Tuesday Oct 27 | Pittsburgh Tribune
DVDs: 'Orphan' delivers the horror-flick thrills
It's wise to carry low expectations for horror movies these days. This anticipation certainly will result in a win-win situation, especially with the state of the genre.
Review -- Are you there God? It's me, Gopnik: 'A Serious Man'
Nebbish on the roof: Michael Stuhlbarg in "A Serious Man" Sure, you could accuse Larry Gopnik of pitying himself, but if he didn't, who would? Lord knows he's got reasons: A physics professor living in a Minnesota suburb in 1967, he's got a sack of troubles that would cause Job himself to think, 'You know, maybe I don't have it so bad....' To wit: ...
Larry David plays his own style of neurotic in Woody Allen's new film, writes Raymond Gill.
Film tells hilarious tale of 'A Serious Man'
Why? The question in "A Serious Man," the Coen brothers' latest film, is simple enough, if the details are much more complex.
Woody Allen Is Going Down to Rio
After being cold-shouldered by the US studios, Woody Allen turned to globe trotting for both the finance and the settings for his projects.
There is something very unnerving about the prospect of interviewing Woody Allen.
A compact, lanky, blond who is able to seem controlled and fraught, as well as off-balance, Robert Joy is an actor who has worked in leading and supporting roles on stage and screen.
Tattle: Kelis has baby, Nas told to pay her 44G a month
ON WEDNESDAY, Kelis gave birth to Nas ' son, Knight . Her beautiful Knight turned into a beautiful day yesterday as L.A. Superior Court Judge Louis Meisinger ordered Nas to pay Kelis nearly $44,000 in monthly support for the near future.
Voiceover announcer Ken Roberts dies
Voiceover announcer Ken Roberts, who introduced soap operas "Love of Live" and "The Secret Storm," died June 19 of pneumonia in New York.
'Golden throat' of radio soaps, quiz shows dies
Ken Roberts, 99, an announcer whose urbane baritone introduced the long-running TV soap operas Love of Life and The Secret Storm , and who memorably parodied his dramatic delivery on the 1970s children's show The Electric Company , died June 19 at New York Presbyterian Hospital.
Maple Pictures David stretches out his cranky acting chops in Woody Allen s Whatever Works.
It's a seemingly innocuous question. "How are you?" Larry David is asked. But this being the man who stars on HBO's Curb Your Enthusiasm as a kind of professional curmudgeon, the man who co-authored the testy and enigmatic Seinfeld , the reply that comes firing back is, one might say, refreshingly candid.
This match made in Manhattan is such an obvious fit you wonder why Woody Allen didn't think of it sooner People like to kvetch: why doesn't Woody Allen make movies like he used to? Whatever happened to the zany intellectual who made us all feel like New Yorkers, as he mocked bourgeois pretension and his own neuroses in the same exasperated breath? ...
Woody Allen Calls New Leading Man, Larry David, a My Kind Of Actora
Larry David attends the premiere of 'Whatever Works' during the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival at Ziegfeld on April 22 Woody Allen at the after party for 'Whatever Works' at the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival Funnyman Larry David arrives at the premiere of Sony Pictures Classics' 'Whatever Works'on June 8, 2009 in West Hollywood June 9, 2009 10:10 AM EDT ...
Larry David stars in Woody Allena s new film
NEW YORK - On "Curb Your Enthusiasm," Larry David's alter ego has realized two fantasies: starring in a Mel Brooks production and acting in a Martin Scorsese film .
BroadwayWorld.com Featured Content
Ian Talks-Louis Walks A Musical Oddity Presented 6/9, 6/12 At Carroll Musical
Louie Walks, a one man show , is a musical oddity created by and starring Ian Finkel .
Why 'Cassandra's Dream' is turning out to be Woody Allen's nightmare
In his latest film, premiered at the Venice Film Festival yesterday, the veteran American director abandons his native New York for the unfamiliar streets and accents of London.
"A hundred and fifty lofty masts, more or less, held out the web of their rigging like an immense net in whose close mesh, black against the sky, the heavy yards seemed to be entangled and suspended.
Actors pull off the best trick of all in The Floating Light Bulb : giving vibrancy to a so-so script
Woody Allen's 1981 play, The Floating Light Bulb , begins and ends with a magic trick.
Kavner's long and winding Rhoda
Rob Salem I ronically, for an actor so indelibly identified by her distinctive voice, Julie Kavner remains adamantly unwilling to talk.
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