Posted on
Dec 06 2007 4:37 PM
by
adnana
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I thought this franchise was good and dead, but apparently there’s still so much love out there for the Charles Grodin starring Beethoven movie that they’ve decided to remake it. Sort of. One of our 100% reliable sources recently emailed me to let us know that Mike Elliot is working on a re-imagining of the original Beethoven movie...
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In an attempt to further capitalize off the Borat craze, Sacha Baron Cohen, has signed a book deal with Flying Dolphin Press to pen a travel guide book. The book will be written by Kazakh television reporter Borat Sagdiyev, and will tackle both the US and Kazakhstan. The....
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I had always really liked Felicity Huffman, one half of Hollywood power couple Filliam H. Muffman, as an actress. And then I saw her screeching, ridiculous work in the screeching, ridiculous movie Georgia Rule. I'm usually pretty forgiving for such cases of bad judgment -- but I just can't let this one slide. I'm going to need a couple great performances from Huffman to scrub miserable scenes like her roadside...
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I have a feeling that The Weinstein Co and the US Government have teamed up to promote Michael Moore’s new documentary Sicko, which will debut last this month at the.....
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I was in high school the first time I saw the 1984 movie Splash, and I hadn't seen it again until I rented the DVD the other night. I remember liking it a lot when I saw it back in the 1980s, thinking it was a sweet film and about as close to a screwball.....
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An ageing societal outcast and a motherless duck set out to find shelter and meaning in a future where people are separated by as many degrees as they are connected. The year is 2009, and the last public park in Los Angeles has been closed to the public. The city is a desert, and dispossessed widower Arthur Pratt (Philip Baker Hall) has outlived his usefulness. A retired history professor who spent all of his savings caring for his beloved late wife, Arthur sets out to the park where his son and ...
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The proprietor of a beauty salon that serves as the one remaining thread that ties her community together finds her last bastion of unity threatened by eminent domain in Barbershop director Mark Brown's adaptation of Shelly....
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Warner Independent Pictures will remake the German comedy Night of the Living Dorks, and has set Chris Bishop to write the script. Vertigo's Roy Lee and Doug Davison are producing along with Adam F. Goldberg.
Described as Revenge of the Nerds meets Shaun of the Dead, the story revolves around three not-so-cool school friends who decide to try an old voodoo ritual. When they later die in a car crash, they find themselves reborn as zombies, and try to take advantage of their new lifestyle.
"Dorks" would be one of Vertigo's first comedies.
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Posted on
Mar 07 2007 3:31 AM
by
majid
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At WonderCon San Francisco this past weekend, Disney/Pixar showed a
clip from their eighth feature film to be released June 29:
Ratatouille. Directed by Brad Bird (The Incredibles), it is as
different from Cars as Cars was from The Incredibles. Bird suggested
that they rename it "Ratatouille 1: the Prequel to the Sequel," so the
audience would feel more comfortable in a summer season rife with
ordinals like Spider-Man 3, "Harry Potter 5," "Pirates of the Caribbean
3," "Shrek 3," "Fantastic Four 2" and "Die Hard 4"...more click on heading
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Posted on
Feb 06 2007 5:02 AM
by
Mehwish
Ben Stiller is in talks with Tom Cruise about starring in an updated version of The Hardy Boys at 20th Century Fox.
Tentatively titled The Hardy Men, the comedy would be directed by Stiller's Night at the Museum helmer Shawn Levy, who was just announced as the new director for Warner Bros. Pictures' The Flash....more click on heading
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Posted on
Oct 21 2006 12:06 AM
by
Xtrmius
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Release Date: November 17th, 2006
The cast and crew of a small indie movie find themselves inexplicably surrounded by Oscar buzz in the middle of Academy Awards season. Debut feature director Jay Berman steers cast and crew through a typically tumultuous independent film "Home for Purim," an intimate period drama about a Jewish family's turbulent reunion on the occasion of the dying matriarch's favorite holiday. When Internet-generated rumors begin circulating that three of the film's stars--faded luminary Marilyn Hack, journeyman actor and former hot dog pitchman Victor Allan Miller, and ingénue Callie Webb--may be perpetrating Award-worthy performances, a rumble of.....
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Posted on
Oct 18 2006 11:22 PM
by
Zek Mike
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Release Date:November 3rd, 2006
Kazakhstani reporter Borat (Sacha Baron Cohen) travels to the United States in hopes of bringing back important knowledge to his primitive homeland. Borat Sagdiyev, Kazakhstan's sixth most famous man and a leading journalist from the State run TV network, travels from his home in Kazakhstan to the U.S. to make a documentary. On his cross-country road-trip, Borat meets real people in real situations with hysterical consequences. In Larry Charles's "Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan," S.B. Cohen plays a reporter from Kazakhstan, named Borat Sagdiyev, a perpetually upbeat, seldom defeatable mustached TV reporter who ......
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Posted on
Oct 10 2006 2:32 AM
by
Steve
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New York meter maid Roger (Jon Heder) enrolls in a confidence-building course to help him win the love of his longtime crush, Amanda (Jacinda Barrett). The class is taught by the suave Dr. P (Billy Bob Thornton) and his assistant, Lesher (Michael Clarke Duncan), but it's more than Roger bargained for: Dr. P's teachings transform the former dork into a smooth player. Everything seems to be going great until Dr. P decides that he too has a thing for Amanda.
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