Richard Dean Anderson

Like many small-screen veterans who headline a hit network series for multiple seasons, the fresh-faced, genial American actor Richard Dean Anderson will forever be associated with one role -- that of...
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BirthDate
BirthPlace
01/22/1950
Minneapolis, MN
  • The Greatest Game Ever Played Review
    By: Kit Bowen September 30, 2005 7:34am EST
    Granted, it's a sports movie about golf. But with winning performances, fancy camerawork and a classic root-for-the-little-guy scenario, The Greatest Game Ever Played tees off with the best of them.
  • 'MacGyver' Star Dana Elcar Dies at 77
    By: WENN.com Source June 13, 2005 10:06am EST
    Dana Elcar, one of the stars on hit TV show MacGyver has died in a California hospital of complications from pneumonia. He was 77.
  • Friday Night Lights Review
    By: Kit Bowen October 08, 2004 9:39am EST
    Perhaps if Friday Night Lights was the first high school football story to come to the big screen, it would be one of the best. Even though the film does sport some superb performances and tackles gritty realism with gusto, it isn't the first to do that--far from it.
  • Paparazzi Review
    By: Gregory Freitas September 07, 2004 12:11pm EST
    Worthless as a film, Paparazzi is a $20 million poison pen letter from Mel Gibson to the photographers who annoy him.
  • 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.
  • Thunderbirds Review
    By: Betsy Bozdech July 30, 2004 6:02am EST
    Cool ships and a delightful, pink-clad bombshell can't mask the fact that these Thunderbirds are not go.
  • Catwoman Review
    By: Steven Rosen July 23, 2004 3:02pm EST
    No doubt Berry will spend some time licking her wounds from the scathing reviews the film is sure to earn. Hide this Catwoman on a hot tin roof--or anywhere else no one is likely to see it. It's that bad.
  • Connie and Carla Review
    By: Kit Bowen April 15, 2004 2:20pm EST
    Although it may take its cue from other gender-benders, it's definitely snaps all around for the delightful and heartfelt Connie and Carla.
  • Walking Tall Review
    By: Guylaine Cadorette April 02, 2004 7:49am EST
    Walking Tall could have used more intelligent storytelling and less wrestlemania; it reeks of SmackDown!, but it never fully exploits its champ, The Rock
  • Mona Lisa Smile Review
    By: Guylaine Cadorette December 18, 2003 12:55pm EST
    Mona Lisa Smile's lesson of the day--that the '50s were an oppressive decade for women--is delivered in an unoriginal manner through such shallow and unlikable characters that its message lacks an emotional punch.