode, the relationship between Rachel and Gene will remain strained as Charlie shows her mom how much she's grown. In the meantime, Neville will end up, giving Jason a determined proclamation. Charlie,Rachel, and company are going to happen upon a bunker full of dead bodies, and more. Episode 9 is set to hit the airwaves on Wednesday night, November 20th at 7pm central time on NBC.
- 11/14/2013
- by Andre
- OnTheFlix
We could all use a little more Edward Norton in our lives.
Though the Fight Club star has had a few particularly zeitgeisty moments (see 1996, which brought us Norton’s Primal Fear/Larry Flynt/Everyone Says I Love You trifecta, or 2002, when he had big roles in four movies… one of which, granted, was Death to Smoochy), he generally keeps a pretty low profile by appearing in just a few carefully chosen films each year. This, plus Norton’s closely guarded personal life, mean that he’s sort of impossible to get sick of — and makes his first time hosting...
Though the Fight Club star has had a few particularly zeitgeisty moments (see 1996, which brought us Norton’s Primal Fear/Larry Flynt/Everyone Says I Love You trifecta, or 2002, when he had big roles in four movies… one of which, granted, was Death to Smoochy), he generally keeps a pretty low profile by appearing in just a few carefully chosen films each year. This, plus Norton’s closely guarded personal life, mean that he’s sort of impossible to get sick of — and makes his first time hosting...
- 10/26/2013
- by Hillary Busis
- EW.com - PopWatch
Feature Ivan Radford 30 Sep 2013 - 07:03
Ivan gives the soundtrack from Woody Allen's Blue Jasmine a listen, and provides a rundown of the filmmaker's 10 best music moments...
You can tell immediately when you're watching a Woody Allen movie. Not just from the opening credits (Windsor Light Condensed on black title cards) but from the music. Woody loves the stuff - he'd rather play clarinet with his band than go to the Oscars. He loves it so much that he joins the list of directors such as Quentin Tarantino and Martin Scorsese who are known for using popular, pre-existing music in their soundtracks. The man has directed an astonishing 43 films in his career. Just seven of those have original scores.
Allen started his career with none other than Marvin Hamlisch, who would go on to score The Spy Who Loved Me. Working on Bananas after Take The Money And Run,...
Ivan gives the soundtrack from Woody Allen's Blue Jasmine a listen, and provides a rundown of the filmmaker's 10 best music moments...
You can tell immediately when you're watching a Woody Allen movie. Not just from the opening credits (Windsor Light Condensed on black title cards) but from the music. Woody loves the stuff - he'd rather play clarinet with his band than go to the Oscars. He loves it so much that he joins the list of directors such as Quentin Tarantino and Martin Scorsese who are known for using popular, pre-existing music in their soundtracks. The man has directed an astonishing 43 films in his career. Just seven of those have original scores.
Allen started his career with none other than Marvin Hamlisch, who would go on to score The Spy Who Loved Me. Working on Bananas after Take The Money And Run,...
- 9/27/2013
- by ryanlambie
- Den of Geek
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