A game show winner, a vampire and an animated dog voiced by John Travolta are the subjects of this week's movies.
Danny Boyle again turns to young kids as stars in “Slumdog Millionaire,” an adaptation of the India-set Vikas Swarup novel “Q and A.” The book’s story of an almost penniless young man who wins gobs of money on an Indian version of “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire” but is then accused of cheating, remains at the film’s center. But many inventive liberties have been taken with the script.
This week, the Wrestling Genius looks at Brock Lesnar and his UFC Title win.
Stephenie Meyer has the story of her vampire dream down pat: It happened on June 2, 2003, it contained a complicated but coherent conversation and when she woke up, she just had to know what was going to happen next. So she wrote it down. Then Meyer, who had no ambitions for a writing career, just kept writing. The much-anticipated film adaptation of “Twilight” – the first of four books in her series – opens Friday.
Director Danny Boyle's underdog tale is generating Oscar buzz.
It’s just another one of those typical high school romance movies. You know: Lonely boy meets lonely girl, each falls hard for the other, boy turns out to be a vampire.
I don’t know about you, but my stock in Bond has plummeted ever since Daniel Craig donned the trademark tux in “Casino Royale” and turned the witty debonair spy into a stuck-up sourpuss.
As a card-carrying and non-recovering workaholic, I've chased more than a few white whales in my time only to realize the futility of the quest.
Since when has 2 plus 2 ever equaled 1? It does if you’re talking about Reba McEntire and Kelly Clarkson.
Girl Talk is 27-year-old DJ Gregg Gillis, a skinny, hirsute and undoubtedly wily Pittsburgh native who, through sharing his favorite music with the masses, has become one of the indie music world’s bigger success stories this year.