The Resident is a popular medical TV drama that started airing on Fox in 2018. It lasted for six seasons until Fox announced its cancellation in 2023.
Even though it didn’t run as long as some other shows, it has a big fan base. You can watch it on Hulu and Netflix. Due to its popularity, the stars on the show “The Resident” have earned a huge amount of money.
If you want to know in detail more about how much the cast members earn, keep reading this article till the end. You will also find out who the richest stars on the show named “The Resident” are, starting from the least wealthy to the wealthiest. So, just keep reading this article till the very end to find out everything.
Also Read: The Most Liked “Fear the Walking Dead” Stars Ranked From Lowest to Highest Following!!!
The Richest “The Resident” Stars...
Even though it didn’t run as long as some other shows, it has a big fan base. You can watch it on Hulu and Netflix. Due to its popularity, the stars on the show “The Resident” have earned a huge amount of money.
If you want to know in detail more about how much the cast members earn, keep reading this article till the end. You will also find out who the richest stars on the show named “The Resident” are, starting from the least wealthy to the wealthiest. So, just keep reading this article till the very end to find out everything.
Also Read: The Most Liked “Fear the Walking Dead” Stars Ranked From Lowest to Highest Following!!!
The Richest “The Resident” Stars...
- 5/2/2024
- by Om Prakash Kaushal
- https://dailyresearchplot.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/new-sam
Users can find holiday classics, new movies and plenty more on Sling TV this holiday season.
Sling TV is a fantastic way to watch your favorite cable channels no matter what time of year it is. With regular plans starting at $40 per month (now 50% off), it’s hard to beat the value you’ll get with a Sling TV subscription, especially since it carries top cable channels like ESPN, TNT, FX, and more.
But at this time of year, when temperatures turn cold and indoor activities take on an even greater emphasis, a subscription to a top-quality streaming service is an absolute must. Sling is one of the best available, with plenty of incredible holiday-themed content for users to enjoy at Christmastime!
Get 50% Off Pay Just $20 For Your First Month sling.com What Holiday Content is Available with Sling TV?
Sling TV carries Lifetime in both of its base plans,...
Sling TV is a fantastic way to watch your favorite cable channels no matter what time of year it is. With regular plans starting at $40 per month (now 50% off), it’s hard to beat the value you’ll get with a Sling TV subscription, especially since it carries top cable channels like ESPN, TNT, FX, and more.
But at this time of year, when temperatures turn cold and indoor activities take on an even greater emphasis, a subscription to a top-quality streaming service is an absolute must. Sling is one of the best available, with plenty of incredible holiday-themed content for users to enjoy at Christmastime!
Get 50% Off Pay Just $20 For Your First Month sling.com What Holiday Content is Available with Sling TV?
Sling TV carries Lifetime in both of its base plans,...
- 12/7/2023
- by David Satin
- The Streamable
Hollywood legend Natalie Wood had a dark prophecy hanging over her head long before her death. A movie star since childhood, Wood was in a series of classics before her life was cut short at 43. But despite a brilliant career, the West Side Story star had a troubling private life. Her mysterious 1981 drowning was even predicted by a psychic, creating a fear of water she never let go of.
Natalie Wood’s mother pushed her into show business
On the surface, Wood’s arrival on the 1940s scene was a triumph. Her first credited screen role (Tomorrow is Forever) put her opposite influential movie magnate Orson Welles. She was only seven at the time.
Following the success of Tomorrow is Forever, Wood landed the role that would cement her status as a child star. Miracle on 34th Street was one of the most popular movies of 1947. It remains one of Wood’s most famous roles.
Natalie Wood’s mother pushed her into show business
On the surface, Wood’s arrival on the 1940s scene was a triumph. Her first credited screen role (Tomorrow is Forever) put her opposite influential movie magnate Orson Welles. She was only seven at the time.
Following the success of Tomorrow is Forever, Wood landed the role that would cement her status as a child star. Miracle on 34th Street was one of the most popular movies of 1947. It remains one of Wood’s most famous roles.
- 3/19/2023
- by David James
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Rupert Murdoch’s Fox Corp. is expanding its legendary Century City studio lot.
The proposed Fox Future Studio Lot promises another nine new soundstages, to bring the total number to 24, and will add new production facilities and commercial office space.
Fox owns the former 20th Century Fox complex and leased the facility to Disney for seven years as part of the $52 billion deal unveiled in late 2017, in which Disney acquired Fox’s film and television assets, much of which was centered on the lot.
Now, Fox will expand the studio facility as the Century City film shooting sector expands. “The Fox Studio Lot is one of the most iconic and treasured production locations in the history of entertainment and is a rich part of our history. The Fox Future project represents a long-term commitment to our industry, to our community, and to the City of Los Angeles,” Lachlan Murdoch, executive...
The proposed Fox Future Studio Lot promises another nine new soundstages, to bring the total number to 24, and will add new production facilities and commercial office space.
Fox owns the former 20th Century Fox complex and leased the facility to Disney for seven years as part of the $52 billion deal unveiled in late 2017, in which Disney acquired Fox’s film and television assets, much of which was centered on the lot.
Now, Fox will expand the studio facility as the Century City film shooting sector expands. “The Fox Studio Lot is one of the most iconic and treasured production locations in the history of entertainment and is a rich part of our history. The Fox Future project represents a long-term commitment to our industry, to our community, and to the City of Los Angeles,” Lachlan Murdoch, executive...
- 3/16/2023
- by Etan Vlessing
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Much has been made of titles being quietly removed from HBO Max over the last few week, but while the number of films departing the service in September is substantial, at least subscribers have a heads up.
As is the case every month, various movies are due to leave HBO Max in September, and below we’ve got the full list of which films are leaving and when so you can prioritizing some viewing options. Noteworthy removals include the 2021 Warner Bros. thriller “The Little Things” starring Denzel Washington (leaving Sept. 16), the 2020 “Freaky Friday” horror riff “Freaky,” Quentin Tarantino’s “Kill Bill” films, the “Lethal Weapon” franchise, “Super 8,” “Tootsie” and the Nancy Meyers classic “The Holiday.”
Check out the full list of what’s leaving HBO Max in September below.
September 4
Meet the Patels, 2014
September 5
Turner Classic Movies: Follow the Thread, 2022
September 8
Teen Titans Go! To The Movies, 2018
September 9
Horrible Bosses 2,...
As is the case every month, various movies are due to leave HBO Max in September, and below we’ve got the full list of which films are leaving and when so you can prioritizing some viewing options. Noteworthy removals include the 2021 Warner Bros. thriller “The Little Things” starring Denzel Washington (leaving Sept. 16), the 2020 “Freaky Friday” horror riff “Freaky,” Quentin Tarantino’s “Kill Bill” films, the “Lethal Weapon” franchise, “Super 8,” “Tootsie” and the Nancy Meyers classic “The Holiday.”
Check out the full list of what’s leaving HBO Max in September below.
September 4
Meet the Patels, 2014
September 5
Turner Classic Movies: Follow the Thread, 2022
September 8
Teen Titans Go! To The Movies, 2018
September 9
Horrible Bosses 2,...
- 9/1/2022
- by Adam Chitwood
- The Wrap
Fox Post Production Services has entered into a strategic alliance with the full-service post-production sound company Formosa Group that will broaden the creative talent available to the studio’s producers, leveraging the storied Fox sound facilities and further expanding business opportunities for both companies.
Fox Post Production Services is based at the historic Fox Studio Lot in Century City and encompasses four feature mixing stages, along with two Adr stages, the Newman Scoring Stage, a foley stage and editing rooms supporting the full post-production process. Formosa Group will now have a presence in the lot’s original Film Editorial building.
“Formosa is revered for its incredible roster of artists, and we’re looking forward to working alongside them,” said Fox Post Production Services’ Senior Vice President Andy Nelson, who leads the group’s creative mixing staff. “We see such great opportunities for both companies with this new alliance, offering even...
Fox Post Production Services is based at the historic Fox Studio Lot in Century City and encompasses four feature mixing stages, along with two Adr stages, the Newman Scoring Stage, a foley stage and editing rooms supporting the full post-production process. Formosa Group will now have a presence in the lot’s original Film Editorial building.
“Formosa is revered for its incredible roster of artists, and we’re looking forward to working alongside them,” said Fox Post Production Services’ Senior Vice President Andy Nelson, who leads the group’s creative mixing staff. “We see such great opportunities for both companies with this new alliance, offering even...
- 2/3/2022
- by Matt Grobar
- Deadline Film + TV
Chris Evans is packing up his cozy knit-sweaters and heading for holiday climates! The former Marvel actor is joining Dwayne Johnson in his action-packed Christmas "experience," currently titled "Red One." The film has been shrouded in mystery thus far, but for context, producer Hiram Garcia once described it as "Hobbs and Shaw" meets "Guardians of the Galaxy" meets "Miracle on 34th Street."
This terrifying concept is "a globe-trotting, four-quadrant action-adventure comedy, imagining a whole new universe to explore within the holiday genre." Set to film later this year, the film comes from previous Johnson collaborators director Jake Kasdan ("Jumanji: Welcome To The...
The post Dwayne Johnson Christmas Action Movie Red One Adds Sweater Enthusiast Chris Evans appeared first on /Film.
This terrifying concept is "a globe-trotting, four-quadrant action-adventure comedy, imagining a whole new universe to explore within the holiday genre." Set to film later this year, the film comes from previous Johnson collaborators director Jake Kasdan ("Jumanji: Welcome To The...
The post Dwayne Johnson Christmas Action Movie Red One Adds Sweater Enthusiast Chris Evans appeared first on /Film.
- 1/24/2022
- by Shania Russell
- Slash Film
The holidays can be a hectic time and despite doing our best to find free time, it can be tough to catch your favorite holiday staples on TV live. A good alternative is streaming, and plenty of Christmastime flicks are readily available through some of today’s most popular platforms such as Amazon Prime Video, Netflix, and Disney+. Below, we’re breaking down where you can find your holiday favorites this year on streaming and On Demand. Starz Elf (2003) Amazon Prime Video It’s a Wonderful Life (1946) Elf (Credit: New Line/courtesy Everett Collection) Disney+ Home Alone (1990) Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992) The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) The Santa Clause (1994) The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992) Netflix White Christmas (1954) HBO Max A Christmas Carol (1938) Elf (2003) Miracle on 34th Street (1947) Die Hard (Credit: Copyright © 20th Century Fox Film corp./courtesy Everett collection) AMC+ National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation (1989) The Polar Express (2004) Elf (2005) Apple TV...
- 12/25/2021
- TV Insider
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While it’s much easier to gather with family this year, that doesn’t mean we can’t uphold some well-worn holiday traditions, like settling in on the couch with some hot cocoa to watch Christmas movies. Even if you’re not physically in the room with them, watch parties using integrated apps or Zooms or other virtual meetups means you can still have a collective, shared experience — just over the internet.
And if you are lucky enough to be in the same place as your family, you can spend time with your loved ones and cherish the fact that you’re able to be close to them Irl when so many people cannot be with theirs.
While it’s much easier to gather with family this year, that doesn’t mean we can’t uphold some well-worn holiday traditions, like settling in on the couch with some hot cocoa to watch Christmas movies. Even if you’re not physically in the room with them, watch parties using integrated apps or Zooms or other virtual meetups means you can still have a collective, shared experience — just over the internet.
And if you are lucky enough to be in the same place as your family, you can spend time with your loved ones and cherish the fact that you’re able to be close to them Irl when so many people cannot be with theirs.
- 12/6/2021
- by Jean Bentley and Latifah Muhammad
- Indiewire
Multi-hyphenate talent Melvin Van Peebles has died at the age of 89. The news was announced on Wednesday by The Criterion Collection and Janus Films, which shared it on behalf of the entire Van Peebles family. The “giant of American Cinema” passed away on September 21 at home with his family.
Van Peebles gave American independent cinema exactly what it needed, when it needed it most: an explosive shake-up, with his unfiltered expression of Black consciousness and energetic style. The anarchic 1971 blaxploitation classic “Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song” undeniably shifted the course of American film history, and it was just one piece of a remarkably varied career that also encompassed forays into European arthouse cinema (“The Story of a Three Day Pass”), Hollywood comedy (“Watermelon Man”), Broadway productions (“Don’t Play Us Cheap”), novels, and performances. He was a transformative artist whose biting observations of social mores, unapologetic radicalism, and vision established a model for Black creative independence.
Van Peebles gave American independent cinema exactly what it needed, when it needed it most: an explosive shake-up, with his unfiltered expression of Black consciousness and energetic style. The anarchic 1971 blaxploitation classic “Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song” undeniably shifted the course of American film history, and it was just one piece of a remarkably varied career that also encompassed forays into European arthouse cinema (“The Story of a Three Day Pass”), Hollywood comedy (“Watermelon Man”), Broadway productions (“Don’t Play Us Cheap”), novels, and performances. He was a transformative artist whose biting observations of social mores, unapologetic radicalism, and vision established a model for Black creative independence.
- 9/22/2021
- by Tambay Obenson and Kate Erbland
- Indiewire
'Tis the season to lounge around in sweats and forget about everything going on in the world. Somehow it's December already, which means one excellent thing for those of us hunkered down indoors due to cold and/or the continuing coronavirus pandemic: 25 Days of Christmas! Freeform is bringing the non-stop joy with its annual holiday lineup, a much-needed TV treat in a year that's made so many of us wish we could make like Santa Claus and escape to the North Pole. During the month-long event, Freeform will air tried and true favorites like Home Alone, The Santa Clause trilogy, How the Grinch Stole Christmas, Miracle on 34th Street and The Nightmare Before...
- 12/1/2020
- E! Online
Freeform is set to deck the halls with its annual 25 Days of Christmas programming extravaganza, which includes a dozen or so showings of holiday faves like Home Alone and The Santa Clause (and their myriad sequels).
Not enough Tim Allen for you? The Home Improvement and Last Man Standing star can also be seen in Christmas With the Kranks and heard in the Toy Story trilogy, both of which make multiple appearances throughout the cable network’s festive lineup.
More from TVLineNetflix's 'Here for the Holidays' Schedule: New Christmas TV Shows & Movies'It's a Wonderful Lifetime' Schedule: 30 New Christmas MoviesTVLine Items:...
Not enough Tim Allen for you? The Home Improvement and Last Man Standing star can also be seen in Christmas With the Kranks and heard in the Toy Story trilogy, both of which make multiple appearances throughout the cable network’s festive lineup.
More from TVLineNetflix's 'Here for the Holidays' Schedule: New Christmas TV Shows & Movies'It's a Wonderful Lifetime' Schedule: 30 New Christmas MoviesTVLine Items:...
- 12/1/2020
- by Ryan Schwartz
- TVLine.com
Warning: Do not read this story until you have seen the final episode of “Hollywood.”
For its first six episodes, Ryan Murphy’s “Hollywood” mixed reality and fiction in its portrait of the movie business in the years after World War II. But there’s a good reason why the final episode is titled “A Hollywood Ending” – because it uses the Oscars of March 1948 to paint a picture of Hollywood growing more tolerant, more open to minorities and gays and more embracing of the kind of films that in reality were nearly impossible to make at the time or for decades later.
Like the ending of Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood,” the episode veers into a kind of wish-fulfillment fiction that is the whole point of its existence.
So we’re not really fact-checking when we look at the show’s depiction of the 20th Academy Awards ceremony.
For its first six episodes, Ryan Murphy’s “Hollywood” mixed reality and fiction in its portrait of the movie business in the years after World War II. But there’s a good reason why the final episode is titled “A Hollywood Ending” – because it uses the Oscars of March 1948 to paint a picture of Hollywood growing more tolerant, more open to minorities and gays and more embracing of the kind of films that in reality were nearly impossible to make at the time or for decades later.
Like the ending of Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood,” the episode veers into a kind of wish-fulfillment fiction that is the whole point of its existence.
So we’re not really fact-checking when we look at the show’s depiction of the 20th Academy Awards ceremony.
- 5/13/2020
- by Steve Pond
- The Wrap
Natasha Gregson Wagner says a poignant thing about her movie star mother, and her all-too tragic death, at the beginning of Laurent Bouzereau’s Natalie Wood: What Remains Behind. “Since then there’s been so much speculation on how she died that it’s overshadowed her life’s work and who she was as a person.” It’s a brief but sudden flash into the perspective of living with a lifelong media whirlwind of speculation and insinuation. It also is clearly Gregson Wagner’s pained personal truth.
Yet what’s both interesting and ultimately frustrating about Bouzereau’s new documentary, which just premiered on HBO, is that it seems to immediately concede this point by framing its narrative as being more concerned with how she died—and how that death has been manipulated by the press—than with how she lived. And as someone who grew up on Natalie Wood’s movies and total legacy,...
Yet what’s both interesting and ultimately frustrating about Bouzereau’s new documentary, which just premiered on HBO, is that it seems to immediately concede this point by framing its narrative as being more concerned with how she died—and how that death has been manipulated by the press—than with how she lived. And as someone who grew up on Natalie Wood’s movies and total legacy,...
- 5/5/2020
- by David Crow
- Den of Geek
“I feel that this documentary is definitive documentary of her life you know, and my book is the definitive deep dive into our relationship, but I also talk about the night she died and the sheriff’s department reopening the case, I get into that in the book as well, and I just think this narrative of fiction that has been peddled, it’s time for that to stop now.”
Those are the determined words of Natasha Gregson Wagner, daughter of the late Natalie Wood, in talking to me recently about her new film for which she is not only a producer but also an on-camera guide and interviewer in exploring the career, life and yes death of her famous mother, who died at age 43 while on a weekend boating excursion to Catalina Island in late November 1981. That mysterious death, in which Wood was found floating in the shallow surf,...
Those are the determined words of Natasha Gregson Wagner, daughter of the late Natalie Wood, in talking to me recently about her new film for which she is not only a producer but also an on-camera guide and interviewer in exploring the career, life and yes death of her famous mother, who died at age 43 while on a weekend boating excursion to Catalina Island in late November 1981. That mysterious death, in which Wood was found floating in the shallow surf,...
- 5/1/2020
- by Pete Hammond
- Deadline Film + TV
By now we all know that the film the Academy selects as the “Best Picture” of any given year is rarely the actual Best Picture, but some years it’s hard to explain why they picked what they picked. Never mind “Shakespeare in Love” beating “Saving Private Ryan,” because at least “Shakespeare in Love” is a handsome production with a witty script. Never mind “Dances with Wolves” beating “Goodfellas,” because at least “Dances with Wolves” is a respectable western. We’re taking a look at the films that we can’t watch, even in a vacuum, without cringing nowadays. And when you compare them with the nominees that didn’t earn the Oscar, it’s just plain hard to justify why the Academy voted the way it did.
“The Broadway Melody” (1929)
The second Best Picture winner, and the first synch sound movie to win the top prize, was innovative for the time.
“The Broadway Melody” (1929)
The second Best Picture winner, and the first synch sound movie to win the top prize, was innovative for the time.
- 1/7/2020
- by William Bibbiani
- The Wrap
AMC Networks has viewers covered this holiday season as the second annual “Best Christmas Ever,” returns with its largest slate of holiday programming to-date featuring over 60 films and specials airing all day, every day, and this year expands to all five of AMC Networks. Beginning Monday, November 25 through Christmas Day, the monthlong programming event will offer up more than 700 hours of holiday-themed movies, specials and family favorite films. AMC Networks will be the exclusive home to many holiday favorites including Elf, The Polar Express, National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, Miracle on 34th Street (’94), Four Christmases, Fred Claus and Rankin-Bass Christmas classics including The Year Without a Santa Claus, ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas, Jack Frost, and Rudolph’s Shiny New Year, among many others. This year’s newly expanded Best Christmas Ever holiday event will feature a schedule takeover on AMC, and daily marathons across the other AMC Networks including BBC America,...
- 9/18/2019
- by Kristyn Clarke
- Age of the Nerd
Natalie Wood would’ve celebrated her 81st birthday on July 20, 2019. A former child actress who racked up three Oscar nominations before she was 25, Wood’s life ended in a tragedy that often overshadows her movie career. Yet many of her titles remain classics, so in honor of her birthday, let’s take a look back at 15 of her greatest films, ranked worst to best.
Born in 1938 in San Francisco, Wood snagged her first starring role when she was just nine years old in the holiday classic “Miracle on 34th Street” (1947), playing a precocious girl who tugs on Santa Claus’ beard. She earned her first Oscar nomination when she was 17 for the juvenile delinquent drama “Rebel Without a Cause” (Best Supporting Actress in 1955), which made an icon out of James Dean, who died before its release. Wood added two more Best Actress bids to her resume with the romantic melodramas “Splendor in the Grass...
Born in 1938 in San Francisco, Wood snagged her first starring role when she was just nine years old in the holiday classic “Miracle on 34th Street” (1947), playing a precocious girl who tugs on Santa Claus’ beard. She earned her first Oscar nomination when she was 17 for the juvenile delinquent drama “Rebel Without a Cause” (Best Supporting Actress in 1955), which made an icon out of James Dean, who died before its release. Wood added two more Best Actress bids to her resume with the romantic melodramas “Splendor in the Grass...
- 7/20/2019
- by Chris Beachum and Zach Laws
- Gold Derby
Composer-arranger Sid Ramin, a longtime associate of Leonard Bernstein who won an Oscar, an Emmy and a Grammy for his work in film, TV and theater, died of natural causes Monday (July 1) at his home in New York City. He was 100.
Ramin won a 1961 Academy Award for adapting the music of “West Side Story,” which he had originally orchestrated for composer Leonard Bernstein on Broadway in 1957 (with fellow arranger Irwin Kostal). He won a 1961 Grammy for the “West Side Story” soundtrack album, and a 1983 Daytime Emmy for music for TV’s “All My Children.”
Ramin’s musical career encompassed every aspect of show business. He started in the early days of live television, arranging for Milton Berle’s “Texaco Star Theatre” from 1948 to 1956. “There was no second take,” Ramin once reminisced about the insane pace of live TV. “What you did was on the air, good or bad.”
He began...
Ramin won a 1961 Academy Award for adapting the music of “West Side Story,” which he had originally orchestrated for composer Leonard Bernstein on Broadway in 1957 (with fellow arranger Irwin Kostal). He won a 1961 Grammy for the “West Side Story” soundtrack album, and a 1983 Daytime Emmy for music for TV’s “All My Children.”
Ramin’s musical career encompassed every aspect of show business. He started in the early days of live television, arranging for Milton Berle’s “Texaco Star Theatre” from 1948 to 1956. “There was no second take,” Ramin once reminisced about the insane pace of live TV. “What you did was on the air, good or bad.”
He began...
- 7/3/2019
- by Jon Burlingame
- Variety Film + TV
Mark Harrison Jun 11, 2019
As Men In Black: International gives the franchise a soft reboot, we revisit the private battles of the first three films
All things considered, it's pretty astonishing that Men In Black: International seems to have come together in just over 18 months. Starring Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson in the lead roles, F. Gary Gray's spin-off film was announced in 2017, started shooting last July, and arrives in cinemas this week. All films are difficult to make, but compared with each installment of the original trilogy starring Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones, it sounds like it was a doddle to make.
Directed by Barry Sonnenfeld and executive produced by Steven Spielberg, the three films are loosely inspired by Malibu Comics' The Men In Black, a six-issue sci-fi series penned by Lowell Cunningham. To give you an idea of how long it took to bring to the screen,...
As Men In Black: International gives the franchise a soft reboot, we revisit the private battles of the first three films
All things considered, it's pretty astonishing that Men In Black: International seems to have come together in just over 18 months. Starring Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson in the lead roles, F. Gary Gray's spin-off film was announced in 2017, started shooting last July, and arrives in cinemas this week. All films are difficult to make, but compared with each installment of the original trilogy starring Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones, it sounds like it was a doddle to make.
Directed by Barry Sonnenfeld and executive produced by Steven Spielberg, the three films are loosely inspired by Malibu Comics' The Men In Black, a six-issue sci-fi series penned by Lowell Cunningham. To give you an idea of how long it took to bring to the screen,...
- 6/11/2019
- Den of Geek
Barry Jenkins and Spike Lee made history this year as the first black writers to earn multiple nominations at the Oscars. They’re both up for Best Adapted Screenplay, Jenkins for “If Beale Street Could Talk” and Lee for “BlacKkKlansman.” But Jenkins previously won this category for “Moonlight” (2016), so if he prevails again he will become the first black writer to claim multiple awards, and he would join an elite group of scribes with multiple Best Adapted Screenplay trophies on their mantels.
The auspicious list of multiple champs already includes Joseph L. Mankiewicz (“A Letter to Three Wives” and “All About Eve”), George Seaton (“Miracle on 34th Street” and “The Country Girl”), Robert Bolt (“Doctor Zhivago” and “A Man for All Seasons”), Francis Ford Coppola and Mario Puzo (together for both “The Godfather” and “The Godfather Part II”), Alvin Sargent (“Julia” and “Ordinary People”), Ruth Prawer Jhabvala (“A Room with a View...
The auspicious list of multiple champs already includes Joseph L. Mankiewicz (“A Letter to Three Wives” and “All About Eve”), George Seaton (“Miracle on 34th Street” and “The Country Girl”), Robert Bolt (“Doctor Zhivago” and “A Man for All Seasons”), Francis Ford Coppola and Mario Puzo (together for both “The Godfather” and “The Godfather Part II”), Alvin Sargent (“Julia” and “Ordinary People”), Ruth Prawer Jhabvala (“A Room with a View...
- 2/14/2019
- by Daniel Montgomery
- Gold Derby
Do you believe?
That's the question asked of the characters and audiences alike as Kris Kringle (an Oscar-winning role for Edmund Gwenn) insists he's the real deal Santa Claus in the heartwarming 1947 classic Miracle on 34th Street.
Kris is brought in to sub in as a Macy's Santa after the original
...
Read More >
Other Links From TVGuide.com Miracle On 34th StreetMiracle On 34th Street...
That's the question asked of the characters and audiences alike as Kris Kringle (an Oscar-winning role for Edmund Gwenn) insists he's the real deal Santa Claus in the heartwarming 1947 classic Miracle on 34th Street.
Kris is brought in to sub in as a Macy's Santa after the original
...
Read More >
Other Links From TVGuide.com Miracle On 34th StreetMiracle On 34th Street...
- 12/5/2018
- by Amanda Bell
- TVGuide - Breaking News
It may be “the most wonderful time of the year,” as the song goes, but let’s face it, not all things Christmas are created equal. There are the tree ornaments you cherish, and others that can fill space in the back. There are movies that become classics, like “Miracle on 34th Street” or “Elf,” and those which seem to have been created as holiday time-fillers — harmless if charmless mediocrities parents can use to distract the kids for a couple of hours while they get some Christmas shopping done in peace.
Such is the generic ilk of “Elliot: The Littlest Reindeer,” a Canadian toon whose animation isn’t the only thing that seems to have been handled by computer. A would-be new “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,” it’s energetic and polished enough to avoid feeling like a rip-off — “Santa and the Ice Cream Bunny,” this is not — but there the compliments pretty much end.
Such is the generic ilk of “Elliot: The Littlest Reindeer,” a Canadian toon whose animation isn’t the only thing that seems to have been handled by computer. A would-be new “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,” it’s energetic and polished enough to avoid feeling like a rip-off — “Santa and the Ice Cream Bunny,” this is not — but there the compliments pretty much end.
- 11/29/2018
- by Dennis Harvey
- Variety Film + TV
The Best Supporting Actor Oscar race could be one for the ages. Timothee Chalamet (“Beautiful Boy”) could become the second youngest winner in the category, but on the other end of the spectrum, Sam Elliott (“A Star Is Born”) could become one of the oldest.
Elliott, who will be 74 years and 199 days old on the Feb. 24 ceremony, would become the sixth oldest Best Supporting Actor champ, dethroning Jack Palance who was 73 years and 41 days old when he did those one-handed push-ups. He’d be a few years off of the fifth spot, held by “Cocoon” (1981) Don Ameche, who was 77 years and 297 days old, and eight years shy of the record set by Christopher Plummer, who became the oldest acting winner in any category at 82 years and 75 days old when he prevailed for “Beginners” (2011).
See Sam Elliott (‘A Star Is Born’) on how he reacted when Bradley Cooper stole his voice...
Elliott, who will be 74 years and 199 days old on the Feb. 24 ceremony, would become the sixth oldest Best Supporting Actor champ, dethroning Jack Palance who was 73 years and 41 days old when he did those one-handed push-ups. He’d be a few years off of the fifth spot, held by “Cocoon” (1981) Don Ameche, who was 77 years and 297 days old, and eight years shy of the record set by Christopher Plummer, who became the oldest acting winner in any category at 82 years and 75 days old when he prevailed for “Beginners” (2011).
See Sam Elliott (‘A Star Is Born’) on how he reacted when Bradley Cooper stole his voice...
- 11/27/2018
- by Joyce Eng
- Gold Derby
With Christmas just a few short weeks away, the spirit of the season is alive and well. Major cable networks are showing a variety of holiday themed movies and we’re even privileged to see some of the old favorite classics. This is the perfect time to look at the movies that featured the jolly old elf as the main character. Here are the top five Santa performances in movies of all time. Whether you believe in Santa Claus or not, he’s made some impressive appearances in film and here are some of the best. Edmund Gwenn “Miracle on 34th Street
The Top Five Santa Performances in Movies...
The Top Five Santa Performances in Movies...
- 12/4/2017
- by Nat Berman
- TVovermind.com
Miracle on 34th Street is back in theatres this month as part of our Classic Film SeriesMiracle on 34th Street is back in theatres this month as part of our Classic Film SeriesIngrid Randoja - Cineplex Magazine11/29/2017 1:57:00 Pm
In today’s Hollywood no movie studio would even consider opening a Christmas movie in June, but that’s exactly what 20th Century Fox studio head Darryl Zanuck decided to do in 1947 with Miracle on 34th Street. In addition to releasing the film in summer, he also decided that the trailer wouldn’t even mention it was a Christmas movie.
His curious choices paid off as crowds flocked to see a movie that’s become a Holiday classic. Directed by George Seaton, the film stars Edmund Gwenn as Kris Kringle, a kindly old man who is hired by Macy’s department store employee Doris Walker (Maureen O’Hara) to act...
In today’s Hollywood no movie studio would even consider opening a Christmas movie in June, but that’s exactly what 20th Century Fox studio head Darryl Zanuck decided to do in 1947 with Miracle on 34th Street. In addition to releasing the film in summer, he also decided that the trailer wouldn’t even mention it was a Christmas movie.
His curious choices paid off as crowds flocked to see a movie that’s become a Holiday classic. Directed by George Seaton, the film stars Edmund Gwenn as Kris Kringle, a kindly old man who is hired by Macy’s department store employee Doris Walker (Maureen O’Hara) to act...
- 11/29/2017
- by Ingrid Randoja - Cineplex Magazine
- Cineplex
Here’s the only plausible explanation for “Pottersville,” a nearly unwatchable — but inexplicably star-studded — new Christmas comedy which is making a brief pitstop in select theaters before spending the rest of eternity in the storage room of your local Walmart: A veteran producer at the Hallmark Channel was at the end of his rope (for the purposes of this hypothetical scenario, let’s pretend said producer was “Pottersville” director Seth Henrikson, whose sparse IMDb credits leave plenty to the imagination). Frustrated by a career spent churning out festive — and weirdly horny — shlock like “A Very Merry Mix-Up,” “Matchmaker Santa” (featuring Lacey Chabert), and “A Boyfriend for Christmas” (the story of an infatuated girl who wastes her 20s waiting for Santa Claus to come down her chimney), he finally broke.
Some scholars argue that it was the 2007 Melissa Joan Hart / Mario Lopez vehicle “Holiday in Handcuffs” that pushed him over the...
Some scholars argue that it was the 2007 Melissa Joan Hart / Mario Lopez vehicle “Holiday in Handcuffs” that pushed him over the...
- 11/10/2017
- by David Ehrlich
- Indiewire
If you usually visit the theatre, it is almost a sure bet that you have had both a positive and negative experience at one point or another. Personally, I don’t understand why anybody would pay for a cinema ticket only to talk all their way through a film, when they could have easily just gone to a bar to talk each other’s ear off for a couple of hours.
Thankfully, my cinematic adventures in the theatre have been an enjoyable ride for the most part. Whether that was due to a film being so good that it had the ability to totally immerse me in it’s world or seeing a movie with an upbeat crowd of people, well, there are numerous considerations I could have picked from. In this piece I’m going to be talking about five theatre experiences that turned out to be memorable for both worthwhile reasons,...
Thankfully, my cinematic adventures in the theatre have been an enjoyable ride for the most part. Whether that was due to a film being so good that it had the ability to totally immerse me in it’s world or seeing a movie with an upbeat crowd of people, well, there are numerous considerations I could have picked from. In this piece I’m going to be talking about five theatre experiences that turned out to be memorable for both worthwhile reasons,...
- 10/23/2017
- by Lee Skavydis
- Age of the Nerd
The death of movie producer Jc Spink has been ruled an accidental drug overdose by the Los Angeles Coroners Office. Spink, who shepherded titles like “The Hangover,” “We’re the Millers” and “A History of Violence” with partner Chris Bender, was found dead at his West Hollywood home in April. His autopsy report indicates his death was accidental and cited “multiple drug intoxication.” Also Read: The Big Heart of Jc Spink Remembered by Hollywood's Players Originally from Philadelphia, Spink was one half of Benderspink, the management-production company that he founded with Bender. The college pals were assistants at management-production company Zide-Perry Productions before striking.
- 7/13/2017
- by Matt Donnelly
- The Wrap
It’s never too early for a bit of Christmas magic! A Midwest production of “Miracle on 34th Street” is searching for its Kris Kringle, plus several other lead and supporting roles. There are also opportunities for lead roles in a short film, YouTube variety series hosts, and background actors in Amazon’s “Red Oaks!” “Miracle On 34Th Street”The musical based on the film of the same name is casting principal and supporting roles. Male and female talent aged 18–65 are needed to fill several roles, including the lead roles of Kris Kringle and Doris Walker. There is an open casting call on Aug. 1 in NYC. Rehearsals begin Oct. 16 and the show runs Nov. 3–Dec. 23 in Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin. Competitive salary, Emc points, travel, housing, and meals will be provided. “Htttg”Several actors are needed to fill lead roles in “Htttg,” a short film that “examines family dynamics and how we communicate with others.” One male and one female actor, both ages 35–48, are sought for the lead parent roles. There are also lead roles available for a young male actor ages 14–18 and two fraternal female twins ages 14–18. The...
- 6/22/2017
- backstage.com
Long before movies routinely created ‘worlds’ with their own twisted fantasy logic, only a few paranoid thrillers, usually odd genre items, tried out twisted stories of deceptive ‘hidden realities.’ Like an extended Twilight Zone entry, this lively James Garner war pic morphs into a bizarre conspiracy worthy of Philip K. Dick. If only it weren’t so “L-a-o” — Literal And Obvious.
36 Hours
Blu-ray
Warner Archive Collection
1965 / B&W / 2:35 widescreen / 115 min. / Street Date April 11, 2017 / available through the WBshop / 21.99
Starring: James Garner, Eva Marie Saint, Rod Taylor, Werner Peters, John Banner, Russell Thorson, Alan Napier, Oscar Beregi, Ed Gilbert, Sig Ruman, Celia Lovsky, Karl Held, James Doohan.
Cinematography Philip H. Lathrop
Art Direction Edward Carfagno, George W. Davis
Film Editor Adrienne Fazan
Original Music Dimitri Tiomkin
Written by George Seaton, Carl K. Hittleman, Luis H. Vance from a story by Roald Dahl
Produced by William Perlberg
Directed by George Seaton
Released...
36 Hours
Blu-ray
Warner Archive Collection
1965 / B&W / 2:35 widescreen / 115 min. / Street Date April 11, 2017 / available through the WBshop / 21.99
Starring: James Garner, Eva Marie Saint, Rod Taylor, Werner Peters, John Banner, Russell Thorson, Alan Napier, Oscar Beregi, Ed Gilbert, Sig Ruman, Celia Lovsky, Karl Held, James Doohan.
Cinematography Philip H. Lathrop
Art Direction Edward Carfagno, George W. Davis
Film Editor Adrienne Fazan
Original Music Dimitri Tiomkin
Written by George Seaton, Carl K. Hittleman, Luis H. Vance from a story by Roald Dahl
Produced by William Perlberg
Directed by George Seaton
Released...
- 4/11/2017
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
On this day in showbiz history
The Story of Miss Lonelyheart from Péter Lichter on Vimeo.
1913/1914 Did you know that Detective Doyle (Wendell Corey) and Miss Lonelyhearts (Judith Evelyn) from Rear Window shared a birthday? Now you do! (Uff, I love Rear Window so much)
1942 Rings on Her Finger, a screwball comedy starring Henry Fonda and Gene Tierney opens in theaters
1948 Gentleman's Agreement wins Best Picture at the 1947 Oscars but the enduring statues from that year are surely Edmund Gwenn's Supporting Actor win as Kris Kringle in Miracle on 34th Street and the Cinematography and Art Direction wins for the astounding Black Narcissus. What a picture!
1952 Vivien Leigh wins her second Best Actress prize at the 1951 Oscars for A Streetcar Named Desire. Absent from the ceremony, Greer Garson accepts for Vivien...
The Story of Miss Lonelyheart from Péter Lichter on Vimeo.
1913/1914 Did you know that Detective Doyle (Wendell Corey) and Miss Lonelyhearts (Judith Evelyn) from Rear Window shared a birthday? Now you do! (Uff, I love Rear Window so much)
1942 Rings on Her Finger, a screwball comedy starring Henry Fonda and Gene Tierney opens in theaters
1948 Gentleman's Agreement wins Best Picture at the 1947 Oscars but the enduring statues from that year are surely Edmund Gwenn's Supporting Actor win as Kris Kringle in Miracle on 34th Street and the Cinematography and Art Direction wins for the astounding Black Narcissus. What a picture!
1952 Vivien Leigh wins her second Best Actress prize at the 1951 Oscars for A Streetcar Named Desire. Absent from the ceremony, Greer Garson accepts for Vivien...
- 3/20/2017
- by NATHANIEL R
- FilmExperience
Sal Mineo & Natalie Wood at the Oscars for Rebel Without A Cause (1955) one of only two years wherein two minors were nominated. The other is 1973As Sunny Pawar (Lion) can attest this Oscar season, being a cute kid with a preternatural gift in front of the cameras can only get you so far. A little further if you're a girl but still, the point is: it's not easy to be Oscar nominated when you're a minor. Think of the famous or iconic minor performances that Didn't snag nominations: Natalie Wood in Miracle on 34th Street, Elizabeth Taylor in National Velvet, Hayley Mills in The Parent Trap, Judy Garland in The Wizard of Oz, Evan Rachel Wood in thirteen, Jacob Tremblay in Room and so on.
On this 18th day before the Oscars let's quickly survey all the actors who managed a nomination before their 18th birthday!
There are 21 of them...
On this 18th day before the Oscars let's quickly survey all the actors who managed a nomination before their 18th birthday!
There are 21 of them...
- 2/8/2017
- by NATHANIEL R
- FilmExperience
Sean Wilson Jan 16, 2017
From the BBC's Sherlock, through Disney, Hans Zimmer and Young Sherlock Holmes: we salute the music of Mr Holmes...
Few characters have enjoyed as much reinvention as Arthur Conan Doyle's sleuth Sherlock Holmes, an enduring icon who is as much bound up with the history of cinema (and indeed stage, TV and radio) as he is with literature. Indeed, adaptations of Holmes stories stretch right the way back to the earliest days of film at the start of the 20th century. Fittingly enough given Holmes' penchant for a violin serenade, the musical scores to his adventures are as richly varied as the outcomes to his mysteries are unexpected. Here are Holmes' musical highlights, from Buster Keaton through to Benedict Cumberbatch.
Sherlock Jr. (1924)
Not, strictly speaking, a Sherlock movie but as the title implies, the legacy of the character casts a long shadow over Buster Keaton's silent classic.
From the BBC's Sherlock, through Disney, Hans Zimmer and Young Sherlock Holmes: we salute the music of Mr Holmes...
Few characters have enjoyed as much reinvention as Arthur Conan Doyle's sleuth Sherlock Holmes, an enduring icon who is as much bound up with the history of cinema (and indeed stage, TV and radio) as he is with literature. Indeed, adaptations of Holmes stories stretch right the way back to the earliest days of film at the start of the 20th century. Fittingly enough given Holmes' penchant for a violin serenade, the musical scores to his adventures are as richly varied as the outcomes to his mysteries are unexpected. Here are Holmes' musical highlights, from Buster Keaton through to Benedict Cumberbatch.
Sherlock Jr. (1924)
Not, strictly speaking, a Sherlock movie but as the title implies, the legacy of the character casts a long shadow over Buster Keaton's silent classic.
- 1/15/2017
- Den of Geek
I’m guessing that you, just like most of us, have always had seasonal favorites when it comes to movies that attempt to address and evoke the spirit of Christmas. Like most from my generation, when I was a kid I learned the pleasures of perennial anticipation of Christmastime as interpreted by TV through a series of holiday specials, like How the Grinch Stole Christmas, A Charlie Brown Christmas, Santa Claus is Coming to Town and even musical variety hours where the likes of Bing Crosby and Andy Williams and Dean Martin et al would sit around sets elaborately designed to represent the ideal Christmas-decorated living room, drinking “wassail” (I’m sure that’s what was in those cups) and crooning classics of the season alongside a dazzling array of guests. (We knew we were moving into a new world of holiday cheer when David Bowie joined Bing Crosby for...
- 12/20/2016
- by Dennis Cozzalio
- Trailers from Hell
Daniel Langrish-Beard Dec 20, 2016
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation has an odd picture on its DVD cover: a picture of a scene that seemingly nobody has ever heard of.
I’ll set the scene for you. I was invited round my friends Jane's house for Christmas cocktails and Christmas films. On the day I realised that I had forgotten to bring any promised DVDs with me. Thus, I nipped into a local supermarket to pick up some cheap DVDs, so I didn’t look like I’d forgotten.
I picked three films in the end: Miracle On 34th Street (double feature with 1947 & 1994 versions), Nativity (never seen) and National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation. Jane hadn’t seen Christmas Vacation, so we popped that in the DVD player.
I had a look at the cover, as it was different to the cover I had at home. Then I saw it - a picture of a...
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation has an odd picture on its DVD cover: a picture of a scene that seemingly nobody has ever heard of.
I’ll set the scene for you. I was invited round my friends Jane's house for Christmas cocktails and Christmas films. On the day I realised that I had forgotten to bring any promised DVDs with me. Thus, I nipped into a local supermarket to pick up some cheap DVDs, so I didn’t look like I’d forgotten.
I picked three films in the end: Miracle On 34th Street (double feature with 1947 & 1994 versions), Nativity (never seen) and National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation. Jane hadn’t seen Christmas Vacation, so we popped that in the DVD player.
I had a look at the cover, as it was different to the cover I had at home. Then I saw it - a picture of a...
- 12/19/2016
- Den of Geek
Holiday films are meant to celebrate the spirit of the season. They wouldn’t really be all that interesting without a villain who wants to ruin it. We pick 10 of the best.
Holiday movies often teach lessons about the importance of sharing, helping others, giving thanks, etc. One method these storied films use to highlight the importance of the ideas they promote is by featuring someone who doesn’t follow them. This person is someone who may even hate those ideas. So much so that they try and prevent people from practicing them, or exploit those that do for their own benefit. These characters are the villains of holiday movies, and without them, the lessons being taught would not have as much impact. These are our picks for the 10 best holiday movie villains.
10. Granville Sawyer - Miracle on 34th Street
Worst Thing They Did: Attempted to commit Santa Claus to...
Holiday movies often teach lessons about the importance of sharing, helping others, giving thanks, etc. One method these storied films use to highlight the importance of the ideas they promote is by featuring someone who doesn’t follow them. This person is someone who may even hate those ideas. So much so that they try and prevent people from practicing them, or exploit those that do for their own benefit. These characters are the villains of holiday movies, and without them, the lessons being taught would not have as much impact. These are our picks for the 10 best holiday movie villains.
10. Granville Sawyer - Miracle on 34th Street
Worst Thing They Did: Attempted to commit Santa Claus to...
- 12/13/2016
- by feeds@cinelinx.com (G.S. Perno)
- Cinelinx
Author: Cai Ross
Christmastime is here. Presumably you already have chestnuts roasting on an open fire, a turkey and some mistletoe, and your first screaming argument about who’s cooking for who and where. ’Tis the season for such timeless traditions, and along with a collective craving for manifestly ill-judged food combinations and a moratorium on our disapproval of comedy knitwear, classic Christmas movies are now a vital part of the great yuletide experience.
But what precisely is a classic Christmas movie? Timeless vintage offerings like Holiday Inn and Miracle on 34th Street are stuffed from titles to credits with all things Christmassy, yet you’ll also find films like Casablanca and The Great Escape on many festive film lists, which have nothing more to do with Christmas than Cannibal Holocaust.
Even the single greatest ‘Christmas Movie’ of all time, It’s a Wonderful Life has a pretty tenuous connection with the Holiday Season,...
Christmastime is here. Presumably you already have chestnuts roasting on an open fire, a turkey and some mistletoe, and your first screaming argument about who’s cooking for who and where. ’Tis the season for such timeless traditions, and along with a collective craving for manifestly ill-judged food combinations and a moratorium on our disapproval of comedy knitwear, classic Christmas movies are now a vital part of the great yuletide experience.
But what precisely is a classic Christmas movie? Timeless vintage offerings like Holiday Inn and Miracle on 34th Street are stuffed from titles to credits with all things Christmassy, yet you’ll also find films like Casablanca and The Great Escape on many festive film lists, which have nothing more to do with Christmas than Cannibal Holocaust.
Even the single greatest ‘Christmas Movie’ of all time, It’s a Wonderful Life has a pretty tenuous connection with the Holiday Season,...
- 12/13/2016
- by Cai Ross
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
It's that time of year: the fireplace is burning, your plaid pajamas are on, and you've got Netflix streaming your favorite holiday movies of all time! Whether it's Miracle on 34th Street or Christmas Vacation, Love Actually or Elf, most of these festive flicks are filled with Santa Claus-loving little kids who we can't help but acknowledge are pretty darn cute...except they probably aren't kids any more! As we started flipping through the films, we got to wondering: where are these child stars now? One thing lead to another and...voila! Macaulay Culkin: He played Kevin McCallister in 1991's Home Alone (and then again in the film's sequel). Today, he's rocking long...
- 12/8/2016
- E! Online
Every new December is a chance to dust off old copies of holiday classics and bask in the warm glow of nostalgia and yuletide cheer, preferably with a warm drink in hand and cozy slippers on feet. The list of go-to Christmas films is ever-growing, from familiar classics like Miracle on 34th Street and It's a Wonderful Life to more recent fare such as Elf or Grumpy Cat's Worst Christmas Ever.
However, repeated viewings may leave once-beloved films feeling as stale as leftover gingerbread cookies, not to mention the familiar themes, settings and tropes shared by so many "quintessential" holiday films....
However, repeated viewings may leave once-beloved films feeling as stale as leftover gingerbread cookies, not to mention the familiar themes, settings and tropes shared by so many "quintessential" holiday films....
- 12/5/2016
- by Patrick Shanley
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
We can’t blame you for thinking you know all there is to know about your favorite beloved holiday flicks. After all, annual 24-hour marathons and Netflix access make it almost too easy to unintentionally learn every heartwarming and hilarious line.
But even the most diehard Christmas movie fanatics still have secrets to discover, from just how much actors went it took to bring storybook characters to life, to the cameos you might have missed even on your 10th viewing.
1. Now a beloved classic, It’s a Wonderful Life was a total box office flop when it was released in...
But even the most diehard Christmas movie fanatics still have secrets to discover, from just how much actors went it took to bring storybook characters to life, to the cameos you might have missed even on your 10th viewing.
1. Now a beloved classic, It’s a Wonderful Life was a total box office flop when it was released in...
- 11/29/2016
- by lydprice
- PEOPLE.com
The Hollywood Reporter on the Thanksgiving-weekend drowning death of Natalie Wood. Though only 43, Wood had been acting for nearly four decades. She was 4 when she appeared briefly in 1943's Happy Land and 7 when she made Tomorrow Is Forever with Orson Welles (who said Wood was a natural actress — "so good, she was terrifying"), and at 8 she co-starred in the Christmas classic Miracle on 34th Street.
...
...
- 11/24/2016
- by Bill Higgins
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Just ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday, Starz has released its latest list of availability for the Starz App streaming service. December’s offerings are a pretty mixed bag, but it’s not like there’s ever a bad month for Wayne’s World or new episodes of Blunt Talk or Ash Vs. Evil Dead. Starz also has a list of the holiday movies already in its library, in case a viewing of Miracle On 34th Street (1994) or The Santa Clause 3 will help you make your way through the holiday blues.
For anybody hoping to take the edge off the recent election results with some populist sentiment, meanwhile, a number of Michael Moore’s documentaries are making their way to the service (plus Canadian Bacon). Or if you just want a heart-warming story about a bad-haired homunculus who’s repeatedly thwarted in his efforts to kill off all life ...
For anybody hoping to take the edge off the recent election results with some populist sentiment, meanwhile, a number of Michael Moore’s documentaries are making their way to the service (plus Canadian Bacon). Or if you just want a heart-warming story about a bad-haired homunculus who’s repeatedly thwarted in his efforts to kill off all life ...
- 11/24/2016
- by William Hughes
- avclub.com
Window Warriors, Gsn's upcoming new show, will put eight of the country's most talented window merchandisers to the test in hopes of snagging a $100,000 grand prize and a career-changing contract to design a high-profile holiday display at a major department store.
The contestants will need to win the approval of the judges, Emmy-winning TV personality Carson Kressley (Queer Eye for the Straight Guy), internationally recognized style influencer Tai Beauchamp, and master of visual merchandising Douglas Little. The show will be hosted by actress Garcelle Beauvais.
Ahead of its Nov. 15 premiere, Et wanted to showcase our top picks of movies that feature the most stunning window displays:
1. Miracle on 34th Street
As a Christmas classic, the 1947 film is at the top of our list. Who knew the original window displays in the movie were sold to Marshall & Ilsley Bank of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and can be seen in their lobby every December?
2. A Christmas Story
Fun...
The contestants will need to win the approval of the judges, Emmy-winning TV personality Carson Kressley (Queer Eye for the Straight Guy), internationally recognized style influencer Tai Beauchamp, and master of visual merchandising Douglas Little. The show will be hosted by actress Garcelle Beauvais.
Ahead of its Nov. 15 premiere, Et wanted to showcase our top picks of movies that feature the most stunning window displays:
1. Miracle on 34th Street
As a Christmas classic, the 1947 film is at the top of our list. Who knew the original window displays in the movie were sold to Marshall & Ilsley Bank of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and can be seen in their lobby every December?
2. A Christmas Story
Fun...
- 11/9/2016
- Entertainment Tonight
Window Warriors, Gsn's upcoming new show, will put eight of the country's most talented window merchandisers to the test in hopes of snagging a $100,000 grand prize and a career-changing contract to design a high-profile holiday display at a major department store.
The contestants will need to win the approval of the judges, Emmy-winning TV personality Carson Kressley (Queer Eye for the Straight Guy), internationally recognized style influencer Tai Beauchamp, and master of visual merchandising Douglas Little. The show will be hosted by actress Garcelle Beauvais.
Ahead of its Nov. 15 premiere, Et wanted to showcase our top picks of movies that feature the most stunning window displays:
1. Miracle on 34th Street
As a Christmas classic, the 1947 film is at the top of our list. Who knew the original window displays in the movie were sold to Marshall & Ilsley Bank of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and can be seen in their lobby every December?
2. A Christmas Story
Fun...
The contestants will need to win the approval of the judges, Emmy-winning TV personality Carson Kressley (Queer Eye for the Straight Guy), internationally recognized style influencer Tai Beauchamp, and master of visual merchandising Douglas Little. The show will be hosted by actress Garcelle Beauvais.
Ahead of its Nov. 15 premiere, Et wanted to showcase our top picks of movies that feature the most stunning window displays:
1. Miracle on 34th Street
As a Christmas classic, the 1947 film is at the top of our list. Who knew the original window displays in the movie were sold to Marshall & Ilsley Bank of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and can be seen in their lobby every December?
2. A Christmas Story
Fun...
- 11/9/2016
- Entertainment Tonight
On this day in history as it relates to the movies...
1877 Edmund Gwenn is born. Wins the Oscar seventy years or so later as Kris Kringle, helping adults to believe in Santa Claus again in Miracle on 34th Street (and yes, that's one of the all time best wins in Supporting Actor. Do you agree?)
1888 T.S. Eliot, one of the 20th century's great poets, is born. Though few movies are made from his work he did lead to Cats on Broadway. He was played by Willem Dafoe in the movie Tom & Viv (1994)
1898 A true musical genius George Gershwin is born in Brooklyn. Movies and TV shows still use his music today.
gangsters and musicals after the jump...
1877 Edmund Gwenn is born. Wins the Oscar seventy years or so later as Kris Kringle, helping adults to believe in Santa Claus again in Miracle on 34th Street (and yes, that's one of the all time best wins in Supporting Actor. Do you agree?)
1888 T.S. Eliot, one of the 20th century's great poets, is born. Though few movies are made from his work he did lead to Cats on Broadway. He was played by Willem Dafoe in the movie Tom & Viv (1994)
1898 A true musical genius George Gershwin is born in Brooklyn. Movies and TV shows still use his music today.
gangsters and musicals after the jump...
- 9/26/2016
- by NATHANIEL R
- FilmExperience
She was the adorable little girl in Matilda and Mrs Doubtfire… then the phone stopped ringing. The former child star lifts the lid on hitting puberty in the public eye
When I was seven, my family spent a week in Japan to promote the remake of Miracle On 34th Street. Within three days, I was ready to become an expatriate.
“This is so much better than the United States!” I told my mother as we walked back to the hotel with brand new kimonos. I bowed my head to the people we passed. A Japanese businessman smiled at me and bowed back.
Continue reading...
When I was seven, my family spent a week in Japan to promote the remake of Miracle On 34th Street. Within three days, I was ready to become an expatriate.
“This is so much better than the United States!” I told my mother as we walked back to the hotel with brand new kimonos. I bowed my head to the people we passed. A Japanese businessman smiled at me and bowed back.
Continue reading...
- 9/17/2016
- by Mara Wilson
- The Guardian - Film News
Natalie Wood's daughter Natasha Gregson Wagner is opening up about the private side of the beloved mother she lost in a tragic boating accident. Subscribe now for the exclusive untold story, only in People.For Natalie Wood's daughter, Natasha Gregson Wagner she's the mom who loved to laugh, who always quoted The Little Prince and "had a sense of adventure and mischief." And for her granddaughter, Clover, 3, she is simply "Grandma Natalie" who loved butterflies and stars in one her favorite movies, West Side Story. "After we watched it over the summer, she kept wanting to watch I Feel Pretty on YouTube,...
- 4/14/2016
- by Liz McNeil, @lizmcneil
- PEOPLE.com
Natalie Wood's daughter Natasha Gregson Wagner is opening up about the private side of the beloved mother she lost in a tragic boating accident. Subscribe now for the exclusive untold story, only in People.For Natalie Wood's daughter, Natasha Gregson Wagner she's the mom who loved to laugh, who always quoted The Little Prince and "had a sense of adventure and mischief." And for her granddaughter, Clover, 3, she is simply "Grandma Natalie" who loved butterflies and stars in one her favorite movies, West Side Story. "After we watched it over the summer, she kept wanting to watch I Feel Pretty on YouTube,...
- 4/14/2016
- by Liz McNeil, @lizmcneil
- PEOPLE.com
Forget the theory that Katy Perry is a grown-up JonBenét Ramsey or that the Denver Airport was designed by the Illuminati. On Sunday, John Oliver hatched a mind-blowing, Easter-themed conspiracy video uncovering the sinister background of Cadbury Creme Eggs. It's time to open your eyes, sheeple.
Oliver opens the Last Week Tonight web exclusive clip by acknowledging his envy of other YouTube conspiracy theorists: "First, there's a wave of, 'This guy has to be fucking kidding, right?' But then it's jealousy at the sheer scale of imagination." Then he...
Oliver opens the Last Week Tonight web exclusive clip by acknowledging his envy of other YouTube conspiracy theorists: "First, there's a wave of, 'This guy has to be fucking kidding, right?' But then it's jealousy at the sheer scale of imagination." Then he...
- 3/28/2016
- Rollingstone.com
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