Adrian Grenier

Although he plays an A-list movie star on Entourage, Grenier needed this TV role to become a bona fide celebrity. In the late '90s, his quirky persona, Groucho Marx eyebrows and perpetual five o'clock...
read more...

BirthDate
BirthPlace
07/09/1976
Brooklyn, NY
  • Pulse Review
    By: Kit Bowen August 11, 2006 1:35pm EST
    After seeing Pulse, you might want to check if you still have one. If the ghosts in the machines don’t get ya, boredom might.
  • The Devil Wears Prada Review
    By: Kit Bowen June 30, 2006 7:15am EST
    If The Devil Wears Prada didn’t have the silently menacing Meryl Streep as its title character, the film would be sporting nubs and carrying a broom instead of full-blown horns and a pitch fork.
  • Adrian Grenier Tries to Revive Member of Actual Entourage
    By: WENN.com Source January 26, 2006 11:56am EST
    A member of Adrian Grenier's real-life entourage was rushed to hospital on Monday night after the actor tried unsuccessfully to revive her.
  • Owen Wilson Named Hollywood's Hottest Bachelor
    By: WENN.com Source October 31, 2005 10:37am EST
    Owen Wilson has seen off competition from long list of actors to be named Hollywood's Hottest Bachelor.
  • Gothika Review
    By: Stacie Hougland August 23, 2004 1:28pm EST
    This plane-crossing load of malarkey is not altogether awful until two-thirds in, the exact point when the music stops, you see the abysmal finale coming at you like a brick-loaded train, and you wish you'd rented The Ring instead.
  • Taking Lives Review
    By: Kit Bowen March 18, 2004 8:23pm EST
    With a great zinger at the end, Taking Lives just manages to squeak by as a passable entry in the psychological thriller arena.
  • Love in the Time of Money Review
    By: Cindy White November 01, 2002 12:17pm EST
    Love in the Time of Money feels like a filmed stage play. It's unconventional narrative structure is interesting, but the gimmick only goes so far and doesn't make up for uneven pacing and a lack of emotional depth. Like the time it represents, the film focuses on the surface rather than the content underneath.