STAR POWER AT THE BOX OFFICE
Movie Snapshot | Box Office Since 2001: | $1436.3M | |
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Highest Rated |
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92% |
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Lowest Rated |
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12% |
$15.1M |
UPCOMING
NEXT WEEK
Ben Barnes Helen Mirren Angelina Jolie Johnny Depp Georgie Henley Mark Wahlberg Djimon Hounsou Paul Bettany Skandar Keynes Jeremy Irons Ben Affleck
THE WEEK AFTER THAT
Garrett Hedlund Nicole Kidman Kevin Spacey Anna Faris Reese Witherspoon Jeff Bridges Aaron Eckhart Barry Pepper Dan Aykroyd Owen Wilson Beau Garrett Sandra Oh Justin Timberlake
CELEBRITY SPOTLIGHT
FEATURES
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Five Favorite Films with Geoffrey RushOscar-winning actor Geoffrey Rush talks to RT about his acclaimed new film, The King's Speech, what we can expect from the fourth Pirates of the Caribbean film, and reveals his all-time Five Favorite Films. 47 Comments |
Five Favorite Films with Jeff GoldblumFrom his humble debut as a young punk terrorizing a supermarket in 1974's Death Wish to his classic era of "unorthodox science types" in blockbusters like Jurassic Park and Independence Day, Jeff Goldblum has accumulated an intriguing acting resume across all kinds of film genres. Who could forget his miniature but memorable appearance in Annie Hall ("I forgot my mantra") or his off the wall turns in cult movies like Earth Girls Are Easy and The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension, for starters? And then there was The Fly, in which he turned in an heroic performance as a scientist who fuses himself with an insect to horrific, heartbreaking results. This week, Goldblum's back on the big screen in the newsroom comedy Morning Glory, in which he stars alongside Rachel McAdams as the network head of a TV show anchored by Harrison Ford and his old Annie Hall alum, Diane Keaton. We caught up with him recently to ask him his Five Favorite Films. 84 Comments |
Five Favorite Films with Baz LuhrmannFor a director whose films -- from the eclectic pop confection Romeo + Juliet to the widescreen-nostalgic Australia -- are rich with references to cinema history, it should come as no surprise to find Baz Luhrmann arrives at his "Five Favorite Films" list both well prepared and bearing a caveat of sorts. "To me there are the usual suspects, in terms of the things I particularly like," he begins, when asked to break it down to five, "from Apocalypse Now to Lawrence of Arabia to Bandwagon, to The Seventh Seal or Annie Hall or The Wizard of Oz or Cabaret. They go from epics to musicals, but when I started to think about it, I started scribbling down these lists and there was Battle of Algiers and Being John Malkovich, All the President's Men and Casablanca, for example. So I was thinking, maybe my list will be what I think are remarkable films worth seeing, that are perhaps not on the radar. These are like the side menus to the main banquet, to broaden your palette." 185 Comments |
Five Favorite Films with Corey FeldmanThink of some of the most beloved movies of the 1980s and chances are Corey Feldman made an appearance in them. From Gremlins and Stand By Me to The Goonies and The Lost Boys, the young actor notched up a succession of classics before those heady days of teen idolatry -- the so-called “Two Coreys,” named for his movies with fellow pin-up Corey Haim -- would go on to enshrine him on the adolescent bedroom walls of an era. Though his well-publicized period since has been erratic -- and marred by tragedy, with Haim’s unfortunate death earlier this year -- Feldman has proved that he’s a survivor, returning to the role of vampire hunter Edgar Frog that he made famous in The Lost Boys. With this week’s latest installment, Lost Boys: The Thirst, reuniting him with fellow ’87 Frog brother Jamison Newlander, Feldman has come full circle -- complete with signature head band and copy of Batman No. 14. We spoke to the actor recently and asked him to name his Five Favorite Films. He politely declined to include Gremlins, despite RT’s insistence. 250 Comments |
Sam Taylor-Wood talks John Lennon and Nowhere BoyEarly on in her career, British visual artist Sam Taylor-Wood and her then-partner recreated the famous portrait of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, originally taken by Annie Leibovitz for Rolling Stone just hours before the Beatle was shot dead. “What was I thinking?” Taylor-Wood laughs. Now, of course, that art project has a whole other meaning for the director, who makes her feature film debut with this week’s Nowhere Boy, a depiction of the teenage life of the young John Lennon. Set in 1950s Liverpool, the movie presents a displaced Lennon (Aaron Johnson) torn between two key women __ long-time guardian Aunt Mimi (Kristin Scott-Thomas) and free-spirited birth mother Julia (Anne-Marie Duff) -- and how that turmoil fed into the creation of the rock ‘n’ roller he would become. 181 Comments |