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STARS AND CELEBRITIES OF THE YEAR. FROM THE MOST BORING TO THE MOST TALENTED AND LUCKIEST CELEBRITIES. By Maximillien de Lafayette. THEY ARE FAMOUS, BUT, THEY ARE NOT BETTER THAN YOU! There are 4 kinds of stars-entertainers in the world: 1-The talented; 2-The talented and the lucky; 3- The lucky; 4- The lucky and the boring. All, except the "unlucky" make money. Big time money. Millions and millions. Sometimes, the most boring ones are the luckiest and among the wealthiest. And this tragic reality has nothing to do with talent or lack of it. Many extremely talented artists will never see their names in light. They don't lack creativity or talent. They lack luck, a good agent, an effective publicist, a shrewd manager, good contacts, business and promotion strategy, and above all, they desperately need an "OPPORTUNITY", or a break...Read full article and see photos

 

CABARET AND ENTERTAINMENT FROM A TO Z. By Maximillien de Lafayette. A MEGA 135 PAGE IN-DEPTH ARTICLE OF THE HISTORY OF ENTERTAINMENT AND CABARET IN EUROPE AND THE UNITED STATES FROM THE 18th CENTURY TO PRESENT WITH HUNDREDS OF VINTAGE AND RARE PHOTOS. By Maximillien de Lafayette CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE

TEN MOST WATCHED AMERICAN TV SHOW HOSTS. Read full article and see photos

 

HISTORY OF AMERICAN MUSIC AND GOSPEL SPIRITUALS BY MAXIMILLIEN de LAFAYETTE: THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN ENTERTAINMENT, MUSIC, SOUL, JAZZ, FOLK AND GOSPEL SPIRITUALS FROM THE 17th CENTURY TO PRESENT. INCLUDING: History and Early Origin of American Music, American Song, American Composers and American Singers from the Colonial Era to the 21st century. ..Read full article (A 70 page condensed edition)

 

 

ALL TIME GREATEST ENTERTAINERS AND SINGERS. WHO’S WHO OF THE BEST AMERICAN FEMALE SINGERS-ENTERTAINERS. By Maximillien de Lafayette. THE BEST AMERICAN FEMALE SINGERS ENTERTAINERS FROM THE COTTON FIELDS ERA TO PRESENT. Read the full article

ENTERTAINMENT: READ THE LATEST REVIEWS,  RELEASES, FILMS, CDs, GOSSIPS AND NEWS

CINEMA: LATEST NEWS AND REVIEWS     CINEMA: INDEX OF CONTENTS AND ARTICLES

 
ROBERT OSBORNE: MAN OF THE YEAR

By Maximillien de Lafayette

Robert OsborneLong time ago, in my first year at the law graduate school, a haunting passion with insatiable appetite devoured my thoughts and feelings. And  because of that haunting passion, quite often, I asked myself if studying law instead of cinema  was  really what I wanted it to do. You guessed it. My "first love" was the silver screen. Not, because I was fascinated by the stars but, because I was taken by the mesmerizing talents of cinematographers, the genius of the directors of photography, the light engineers, the set designers, the visions of films directors, the depth of  challenging and engaging dialogues, and of course, the  musical scores composers. I did not care much for actors and actresses whom I consider -with a very few exception of remarkable human beings like Audrey Hepburn, June Allyson, Edward J. Robinson, Peter Ustinov, Ernest Borgnine, etc.,) to be vain, very show-off, extremely lucky with few merits, pretentious and greedy.

Click Here!!My passion for cinema was fueled by my curiosity to know what was happening behind the curtains, the scene, the screen, the untold story of a film, the character and persona of the players, the events that surrounded the creation of the film, the relationship between the movies makers, the artists and the leading players. In other words, the human aspect of cinema with all its neglected or hidden stories fascinated me. And for years, I searched the humanistic history of the movies making. Back then, it was so difficult to harvest those stories. Few studios existed in Paris, headlines rotated around world premieres, vedettes scandals, new releases, events actors and actresses attended, gossips, affairs ad infinitum, and this left me with few material, events  and inside stories surrounding  the making of a film. Sure, from time to time, a mini documentary on shooting this or that film appeared in movie theaters, but it wasn't enough, especially when the documentary appeared more like a trailer than a story behind the story. It took me years to find my grail. And finally,  I found it in Mr. Robert Osborne.

Nowadays, an avalanche of film historians and critics rolls over and over on out TV sets. But only one cinema historian and story-teller extraordinaire captured my full attention: TCM's Robert Osborne. Many other film "introducers and historians" are nothing more than a scenarioed  projection of pompous, pretentious and irritating talkers. Mr. Osborne distinguished himself by his warmth, graceful humility, friendly persona, abundance of behind the scene touching and captivating description of what happened back then, on stage, off stage, on location, in the studio and beyond. This very fine gentleman and cinema expert knows what and where are the buried or unknown, unusual and informative movies cosmos stories  and how to bring them to his audience. Stories that add more character, meaning, substance, the "un je ne sais quoi", mystique, revelations  and  cache to the film he is showing. Without Osborne's intros, the films remain simply an enjoyable entertainment, but Helas! without the soul, spirit and multidimensional chronicles that created or metamorphosed through the production stages of the film and brought to us by Mr. Osborne, the magical opened can is  simply a cinema empirical projection. In many instances, I found Mr. Osborne's intros and brief narrative historical back-flashes more fascinating and entertaining than the film itself. This remarkable raconteur, historian and cinema story teller recreates the whole universe and the genesis of movies. He does it with effectiveness, charming style, authoritative, yet warm mannerism, and above all, with style and confidence. Mr. Osborne is the gentle encyclopedia of cinema and its human dimension.

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WHO IS ROBERT OSBORNE?

Photo: Cover of the book "70 YEARS OF THE OSCAR" by Mr. Robert Osborne. Read the review in the Books Section.

His biography as posted on the website of  Turner Classic Movies tells us that Osborne was born in Colfax, Washington (population: 2700) and graduated from the University of Washington's School of Journalism, appearing in local plays in his non-study hours. He soon went to Hollywood as an actor under contract to Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz. But Lucy encouraged him to pursue writing, which he considers among the best advice he's ever been given. She remained a friend and mentor to him until her death. Osborne joined the staff of The Hollywood Reporter in 1977 and six years later began writing the paper's influential "Rambling Reporter" column, which covers all aspects of the movie and television business. He also attends the Cannes Film Festival to review films for the paper and is The Hollywood Reporter's chief Broadway critic, covering New York plays and first nights. Osborne began as the on-air entertainment reporter for the nightly news on Los Angeles, KTTV in 1982. In 1987, he was signed by CBS to make daily appearances on the CBS Morning Program. From 1986-1993, he was also a regular host of The Movie Channel cable network. From 1981-83, he served as president of the Los Angeles Film Critics Association (LAFCA).

 

Photo: Man of the Year, Mr. Robert Osborne.

He is a frequent guest on Entertainment Tonight, Good Morning America and other network shows; won a Golden Mike for excellence (for a TV special he wrote, produced and hosted titled Lana Turner Today); has twice been a CableAce nominee for his "Osborne Report" segments for The Movie Channel; and was nominated for an Emmy Award as Best Host Moderator. Osborne is also the winner of the 1984 Press Award from the Publicists Guild of America. In addition to his hosting duties for TCM, Osborne has also done several specials for the network, including hour-long interviews, including the last on-camera interview done by Robert Mitchum, Jane Russell, June Allyson, Ann Miller, Mickey Rooney, Charlton Heston, Jack Lemmon,Walter Matthau and Tony Curtis. The biography also reveals that Osborne is also a columnist-critic for The Hollywood Reporter, the daily show business trade paper. He is known as the official biographer of Oscar, thanks to a series of books he's written on the subject of Hollywood's annual Academy Awards. His latest book, the updated 70 Years Of the Oscar, was written at the special request of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, and has been called "the most comprehensive and definitive book ever done on the subject."

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OsbourneAn expert insider wrote about Mr. Robert Osborne: "Never volunteer to play Trivial Pursuit with Robert Osborne: He's going to nail every entertainment question. The host of Turner Classic Movies and columnist for the Hollywood Reporter has not only covered Hollywood, he was also a close friend to Hollywood elite such as Bette Davis and Lucille Ball. Osborne loves his field of expertise. And it shows...In a way, Osborne built his prestigious career out of luck. He says he landed in Hollywood at the right time. "Bette Davis and the other stars were at the end of their careers. They wouldn't have had time for me in their heyday. So I got the benefit of spending time with them and hearing their stories." Another movies savvy wrote: "Osborne  worked at the Rose Theater as a teen-ager, and broke both his arms while putting Elizabeth Taylor's name up on a marquee. "She was bad for me, too," Osborne jokes...Osborne ended up in Hollywood by chance. He had set out for New York but landed in California by way of an actress friend of his.

There he met Lucille Ball and became a contract player for Desilu. He said Ball was the first to encourage him to become a writer. The stars took a liking to Osborne because he had studied them and knew their history. "They didn't have to tell me what they had done in the past. I already knew." He was comfortable around them and was invited to dinners and parties.  Osborne often escorted Davis to dinner. "She was a very proper New England lady and wouldn't go to a restaurant alone or with another woman." So he was her dinner date...Osborne also accompanied Davis to the Academy Awards in 1977. "Bette wanted to sit in the back so that she could sneak out and smoke. She would go out to the press tent. All of these stars of the time, Travolta and others, would hover, wanting to meet her but were so awed by her. They were afraid to approach her, she was such a star. Here she was, she couldn't get a job and these stars were afraid to talk to her. And she didn't know who the hell they were." At one point Davis leaned over to him and, referring to the man sitting next to them, said, "My God, he sure is attractive. Who is he?" "That's Jack Nicholson," Osborne told her. "

 

RALPH LAUREN

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OSBORNE ON THE OSCARS AND TODAY'S MOVIES AND STARS

Private Screenings.jpg (11048 bytes)Photo: Mr. Robert Osborne with the legendary June Allyson.

What does he think of the today's Oscars? Mr. Osborne longs for the days when people, directors, studio executives and stars had more class, style and integrity. He told one reporter: "We've lost class. There's been this declassing of humans. People used to have honor. They never wrote about Spencer Tracy and Hepburn having an affair. You just didn't do that." Anything new or unusual about today's OSCARS? Mr. Osborne commented: "In the past, people used to know the results ahead of time. They simply knew, so they had all the reasons in the world to relax. In the golden days, one could enjoy lavish and splendid banquets. It was a great time and fun for everybody. Today, you just sit there and you don't move. Too many awards are given and more categories are created, like awards for costumes, songs, etc...and of course, today, the OSCARS welcome European and foreign films, a real novelty..." And how about today's movies and stars? Mr. Osborne explains: " Today's films are lacking. "I realize that everyone likes 'Titanic', but if they give (the Oscar) to 'Titanic' I think I'll stop writing books about the Oscars. For $200 million you think that they would have made 'Dr. Zhivago' on board a ship or 'Lawrence of Arabia' on the high seas.

Photo: Mr. Robert Osborne with the delightful Celeste Holms and actress Rita Gam.

Instead, they wrote this sappy little story...There are a few bonafide movie stars around. Emma Thompson. She's got it. She's wonderful in everything that she does." Another top star, he says, is Matt Damon. "He's a great actor." Is Mr. Osborne satisfied with the awards process, procedures and standards? "Even though, today's films are not as good as they used to be, quality-wise, the Academy Awards still point to some gems out there. And the awards are extremely important because "A film really has to stand out to get a nomination, even if it's just a special effects picture with a big box-office  draw. The Academy members take their votes very seriously. "They see their vote as a very respected thing. They take their time and scrutinize the tapes (of the films.)" In an interview he gave, a few years ago, Mr. Osborne mentioned this: "Olivia de Havilland watched Judi Dench's performance in "Mrs. Brown" and had a few notes for the Oscar nominee. "She said that (Dench) needed to work on her eyebrows and the way she carried herself for that period."

Mr. Osborne's most cherished and remembered OSCARS moments are when Charlie Chaplin's in 1972, returned to the United States to accept an Oscar for the title song in his film "Limelight." Mr. Osborne said: "He was this little, frail man that people had labeled a child molester and a communist. And as he stood there looking at the people standing up in ovation, you remembered all of the magic that he had brought to the screen. It was very moving to see this little old man just standing there on the stage." Another favorite moment is  Louis Fletcher's acceptance speech for Best Supporting Actress for "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest." Mr. Osborne recalls: "This sweet, innocent little girl came up to accept and no one knew who she was," he said. Fletcher had played the bitter and twisted Nurse Ratchett. "Her parents were deaf mutes so she signed her acceptance speech. It was really something to see.."

 

 

ROBERT OSBORNE: MAN OF THE YEAR

On a regular basis, I watch TCM for three reasons: 1-My passion for classical movies. 2-The lyrical beauty and nostalgia those black and white films awake in me. 3-Mr. Osborne's intros to films. What a delight and inspirational moment I enjoy and feel upon watching those magnificent moving treasures. Consequently, I developed a great admiration and a deep respect for Mr. Osborne. And this resulted in writing this piece on him. But little, did I know,  and delighted I became, when members of our editorial board told me that the board chose Mr. Osborne as THE MAN OF THE YEAR in recognition to his enormous contributions to the world of cinema. Ironically enough, one day later, Ms. Ruth Sielberg, Editor-in-Chief of the International Herald Daily news  http://www.internationalheraldfailynews.org (London, Paris) called me to ask me if I would be interested in writing an article about Robert Osborne, for the Herald decided to select Mr. Osborn as their Man of the Year! I do not believe in coincidence. Coincidence exists solely in the abyss of uncreative minds. To be selected by another news agency as MAN OF THE YEAR for the same year is NOT a coincidence but, a global  and a wide-spread recognition of unusual contributions and outstanding accomplishments in any given field. And most certainly, Mr. Robert Osborne deserves our gratitude and a universal recognition. The man is a national treasure and a great asset to world cinema. La crème de la crème.

Written by Maximillien de Lafayette, Syndicated Columnist delafayette@internationalnewsagency.org

FILMS REVIEWS:

Prima Donna: Minnie Driver in Hope Springs: A romantic comedy; a classic adaptation and a Scottish road movie - three new British films all have their charms, even the one featuring Minnie Driver's trademark Prima Donna routine...Read full article

Mystic River: Self-doubt, ethical compromise and moral ambiguity are on the cards when three childhood friends are reunited following the murder of one's daughter Clint Eastwood's latest movie as a director is a stolid, masculine thriller bearing the lineaments of tragedy - something classical or even biblical. It's a film where work, good and bad, is done by men...Read full article

She's a Renegade with no Deadline. “Veronica Guerin” Starring: Cate Blanchett. RATING: 2 Stars. Movies have always confused journalists with cops, and maybe the comparison isn't far off: Both jobs appear to be about unraveling mysteries, but both are really about paperwork. The difference, however, is that cops get shot more often. Not to belittle those journalists who put their lives on the line daily, but their movie brethren are a Hollywood fantasy of tough-talking...Read full article

Intolerable Cruelty. Directed by: Joel Coen. Starring: George Clooney; Catherine Zeta-Jones. It is traditional, when considering the films of the Coen brothers, to remark on their versatility, and their ability to pastiche and corrupt genres, while also remaining true to their chosen form. There is some truth in this notion, but, as a means of understanding their output, it is increasingly unhelpful... Read full article

 

 

 

 

ENTERTAINMENT: READ THE LATEST REVIEWS,  RELEASES, ARTICLES ON FILMS, CDs, GOSSIPS AND NEWS...MORE ARTICLES: REVISITING THE STARS, THE GOSSIPS AND RUMORS OF THE YEAR

COMING SOON...AND FOR THE FIRST TIME ON THE INTERNET

100 YEARS OF CINEMA

INCLUDING: HISTORY, BIOGRAPHIES, UNTOLD STORIES, REVIEWS, ESSAYS AND HUNDREDS OF VINTAGE AND RARE PHOTOS.

By Maximillien de Lafayette

GLORIA LORING: HER LIFE, BOOKS, MUSIC AND STARDOM.

READ THE ARTICLE AND EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW

She did it all with class, beauty, intelligence, style, talent, unique creativity, guts  and warmth. And she excelled in everything she accomplished. Grande Dame Loring is a published author, a national speaker, a world-class actress, an international celebrity, a star of the American cinema and television, a leading figure of the American theater and concert halls, a singer, a composer, a lyricist, a songwriter, a producer,  a certified yoga teacher, a member of Who's Who in America and The World Who's Who of Women and a  humanitarian.  This woman is almost 99.99% perfect. This is the kind of people who create and shape the greatness of a nation. This is the vintage of noble souls, warm hearts  and bright minds who  make the sun rise and  shine over the hills, the prairies and the faces of people we love...And this is the kind of human beings who  at every dawn, make the wild roses bloom in the valley and on the landscape of the human psyche.

CINEMA: MORE TOPICS, HOLLYWOOD, DIVAS, STORIES YOU NEVER HEARD BEFORE, GOSSIPS AND NEWS

BY MAXIMILLIEN de LAFAYETTE

WHY MOVIES STARS, CELEBRITIES AND ORDINARY WOMEN POSE NAKED? By Maximillien de Lafayette. Brigitte Bardot: "Animals walk around naked and they have more loyalty than men. I have never been betrayed by my pets. But I have been cheated so many times by men and women who were fully clothed..."Josephine Baker: " I will strip by the name of God, if I have to feed those orphans...". WHY SOME WOMEN STRIP IN PUBLIC AND WHY STARS POSE NAKED? For  one million reasons. And it has nothing to do with money, as many ingenious minds and rednecks believe or imagine. Kate Moss does not need to pose naked to make money. She appeared in full armored clothes on major glossy magazines covers. And she earns zillions, just by holding a product or looking at the camera. She does it because it is part of the fabric of the business. Almost 88% of stars and celebrities, including university professors, anchorwomen, women-wrestlers, top executives and moms posed in the nude at one time in their lives and careers for pragmatic, incomprehensible reasons, fantasy, celebrity quest, notoriety exposure... Read full article and see photos

 

CINEMA: LATEST FILMS REVIEWS. The bad movies of the week: "JUST FRIENDS", "THE ICE HARVEST", "YOURS, MINE AND OURS".

Outrageous gossips & insults by and about movies stars and celebrities : Bette Davis, Barbra Streisand, Judy Garland, Madonna, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Katherine Hepburn,  Elizabeth Taylor, Marilyn Monroe, Lauren Bacall, Marlene Dietrich, Ingrid Bergman,  Joan Crawford, Joan Collins, Bo Derek, Mia Farrow, Frank Sinatra, Phyllis Diller, Ernest Borgnine, Montgomery Clift, Gary Cooper, Ava Gardner, Robert Redford,  Steve McQueen, Clark Gable, Steve Martin,  Mickey Rooney, Walter Matthau, Cole Porter, Warren Beatty, Elvis Presley, Robert Mitchum, Clint Eastwood, Marlon Brando, Liberace, Sarah Bernhardt, etc., Read full article

 

FEMMES FATALES AND DIVAS OF THE FILM NOIRE By Maximillien de Lafayette

The femme fatale,  is an irresistible dramatic and dangerously attractive woman. She is "la Femme"  who  directs men toward the abyss of danger.  Ironically, the literature of the sacred and the damned does not include  hommes fatales. Even, Charles Boyer, Jean Gabin and Tyron Power do not fit the description of a fatal persona.  La  femme fatale dates back  to classic myth and ancient folklore. Astarte (Ashtaroot in Aramaic and Phoenician) was one. Circe,  is another half woman half divine femme fatale who turned Odysseus' men into swine in Book X of The Odyssey and the Sirens, whose beauty and alluring song attracted his sailors  and high seas adventurers...Read the full article

REVISITING  SUPERSTARS AND LEGENDS: ANN MILLER. Once upon a time, she was number 1. The star of forty motion pictures and Broadway shows, national tours and innumerable television appearances, Ann Miller has been tap dancing since her earliest childhood days. Ann began her Hollywood career at age eleven, and with her vibrant personality, great legs and her tap dancing, won a seven year contract with R.K.O. at the age of thirteen (claiming to be eighteen). She was so remarkable that by age fourteen, she played Ginger Roger's dancing partner in "Stage Door", which started a Motion Picture Career that spanned 20 years. During that period, Ann appeared in more than 40 films. At fifteen, Ann was "borrowed" by Columbia to appear with James Stewart and Jean Arthur in "You Can't Take It With You" which won the Academy Award for Best Picture of 1938. That same year, back at R.K.O., she appeared with the Marx Brothers in "Room Service". She left R.K.O. and starred on Broadway in the George White Scandals of 1939 and 1940. Following her initial contract with R.K.O., Ann came back to appear in the Rogers and Hart musical...Read full article

THE HOLLYWOOD FILE: THE MOST REMEMBERED CINEMA DIVAS, ICONS AND LEGENDS. Icon' -- like 'diva,' 'legend' and 'genius' -- has become a bastardized term, a cliché applied by hack publicists to everyone from faded disco queens to Suzanne Somers. In a cultural sense, what does 'icon' really mean? Consider the differences between Marilyn Monroe and Meryl Streep, Elvis Presley and Elton John. An icon is not just a star but the blueprint for scores of imitators. Icons touch, dazzle and mystify each new generation, very often for tragic reasons. How compelling it is to watch people dance closer to the flame than most of us would ever dare; to take what we covet -- fame, beauty, riches -- and disdain it or destroy it...Read full article

 

 

 

 

 

 

THE MASTERPIECES OF GODARD: One of Godard’s masterpieces, in which Marianne Renoir (Karina, who was divorcing the director at the time), accompanies Belmondo’s Pierrot, who has abandoned his wife and children in Paris, on a doomed escape to the Mediterranean. The movie is important for its themes of alienation and brooding narcissism, especially revealed in a party where mannequin-like capitalists spout American TV ad copy instead of conversation...Read full article

 

THE MEGA DOLLAR WOMEN. THE MOST EXPENSIVE STARS IN HOLLYWOOD.  What so special about these women? Are they the most intelligent and captivating human beings in the world? NO! Have they contributed the most essential and the most needed help, knowledge and wisdom to the society and world of excellence, humanities and human science? NO! So why are they so expensive? Why they are making so much money,  millions and millions of Dollars, when so many talented artists, creative singers and entertainers, devoted teachers, academicians and much more intelligent, fascinating and brilliant minds and bodies are barely surviving?  Find out!  Read full article 

 

AN OLD FRENCH  PORNO FILM HAILED AS A MASTERPIECE: Woman's erotic presence as a pivotal necessity in art films and documentaries. A secret stash of naughty silent films turned up in a Paris attic, and producer Michel Reilhac knew he had to put them on the big screen...Read full article

[The lovely Kim Novak]Actress Kim Novak leads rustic life. "What would I be doing if I still lived here?" Kim Novak mused. She supplied her own answer: "I'd be spending my afternoons shopping on Rodeo Drive." Instead, she has chosen to live in a wooded paradise near Ashland, Ore. Called Windsong, it's a place she and her husband, Bob Malloy, share with golden eagles, geese, deer, elk and a host of other wild fauna, not to mention a barnyard full of farm animals. "We have two or three hundred acres (80 to 120 hectares), including two large islands," she reported. "The main channel of the (Rogue) river runs past the islands. A smaller tributary passes in front of our house...Read full article

THIS WEEK 10 TOP FILMS 

CINEMA: Israel Film Festival “What A Wonderful Place” to be Opening Night film at The 21st Annual Israel Film Festival. 

SPINNING INTO BUTTER. Spinning into Butter is currently filming on Governors Island in New York City.  Sarah Jessica Parker will be joined by Beau Bridges (The Ballad of Jack and Rose, The Fabulous Baker Boys), Miranda Richardson (The Hours, The film version of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s The Phantom of the Opera) and Mykelti Williamson... 

Rent or Buy ROBOTS - Available to buy for $29.95 in store at your local participating Video Ezy NOW! Stocks are limited!

CINEMA: MOVIES REVIEWS: Two For the Money: Dramatic tension never quite fulfilled. Wall Street meets Las Vegas -- the middle of Vancouver -- in Two for the Money, a slick and stylish reel that attempts to recreate Al Pacino as the modern Gordon Gekko, with a post-millennial lump of pathos. Pacino plays Walter, a reformed gambling addict who's turned his destructive habit into a profitable advisory service for other players. Give Walter money, and he'll give you his expert picks on what's a lock for the weekend. Walter isn't allowed to gamble anymore, but when he brings in a young buck named Brandon Lang (Matthew McConaughey)... Read the full article 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In Her Shoes: Strong acting lifts it above standard chick-flick. There's a scene in In Her Shoes in which Cameron Diaz and Shirley MacLaine sit around a TV set with some neighbours at a Florida retirement community, watching Sex and the City and sipping that show's signature cocktail, the cosmopolitan. In Her Shoes seems to be striving for that series' same mix of witty insights into female relationships and romance with weighty tearjerker moments. Everything about the film cries out to the same core audience: the source material (Susannah Grant's script is...Read the full article 

 

SCREENING OF SISTER ROSE'S PASSION

At  Edmond J. Safra Hall at  the Museum of Jewish Heritage - A Living Memorial to the Holocaust.  36 Battery Place, New York, NY 10280. Sunday, October 16 at 2:30 p.m. Sister Rose Thering To Discuss Her Life Spent Fighting Anti-Semitism ...Read the full article 

Unlimited DVD Rentals - delivered to your door.

Moviefone® DVD Rentals has over 30,000 titles to choose from including new releases, classics and comedies. As a member you'll be able to rent them all! Check out some of the newest additions in our catalogue.

Ramones walking in New York CityDOCUMENTARY FESTIVAL

This film is one of many highlights for the documentary festival. In 1974 the Ramones rattled the music scene in New York City with their unique raw sound - this film documents one of the most influential groups in the history of rock music. The documentary's strength is leaving most of the talking to the complex and contradictory personalities in the band. Joey the bright lanky misfit growing up with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder....Read the full article

 

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