Angelina Jolie made her latest outing a family affair when she brought along two of her daughters - Shiloh (11) and Zahara (12) - to the premiere of her film The Breadwinner in La on Friday. The proud mom of six posed for pictures on the red carpet in a white dress, while her girls opted for all-black ensembles. Angelina's youngest daughter, Vivienne (9), did not attend. The trio were later joined by 13-year-old actress Saara Chaudry (pictured on the far right), who stars in the film. See all of the fun photos of Angelina with her daughters ahead. RelatedWatch Angelina and Brad's Kids Grow Up Before Your Eyes in These 14 Pictures...
- 10/23/2017
- by Terry Carter
- Popsugar.com
Angelina Jolie and her children have been stepping out a lot lately, and we can't get enough. After taking the Toronto International Film Festival by storm, the big, happy family attended the NYC premiere of Angelina's movie First They Killed My Father on Thursday night. The actress and her six children put on a united front as they all incorporated into their outfits what appeared to be plumeria flowers, which symbolize positivity. Of course, it was her eldest sons, Maddox and Pax, who helped work on the film, who really stole the spotlight as they sweetly escorted their mom down the red carpet. Seriously, she looked so proud! Angelina's two eldest sons also weren't the only men in her life who showed their support. Her father, Jon Voight, who had previously been estranged from her for nearly seven years, made a cameo at the event. The two ended...
- 9/15/2017
- by Kelsie Gibson
- Popsugar.com
Angelina Jolie and her family are currently hitting the press tour for her new film, First They Killed My Father, on which Maddox, 16, served as an executive producer and Pax, 13, was an on-set photographer. During Maddox's first-ever interview with People this week, Angelina's oldest son opened up about what it was like working alongside his mom. "I was trying to help wherever I could," he said. "[She's] fun, funny, and easy to work with. She's a wonder." Angelina famously adopted Maddox from Cambodia back in 2002, and she revealed that he was actually the one who encouraged her to make a movie about his country. "Mad knows himself very well and if he said he was ready, I knew he knew," Angelina said. "He goes back and forth [to Cambodia] a lot, but this would be over four months of just being in the country, really reading, listening, learning and absorbing all things...
- 9/13/2017
- by Monica Sisavat
- Popsugar.com
Jamie Chung may no longer be on Once Upon a Time, but that doesn't mean she's out of our lives forever. The actress recently joined the cast of the upcoming film 1985 and she is very active on social media. When she's not making us swoon over her sweet relationship with husband Bryan Greenberg or sharing cute photos of her adventures with Jennifer Morrison, you can also almost bet she's hanging out in her bikini somewhere. And with a body like hers, can you really blame her? Keep reading to see what we're talking about. RelatedWatch Jamie Chung and Bryan Greenberg's Love Story Unfold Before Your Eyes...
- 8/17/2017
- by Monica Sisavat
- Popsugar.com
A photo posted by Catherine Zeta-Jones (@catherinezetajones) on Nov 23, 2016 at 2:27pm Pst Catherine Zeta-Jones is currently enjoying a family vacation in Mexico, and on Wednesday, the actress shared a couple of sexy swimsuit pictures taken by husband Michael Douglas. Along with a sexy photo collage, she wrote, "Pissed the paparazzi photographed my ass, thus sharing the photographs my husband took of my ass. Always a better option for viewing." One thing is for sure: Michael is a lucky man. Related:See Catherine Zeta-Jones and Michael Douglas's Kids Grow Up Before Your Eyes...
- 11/24/2016
- by Monica Sisavat
- Popsugar.com
Most Richard Linklater fans can tell you which film – and sometimes which scene – ignited their enthusiasm for the director, whether it was 1991’s influential indie Slacker, 1993’s high-school classic Dazed and Confused or 2003’s comedy School of Rock.
But, it all began with Before Sunrise.
Released 20 years ago this week, Before Sunrise boasted fresh-faced actors and a swoon-worthy premise: An American man (Ethan Hawke) meets a French woman (Julie Delpy) on a train, and they spend one magical evening together in Vienna. That alone was enough to attract my 17-year-old self to the theater, as was the case with many of my peers.
News: Julie & Ethan Reunite 'Before Midnight'
The true magic of Before Sunrise, however, lies beyond the picturesque scenery and smitten gazes. Building upon his gift for crafting relatable and engrossing conversation, Linklater’s characters feel fully formed, discussing everything from philosophy and religion to love and their hopes for the future.
"[link...
But, it all began with Before Sunrise.
Released 20 years ago this week, Before Sunrise boasted fresh-faced actors and a swoon-worthy premise: An American man (Ethan Hawke) meets a French woman (Julie Delpy) on a train, and they spend one magical evening together in Vienna. That alone was enough to attract my 17-year-old self to the theater, as was the case with many of my peers.
News: Julie & Ethan Reunite 'Before Midnight'
The true magic of Before Sunrise, however, lies beyond the picturesque scenery and smitten gazes. Building upon his gift for crafting relatable and engrossing conversation, Linklater’s characters feel fully formed, discussing everything from philosophy and religion to love and their hopes for the future.
"[link...
- 1/27/2015
- Entertainment Tonight
This weekend, Paramount’s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles is opening strong with a possible $65M+ three-day haul … and a B CinemaScore. Meanwhile, The Hundred-Foot Journey is opening in fourth place — but with an A CinemaScore from its core audience. And last week, CinemaScore began putting its scores out on Twitter and Facebook (via Denver-based Social Media Energy). In other words, after the exit polls, audiences around the country now will be able to see a film’s CinemaScore, telling the world what its core audience thought of the film on Friday night. In a tweet.
Related: Box Office Shell-Shock: $65M For ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles’
If you look at the breakdowns — and this was not provided to Deadline by CinemaScore — Turtles garnered an A from moviegoers under 18 and a C+ from the 25- to 35-year-olds who grew up watching the Turtles on Saturday morning cartoons years ago. For those under...
Related: Box Office Shell-Shock: $65M For ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles’
If you look at the breakdowns — and this was not provided to Deadline by CinemaScore — Turtles garnered an A from moviegoers under 18 and a C+ from the 25- to 35-year-olds who grew up watching the Turtles on Saturday morning cartoons years ago. For those under...
- 8/9/2014
- by Anita Busch
- Deadline
Miley Cyrus didn't take her twerking to the Grammys stage - luckily Beyoncé had that bootylicious move covered - but skipping the awards show didn't keep the young star from rocking out. Cyrus, 21, spent Sunday night playing Guitar Hero at home. Dressed in sweatpants and a striped muscle tee, the "Wrecking Ball" singer stood on a couch and jammed to "Rock and Roll All Nite" by Kiss. Early Monday morning, she proudly posted an Instagram video of her casual performance. Though she sang at Clive Davis' pre-Grammys bash Saturday, Cyrus was a no show at the actual awards telecast.
- 1/27/2014
- by Michele Corriston
- PEOPLE.com
Time to look at a trio of new ABC sitcoms which debuted in the last week, none of which have been acquired by a UK broadcaster as of yet. That isn’t necessarily a mark against their quality – one looks great, one looks okay, and one delivered a pretty dreadful pilot. Nor is it a sign that they aren’t a good fit for the UK – at least one of them would be a perfect pick for E4, for example – and all three are certainly worthy of discussion. Sadly, the ratings for each show are pretty much the inverse of how much I liked each of them, so we’ll work our way through them in reverse order, starting with the one I liked the least but got the biggest audience…
And to my immense surprise, The Goldbergs was the worst by a long, long way. I was really looking...
And to my immense surprise, The Goldbergs was the worst by a long, long way. I was really looking...
- 10/4/2013
- by Joe Cunningham
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
It’s been a little over 24 hours since I saw the Breaking Bad finale, “Felina,” and I’ve thought about very little else since. My original plan was to write a review of the episode for the site, but after some thought it felt more appropriate to instead pen a more freeform blog in which I pour out a bunch of my feelings about the episode, and invite you readers to join me in some further discussion in the comments section.
Let me begin by stating that if there’s one word that I feel best sums up the finale, it’s ‘satisfying’. Vince Gilligan signed off by wrapping up almost everything we could have hoped he would, and then tied a big old ribbon around it. So Walter found a way to get what remains of his fortune to Flynn. He has an emotional reconciliation with Skyler, and finally...
Let me begin by stating that if there’s one word that I feel best sums up the finale, it’s ‘satisfying’. Vince Gilligan signed off by wrapping up almost everything we could have hoped he would, and then tied a big old ribbon around it. So Walter found a way to get what remains of his fortune to Flynn. He has an emotional reconciliation with Skyler, and finally...
- 10/1/2013
- by Joe Cunningham
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
CBS has the some of the most-watched sitcoms on TV, so any new sitcoms at the very least have some decent lead-ins to theoretically help them build an audience. That was certainly the case for The Crazy Ones, which held onto the lions share of The Big Bang Theory’s gargantuan audience to register 15.61 million viewers and a 4.0 rating on Wednesday.
Debuting to around half that viewership was Mom, the latest sitcom from Chuck Lorre, which would have made it a more obvious candidate to follow-up Tbbt, but is obviously lower down on CBS’s list of priorities. Instead it came after 2 Broke Girls (which deservedly saw a dip in ratings from last year) and registered a soft debut on Monday night. In truth there’s not an awful lot between them in terms of quality based on the pilots, but we’ll start off with the one that I liked a little bit more…...
Debuting to around half that viewership was Mom, the latest sitcom from Chuck Lorre, which would have made it a more obvious candidate to follow-up Tbbt, but is obviously lower down on CBS’s list of priorities. Instead it came after 2 Broke Girls (which deservedly saw a dip in ratings from last year) and registered a soft debut on Monday night. In truth there’s not an awful lot between them in terms of quality based on the pilots, but we’ll start off with the one that I liked a little bit more…...
- 10/1/2013
- by Joe Cunningham
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
It rarely happens, but ABC debuted a night comprised entirely of new programming on Tuesday, hoping that their big-name new property would meet its lofty expectations and with it launch a number of other shows that are arriving with considerably less fanfare. Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D kicked things off, with two comedies in the form of The Goldbergs and Trophy Wife sandwiched in-between the two dramas, with Lucky 7 (a remake of BBC One’s The Syndicate) closing out the night.
We’ll address the two sitcoms in a later post – one I liked, one I didn’t – and for now focus on the dramas. While Shield didn’t quite meet the wildest of ABC’s expectations, it still did extremely well in a tough time slot (opposite NCIS and The Voice) and registered the highest ratings for a drama since 2009. That’s great,...
We’ll address the two sitcoms in a later post – one I liked, one I didn’t – and for now focus on the dramas. While Shield didn’t quite meet the wildest of ABC’s expectations, it still did extremely well in a tough time slot (opposite NCIS and The Voice) and registered the highest ratings for a drama since 2009. That’s great,...
- 9/30/2013
- by Joe Cunningham
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Monday saw the debut of two new drama thrillers in the Us, CBS’s Hostages and NBC’s The Blacklist, which aired head-to-head in the 10pm timeslot.
The former, which has been picked up by Channel 4 to air in the UK, was roundly trounced by The Blacklist in the ratings, which incidentally will debut in the UK on Sky Living on October 4th. Hostages isn’t quite D.O.A., but with a soft landing don’t expect Hostages to get a solid air date from Channel 4 until it’s fate looks a little clearer.
Until then, let’s have a look and see whether the shows themselves are any good, and if we should be looking forward to their UK debuts.
We’ll start with Hostages, which I have to admit, based on the trailer I wasn’t really looking forward to the Jerry Bruckheimer-produced show. The cast is solid,...
The former, which has been picked up by Channel 4 to air in the UK, was roundly trounced by The Blacklist in the ratings, which incidentally will debut in the UK on Sky Living on October 4th. Hostages isn’t quite D.O.A., but with a soft landing don’t expect Hostages to get a solid air date from Channel 4 until it’s fate looks a little clearer.
Until then, let’s have a look and see whether the shows themselves are any good, and if we should be looking forward to their UK debuts.
We’ll start with Hostages, which I have to admit, based on the trailer I wasn’t really looking forward to the Jerry Bruckheimer-produced show. The cast is solid,...
- 9/27/2013
- by Joe Cunningham
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Perhaps one of the most buzzed about new shows of the Fall schedule, but for all the wrong reasons, is Fox’s Dads. Created by Family Guy vets Alec Sulkin and Wellesley Wild, and executive-produced by Seth MacFarlane himself, Dads stars Seth Green and Giovanni Ribisi as a pair of successful video games developers whose lives are interrupted when their fathers (Martin Mull and Peter Riegert) decide to move in with them. Critics who got early access to the Pilot have been scathing, and unsurprisingly for a Seth MacFarlane product it’s been labeled highly offensive (which Fox have sadly tried to use to their advantage). That’s been the headline, and unfortunately it has served to obscure the other key criticism present in most of those reviews: Dads just isn’t funny. The Pilot is a mess, and it’s much easier to take offence when you’re not...
- 9/19/2013
- by Joe Cunningham
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
First and foremost, welcome to a new dedicated TV blog on HeyUGuys. You may have noticed the amount of television content increasing on the site over the past few months, and with a raft of new shows arriving in the coming weeks as part of the new Fall TV season across the pond, we felt there was no time like the present to launch the Flashes Before Your Eyes blog. The first new network show, Sleepy Hollow, debuted on Fox on Monday night, so that’s where we’ll begin.
Iframe Embed for Youtube
Now it’s fair to say that Sleepy Hollow wasn’t the most anticipated of the new Fall shows. There was absolutely no one crying out for a new take on The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, not least a modern-day take on the tale. The show’s creators didn’t inspire much confidence either: Alex Kurtzman...
Iframe Embed for Youtube
Now it’s fair to say that Sleepy Hollow wasn’t the most anticipated of the new Fall shows. There was absolutely no one crying out for a new take on The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, not least a modern-day take on the tale. The show’s creators didn’t inspire much confidence either: Alex Kurtzman...
- 9/18/2013
- by Joe Cunningham
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Each week we take a look at the good, the bad and the ugly of the home entertainment offerings, reviewing and rating the films and the special features packed onto the discs.
Here are the essential picks from the releases out on the 1st of July 2013.
Release of the Week
Oz the Great and Powerful
The Film
Wrenched from the reins of Spider-Man and thrown headlong into the typhoon of anticipation that was the Disney produced prequel to The Wizard of Oz Sam Raimi acquits himself ably here with a wonderful return to Oz.
Two elements serve this film well, the first is the sumptuous production design which looks terribly cluttered on the DVD cover art above but is a visual leap of imagination on screen and is at times jaw-dropping. Raimi keeps a tight hold on the film, and provides a decent guide through the world of Oz and...
Here are the essential picks from the releases out on the 1st of July 2013.
Release of the Week
Oz the Great and Powerful
The Film
Wrenched from the reins of Spider-Man and thrown headlong into the typhoon of anticipation that was the Disney produced prequel to The Wizard of Oz Sam Raimi acquits himself ably here with a wonderful return to Oz.
Two elements serve this film well, the first is the sumptuous production design which looks terribly cluttered on the DVD cover art above but is a visual leap of imagination on screen and is at times jaw-dropping. Raimi keeps a tight hold on the film, and provides a decent guide through the world of Oz and...
- 7/1/2013
- by Jon Lyus
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Film Movement is the latest specialty distributor to cut a deal with theatrical-on-demand web platform Tugg to make some of its catalog available for screenings in local theaters at audiences’ request. Fifteen new and library art-house titles, including Chanoch Ze’evi’s “Hitler’s Children,” Dusty Bias’s “Prairie Love” and Joseph Infantolino’s “Helena From the Wedding,” are available on Tugg as of Tuesday. Also part of the slate are “Amador,” “Arranged,” “Before Your Eyes,” “Foreign Letters,” “Free Men,” “Lucky,” “Papirosen,” “Queen of Hearts,” “Seven Minutes in Heaven,” “Teddy Bear,” “The Day I Saw Your Heart” and “The Dynamiter.” Read More: Tugg Pacts With Tla Releasing to Bring Lgbt Films to Local Theaters on Demand “We are absolutely thrilled to...
- 10/23/2012
- by Jay A. Fernandez
- Indiewire
One more time to the well I go! As with my articles over the last two weeks … I’m taking to task one Tim Marchman of the Wall Street Journal. He quipped that the comic industry is in a tailspin in part because of “clumsy art, poor writing, and (and I’m paraphrasing…) the clinging-to-continuity.” I’ve defended the art. I’ve defended the writing. I might as well finish off the trifecta of telling this putz where to shove his opinions, right? Even if it gets Mike Gold in a tizzy.
It’s the argument I hear (and honestly have made myself… whoops) time and again; Modern comic books are too hard to get into because they have a nearly-impossible-to-grasp forever-changing mythology. In fact, this very argument was brought to life (and a live audience) to Wbez (Chicago’s NPR affiliate) at a well-attended debate. At that debate? Tim Seeley,...
It’s the argument I hear (and honestly have made myself… whoops) time and again; Modern comic books are too hard to get into because they have a nearly-impossible-to-grasp forever-changing mythology. In fact, this very argument was brought to life (and a live audience) to Wbez (Chicago’s NPR affiliate) at a well-attended debate. At that debate? Tim Seeley,...
- 6/16/2012
- by Marc Alan Fishman
- Comicmix.com
Chicago – Disney has cleverly timed this week’s release of Studio Ghibli’s “The Secret World of Arrietty” with the Blu-ray debut two other Ghibli films from one of the most influential studios in the history of film — “Whisper of the Heart” and “Castle in the Sky.” All three films are worth a look (as is Everything ever made by Studio Ghibli) but “Castle” is my personal favorite of the three. Just check ‘em all out (and stay tuned for more exciting news about an upcoming Chicago Film Critics Association event featuring HollywoodChicago.com about Studio Ghibli).
While the Ghibli films never make much of a dent at the U.S. box office, they are absolute juggernauts overseas. “The Secret World of Arrietty” has made $145 million worldwide. Like most Ghibli films, it’s beloved everywhere but the U.S.(where it couldn’t break $20 million). However, the people in the...
While the Ghibli films never make much of a dent at the U.S. box office, they are absolute juggernauts overseas. “The Secret World of Arrietty” has made $145 million worldwide. Like most Ghibli films, it’s beloved everywhere but the U.S.(where it couldn’t break $20 million). However, the people in the...
- 5/21/2012
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
The 20th Annual Stella Artois St. Louis International Film Festival (better known to local movie buffs as Sliff) is presented by Cinema St. Louis and begins this Thursday, November 10th. The fest looks like another exciting event for film buffs. Now in its 20th year, Sliff is one of the largest international film festivals in the Midwest. This year’s event will be held Nov. 10-20. Sliff’s main venues are the Tivoli Theatre, Plaza Frontenac Cinema, and Webster University’s Winifred Moore Auditorium with additional screenings at the Wildey Theater in Edwardsville, Il, and Brown Hall on the campus of Washington University. Sliff showcases the best in cutting-edge features and shorts from around the globe. The majority of the more than 300 films screened – many of them critically lauded award-winners will receive their only St. Louis exposure at the festival. We Are Movie Geeks.com will be posting reviews of...
- 11/7/2011
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
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