2014 is filling up with blockbusters.
Can we pretend that small planes in the night skies are like Trophy Wives?
Seeing is believing.
Why sequel Rocket?
Cocky much?
Keeping the aliens in the shadows.
This news is bananas.
The actor opens up about his near-death experience.
Screen Gems' documentary adaptation is taking shape.
Enjoy the special "Behind the Cookie" featurette.
Yes we did. And don't call us Shirley.
Cue the Cruise laugh!
And he's pissed.
The film's screenwriters have alluded to sequels. Plural.
This could be the Disneyest movie ever
Is 'Rise of the Planet of the Apes' actually a remake?
Blue people are very in
We look at how the series' first entry before seeing the prequel.
Finally a video that delivers on the monkey mayhem.
Everyone knows not to mess with a sentient chimp's aging foster father
Will it be as good as the musical incarnation starring Troy McClure?
Yes, but can they host the Oscars?
Monkey see, monkey throw parking meter at cop.
Monkey see, monkey kick your ass.
"The monkeys are coming! The monkeys are coming!"
The mini-series is on Discovery this month.
Francis was also known for her role as TV's Honey West.
Get an exclusive peak at Sony Animation's new family adventure comedy, featuring the voices of Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson, Jessica Biel and Gary Oldman.
John Travolta has such a passion for planes that when he designed his Florida estate he insisted on being able to view his fleet of jets from every window in the house.
News, June 9: Disney, Miramax Make Feud Public; Mel Gibson Sues Over "Passion" Box Office; Soul Plane Crash Lands on Bootleg Market Viggo Mortensen Cameron Crowe Vanilla Sky Final Destination 3 Bridget Jones
Goldie Hawn's production company and cable network F/X are planning a movie about United Flight 93 which crashed in Pennsylvania on Sept. 11
Two French directors who were shooting a documentary about a rookie New York fireman at the time of the terrorist attack have indicated that they are so distraught over the events that they may never finish their film.
According to preliminary reports, the twin-engine plane that crashed in the Bahamas killing R&B singer Aaliyah and eight other passengers was significantly overloaded, The Associated Press reports.
The twin engine plane that crashed in the Bahamas, killing R&B singer Aaliyah and eight others on board, was carrying more than the recommended number of passengers.
U.S. singer and actress Aaliyah, along with eight other people, were killed when their Cessna passenger plane crashed shortly after take-off from an island in the Bahamas. Romeo Must Die
HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 18, 2000 -- The trouble is far from over for the cash-flow-negative Planet Hollywood restaurant franchise. The celebrity-themed food chain -- which filed for Chapter 11 in October 1999 -- is being sued by tennis champs Andre Agassi and Monica Seles, golfer Tiger Woods and retired Super Bowl champ Joe Montana for breach of contract, Reuters reports. The suit, which was filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Delaware, alleges that Planet Hollywood has continued to use their names, photographs and memorabilia in its promotion, despite the fact that the four athletes had notified the restaurant chain last month that they consider their 1996 endorsement contracts to be terminated. In the contracts, the sport figures were to receive shares of Planet Hollywood stock in exchange for their endorsements. But the four sports greats say that Planet Hol
The highly anticipated reinterpretation of "Planet of the Apes" has finally made it to the theaters. Hollywood.com talked to our intrepid reporters Kit Bowen and Noah Davis about their views on the film, its comparison to the original, director Tim Burton's style and what the world would be like if apes actually ran it.
Unlike most other movies of the current summer aimed primarily at popcorn chompers, Planet of the Apes is not really infuriating many critics. Rather, the reviews are divided almost equally between those who find it somewhat disappointing and those who have gone, er, ape over it.
A small plane carrying British rock star Sting, two pilots and friends skidded off the runway while trying to land Monday at the Florence airport in Italy. No one was hurt.
HOLLYWOOD, June 1, 2000 -- Patrick Swayze was unhurt after a scare while piloting his private plane today, it has been learned. A spokesman from the Federal Aviation Administration in Oklahoma tells Hollywood.com that the 46-year-old "Dirty Dancing" star was flying en route from Van Nuys, Calif., to Las Vegas around noon today, when he made an unscheduled, emergency landing on the dirt roads near Prescott, Ariz. According to the FAA, Swayze's plane, a 1978-built Cessna seven-passenger aircraft, encountered a pressurization problem in its engine and had disappeared from the radar shortly after. The actor was at the controls; no others were on board. Swayze's publicist issued a statement saying that the actor was not "seriously hurt" and that the plane had only minor damage.
SANTA MONICA, Calif., March 1, 2000 -- Remember "Gorilla World," the would-be UPN series conceived by "Spawn" architect Todd McFarlane? The one that sounded suspiciously like a certain film predecessor called "Planets of the Apes"?Well, apparently the folks at 20th Century Fox (the studio that owns the right to the "Apes" franchise) also noticed the marked similarity between the two projects. And they are not buying any of that homage crap.Today's Daily Variety says UPN has scrapped the project after Fox's legal wing fired off a letter. For its part, UPN insists that the series' cancellation had nothing whatsoever to do with Fox's legal meddling.McFarlane, on the other hand, is not as silent in the matter. In a "they-should-talk" rebuttal to the trade paper, McFarlane cited Fox's television division's "Millionaire" rip-off "Greed" as an example of rampant plagiari