Bane is bringing down the house (among other things).
Just what the world needs: More music from Heidi Montag.
This movie might warrant two viewings.
Bestselling author discusses reboot of his franchise and the differences between Morgan Freeman and Perry's performance.
It's not exactly the Vincent Chase lifestyle.
Robert De Niro, Jason Stathem and Clive Owen fight to the death.
'Fast Five' took pole position this weekend with a massive $83.6 million!
Not as well knows as 'Scarface' but just as awesome.
You're damn right it was overBLOWn!
Will SCDP make it through the next six months without Lucky Strike?
Glitter Mariah Carey Hardball Keanu Reeves The Glass House Leelee Sobieski The Omega Code Megiddo The Watcher The Others Rush Hours 2 American Pie 2 The Princess Diaries The Musketeer Two Can Play That Hame The Fast and the Furious Rat Race Hearts in Atlantis Training Day Big Trouble Don't Say a Word Zoolander Ben Stiller Michale Douglas Scott Hicks
HOLLYWOOD, June 23, 2000 -- If we can call Fox's "Titan A.E." a bomb (and since the $80 million toon only made $9.3 million last weekend, let's do just that), then did its shrapnel take out a studio chief? Officially, Fox Chairman Bill Mechanic resigned Thursday to launch his own film company. Unofficially, the word is that Fox honchos were none too happy with Mechanic's recent string of un-hits: "Fight Club," "Anna and the King" and the aforementioned "Titan A.E." Of course, Mechanic is also bailing before Fox opens one of its seemingly can't-miss properties: "Me, Myself & Irene" with Jim Carrey. "The studio is in excellent shape with a strong summer lineup and terrific product into next summer," Mechanic said in a statement, "and so I feel now is the time to pursue other personal ambitions." No time like the present -- and before another potentially troublesome
Sean "P. Diddy" Combs, the former Puff Daddy whose new album The Saga Continues was released last week, to Reuters on his repeated run-ins with Miami-area police:
"I think things get kind of thrown out of proportion. I mean, the police, they treat me great, the people in the city treat me great. I love the city and hope to get some type of residency here."
After much controversy, a parody of the classic Margaret Mitchell novel Gone With The Wind will hit bookstores shortly. A U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta ruled Friday that Alice Randall's novel The Wind Done Gone did not infringe copyright laws, and was suitable for publishing by Houghton Mifflin Co., Reuters reports. Randall's novel takes a satirical African-American view on Mitchell's Civil War-era story.
The French TV show Loft Story, which has spurred riots even while attracting record audiences, has made the upstart M6-TV channel on which it airs a serious competitor to the established channels, The Washington Post observed Thursday.