MovieTimes.com Movie News
Long before Jeremy Piven was a
four-time Emmy winner for Entourage, he was of course George Costanza on
Seinfeld. What, you don’t remember him as George? That’s probably
bec... (read more)
Retiring for good any doubt about Daniel Craig’s Bond
bankability, Quantum of Solace set a franchise record at the box office this
weekend with a $70.4 million take. Since every other stu... (read more)
Paramount Home Entertainment’s DVD release slate for
the end of the year is heavy on new Blu-ray product. Among the big titles are Into
the Wild, The Heartbreak Kid and Coach Carter (Dec.... (read more)
According to Variety, Jaden Smith will be the next
Daniel-son in the remake of “The Karate Kid,” which is set to begin filming next
year. Surprisingly enough, the film will be produ... (read more)
According to Now Magazine, Kim Cattrall has said there
will be a sequel to the “Sex and the City” Movie. The first movie, starring Sarah Jessica Parker, Cynthia Nixon, Kristen Davis ... (read more)
Variety reports that Antonio Banderas is in final
negations to play artist Salvador Dali in the upcoming film “Dali,” to be
directed by Simon West. The film will mix CGI and music t... (read more)
The official weekend box-office numbers are in, with
Beverly Hills Chihuahua pawing its way to the number one spot with $29 million.
Second place went to Eagle Eye in its second weekend with $1... (read more)
After Bangkok Dangerous’ rather sad showing (only
making about a third of the production cost after three weeks in theaters—about
$15 million), Nicolas Cage is teaming up with direc... (read more)
In a rather slow weekend for movies, Lakeview
Terrace, starring badass monologuer Samuel Jackson, came out on top, grossing a not-so-staggering $15,004,672. Coming in second during its
second w... (read more)
Actor Tommy Lee Jones has filed a lawsuit against Paramount Pictures
and its subsidiary involved in the production of No Country for Old
Men, according to an AP story published in Variety. Jo... (read more)
More Movie News
Hollywood bad guys think Occam's razor is a Mach 3 competitor. They can't seem to kill a single victim without planning out a complex, Rube Goldberg-style sequence that's almost sure to end in failure.
We all know some of the famous on-liners from the movies, but some of them are so commonplace that you may not even know that it’s a quote from a movie or from which movie it originated. But there are some quotes from movies that everyone should know. Some of them have really stood the test of time and are very old.
We watch movies for plenty of reasons: to laugh, to cry, to learn new things. But often what we want most is a mind-blowing jolt to the system — whether it be a revealing line of dialogue, an horrific act of violence or simply a star playing against type. Click on a title below to find the best shocks cinema has to offer.
AMONG the significant dates in the history of Kahlúa, the Mexican coffee liqueur, surely March 6, 1998, rates a mention.
I hope these photos will help keep your balls as blue as mine are.
Of all the amateur photographers out there, who among us hasn’t dreamed of seeing our photos plastered onscreen during the runtime of a multi-million dollar studio tentpole release/major comic book franchise film?
Many of Hollywood's finest have played presidents, prime ministers and dictators, but which have given the most convincing performances? From Adolf Hitler to Tony Blair, we pick the ten greatest performances that will make you do a double-take.
I've been accused of refusing to review Ben Stein's documentary "Expelled," a defense of Creationism, because of my Darwinian agenda. Here is my review.
That villain is a man who eventually chooses the name Jigsaw and is played by baddie default Dominic West. I guess they couldn’t afford Sean Bean. West’s performance as Jigsaw is eerily similar to what Tommy Lee Jones did as Two-Face in Batman Forever, and if that comparison hasn’t made you vomit a little… wait there’s more!
Empire Magazine recently put out their list of "The 100 Greatest Movie Characters," placing Tyler Durden from "Fight Club" at number one. Here's a slideshow of 25 other great characters we feel their list left out.
Jeffrey Katzenberg boldly predicted Monday that there will be nearly 2,500 screens ready for 3-D in time for the March 27 release of DreamWorks Animation's "Monsters vs. Aliens."
You see these opening logos every time you go to the movies, but have you ever wondered who is the boy on the moon in the DreamWorks logo? Or which mountain inspired the Paramount logo? Or who was the Columbia Torch Lady? Let's find out
Not that Warner Bros. needs more evidence that its Batman film franchise is a phenomenon, but it got some Tuesday from Apple anyway.
Coming soon, in a gallery far, far away (Australia), an exhibition is opening that compares the technology featured in the Star Wars films with real life scientific advancements.
As a tribute to the absence of the Q branch's lab in the last two films, let's step inside Universal Exports and take a look at the 007 best Q gadgets that never made it out of the lab.
In an alternate universe, we're all obsessing about the impending release of The Matrix V and Chronicles Of Riddick 9. Even as we're drowning in retreads of things that launched in the 1960s, just think of all the more recent works that tried — and failed — to launch a franchise. Why is it so difficult?
The 3-D format is a boon to both studios and exhibitors, and it's here to stay. National Assn. of Theater Owners prexy John Fithian said that 3-D is "the value add" that theater owners have been looking for to spur their transition to digital projection. "This is the technology of the future, and it's going to be here for a long time."
It might just happen, if Steve Guttenberg has his way. Finally, the sequel to Police Academy 7--if not the worst movie ever made, up there. Sure, some states may prevent its exhibition (under little used turn-of-the-century "fomenting public horror" statutes) but Gutenberg is committed & if he can pull together his "creative" team, audiences beware
It is rare for cinema to really change the world. A movie like Philadelphia easily gets moviegoers thinking about AIDS and discrimination, yet these kinds of message films preach primarily to the choir. But at least five films have made an actual difference, either on a local or national level.