Monday Nov 30 | The Daily Princetonian, 2008-05-16
What are we gonna do with our lives?
When I got my acceptance letter from Princeton on April 3, 2006, I thought my life was made.
10 Mysteriously Delicious Books that Turned into Movies
There's nothing like a good book that ends well. Good books wait until the end to tell all.
Morrissey steps into Hoffman's shoes as Rain Man
NEIL Morrissey makes his touring debut in the stage adaptation of the Oscar-winning film Rain Man, running at the New Victoria Theatre, Woking, from Monday to Saturday, November 23 to 28.
Norris? Shatner? Bronson? P'shaw
What are the two most frightening words in Hollywood? OK, other than "casting couch." OK, other than "no trailer." OK, other than look, never mind! They're "Gary Busey." That's all it took to excite me about the Paso Robles Digital Film Festival .
Tom Cruise, seen in this file photo running along Bostona s Charles River.
The "Knight & Day" leading man, wearing a dark suit and his trademark Tinseltown smile, joined rarely seen Church of Scientology leader David Miscavige at the service for Cooley, who was the religious group's legal Top Gun for more than 25 years.
A Guide to Tom Cruise Films: The Top 10 Tom Cruise Movies
Everyone has a favorite actor or actress that they like to watch. While there may be many people who love Tom Cruise, there are also those who do not.
Movie actors' mugshots shown in BBC online appeal for football hooligans
The BBC has admitted it posted pictures of actors from the film The Firm on the Crimewatch website and wrongly claimed they were football hooligans earlier this week.
In case you missed it, Pinchot claimed that Cruise's behavior while filming Risky Business consisted of hurling regular anti-gay slurs that were bizarrely disconnected from anything that was actually happening at a given moment: He was tense and made constant, constant unrelated homophobic comments, like, 'You want some ice cream, in case there are ...
Tom Cruise Surprises Entertainment Law Class At Harvard
Bertram Fields showed up to an entertainment law class to give a lecture, when the students in the class were surprised with an appearance by none other than movie star, Tom Cruise .
Director RJ Cutler penetrates the offices of Anna "Nuclear" Wintour's American Vogue and crafts an insightful documentary on the art of fashion.
Jacksonsun.com Jackson news, communit...
For the first time, Sarah Clayborne, the "Pie Lady" has agreed to share some of her recipes.
Damon makes 'The Informant!' worth the price of admission
CASEY PHILLIPS: Like "Erin Brockovich" and "Michael Clayton," Steven Soderbergh's "The Informant!" succeeds by pushing the small type and legalese of a lusterless plot to the background and directing attention to a magnetically powerful performance by its lead actor.
A shallow, conventional film that throws little light on the era and makes little of its characters, says Philip French Sunday, 20 September 2009 Alan Clarke's 1988 TV film The Firm, starring Gary Oldman and Phil Davis as rival gang leaders, is by some way the best movie on the subject of football hooliganism and a key text on the subject of ...
The Firm, review The Firm doesn't live up to the classic TV film but it's a good effort.
The Firm - Calum MacNab, Paul Anderson and Daniel Mays interview
Anderson , Daniel Mays and Calum MacNab talk about remaking The Firm for director Nick Love, why it differs from most other films about football violence a ' including Alan Clarkea TMs original a ' and what it was like for Paul and Calum to headline a film for the first timea Q. How does The Firm differ from other films about football violence and, ...
It's an open-shut case: you're best served by a tightly-plotted legal thriller, where the winners and losers are decided by judges, juries, lawyers and Jack Nicholson.
Director: Nick Love Screenwriters: Nick Love, Al Ashton Starring: Paul Anderson, Calum McNab, Daniel Mays, Billy Seymour, Joanne Matthews Running time: 90 mins Certificate: 18 On paper, remaking The Firm - Alan Clarke's mini-masterpiece about football thugs in Thatcher's Britain - is a thankless task.
The Firm (18): Robbie Collins says we've seen it brawl before
THE Firm's about as good as football hooligan films will probably ever get. And no, that is not a compliment.
The Informant! is a whistleblower thriller in which the whistle turns out to be a raspberry and the thriller becomes a farce.
A tribute to the cult TV film about football hooligans, The Firm, and the mystery of Guy Richie's reshoot Love turns Hollywood neon Director Nick Love has made a fond tribute to the cult Alan Clarke TV film about football hooligans, The Firm.
Also on Topix