The more we see Jessica Biel with a gun, the better.
The best celebrity walkouts of all time.
Sometimes, the pre-pocalypse is even worse.
Before things took a bad turn.
Fox is going to be just one big MacFarlane cartoon soon.
Kate Winslet, Jodie Foster, John C. Reilly and Christoph Waltz will rock you.
The ladies from 'The View' ran away from big, scary Bill O'Reilly.
Kanye West has apologized to Taylor Swift after he interrupted her acceptance speech at the MTV Video Music Awards on Sunday, admitting he's "in the wrong" for ruining her moment.
Britney Spears dramatically stormed off stage for an hour on Wednesday after complaining the air in the venue had become too smoky.
You’ve got to follow the biggest story--and right now that story is Hurricane Gustav coming ashore southwest of New Orleans as a Category 2 hurricane, NOT the Republican national convention, which was due to begin tonight.
Scarlett Johansson showed off her singing skills when she hosted comedy show Saturday Night Live by joining comedienne Amy Poehler for a rendition of “Isn't It Wonderful Being A Star.”
NEW YORK, NY, June 12, 2000 -- How do you sell a really big summer movie if all the good guys, including your major stars, die at the end? (At least Kate Winslet's Rose Dewitt Bukater, if not poor Leo, survived the "Titanic" !) When the film is Warner Bros.' "The Perfect Storm," which opens later this month, stars George Clooney and Mark Wahlberg have to take a back seat to the movie's real star – the storm itself.At least that's how Warner Bros.' marketing campaign has lined up its ducks. In the print ads, trailers, TV ads, Web and radio promotions, it's the storm, storm, storm (and loud she is!) they're pushing. There's barely a glimpse of George and Mark, who were seen together last year in "Three Kings." This marketing manoeuvering for "The Perfect Storm" was surely tricky, especially since the huge marquee value of Clooney and Wahlberg had to be devalued. The
PARK CITY, Utah, Jan. 19, 2000 -- And so this is Sundance. Sort of. There's no snow. No crowds. No film crews. The locals promise that a storm will hit Friday, and while it'd be clever to argue they're a day off -- that the real storm arrives Thursday in the form of Robert Redford's film festival cum schmoozefest (running through Jan. 30) -- they're not. There's nobody stinkin' here. There aren't even any films -- stinkin' or otherwise -- until 7:30 p.m. Thursday when the Thanksgiving-themed ensemble drama "What's Cooking?" (with outward-bound "ER" star Julianna Margulies) unspools at Sundance's opening-night gala premiere event in nearby Salt Lake City. So how best to kill the hours (days?) waiting for something Sundance-ian to happen? (Or for the NC-17 branded "American Psycho" to premiere on Friday night -- whichever comes first?) Here's what yo
The wife and daughters of Andrea Gail captain Billy Tyne crossed a major hurdle in their legal action against Warner Bros. Monday when a Florida judge denied Warner Bros.' motion to dismiss a lawsuit that the Tyne family and others brought against it following release of the 1999 movie The Perfect Storm.