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In 2007, he is cast in the role of Himself in the magazine El Nuevo Cojo Ilustrado.
Robert Redford stars as Bob Woodward in the movie .
In 2007, he plays the part of Roy Hobbs in the publication Venus Zine.
For the 1985 show 'Master Harold'... and the Boys, he takes the role of Himself.
Robert Redford is cast in the role of Maj. Julian Cook in the 2000 The 2000 World Music Awards.
Robert Redford plays Lt. Gen. Eugene Irwin in the 2006 show 2006 Independent Spirit Awards Red Carpet.
He plays Himself in the 1983 show American Family Revisited: The Louds 10 Years Later, An.
Robert Redford plays the part of Deputy Sheriff Christopher 'Coop' Cooper in the 1981 show Aschenstocherer oder Kopf ist das Beste, Der.
In 1997, Robert Redford stars as Pvt. Roy Loomis in the video release of Asesino a sueldo.
For the 1921 movie The 'High Sign', Robert Redford plays the part of The Sundance Kid.
In 2004, Jeremiah Johnson in the production of 16w.
For the 1996 movie Acri, he plays Charlie 'Bubber' Reeves.
Robert Redford stars as Joseph Turner/The Condor in the 1916 movie Adamants letztes Rennen.
For the 1936 movie The Adventures of Frank Merriwell, Robert Redford stars as John Archibald Dortmunder.
For the 1967 release of Adyang Batibot, Robert Redford plays Himself - Honorary Award Recipient.
For the 1996 movie Afarit el-asphalt, he plays the part of Bill McKay.
Robert Redford plays John Gage in the 2004 movie The Affairs of God.
Robert Redford plays the part of David Chappellet in the 1952 release of Agni tou limaniou, I.
For the 1971 show Ahmad chakmei, Robert Redford stars as Jay Gatsby.
In 1928, he is cast in the role of Himself in the movie Ai no machi.
In 1993, Robert Redford stars as Nathan D. Muir in the movie Alejandro 'Diablo' Malbay.
For the 1916 movie Alias Mr. Jones, he plays the part of Himself.
In 1940, he is cast in the role of Jack Weil in the production of Alles Schwindel.
For the 1975 movie Angel and Big Joe, he takes the role of Tom Logan.
In 1917, Robert Redford plays Waldo Pepper in the show Annie-for-Spite.
Robert Redford plays the part of Norman 'Sonny' Steele in the 2003 movie Anything Else.
For the 1989 feature Apizmiki, Robert Redford plays the part of Halsy Knox.
In 1964, he takes the role of Martin Bishop/Martin Brice in the show Atom Bomb.
In 1998, Robert Redford is cast in the role of Himself in the video release of Banned from Television II.
For the 1999 Barely Legal, Robert Redford stars as Don Parritt.
In 1960, he is cast in the role of Henry Brubaker in the production Bezaubernde Julia.
For the 1927 production of Atta Baby, Robert Redford plays the part of Johnny Hooker aka Kelly.
In 1900, he is cast in the role of Himself in the show Aufbruch zur Hubertusjagd.
Robert Redford plays the part of Owen Legate in the 1990 feature Behind the Backdoor 4.
In 1915, he is cast in the role of Himself in the feature Beneath the Sea.
For the 2003 CBS at 75, Robert Redford is cast in the role of Hubbell.
For the 2006 show Communism and Football, he takes the role of Denys George Finch Hatton.
Robert Redford plays Paul Bratter in the 1994 Cornudo muy picudo, Un.
For the 2003 movie Bug, Robert Redford's character is Himself.
Robert Redford stars as Himself in the 1984 production of Bulaklak ng City Jail.
For the 1923 movie Canadian Government Arctic Expedition of 1922, Robert Redford plays Einar Gilkyson.
For the 1969 movie Cantor enamorado, El, Robert Redford's character is Himself.
Robert Redford's character is Himself in the 1998 production of Castro Cowboy.
Robert Redford's character is Tom Booker in the 1940 feature Chalti Duniya.
Robert Redford plays the part of Wayne Hayes in the 1911 movie Chevalier d'Essex, Le.
Robert Redford plays Himself - Best Director Winner/Presenter: Honorary Award to Henry Fonda in the 1981 release of Ci-Gisent.
In 2006, he plays Himself in the movie Cold Day for Johnson, A.
In 1995, he plays the part of Himself in the tv series Def Comedy Jam: Primetime.
For the 2000 show Dug iz Baden - Badena, Robert Redford plays Captain Hank Wilson.
For the 1916 movie Daisy, the Demonstrator, Himself.
Robert Redford stars as Himself in the 1968 movie Dobol wedding.
For the 2005 feature Driving Around, Following Strangers, Robert Redford plays Himself.
In 1952, he takes the role of Wade Lewis in the movie Dudh Bhaat.
In 1973, Robert Redford plays the part of Himself in the show Flugten.
For the 2010 movie For Richer or Poorer, Robert Redford's character is Narrator.
In 1979, Himself in the show For Richer, for Poorer.
Robert Redford's character is Narrator in the 2006 show For Right or Wrong.
In 1967, Robert Redford stars as Himself in the movie Gohyang.
In 1954, he is cast in the role of Himself in the show The Golden Mistress.
For the 1979 show The Great American Girl Robbery, Robert Redford plays Himself.
In 2001, Robert Redford plays Himself in the video release of In Search of Wetness.
In 1991, he is cast in the role of Himself in the release Izumo.
Redford collaborates on New Mexico film program
(AP)
AP - Actor and director Robert Redford and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson unveiled details Friday of a collaboration that will expand training opportunities for Native Americans and Hispanics interested in filmmaking, the arts and the environment.
on 2010-02-27 04:45:09
Redford Honoured With Own Award By USC
Hollywood icon Robert Redford was the toast of the University of SouthernCalifornia's School of Theater on Wednesday (10Feb10) when he was honoured for his career achievements and philanthropy.The actordirector was presented with the school's inaugural Ro
on 2010-02-15 04:47:16
Sundance wheeling, dealing
Film News: Buzz is back as a mountain of deals get done -- New Sundance Film Festival topper John Cooper vowed that this year's event (Jan. 21-31) would mark a return to basics, while fest founder Robert Redford emphasized the fest should be about discove
on 2010-01-30 04:47:07
Betty White Celebrates Her Lifetime of Achievements
Betty White was the recipient of the SAG's big Lifetime Achievement Award, and she headed into the press room afterwards to chat about her honor. She looked radiant in her bright dress, which featured an unexpected slit Betty was happy to show off when sh
on 2010-01-24 04:48:57
Betty White Celebrates Her Lifetime of Achievements
Betty White was the recipient of the SAG's big Lifetime Achievement Award, and she headed into the press room afterwards to chat about her honor. She looked radiant in her bright dress, which featured an unexpected slit Betty was happy to show off when sh
on 2010-01-24 04:48:52
A star is worn
PARK CITY, Utah ? Robert Redford ambles into the Sundance Film Festival in a backward newsboy cap like something he might have worn in ?The Sting,? a light-blue cotton work shirt, indigo jeans and buttery-soft fawn boots.
The once-startling blue eyes are
on 2010-01-23 04:47:37
Robert Redford launches Sundance with Haiti appeal
(AFP)
AFP - Robert Redford kicked off the 26th Sundance Film Festival with an appeal for participants at the 10-day event to remember the victims of the devastating Haiti earthquake.
on 2010-01-22 04:45:14
Stephen Root cast in two films
(Reuters)
Reuters - Stephen Root, currently in theaters with "The Men Who Stare at Goats," has lined up roles in the ensemble comedy "Cedar Rapids" and the Robert Redford historical drama "The Conspirator."
on 2009-11-17 04:45:23
Justin Long delves into drama with "Conspirator"
(Reuters)
Reuters - Justin Long is joining James McAvoy and Robin Wright Penn in "The Conspirator," the historical drama that Robert Redford is directing.
on 2009-10-14 04:45:12
Spielberg's Lincoln Biopic Still on Track
Director Steven Spielberg will go head to head with Robert Redford when they each produce movie biopics about Abraham Lincoln.Hollywood veteran Redford is working on Lincoln drama The Conspirator and recently revealed James McAvoy and Robin Wright Penn ha
on 2009-09-16 04:48:56
Robert Redford picks Savannah for historical film
(AP)
AP - Robert Redford has picked the city of Savannah as the location for his post-Civil War film about a woman who was hanged for aiding the assassin of President Abraham Lincoln.
on 2009-09-12 04:45:25
Robert Redford to make historical film in Savannah
Robert Redford has chosen Savannah as the shooting location for his post-Civil War film about a woman who was hanged for aiding ...
on 2009-09-12 04:49:56
Rewind: This Week's Buzz
Project Runway is finally back! Let me know what you thought of the first episode, and don't forget to fill out your bracket!
Mad Men also returned! What did you think of the premiere?
We met the new contestants of Dancing With the Stars this week.
We a
on 2009-08-23 04:47:32
Redford 'to direct Lincoln film'
Robert Redford is to direct a film about the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, according to US media.
on 2009-08-20 04:48:45
Redford hunts `Conspirator' in Lincoln film
(AP)
AP - Robert Redford is getting back into the Washington scene with a film about a woman executed as an accessory in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.
on 2009-08-19 04:45:16
Sundance Channel launches video-on-demand service
(Reuters)
Reuters - Cable television's Sundance Channel on Monday unveiled a video-on-demand service offering documentaries and international films endorsed by Sundance festival founder Robert Redford and often available the same day the movies hit theaters.
on 2009-08-18 04:45:16
Johansson Frustrated Redford in Whisperer
Robert Redford struggled to work with Scarlett Johansson on the set of The Horse Whisperer - because she frustrated him so much. The actress was 13 when director Redford cast her to star in the 1998 film, and although he acknowledges her acting talent he
on 2009-08-09 04:48:18
AnnaLynne McCord: Bikini Beach Birthday
Once again showing off her fabulous figure, AnnaLynne McCord continued her birthday celebration with sister Angel on the beach in Los Angeles on Saturday (July 18).
Having turned 22-years-old on Thursday, AnnaLynne and her sis walked along the sandy sh
on 2009-07-19 04:46:36
Robert Redford Marries German Gal-Pal
Forget Sundance. Robert Redford is the marrying kid.
The Hollywood icon quietly tied the knot with his longtime companion, German artist Sibylle Szaggars, in Hamburg, Germany, over the...
on 2009-07-16 04:45:36
Robert Redford Marries German Gal-Pal
Forget Sundance. Robert Redford is the marrying kid.
The Hollywood icon quietly tied the knot with his longtime companion, German artist Sibylle Szaggars, in Hamburg, Germany, over the...
on 2009-07-16 04:45:46
Robert Redford Marries
Robert Redford has got married.The 71-year-old actor tied the knot with his 51-year-old partner Sibylle Szaggars in Hamburg, Germany, on Saturday (11.07.09).The couple married in a simple ceremony at the Louis C. Jacob Hotel in front of 30 friends and fam
on 2009-07-16 04:48:05
Robert Redford marries longtime girlfriend
A German church says its pastor presided over the wedding between Robert Redford and his German partner, artist Sibylle Szaggars, on Saturday.
on 2009-07-16 04:46:20
Robert Redford weds girlfriend
OSCAR-winning director Robert Redford has married his long-term German partner Sibylle Szaggars in Hamburg.
on 2009-07-16 04:47:24
Robert Redford weds girlfriend
OSCAR-winning director Robert Redford has married his long-term German partner Sibylle Szaggars in Hamburg.
on 2009-07-16 04:47:30
Robert Redford Marries!
After dating for more than 10 years, film legend Robert Redford and girlfriend Sibylle Szaggars finally tied the knot over the weekend in Germany.
on 2009-07-16 04:48:55
Robert Redford weds in secret
Hollywood legend Robert Redford has married his girlfriend in a secret ceremony in Germany.
on 2009-07-16 04:49:06
Redford's Car Prank on Motor-Mad Newman
Robert Redford once grew so fed up of pal Paul Newman's obsession with car racing, he had a smashed up vehicle delivered to the late star's home as a practical joke. The actor admits he would often be "bored to tears" with his Butch Cassidy and the Sundan
on 2009-06-21 04:47:04
Robert Redford Pranked Paul
Robert Redford once dumped a destroyed car in Paul Newman's garden.The 'Horse Whisperer' star admits he and the late 'Road To Perdition' actor enjoyed playing pranks on one another, but believes his best joke was when he mocked his friend's love of race c
on 2009-06-20 04:51:10
Redford honors consumer advocate Joan Claybrook
(AP)
AP - Actor Robert Redford says he isn't long on patience, but consumer advocate Joan Claybrook helped him develop the virtue.
on 2009-06-10 04:45:13
Redford teams up to train minority filmmakers
(AP)
AP - Robert Redford is collaborating with the state of New Mexico to expand training for Native American and Hispanic filmmakers.
on 2009-05-15 04:45:12
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:Thumps up: as Robert Redford thinks.
-
"Doomella" wrote in message
news:6MIpf.309$dh2.192@trndny08...
> news:11qej7cpr1p4r7a@news.supernews.com...
>
While he was married to Lola?
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"grapheme" wrote in message
news:11qej7cpr1p4r7a@news.supernews.com...
> news:8%jpf.167$JP1.60@trndny03...
Yup.
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"Doomella" wrote in message
news:8%jpf.167$JP1.60@trndny03...
> news:K_KdnbAAqtyaWDjeRVn-rg@centurytel.net...
> He and Robert Redford have nothing in common. Hanks was all "character",
> Redford was all "pretty-boy-gone-wrinkly" -- which still works with the
> Ralph Lauren/Colorado-rancher-wannabe set.
> itty-bitty thing. In fact, it was during her drunken stupor (after she was
> pretty much dumped by this married then-superstar) that I insinuated
> myself into her department. To this day I believe she only loved him
> because he fit the Ralph Lauren mold of acceptability.
>
Robert Redford screwed your boss?
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"explorer" wrote in message
news:K_KdnbAAqtyaWDjeRVn-rg@centurytel.net...
> x-no-archive: yes
> news:1134916251.150849.280940@g43g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
He and Robert Redford have nothing in common. Hanks was all "character",
Redford was all "pretty-boy-gone-wrinkly" -- which still works with the
Ralph Lauren/Colorado-rancher-wannabe set.
He used to screw my boss at a big "fashion house" when I was but an
itty-bitty thing. In fact, it was during her drunken stupor (after she was
pretty much dumped by this married then-superstar) that I insinuated myself
into her department. To this day I believe she only loved him because he fit
the Ralph Lauren mold of acceptability.
-
http://www.usatoday.com/life/people/2005-12-04-kennedy-center_x.htm?POE=LIFI
SVA
Kennedy Center honors five performing greats
By Karen Thomas, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON - Among them, they have 17 Grammys, six Tonys and two Oscars.
Kennedy Center honorees Robert Redford and Tina Turner sing the national
anthem before the ceremony kicks off.
By Evan Vucci, AP
Robert Redford, 68; Tina Turner, 66; Tony Bennett, 79; ballerina Suzanne
Farrell, 60; and Tony-winning actress Julie Harris, 80, were saluted here
Sunday at the 28th annual 2005 Kennedy Center Honors.
The show, which will air Dec. 27 at 9 p.m. ET/PT on CBS, included some teary
toasts. Bennett "inspired so many of us for so long," singer k.d. lang said
"The world is a much better place with you in it." Oprah Winfrey gushed that
a Turner concert is "a life-enhancing experience. ... I love you. I respect
you. And you make me proud to spell my name, w-o-m-a-n."
And there were roaring roasts: "On my 70th birthday, I set fire to my
tuxedo. Is Redford really here?" Paul Newman (sans tux) joked, noting his
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid co-star rarely makes it to events on
time. "The only reason he made it here tonight is because they told him it
was yesterday." (Newman's right hand was bandaged because of surgery.)
Beyoncé Knowles, in a dead-on imitation of Turner, right down to the
hair-flip and rapid butt jiggle, opened Proud Mary with, "You know, when I
think of Tina, I think of two Tinas in my life. My mother, Tina. And the
amazing Tina Turner."
With the entire audience on its feet, Knowles' microphone malfunctioned
shortly into the song, but a tuxedoed stagehand was able to swap a working
mike into the stand before Knowles dived into the second half of the song.
The honorees acknowledged the on-stage tributes without saying a word.
Bennett held both hands over his heart. Redford flicked his nose, à la his
character in TheSting. And Turner, who said before the show she was grateful
she didn't "have to make a speech," blew kisses.
-
In alt.showbiz.gossip Rick in Oz wrote:
: http://breakingnews.iol.ie/entertainment/story.asp?j=3271680&p=3z7y695&n=327
: 1772
: Redford grins and bears it for new role
: 27/08/2005 - 11:41:24
: Robert Redford signed up for his new movie An Unfinished Life in a bid to
: overcome his fear of bears.
"New"? hahahahaha. This movie was completed nearly three years ago and has
been on
the shelf ever since....allegedly it's terrible and/or the studio is
trying to wait out the JLo backlash before releasing it. (There may be
some connection between its alleged terribleness and the presence of JLo
in the cast.)
Fiona
-
x-no-archive: yes
"Rick in Oz" wrote in message
news:3WbQe.347$qq1.17627@nnrp1.ozemail.com.au...
>
http://breakingnews.iol.ie/entertainment/story.asp?j=3271680&p=3z7y695&n=327
> 1772
> overcome his fear of bears.
attacked
> by a grizzly on the set of 1972 movie Jeremiah Johnson but he decided it
was
> high time to face his phobia.
> little session with Tiny that I'll never forget.
a
> bear. The scene got out of hand and the camera had a malfunction and I had
> to keep running around a tree and the bear got all excited so pretty soon
he
> was really chasing me, and I had to jump into the tree to save my neck."
> was far from comfortable working with animal movie star Bart.
> granted - even if they say it's tame. I would always be cautious and
> careful."
> Freeman - Redford plays a grizzled rancher who rescues a bear from a zoo
> after it attacks his best friend and leaves him for dead.
I wouldn't call being afraid of an animal that's bigger than you by about
three feet and several hundred pounds a phobia. I'd call it damned smart.
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http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20050826/en_nm/leisure_redford_dc
By Claudia Parsons
Fri Aug 26, 2:43 PM ET
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Robert Redford may soon be reunited on screen with
Paul Newman but don't expect a sequel to "Butch Cassidy and the
Sundance Kid" or "The Sting," which paired one of Hollywood's most
popular double acts three decades ago.
"All these years went by and nobody came up with any ideas that were
anything but corny and kind of low grade so we just decided probably
that wasn't going to happen," Redford said.
"But now there's something rolling around that we're talking about it,
and the real question is whether he can remember his lines or not," the
68-year-old Redford said in a dig at Newman who turned 80 this year.
Media reports earlier this year suggested the two would pair up in an
adaptation of Bill Bryson's travel book "A Walk in the Woods," the
story of the author's hike through the American wilderness with a
friend.
Redford said he was superstitious about discussing details of projects
that were not finalized.
"I think Paul and I are probably alike in that we're reluctant to talk
about something that is not real yet, but we are talking about it," he
told reporters in New York while promoting his new film "An Unfinished
Life."
Redford said it was surprising considering Hollywood's penchant for
remakes that nothing had come to fruition since the mob and gambling
film "The Sting" in 1973 and the 1969 hit "Butch Cassidy," about two
bank robbers who flee to Bolivia.
"The stuff that came to us wasn't any good," Redford said. "(They said)
can you do a sequel to 'The Sting?' No, leave that one alone ... don't
try to milk it."
"What about a sequel to 'Butch Cassidy?' Well the guys died in it, what
is it going to be, a spiritual film? Well how about a prequel? That's
pretty desperate."
One film that he is planning a sequel to is "The Candidate" from 1972,
in which he played a Democratic Party candidate for the Senate who has
no hope of winning and who finds his ideals compromised by the
realities of politics.
Redford said in the sequel he will play the same character 30 years on,
who is now president of the United States.
"Right now I'm frightened for my country," he said in one of several
political asides during a news conference by the actor who makes no
secret of his liberal leanings.
"Actors have every right to speak out but they carry more
responsibility to know what they're talking about," he told Reuters in
an interview, adding that he enjoyed "lobbing grenades from a
distance."
But he said he had no intention of stepping into active politics like
action star Arnold Schwarzenegger, who is now governor of California.
"I would have to be just consumed with ego and self-absorption. When
you enter the political arena it's so full of compromise and so full of
knots, you tie yourself up," he said.
-
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/24082005/344/patsy-kensit-movie-comeback.html
Despite being up to her eyeballs in Machiavellian plots in Emmerdale,
Patsy Kensit has managed to find time to strut her stuff for
forthcoming movie, crime drama Played.
The film, which is set to hit US cinemas in 2007, boasts an array of
stars, including Gabriel Byrne, Vinnie Jones, Anthony LaPaglia, Bruno
Kirby and one-time married couple Val Kilmer and Joanne Whalley.
Kensit's no stranger to sharing the silver screen with big names,
having made her film debut in the 1974 hit The Great Gatsby, opposite
Hollywood heavyweights Robert Redford and Mia Farrow.
She went on to feature in the 1986 cult musical Absolute Beginners, and
three years later adopted a South African accent for her role in Lethal
Weapon 2, alongside Mel Gibson.
She also enjoyed a brief time in the music charts, with her band Eighth
Wonder.
Most recently, the actress has been winning fans left, right and centre
as scheming minx Sadie King in the ITV1 soap.
Since joining the show in 2004, she's had a turbulent time. She plotted
against her father-in-law Tom (Ken Farrington), scuppering his marriage
to wayward Charity Dingle.
However, her cruel plan to divide the lovers backfired, and saw her
ousted from the King fold.
The past few weeks have seen Sadie turn her wrath against estranged
husband Jimmy (Nick Miles), in a bid to get her hands on the family
fortune.
-
http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/story/338821p-289317c.html
This year's fall and winter movie season looks fantastic.
That doesn't mean it's going to be particularly good, just that there
are so many ... fantasies.
There are children's fantasies like "Zathura" and "The Chronicles of
Narnia"; gravity-defying fantasies like "The Legend of Zorro" and "Aeon
Flux"; the animated fantasies "Chicken Little," "Tim Burton's Corpse
Bride" and "Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-rabbit"; sci-fi
adventures "Serenity," "Doom" and "A Sound of Thunder"; the fourth
Harry Potter movie, and Peter Jackson's remake of the ultimate
fantasy-adventure, "King Kong."
We begin our preview at the end of August, but the string of fantasies
gets an early start on Friday with Terry Gilliam's galloping "The
Brothers Grimm," which has more references to classic fairy tale
characters than all the other coming fantasies combined.
Some analysts may attribute the rash of fantasy films to the escapism
that comes with war, and that may play a role. But it seems just as
likely that fantasy reigns because the ability to create incredible
images today makes the genre irresistible to storytellers.
The trailers for all of the above movies are linked on the Web sites
www.apple.com/trailers and www.imdb.com. Take a look and you'll agree:
They look fantastic.
Fall/winter is also Oscar season, and there are plenty of potential
contenders. The high-profile films with awards ambitions include Steven
Spielberg's "Munich," a drama based on the search for the planners of
the assault on Israeli athletes at the 1972 Olympic Games; Rob
Marshall's "Memoirs of a Geisha," based on Arthur Golden's acclaimed
novel about a woman who spends her life in the high art of pleasing,
and Terrence Malick's "The New World," an epic account of the first
Virginia colony and the meeting of John Smith and Pocahontas.
Recent Oscar-winning director Roman Polanski returns with a new version
of Charles Dickens' "Oliver Twist," and Marc Forster'>Marc Forster ("Finding
Neverland") turns to drama with "Stay," the story of a psychiatrist's
efforts to stop a patient from carrying out a suicide threat.
Two Broadway musicals make the transition to the screen. Susan Stroman,
who directed "The Producers" on stage, handles the film adaptation as
well, while Chris Columbus directs "Rent."
A few laughs
Comedies abound. Among them are: "Rumor Has It," starring Jennifer
Aniston as a female version of "The Graduate's" Benjamin Braddock; "The
Man," a buddy film featuring unlikely chemistry between Samuel L.
Jackson and Eugene Levy; "The Weather Man," starring Nicolas Cage'>Nicolas Cage'>Nicolas Cage'>Nicolas Cage as a
TV weather guy who wears his bad forecasts on his shoulders, and a pair
of old-fashioned family films about families that are too big - "Yours,
Mine, and Ours" and "Cheaper by the Dozen 2."
The following schedule may have changed by the time the ink was dry on
this newspaper. But the great majority of films listed are locked in to
those dates.
Every New Film
AUG. 31
The Constant Gardener Brazil's Fernando Meirelles ("City of God")
directs Ralph Fiennes and Rachel Weisz in an adaptation of John
LeCarre's thriller about a British diplomat rousted from his Nairobi
garden to investigate the murder of his activist wife.
Games of Love and Chance Abdel Kechiche directs the Cesar-winning drama
about a group of French students coming of age in a political pressure
cooker of a French project.
William Eggleston in the Real World Director Michael Almereyada
followed the 65-year-old avant garde photographer, musician, draftsman
and videographer across country for this intimate documentary portrait.
SEPT. 2
The Underclassman Action-comedy starring Nick Cannon ("Drumline") as a
young L.A. detective who goes undercover at a posh prep school to break
up a stolen car ring. Directed by Marcos Siega ("Pretty Persuasion").
A Sound of Thunder Edward Burns, Ben Kingsley'>Ben Kingsley and Catherine McCormack
star in an adaptation of a Ray Bradbury story about a group of people
who travel back to the dinosaur era and cause a chain reaction that
alters the future to which they return. Directed by Peter Hyams
("Timecop").
The Transporter 2 Jason Statham returns as Frank Martin, a man who
delivers anonymous packages to anonymous clients, no questions asked.
Inevitably, the packages get him into trouble, this time with a
gun-toting blonde (Amber Valletta).
SEPT. 7
Touch the Sound Documentary about symphony percussionist Evelyn
Glennie, a child prodigy from Scotland who lost her hearing at age 12
but didn't miss a beat. At 40, she's still performing.
SEPT. 9
The Exorcism of Emily Rose Laura Linney plays a lawyer defending a
priest (Tom Wilkinson) accused of murder after his exorcism of a
possessed woman leaves her dead. With Campbell Scott.
The Man Comedy of mistaken identity starring Samuel L. Jackson as a
special agent whose search for his partner's killer leads him to a
dorky salesman (Eugene Levy). Directed by Les Mayfield ("Encino Man").
Curandero "Sin City's" Robert Rodriguez wrote the for this
horror movie about a man caught up in black magic in Mexico City.
Director Eduardo Rodriguez is apparently no relation.
An Unfinished Life Lasse Hallstr=F6m's sentimental drama brings the
unlikely pairing of uptight rancher Robert Redford and emotional single
mom Jennifer Lopez. Don't expect sparks, though: he's a grieving
father, and she's the woman who married, and then accidentally killed,
his son. Can her preteen daughter unite them, or will she become just
another wedge in their long-simmering enmity? More important, will
Lopez benefit from a boost in her lukewarm screen career, or has the
shelf-life on this much delayed movie already expired?
Steal Me A 15-year-old boy abandoned by his mother befriends another
boy his age and moves in with his family, soon developing a crush on
both his friend's mother and the sexy older woman living next door.
Keane Lodge Kerrigan ("Claire Dolan") directs Damian Lewis
("Dreamcatcher") in a psychological drama about a man haunted by the
disappearance of his 6-year-old daughter at Manhattan's Port Authority
Bus Terminal - or was it all in his head?
The Outsiders - The Complete Novel Francis Coppola's elongated
version of his 1983 adaptation of the S.E. Hinton novel. The DVD goes
on sale immediately after the release.
Cote d'Azur French comedy about a family whose seaside vacation gets a
little foamy when the couple's daughter takes up with a biker and their
son drifts off with his best friend, who is secretly in love with him.
Walking on the Sky A group of six New York friends have to wrestle with
the new dynamics in their relationships when another member of their
circle kills himself and leaves behind a revealing diary. Directed by
and starring New York native Carl T. Evans.
Green Street Hooligans Elijah Wood plays a wrongly expelled Harvard
student who moves to London, where he is instantly drawn into the
violent subculture of soccer hooliganism. With Charlie Hunnam, Claire
Forlani.
Music From the Inside Out Daniel Anker documentary weaving together a
mosaic of the stories, ideas and experiences of the 105 members of the
Philadelphia Orchestra, a musical institution that hasn't participated
in a film since "Fantasia."
Answering the Call Documentary honoring the people who answered
emergency calls on 9/11.
SEPT. 14
The Future of Food Documentary about genetically engineered products
that have become part of the U.S. food chain - whether they're good
for us or not. Directed by Deborah Koons Garcia, widow of Jerry Garcia.
SEPT. 16
Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang Big-fee action screenwriter Shane Black ("Lethal
Weapon") makes his directing debut with his own about a New York
actor (Robert Downey, Jr.) who impersonates a detective and gets
himself in all sorts of trouble. With Val Kilmer, Michelle Monaghan.
Lord of War Nicolas Cage'>Nicolas Cage'>Nicolas Cage'>Nicolas Cage is an international gun dealer in Andrew
Niccol's topical black comedy, which co-stars Ethan Hawke as an
Interpol agent intent on bringing him down. With Donald Sutherland, Ian
Holm, Jared Leto.
Just Like Heaven "Mean Girls"' Mark Waters directs Mark Ruffalo and
Reese Witherspoon in a romantic fantasy about a young man and the
spirit of a comatose doctor who fall in love while sharing an
apartment. Once they're over their, uh, dimensional differences, the
race is on to keep her body from being taken off life support.
Proof Last time director John Madden and Gwyneth Paltrow worked
together, she landed herself an Oscar. Though more erudite and intimate
than "Shakespeare in Love," Madden's adaptation of David Auburn's
Pulitzer Prize-winning play might just catch the eyes of Academy's
voters, too. Reprising a role she has already tackled on the London
stage, Paltrow plays an overwhelmed young woman rapidly losing her grip
after the death of her father (Anthony Hopkins), a brilliant math
professor. Hovering around the edges are her concerned support system:
brainy admirer Jake Gyllenhaal'>Jake Gyllenhaal and coldly practical sister Hope Davis.
The Woods Psychological horror film about the students of an all-girl
boarding school who begin to go missing in the surrounding woods.
Patricia Clarkson is the headmistress and Agnes Bruckner'>Agnes Bruckner is the new
student caught up in the mystery.
Separate Lies It's been a while since we were faced with the sight of
middle-class Brits keeping a stiff upper lip while suppressing
dangerous secrets. Fortunately, Emily Watson and Tom Wilkinson are
always willing to suffer stoically for our entertainment. "Gosford
Park" screenwriter Julian Fellowes makes his directorial debut, while
Watson and Wilkinson play a long-married couple who are still quite
happy together (aside from the passionate affair and possible homicide
she's hiding).
Venom Jim Gillespie ("I Know What You Did Last Summer") directs another
teens-in-trouble horror picture, this one involving voodoo in the
bayous of Louisiana. With Agnes Bruckner'>Agnes Bruckner (poor thing), Bijou Phillips.
The Libertine Johnny Depp takes on the role of notorious 17th-century
poet, derelict and debaucher John Wilmot, the Earl of Rochester and
grand embarrassment of Charles II (John Malkovich). Samantha Morton is
the actress who comes under Wilmot's shaky tutelage.
Adapted from his play by Stephen Jeffreys and directed by first-timer
Laurence Dunmore.
Tim Burton's Corpse Bride Another day, another Johnny Depp-Tim Burton
collaboration. Not that we're feeling cavalier about it: These two have
given us some of the most unusual movies in recent years. Since
Burton's "The Nightmare Before Christmas" and "James and the Giant
Peach" are among them, we have high hopes for this latest stop-motion
animated fantasy, which is based on an old Russian folk tale about a
young groom (voiced by Depp) who inadvertently finds himself with two
wives (he could do worse than Helena Bonham Carter'>Helena Bonham Carter and Emily Watson).
Thumbsucker Offbeat comedy about a 17-year-old boy whose infantile
habit of sucking his thumb makes him the subject of ridicule and
isolation even in his own home. But the people trying to help him kick
the habit are even stranger. With Tilda Swinton, Vincent D'Onofrio,
Keanu Reeves, Vince Vaughn. It's the first feature directed by Mike
Mills, maker of the well-received short "Paperboys."
Everything Is Illuminated Actor Liev Schreiber makes his writing and
directing debut with his adaptation of Jonathan Safran Foer's darkly
comic best seller about a young American Jew who travels to Russia to
find the woman who saved his grandfather from the Nazis. With Elijah
Wood.
One Bright Shining Moment: The Forgotten Summer of George McGovern
Documentary about the 1972 presidential campaign and political
humiliation of the idealistic former South Dakota senator.
Cry Wolf A high-school prank turns lethal when classmates listed on a
joke Web site as the next victims of a serial killer start turning up
dead. With Julian Morris, Lindy Booth, Jon Bon Jovi.
Hard Goodbyes: My Father Greek drama about a lonely boy who has to rely
on his imagination when the father with whom he'd shared a passion for
outer space does not come home.
The Thing About My Folks Paul Reiser wrote this film and co-stars in it
with Peter Falk as a son and father rediscovering the bond between them
on a cross-country trip in a restored '36 Ford. Directed by Raymond De
Felitta ("Two Family House").
The Weeping Meadow The first film in a planned trilogy by Greek master
Theo Angelopoulos follows a pair of refugee children as they come of
age in the small Greek village they are brought to after the Russian
Revolution.
SEPT. 23
A History of Violence With echoes of Alfred Hitchcock's "wrong man"
theme and Sam Peckinpah's "Straw Dogs," David Cronenberg's latest film
stars Viggo Mortensen as a small-town family man whose celebrated
heroism in thwarting and killing two thugs in his diner draws gangsters
to town. The one with the deformed face (Ed Harris) claims he knew the
hero years before and he has come for some payback. Despite his
denials, Mortensen's character ends up having to fight violence with
violence. With Maria Bello, William Hurt.
Oliver Twist If ever there were a story that suited Roman Polanski's
dark sensibilities, it's Charles Dickens' classic saga of an orphan
whose fate falls and rises at the mercy of others. The screenplay was
written by Ronald Harwood, Polanski's partner on their Oscar-winning
"Pianist," so it is always possible that this artistically acclaimed
pair aims to entertain adults and youngsters alike, while
simultaneously approaching the Academy with a respectful request: "May
we have some more?" With Barney Clark as Oliver, Ben Kingsley'>Ben Kingsley as Fagin
and Jamie Foreman as Bill Sykes.
Flightplan In her first starring role in three years, Jodie Foster
plays a recently widowed woman whose 6-year-old daughter disappears in
the middle of a trans-continental flight from Berlin to New York. Since
no one else on the plane remembers seeing the girl, they question
whether she was there only in her mother's mind.
Daltry Calhoun Johnny Knoxville returns to his hometown as a roustabout
and would-be golf magnate whose ex-wife (Elizabeth Banks) throws a
twist into his life by dropping their 14-year-old daughter at his door.
Roll Bounce Nick Cannon, Bow Wow and Mike Epps star for "The Best Man"
director Malcolm D. Lee in this comedy-drama about a group of hip-hop
roller skaters preparing for a competition on the other side of 1970s
Chicago.
Dear Wendy Lars von Trier and Thomas Vinterberg, two of the founders of
the Danish film collective Dogme 95, team up as writer (von Trier) and
director (Vinterberg) of this parable about America's contradictory gun
culture. It follows a group of teenage outcasts in a fictional mining
town who form a secret club known as "The Dandies." Their purpose -
to love and admire guns but never use them on anybody - soon goes out
the window.
Magnificent Desolation: Walking on the Moon 3D Tom Hanks produced and
narrates this 3-D IMAX film that re-creates for the audience what the
12 astronauts who have walked on the moon experienced.
Into the Fire Drama about a troubled NYPD harbor cop who freezes during
a rescue attempt of a drowning woman and tries to make peace with his
conscience and the victim's identical twin. With Sean Patrick Flanery
and Melina Kanakaredes from TV's "Providence."
Dorian Blues Coming-out story about a young man who, on the cusp of
moving to New York, begins showing his preference for men, much to the
dismay of his right-wing father and his jock brother.
7 Dias Mexican film about a U2 super fan determined to raise the
half-million dollars it would cost to bring the band to his country.
Dirty Love Jenny McCarthy wrote this comedy and co-stars in it with
Carmen Electra. It's about a jilted woman who sees a psychic to find
out where she should search for true love.
Occupation: Dreamland Documentary focusing on the men of the 82nd
Airborne in Iraq and on the Army's recruitment tactics.
SEPT. 28
Forty Shades of Blue Rip Torn plays a legendary (and doesn't he know
it) Memphis music producer whose comfy existence is shaken when his
young Russian trophy wife (Dina Korzun) falls in love with his
estranged son.
SEPT. 30
Capote The estimable Philip Seymour Hoffman plays the late novelist and
social gadfly Truman Capote. It's not a conventional biopic, but an
account of the writer's research for "In Cold Blood," his classic
"nonfiction novel" about the murders of a Kansas farm family and the
subsequent trials and executions of their killers. Catherine Keener is
Harper Lee, Capote's young associate (and future author of "To Kill a
Mockingbird") and Clifton Collins Jr. plays the killer Perry Smith,
with whom Capote developed a strong relationship. Bennett Miller is the
first-time director.
The Greatest Game Ever Played Shia LaBeouf ("Holes") stars for director
Bill Paxton in the dramatization of 20-year-old American amateur golfer
Francis Ouimet's legendary victory at the 1913 U.S. Open in Brookline,
Mass. Stephen Dillane plays Harry Vardon, the cocky British champion
who was humbled before the golfing world.
Into the Blue "Blue Crush" director John Stockwell goes back to the
water for this thriller about a group of buff young divers who find a
fortune in the cargo bay of a sunken airplane and make the mistake of
keeping it. With Paul Walker and Jessica Alba.
MirrorMask British fantasy about a 15-year-old circus entertainer whose
guilt over her mother's illness sends her into an alternative universe
of contrasting light and dark kingdoms.
Serenity Feature-length finale to Joss Whedon's 13-episode sci-fi TV
series "Firefly," about a group of adventurers aboard a space
transporter 500 years in the future. Here, Capt. Mal Reynolds (Nathan
Fillion) and his crew are being chased by the galaxy-ruling Alliance,
which wants to reclaim the telepathic fugitive River (Summer Glau)
traveling with them.
Little Manhattan Mark Levin, a story editor for "The Wonder Years,"
makes his directing debut with this tale of first love between two
12-year-olds.
The War Within Drama about a Pakistani engineering student who is
mistaken for a terrorist and placed in confinement.
The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio Julianne Moore is a mother of 10
helping her luckless husband (Woody Harrelson) make ends meet by
entering - and winning - jingles contests in the 1950s. Adapted
from the memoir of Terry Ryan, whose mother did such things.
Going Shopping Henry Jaglom directs his wife, Victoria Foyt, in a story
about a clothing boutique owner's wild experiences during a Mother's
Day weekend sale.
OCT. 5
The Squid and the Whale Noah Baumbach, son of former Village Voice film
critic Georgia Brown, wrote and directs a loosely autobiographical
drama about two brothers dealing with their parents' divorce in 1980s
Brooklyn. With Jeff Daniels, Laura Linney.
OCT. 7
Goodnight, and Good Luck This drama, directed by George Clooney, is
built around the public fight between legendary broadcast journalist
Edward R. Murrow (David Strathairn) and Sen. Joseph McCarthy. In the
1950s, McCarthy was the most visible member of the witch-hunting House
UnAmerican Activities Committee, which destroyed the careers of
innocent people from all walks of life by associating them with
Communists. Murrow led the reaction to McCarthy and got labeled a
Communist for his trouble. CBS News stuck with Murrow despite the
pressure, and McCarthy's power began to fade. Clooney co-stars as CBS
news producer Fred Friendly and Frank Langella plays the corporation's
chief, William Paley.
In Her Shoes Curtis Hanson ("L.A. Confidential") goes all soft on us
with this story about two estranged sisters (Cameron Diaz and Toni
Collette) who are reconciled by the grandmother (Shirley MacLaine) they
never knew they had.
Two for the Money Matthew McConaughey is a former college football star
whose track record for handicapping sporting events draws him into the
world of high stakes gambling, where nothing short of his life will be
at stake. With Al Pacino as the betting agency mogul who comes to rely
on and dominate him. Directed by D.J. Caruso ("The Salton Sea").
The Gospel An R&B star (Clifton Powell) faces a spiritual crisis when
he returns home on learning of the illness of his father, a church
bishop, and his boyhood rival's plans to take over the church. With
Omar Gooding.
Before the Fall German drama about a young boxing prospect whose
repulsion over Nazi atrocities sets him against the biggest opponent of
all.
Waiting An "American Pie"-style comedy about the crude and rude
employees of a restaurant whose name - Shenanigans - describes
their behavior. With Ryan Reynolds, Anna Faris, Justin Long.
Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-rabbit What are the odds we'd
have two stop-motion movies to look forward to this season? (Strangely
enough, Helena Bonham Carter'>Helena Bonham Carter lends her voice to both.) Already the
subject of three Oscar-nominated shorts, inventor Wallace and his dog
Gromit make their feature debut in a comedy about a mysterious monster
who's destroying the garden plots of an English village. Naturally,
it's up to our intrepid heroes to stop him. "Chicken Run," the last
import from the inspired minds at Aardman Animation, was a surprise
smash. Wallace and Gromit deserve nothing less.
Dandelion A coming of age story about a 16-year-old boy and how his
search for his identity is connected with the various forms of love
that are missing from his life.
OCT. 12
Henri Langlois: Phantom of the Cinematheque Documentary about the film
archivist who inspired French New Wave directors Godard, Truffaut,
Rohmer and Chabrol.
OCT. 14
Nine Lives Rodrigo Garcia directs a series of nine vignettes about
women getting on with their lives in Los Angeles. Each segment is done
as a single 10-minute take. With Sissy Spacek, Robin Wright Penn, Glenn
Close and Holly Hunter.
Elizabethtown Orlando Bloom is an industrial designer hit with three
pieces of devastating news: his girlfriend (Jessica Biel) is breaking
up with him; he has lost his job because of a disastrous mistake, and
his father has died. On the plus side, he meets an irrepressible flight
attendant (Kirsten Dunst) traveling to his father's funeral in Kentucky
and realizes that his life may get better - if it doesn't get worse.
Written and directed by Cameron Crowe ("Almost Famous").
North Country Oscar-winner Charlize Theron'>Charlize Theron ("Monster") stars in a
fictionalized account of the landmark 1984 sexual harassment case
involving a woman working in the Minnesota mining industry and her male
co-workers. With Frances McDormand, Woody Harrelson. Directed by Niki
Caro ("Whale Rider").
Domino Keira Knightley'>Keira Knightley assumes the title role in Tony Scott's highly
exaggerated account of the adventures of British actor Laurence
Harvey's daughter, who turned her back on a modeling and potential
acting career to become a bounty hunter; she died at age 35 in June.
With Mena Suvari, Mickey Rourke.
Where the Truth Lies Atom Egoyan ("The Sweet Hereafter") adapts Rupert
Holmes' novel about a young journalist (Alison Lohman) probing for the
truth of a 15-year-old scandal that destroyed the careers of a revered
showbiz duo (Kevin Bacon, Colin Firth).
The Fog Rupert Wainwright ("Stigmata") directs the remake of John
Carpenter's 1980 horror film about the ghosts of long-buried lepers who
rise on a dense fog surrounding a coastal California town. Selma Blair
and Maggie Grace are among the terrorized.
Loggerheads Three interwoven stories about a young gay man (Kip
Pardue), his biological mother (Bonnie Hunt) and his adoptive parents
(Chris Sarandon and Tess Harper).
Innocent Voices Based on screenwriter Oscar Torres' childhood
experience, this is the story of a 12-year-old boy who is automatically
enlisted in the army in 1980s El Salvador. Directed by Luis Mandoki
("Message in a Bottle").
OCT. 19
Ushpizin Drama about the daily lives of ultra-Orthodox Jews learning,
living and loving in modern-day Israel.
OCT. 21
Shopgirl Steve Martin'>Steve Martin adapted his slight novella and co-stars with
Claire Danes in a story about a salesclerk at a Beverly Hills
department store who gets involved with a middle-age sugar daddy.
Barely Legal Three high-school sophomores try to make a porno movie in
their basement while their parents are at work. The results are
disastrous, especially when a school bully wants to participate in the
film.
Stay Marc Forster'>Marc Forster ("Finding Neverland," "Monster's Ball") directs Ewan
McGregor and Naomi Watts'>Naomi Watts in a thriller about a psychiatrist's
nightmarish effort to prevent a patient from carrying out his threat to
kill himself in three days.
Kids in America At fictional Booker High in Brooklyn, a group of
politically active students joins forces with a fired teacher on a film
documenting their campaign against the repressive school principal.
Dreamer A "Seabiscuit"-like "underhorse" story about a filly who breaks
her leg and is nursed back to health by her trainer (Kurt Russell) at
the insistence of his daughter (Dakota Fanning). The horse then returns
to the track to try and win the Breeder's Cup.
After Innocence Documentary about the reentry into society of seven men
released from prison after DNA evidence proved they were innocent of
the crimes for which they were sent away for decades.
Protocols of Zion Documentary filmmaker Marc Levin takes his camera to
the streets of New York to learn from passing anti-Semites why they
hate Jews.
Doom The Rock stars in Andrzej Bartkowiak's feature version of the
super-hot '90s video game about Marines taking on invading monsters on
their base on a moon of Mars in the year 2145.
Innocence This Belgian-French film is based on an 1888 Gothic novella
about young girls growing up in a subterranean boarding school beneath
an isolated wood.
The Ordeal Belgian psychological drama about a singer who ends up in a
creepy, out-of-the-way motel after his car breaks down in the night.
Derailed Adapted from James Siegel's heralded first novel, this
thriller stars Clive Owen and Jennifer Aniston as illicit Manhattan
lovers trying to outwit a violent blackmailer who is much smarter than
they are. With Vincent Cassel, Melissa George, RZA, Tom Conti, Xzibit,
Giancarlo Esposito.
White King, Red Rubber, Black Death Documentary about the brutality of
a jungle gulag created by Belgium's King Leopold II in the colonial
Congo in 1885.
OCT. 26
Ballets Russes Documentary about the famed ballet company, which is
about to celebrate its 100th anniversary.
OCT. 28
The Legend of Zorro The sequel to the 1998 "Mask of Zorro" traces how
Antonio Banderas' Don Alejandro is forced to put on the mask and take
up the sword several years after marrying the lovely Elena (Catherine
Zeta-Jones) and having a son. The boy is now 10 and unaware of dad's
outlaw fame, but he will soon learn as the mark of Zorro begins
appearing anew on the landscape and on the bodies of baddies in Old
California. Returning director is Martin Campbell.
Prime What's a girl (Uma Thurman) to do when she learns that the
psychotherapist to whom she's told the most intimate details of her sex
life is her boyfriend's mother? For that matter, what's the shrink to
do? A comedy by writer-director Ben Younger.
Three ... Extremes A pan-Asian sampler of 30-minute horror shorts from
China's Fruit Chan, Japan's Takashi Miike and South Korea's Chan-wook
Park.
The Dying Gaul A grieving gay screenwriter (Peter Sarsgaard) has a shot
at selling his about his relationship with his late lover and
agent, but there's a Faustian catch: He has to change it to a
heterosexual relationship. With Patricia Clarkson, Campbell Scott.
Craig Lucas (writer of "Long Time Companion") directs his own .
Saw II The serial killer known as Jigsaw returns to terrorize eight
more strangers with his murderous game playing in the sequel to last
year's Halloween hit.
Paradise Now A drama about two Palestinian boyhood friends spending
their last day together before going off on suicide bombing missions in
Tel Aviv.
The Weather Man Nicolas Cage'>Nicolas Cage'>Nicolas Cage'>Nicolas Cage is a Chicago TV weatherman, family man and
neurotic whose decision to take a job in New York puts all of his roles
at risk in this offbeat comedy. With Hope Davis, Michael Caine.
Directed by Gore Verbinski ("Pirates of the Caribbean").
Blackmail Boy A blackmail scheme leads to murder in a small Greek town.
NOV. 4
Jarhead Jake Gyllenhaal'>Jake Gyllenhaal is a young Marine forced to grow up fast during
Desert Storm. Based on former Marine Anthony Swofford's 2003
best-seller. With Jamie Foxx, Lucas Black. Directed by Sam Mendes
("American Beauty").
NY Doll This documentary about the late Arthur Kane, bassist with the
New York Dolls, centers on the notorious glam-punk band's 2004 reunion.
The Matador In writer-director Richard Shepard's black comedy, Pierce
Brosnan plays an international hit man who, on assignment in Mexico
City, befriends, then enlists, a woebegone businessman (Greg Kinnear)
as a partner in crime. With Hope Davis, Philip Baker Hall.
Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story British comedy actor Steve
Coogan ("24 Hour Party People") plays the title character in Michael
Winterbottom's audacious adaptation of Laurence Sterne's 1759 novel
"Tristram Shandy," about an egocentric country gentleman sharing his
views with readers, when not digressing about his family.
Chicken Little This non-Pixar CGI cartoon from Disney stars Zach Braff
as the voice of Chicken Little, a vigilant sky watcher who proves he
isn't always wrong when he says "the sky is falling." Joan Cusack, Don
Knotts, Fred Willard and Amy Sedaris also lend their voices.
The Family Stone A romantic comedy about a family that circles the
wagons when Ben Stone (Luke Wilson) brings home an uptight woman
(Claire Danes) he intends to marry. Facing a cold reception, she calls
in her sister (Sarah Jessica Parker) for support, then things get
really bad.
Summer Storm German coming-out story about a camping trip during which
one of two best friends discovers he wants more than friendship.
NOV. 9
The New World Terrence Malick ("The Thin Red Line") wrote and directed
this historical epic about the arrival of British colonists on the
coast of North America and their conflicts with the natives they found
there. It's the story of John Smith, Pocahontas and John Rolfe, and of
the teenage Pocahontas' role in saving the white colonists from her
tribe's warriors, and of her subsequent trip to England. Colin Farrell
plays Smith, Christian Bale is Rolfe and 15-year-old German-born
Q'Orianka Kilcher, partly descended from native South Americans, is
Pocahontas.
Pulse Remake of a Japanese horror film about a computer virus or
supernatural force that turns viewers into suicidal depressives. With
Kristen Bell (from TV's "Veronica Mars").
The Swenkas In South Africa, flamboyant, stylish - and straight -
blue-collar Zulu men replace their overalls with colorful designer
suits to compete in fashion shows of their own making, in a ritual
called "swanking."
NOV. 11
Bee Season Fans of Myla Goldberg's best seller ought to be happy with
the team behind this adaptation: Directors Scott McGehee and David
Siegel did a nice job exploring family tensions in "The Deep End." And
if any actor can handle the story's spiritual twists and turns, it's
surely the Dalai Lama's No. 1 fan, Richard Gere. He plays a theology
professor convinced his young daughter (Flora Cross) has a divine
connection to another plane. Meanwhile, his teenage son (Max Minghella)
and mentally ill wife (Juliette Binoche) are floundering right here on
Earth.
Take My Eyes Acclaimed Spanish drama about a woman who takes her son
and leaves the abusive husband she still loves.
Ellie Parker In this low-budget indie comedy, which originated as a
2001 short film project, Naomi Watts'>Naomi Watts plays what she once was, an
Australian actress trying to get traction in Hollywood. With Chevy
Chase as her manager and writer-director Scott Coffey as her boyfriend.
Get Rich or Die Tryin' Taking its cue from "8 Mile," this urban drama
is a loosely autobiographical tale about an inner-city thief and drug
dealer who leaves prison determined to become a rap star. He's played
by - and inspired by - Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson. The director is
Jim Sheridan ("In America").
Sarah Silverman: Jesus Is Magic The raw standup comic expounds on
politics, race, sex and religion.
Cape of Good Hope South African drama about three women whose lives
intersect at an animal rescue shelter, to their lasting good.
Zathura Less a sequel to 1995's "Jumanji" than another wild game. In
this one, directed by Jon Favreau ("Elf"), two young brothers find a
space adventure board game in the attic of their California bungalow
and are soon hoist - house and all - into the galaxy. Tim Robbins
plays their befuddled father. The screenplay by David Koepp and John
Kamps was based, like "Jumanji" and "Polar Express," on a book by Chris
Van Allsburg.
NOV. 16
The Syrian Bride Israeli filmmaker Eran Riklis' drama about a Syrian
woman who, in her bridal outfit, is steps away from crossing the border
into Israel to meet her groom when politics stops her in her tracks.
NOV. 18
Walk the Line James Mangold ("Identity") directs Joaquin Phoenix in
this Johnny Cash biopic. Reese Witherspoon plays his wife, June Carter.
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire In the fourth part of the series,
Harry, Ron and Hermione face down Voldemort's Death Eaters. There have
been some grumblings that Mike Newell, the director of "Four Weddings
and a Funeral," will not stay true to the daringly dark tone set by his
predecessor, Alfonso Cuar=F3n. As Dumbledore tells Harry, "We must all
face the choice between what is right and what is easy." Here's hoping
Newell chose wisely.
Pride & Prejudice A new adaptation of Jane Austen's novel about the
five Bennet sisters in Georgian England. Keira Knightley'>Keira Knightley is Elizabeth,
the most self-determined of the girls, and Matthew MacFadyen is Darcy,
the snob whom love will tame.
Breakfast on Pluto Director Neil Jordan ("The Crying Game") takes up
with another transvestite character in his adaptation of Pat McCabe's
novel about an Irish cabaret singer and prostitute who is wrongly
accused of planting a bomb in a 1970s London club. With Cillian Murphy
("Red Eye") and Liam Neeson.
Wolf Creek Australian horror movie about three young people who follow
their spring break with a trip to the outback, where somebody intends
to have fun at their expense.
NOV. 21
The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things A Southern Gothic movie about a
boy learning about the seedy sides of the world while on the road with
his impulsive young mother (played by actress-director Asia Argento).
With cameos by Winona Ryder, Marilyn Manson and Peter Fonda, among
others.
NOV. 23
Syriana George Clooney stars in the biographical drama of Robert Baer,
a 20-year veteran of the CIA, who worked undercover studying terrorists
in the Middle East and became fed up with the growing weakness of the
agency and the cozy relationship between the oil-hungry West and a
certain government (hint: Saudi Arabia). With Matt Damon, Amanda Peet.
Written and directed by Stephen Gaghan.
Rent Chris Columbus, director of the first two Harry Potter movies,
helms the screen version of Jonathan Larson's Tony- and Pulitzer
Prize-winning rock opera about a group of bohemians struggling with
life in the East Village. It stars Rosario Dawson, Taye Diggs and
several members of the original Broadway cast.
The Ice Harvest "Groundhog Day's" Harold Ramis directs John Cusack and
Billy Bob Thornton in a comedy about two guys who embezzle $2 million
from corrupt Wichita businessmen and are set to make a clean Christmas
Eve getaway until an ice storm arrives.
Yours, Mine and Ours Dennis Quaid and Rene Russo take over for Henry
Fonda and Lucille Ball in the remake of the 1968 comedy about a man
with 8 kids who marries a woman with 10.
The White Countess The final Merchant-Ivory production (Ismail Merchant
died in May) is set in late-1930s Shanghai, where a blind,
disillusioned American diplomat (Ralph Fiennes) is making a careful
study of the decadent city's rankest bars with the idea of building the
perfect dive. Natasha Richardson plays the Russian taxi dancer who
catches the diplomat's eye and is recruited as the centerpiece of the
club.
Dying For Dolly After saving a mafioso's life, a young African-American
(R&B star Usher) is rewarded with a job in the mob and puts it in
jeopardy by falling in love with the boss' daughter. With Chazz
Palminteri, Emmanuelle Chriqui.
NOV. 30
The Boys of Baraka Documentary about the experience of a group of
Baltimore 12-year-olds sent to an experimental boarding school in
Kenya.
DEC. 2
Transamerica "Desperate Housewives'" Felicity Huffman plays a pre-op
he-to-she transsexual whose plans for the life-changing surgery are
disrupted by the discovery of a son (Kevin Zegers) fathered 20 years
before.
Aeon Flux Charlize Theron'>Charlize Theron has the title role in this adaptation of the
cult MTV action series about a physically agile heroine working as a
rebel operative in a walled city run by scientists 400 years in the
future. With Frances McDormand, Sophie Okonedo.
Be Here to Love Me Documentary about the late, hard-living songwriter
Townes Van Zandt, with appearances by fans Willie Nelson, Lyle Lovett,
Steve Earle and Kris Kristofferson.
The Kid and I California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger makes his first
post-inauguration movie appearance in a comedy about a 17-year-old boy
with cerebral palsy whose wealthy father (Joe Mantegna) decides to
grant his wish by financing an action movie for him to star in.
First Descent A documentary about snowboarding.
DEC. 9
Memoirs of a Geisha Zhang Ziyi, Gong Li and Michelle Yeoh, three of the
most beautiful Asian actresses, star in the adaptation of Arthur
Golden's epic novel about a peasant girl who is sold by her father to a
geisha house in 1920s Japan. As she flowers into adulthood, she becomes
the most desired geisha in the popular Gion district, and learns not
only the nuances of her profession but about human nature. With Ken
Watanabe. The director is "Chicago" Oscar nominee Rob Marshall.
The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe What,
you thought there was room for only one series of CGI-heavy epics made
in New Zealand from an Oxford don's quasi-religious, mythical stories
of good and evil ? Whether "Shrek" director Andrew Adamson can do as
well by C.S. Lewis as Peter Jackson did by J.R.R. Tolkien remains to be
seen, but this tale of four children who discover the land of Narnia
and fight the evil white witch (Tilda Swinton) holds even more
box-office promise. While "The Lord of the Rings" had three parts,
"Narnia" has seven.
Brokeback Mountain Ang Lee ("Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon") directs
Jake Gyllenhaal'>Jake Gyllenhaal and Heath Ledger in an adaptation of Annie Proulx's
short story about two ranch hands who - to their great surprise -
fall in love in 1963 Wyoming. With Michelle Williams.
DEC. 14
King Kong Why, you ask, do we need another version of the 1933 classic?
Because the 1976 remake with Jessica Lange was awful and the special
effects in the black-and-white original are a bit too rudimentary for
today's audiences. Besides, Peter Jackson, hot off the "Lord of the
Rings" trilogy, was willing to do it. Unlike the '76 movie, Jackson's
film is faithful to the Depression period and to the original story.
Naomi Watts'>Naomi Watts is in for Fay Wray as heroine Ann Darrow, Jack Black is
obsessed filmmaker Carl Denham, and Oscar-winner Adrien Brody ("The
Pianist") plays Watts' love interest, Jack Driscoll. Andy Serkis, who
did the body-motion performance for the computer-animated Gollum in
"Rings," does the same for Kong and also gets a role of his own, as
Lumpy the Cook.
The Grace Lee Project An Asian-American documentary filmmaker with the
extremely common name of Grace Lee sets out to learn what she can about
other Grace Lees current and past, and comes to some conclusions about
Asian stereotypes.
DEC. 16
All the King's Men Sean Penn stars in Steven Zaillian's new version of
Robert Penn Warren's 1946 Pulitzer Prize-winning political satire about
a populist Southern governor (a thinly-veiled Huey Long) who becomes
intoxicated with power. A 1949 adaptation directed by Robert Rossen won
Oscars for Best Picture and Best Actor (Broderick Crawford). Jude Law
is Jack Burden, the journalist who unwittingly aids the cause of Penn's
Willie Stark, and Kate Winslet is Anne Stanton, the governor's niece
and Jack's girlfriend.
The Promise Chen Kaige ("Farewell My Concubine") directs this romantic
fantasy about a royal concubine in love with a slave.
DEC. 21
The Producers: The Movie Musical At last, the film version of the stage
musical of Mel Brooks' 1968 film arrives! Nathan Lane and Matthew
Broderick reprise their roles of Max Bialy=ADstock and Leo Bloom. The
only actors not from the Broadway production are Uma Thurman, as
Swedish secretary Ulla, and Will Ferrell, as retro Nazi Franz Liebkind.
Susan Stroman, director of the stage hit, makes her film-directing
debut, a stint that prompted rumors that Brooks stepped in to direct
some of the nonmusical scenes. The film was shot in the new Steiner
Studios in Brooklyn.
Fun With Dick and Jane The year's umpteenth remake stars Jim Carrey and
T=E9a Leoni in the roles played by George Segal and Jane Fonda in a 1977
comedy about a quiet suburban couple who moonlight as hooded robbers.
Cheaper By the Dozen 2 Steve Martin'>Steve Martin and Bonnie Hunt return for the
sequel to the 2003 remake of a 1950 comedy about a couple with an
oversized brood. Here, the Bakers find themselves in competition with a
family of eight children while on vacation. With Eugene Levy.
DEC. 23
Munich Steven Spielberg follows "War of the Worlds" with a true story
about a squad of Israeli secret agents assigned to track down and kill
the terrorists who engineered the plot against Israeli athletes at the
1972 Olympics in Munich. Eleven members of the Israeli Olympic team
were killed along with all of their Palestinian captors in a failed
rescue mission. Eric Bana plays the Mossad agent in charge of the
post-Munich search. With Daniel Craig and Geoffrey Rush.
The Ringer Black comedy (you may prefer the word "sick") starring
Johnny Knoxville as a nonhandicapped athlete who infiltrates the
Special Olympics with hopes of dethroning the champion.
Hard Candy When a 32-year-old man brings home a 14-year-old girl he met
on the Internet, things don't go as well as he'd hoped. With Patrick
Wilson and Ellen Page.
Cach=E9 A TV book critic (Daniel Auteuil) and his wife (Juliette
Binoche) have their lives turned upside-down by an increasingly
intimate and anonymously sent stream of videos and drawings depicting
the family in alarming situations.
When the Sea Rises French film starring Yolande Moreau as a married
actress and mother whose out-of-town tour with her one-woman show is
spiced up by her impetuous romance with a parade float conductor.
DEC. 25
Casanova What happens when the legendary seducer meets a Venetian
beauty immune to his charms? Why, he falls in love. With Heath Ledger,
Sienna Miller. Directed by Lasse Hallstr=F6m.
Rumor Has It Rob Reiner is back in "When Harry Met Sally ..." country
with this romantic comedy about a young woman (Jennifer Aniston) who
puts off her engagement (to Mark Ruffalo) when she discovers that her
grandmother (Shirley MacLaine) was the inspiration for Mrs. Robinson in
"The Graduate." When she meets an older man (Kevin Costner) who has
slept with both her mother and her grandmother, she begins to believe
she is reliving the experiences of Dustin Hoffman's Benjamin Braddock.
Match Point Woody Allen abandons Manhattan to direct this English
tragicomedy about a former tennis pro who has an affair with the former
girlfriend of his wife's brother. With Jonathan Rhys-Meyers, Scarlett
Johansson, Emily Mortimer. It was acclaimed at the Cannes Film Festival
in May.
Mrs. Henderson Presents Judi Dench stars in the biographical story of a
society matron who bought an old London theater with hopes of drawing
back audiences that had been lured away by talking pictures. Her
roaring success was an all-nude revue. With Christopher Guest, Bob
Hoskins. Directed by Stephen Frears.
Hoodwinked CGI-animated spoof of "Little Red Riding Hood," involving
cops sent from the animal world to investigate disturbances at Granny's
house. Voices of Andy Dick, Sally Struthers, David Ogden Stiers.
DEC. 28
My Name Was Sabina Spielrein Documentary about a Russian Jewish woman
who became Carl Jung's first patient in 1904, then began a long
correspondence with Sigmund Freud and ended up a renowned psychoanalyst
in her own right.
DEC. 31
In the Land of Women After being dumped by his actress girlfriend, a
young Hollywood screenwriter (Adam Brody) goes home to Michigan to ease
his pain and spend time with his grandmother (Olympia Dukakis). While
there, he starts up a relationship with a family across the street that
will change all of their lives. With Meg Ryan, Kristen Stewart.
Compiled and written by Jack Mathews and Elizabeth Weitzman
-
>Rick in Oz wrote:
> http://www.imdb.com/news/wenn/2005-06-16/
> movies together in the 1960s and 1970s - even though she was married at
> the
> time. The pair made The Chase, Barefoot In The Park and The Electric
> Horseman together between 1965 and 1979, and Fonda confesses she harbored
> secret unrequited desires for the silver screen idol throughout their
> working relationship. Fonda, who was married to Roger Vadim from 1965 to
> 1973 and Tom Hayden from 1979 to 1990, says, "There's something about Bob
> that's impossible not to fall in love with. I was smitten. I couldn't wait
> to get to work, wouldn't even get mad when he was his habitual one or two
> hours late. He never knew it, of course. Nothing ever happened between us
> except that we always had a good time together."
I thought it was it about Peter
-
Rick in Oz wrote:
> http://www.imdb.com/news/wenn/2005-06-16/
> movies together in the 1960s and 1970s - even though she was married at t=
he
> time. The pair made The Chase, Barefoot In The Park and The Electric
> Horseman together between 1965 and 1979, and Fonda confesses she harbored
> secret unrequited desires for the silver screen idol throughout their
> working relationship. Fonda, who was married to Roger Vadim from 1965 to
> 1973 and Tom Hayden from 1979 to 1990, says, "There's something about Bob
> that's impossible not to fall in love with. I was smitten. I couldn't wait
> to get to work, wouldn't even get mad when he was his habitual one or two
> hours late. He never knew it, of course. Nothing ever happened between us
> except that we always had a good time together."
Oh JANE Fonda
I thought this was going to be about HENRY Fonda =BF
pardon me
-
http://www.imdb.com/news/wenn/2005-06-16/
Fonda Fell In Love with Redford
Jane Fonda fell in love with co-star Robert Redford when they made three
movies together in the 1960s and 1970s - even though she was married at the
time. The pair made The Chase, Barefoot In The Park and The Electric
Horseman together between 1965 and 1979, and Fonda confesses she harbored
secret unrequited desires for the silver screen idol throughout their
working relationship. Fonda, who was married to Roger Vadim from 1965 to
1973 and Tom Hayden from 1979 to 1990, says, "There's something about Bob
that's impossible not to fall in love with. I was smitten. I couldn't wait
to get to work, wouldn't even get mad when he was his habitual one or two
hours late. He never knew it, of course. Nothing ever happened between us
except that we always had a good time together."
-
"Thanatos" wrote in message
news:atropos-5602CE.21455318032008@news.giganews.com...
> In article
> ,
> TranslucentAmoebae wrote:
possession"http://www.tmz.com/2008/03/11/mary-ann-busted-with-mary-jane/
responsibility"http://www.tmz.com/2008/03/12/it-wasnt-mary-anns-mary-jane/
> difference?
He can't tell you...too drunk.
-
http://www.smh.com.au/news/Film/Wilde-about-the-girl/2005/06/12/111851491967
8.html?oneclick=true
Wilde about the girl
June 13, 2005
The Sun-Herald
Scarlett Johansson's star just keeps rising higher, whether she likes it or
not, David Michael writes.
Scarlett Johansson thought she had the fame game sussed. On the eve of what
was to be her breakout role in Lost In Translation, the actress had a
solution to control her expected burgeoning stardom.
"I'll just walk around with a big pair of sunglasses and continue to eat at
McDonald's," she quipped the first time we met. At the time, the then
18-year-old probably didn't fully appreciate what was in store for her.
When we met more than a year later, I hardly recognised her. Replacing her
punky street smarts was a more glamorous persona: full make-up and a
fetching designer dress. In short, too glam to be seen eating a quarter
pounder. It begs the question: how did her earlier resolution work out?
"Well, I don't go to McDonald's any more," she said with a laugh. "After I
saw Super Size Me, no way!"
If fast food is off limits, there's no doubt Johansson has had to super size
her sunglasses to deal with the glare of her increasing stardom. Since
starring opposite Bill Murray in Lost In Translation, director Sofia
Coppola's beautifully poised, jet-lagged tale of yearning souls, which was
quickly followed by her astutely pitched meditative performance as Johannes
Vermeer's muse in Girl With A Pearl Earring, her future has become rather
bright.
But Johansson refuses to be dazzled by it all. Coppola described her as an
"old soul", while Robert Redford declared, when he directed her seven years
ago in The Horse Whisperer, that she was "13 going on 30". Despite her
undoubted intelligence and level-headiness (she worked on the jury at last
year's Venice Film Festival), you wouldn't blame her for getting swept away
with such exposure. The young actress, though, insists she has a grip on the
situation.
"I don't know if I've got swept up," she said. "It's so shocking when you
hear that Calvin Klein wants you for their new campaign. You're like, 'Who?
Me?' I guess you have to decide where you draw the line between you saying,
this is fun, pretty and fabulous, and being overexposed."
The media, though, have been captivated by Scarlett fever in the past year.
Johansson has several features that send journalists into a deive
froth. There's her crushed rose lips and her 40-a-day-sounding husky
monotone voice.
Admitting she's portrayed as "rather saucy" in the press, Johansson has also
been the target of many a tabloid gossipmonger trying to pin down her love
life.
"I read a lot of things about myself that aren't true," she sighs. "I've
read that I've been with people I've never met." Stating that she's "single
and busy", she adds: "It's nice not to have any attachment, but, likewise,
it's nice to have a boyfriend. I'm open to that. But it's hard, when you're
working constantly, to spend enough time with someone."
Her plucky manner is in direct contrast to her latest screen role as Lady
Windermere in A Good Woman (an adaptation of Oscar Wilde's Lady Windermere's
Fan). Here she is the innocent fawn caught in the centre of the barbed
witticisms of Wilde's world. Wide-eyed and straitlaced, the newlywed
Windermere joins her husband and friends to go to Italy. As she prepares to
celebrate her 21st birthday, her virtue is tested by the arrival of a
notorious older woman from America who threatens to shake up both her
marriage and her steadfast principles.
Windermere's naivety, I suggested, didn't strike me as a trait common with
Johansson. "Well, you put a little piece of yourself into every character
that you do," she said. "Even if you're playing some psychotic person, which
of course I'm not, some part of you is in that character and it's hopefully
believable. I always come back to the fact that my own instinct is better
than something I build in my mind."
More calculated is her choice of roles. While A Good Woman is more whimsical
than Girl With A Pearl Earring, it's a role that continues her trend of
largely avoiding frivolous teen film folly. "Yeah, well I do try to do more
interesting roles," she said. "Tonnes of that stuff comes to me, but a lot
of it is awful. All these teenage slaying movies, and movies about girls
that have deformities that become cheerleaders and then marry the prom
king!"
Johansson began acting at the age of eight, with her first port of call a
commercials agency. "Somebody had suggested to my mum that we were the very
cute Johansson family [she has a twin brother plus a brother and sister] and
we should go to this agency," she said. "So we all went, but the only person
they wanted was my older brother. Later, I'd go up for more commercial stuff
and be devastated, because it was so overwhelming for a little kid - they
didn't know if they wanted me or, like, a little black boy."
Undeterred, the budding actress left the commercials market behind to
audition for movies, and at the age of nine got her first role in North,
starring Elijah Wood. She then made steady progress in films that kept her
under the radar and allowed her to happily work without attracting childhood
fame.
Johansson says that being in the business at a young age didn't affect her.
"I always had the chance to do whatever I wanted to do, my parents were very
open about that," she said. "Acting has been a passion of mine. I wanted to
be in musicals as a kid, and took tap dance, so for me it's a dream come
true. My childhood was filled with things that I loved to do, and also very
normal things: I lived in New York, I have a family life and went to a
regular school. If anything, I look back and think, 'Wow, I did a lot of
things that a lot of people don't get to do in their lifetime'."
She is now in constant demand, and we will soon see her in Woody Allen's new
film Match Point (which premiered last month at the Cannes film festival).
"It was definitely an interesting experience dealing with my anxiety," she
said of her nervous start working with the legendary director. She did well
though, as Allen, clearly smitten, remarked recently: "I usually want to
crawl into the ground after I make a film, almost invariably, but I'm very
bullish about [Match Point] because Scarlett Johansson is such a strong
actress."
After spending last summer in London working on the film, Johansson has
talked about the possibility of buying a house in the city to escape to, for
some normality in her life.
"It's a place of solace," she said. "I love London, it's an amazing city.
I've met some wonderful people there and I also have some family there. I'm
from New York, so I feel very at home in London. It's like a metropolitan
breeding ground for culture, art, music and diversity. It's a beautiful
city, with beautiful history.
"In Hollywood, it's hard to step outside of the circle once you're in it.
But in London I was really moved by how accepted I felt there. There was
definitely less need to wear my big sunglasses!"
- Celebrity Gossip
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