Get your first big look at the superhero flick.
We head overseas for a sneak peek of this Fall's biggest action movie.
The director sheds light on his latest thrill ride.
It's not all fiction.
Dreams really do come true.
You should Du-buy this.
The animation legend on how he revitalized Tom Cruise's superspy franchise.
He's been pretty busy.
And how have they stayed the same?
It's almost as exciting as flying over Dubai!
Chairman discusses the super-sized footage and unique release strategy.
Thankfully no hair was pulled out during the making of this movie.
Tom Cruise is flying high.
Get a glimpse of Jeremy Renner's character.
Dexter confronts Travis about getting Gellar.
Building-scalingly cool.
Catch the latest glimpse of Tom Cruise's upcoming action epic.
A step up, thanks to a touching backstory and a cliffhanger.
Experience true art.
It will open five days early on large-format screens.
He's expecting rain.
I'm beginning to doubt just how impossible these missions are
But not an 'Impossible' one.
And it's positively smashing.
Cowabunga dude!
2011: The year of really big screens.
Click through for a sneak peak of Jason Segel, Amy Adams, and Tom Cruise on set!
Learn from Papa Lemon, an Ed Hardy shirt is never the way to pick up chicks.
The return of punctuation!
Complaints from Bosnian women's groups previously blocked the permit for Jolie's directorial debut.
'Lost' alum brought onto the IMF team by producer J.J. Abrams
49-year-old Swede set to face off against Tom Cruise in the fourth 'Mission: Impossible'
She's been cast as the female lead, so that's exciting!
Paramount picks the 'Hurt Locker' star to revitalize the franchise
TV and movie veteran Peter Graves has died. He was 83.
M:I4 isn't officially greenlit, but the 'Hot Fuzz' star is set to return.
Brad Bird is directing 'Mission: Impossible IV' -- according to its star, Tom Cruise.
Brad Bird accepts the mission as the film gets set for holiday 2011 release
Tom Cruise's fourth mission moves from prime summer real estate to the holiday season of 2011
'Incredibles' director Brad Bird has emerged as a possible candidate to step behind the camera for 'Mission: Impossible IV.'
Tom Cruise signed on today to do another Mission: Impossible. J.J. Abrams is also attached
Tom Cruise has signed up to reprise his producing role for the fourth 'Mission: Impossible' movie.
Pat Hingle, who is best known for playing Commissioner James Gordon in the first four Batman films, died at the age of 84.
A man who was the victim of a blast on the set of Mission: Impossible III is suing the county and city of Los Angeles for not protecting him from danger.
The Screen Actors Guild announced Friday they will start accepting submissions for the 10th annual SAG Awards nominations starting Wednesday, Variety reports, with nominations being announced Jan. 15.
"Sopranos" actor Robert Iler escaped jail time by entering into a plea bargain with New York prosecutors. In return for pleading guilty to misdemeanor petty larceny, Iler, 17, was granted youthful offender status and received three years' probation.
News Roundup for April 17: David Fincher will possible direct the next Mission: Impossible installment with Tom Cruise to star Ben Stiller and wife Christina Taylor have their first child Josie Bissett and husband Rob Estes welcome second child Madonna's demands on her new play in London Clint Eastwood will join the park and recreation panel in Calif. James Gandolfini wants to play Ralph Kamden in Honeymooners film Destiny's Child singer Beyonce Knowles will star with Cuba Gooding Jr. in new movie Kelsey Grammer and Pamela Anderson will voice animated characters in new series for TNN David Lee Roth and Sammy Hagar are going on tour.
Reportedly frustrated by her own inability to stem the deregulatory tide on the FCC, Democratic FCC Commissioner Gloria Tristani announced Monday that she intends to step down from the commission on Sept. 7.
HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 22, 2001 - Recent mom Cindy Crawford is rapidly adding to her budding family. People magazine has reported that Crawford, 35, and her restaurateur husband, Rande Gerber, 38, are expecting another child, with a September due date expected. Crawford and Gerber are already the parents of a 20-month-old son, Presley Walker. Crawford has made no secret of her desire for motherhood. During her marriage to actor Richard Gere, which ended in divorce in 1998, Crawford was quoted by People as saying: “More than anything, I want a family... I love kids and sort of feel that's the thing in my life I'm going to be best at, a mother.”
HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 22, 2001 - One of the '70s' most influential spectaculars is coming back in a big way. Reuters has revealed that Bryan Singer, who scored a hit as the director of last year’s blockbuster “X-Men,” is going to be bringing the fan favorite series “Battlestar Galactica” back to television. Singer, who recently signed on to direct “X-Men 2,” will executive produce the pilot for the new series along with Tom DeSanto, and if the shooting schedule for “X-Men 2” permits, he’ll direct the series pilot, as well. As of yet, no network has been picked to air the pilot. “Battlestar Galactica,” which called on "Star Wars” for inspiration, aired on ABC from 1978-1980. While never a big hit, the series has become a cult favorite and a sci-fi convention regular. David Kissinger, the president of USA Television Production Group, which is producing the new series, tol
SANTA MONICA, Calif., March 12, 2000 -- Hollywood found lots of life on "Mars" this weekend as Buena Vista/Touchstone's "Mission to Mars" blasted off to about $23 million. "Mars" landed in 3,054 theaters with an out-of-this-world estimated $23.10 million ($7,559 per theater). Its per-theater average was the highest for any film playing in wide release this weekend. It was a victory as well for studio tracking studies, which had predicted a first-place finish in the mid $20 millions. For the previous three weeks, however, Hollywood pollsters had been overly optimistic about the openings of "Hanging Up," "Reindeer Games" and "The Next Best Thing." "Our marketing guys (under Marketing President Geoffrey Ammer) did such a fabulous job getting it open," Buena Vista Distribution President Chuck Viane said Sunday morning. "We were sitting here talking this morning, sayi
HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 28, 2000 -- The Screen Actors Guild on Monday announced a nearly 70% increase in "for your consideration" videotape mailings to the nominating committee and a 7% increase in submissions for the 7th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards. "Submissions for nomination consideration and tape mailings to our Nominating Committees have grown each year," Karla Tamburelli, SAG Awards co-chair, said in a press release. "We are pleased by the expanding support for the SAG Awards and the recognition by the Industry of the significance of a SAG Award nomination," added Yale Summers, Tamburelli's fellow co-chair. Submissions will be accepted until 5 p.m. PST on Wednesday. The Screen Actors Guild Award -- the Actor -- is presented to actors voted on by their peers for outstanding performances in motion pictures and on primetime television. Nominations for the
HOLLYWOOD, June 16, 2000 – Memo to Hollywood: If you want to be eligible for an Oscar nomination, don't premiere your movie on the Internet. New rules approved this week by the board of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences say that any movie that's shown in Cyberspace before its theatrical debut will forfeit its eligibility for a golden statue. The move comes in the wake of the dizzying growth of websites like atomfilms.com, reelshort.com, etc., that play original films on the 'net, and it emphasizes the Academy's "longstanding principle that its porvince is theatrical motion pictures, as distnct from pictures experienced as lone viewing," says spokesman John Pavlik. "You're reading and hearding all sorts of things about producers trying new ways to exhibit and distribute their films. I guess for now this would only apply to short films, but tech is showing s
SANTA MONICA, Calif., March 9, 2000 -- Looks like the Red Planet will generate most of this weekend's box-office green. "Mission to Mars" should blast off in first place with about $25 million, according to studio-tracking studies that see everything else in the marketplace flying in a much lower orbit. The most recent tracking scores for "Mission," starring Gary Sinise and Tim Robbins as astronauts on a Mars-bound expedition, show the film being pegged as the No. 1 flick of choice by 17 percent of potential audiences. "They're certainly $20 million-plus, maybe even $25 million-plus," says one distribution executive, predicting substantial ticket sales. So, who wants to go to "Mars?" "It's a young male demographic," the exec points out. "That audience is impulse driven. They'll be out there Friday night and on the weekend." The weekend's only othe
HOLLYWOOD, May 24, 2000 – If you're planning on seeing "Mission: Impossible 2" today, you can forget it. There's no such movie. Say what? After all, aren't there billboards all over North America officially proclaiming today -- May 24 -- as opening day for the new Tom Cruise movie? Right, but those billboards are for "M:I-2," or as it's more properly identified, The Movie Formerly Known As "Mission: Impossible 2." Confused? Well, we were too. So, we called the folks at Paramount, who started the confusion by telling everyone that the flick's title is "M:I-2." That's the way it's listed in all the studio's promotional materials, that's what's it's called in all the trailers, and on all the posters. In other words, says Paramount, "M:I-2" supposedly isn't an acronym for "Mission: Impossible 2," but just a catchy title in its own right. So, what led Paramoun
The reality of "reality TV" was being called into question Thursday following reports on Wednesday that Survivor creator Mark Burnett had acknowledged that he sometimes used stand-ins for certain scenes in the series, including one aerial shot of Survivor contestants swimming.