Movie and TV Writers Authorize a Call to Strike
Friday, October 19th, 2007Screenwriters by a sizable majority authorized their leaders to call a strike against Hollywood’s producers as early as Nov. 1.
Screenwriters by a sizable majority authorized their leaders to call a strike against Hollywood’s producers as early as Nov. 1.
Andy Warhol’s films, in retrospective at the Museum of the Moving Image, are records of a world in which an artist worked, played and built his identity.
Screenwriters by a sizable majority authorized their leaders to call a strike against Hollywood’s producers as early as Nov. 1.
Andy Warhol’s films, in retrospective at the Museum of the Moving Image, are records of a world in which an artist worked, played and built his identity.
In this week’s Ketchup, viewers will get a sneak peek at The Dark Knight, if they go a bit out of their way, Wolverine won’t just be called Wolverine, and the new Star Trek gets a new Kirk and a new Bones.
Finally, something truly terrifying has come out of Hollywood. Make sure you’re sitting down, and don’t say we didn’t warn you — this news is not for the faint of heart.
If nothing else, “Meeting Resistance” should dispel any lingering misconception that the Iraq insurgency is mainly the work of outside agitators.
James Crump’s documentary is a potent exercise in art-world mythography that might be nicknamed “The Prince and the Punk.”
The versatile actress projected the quintessential image of the proper Englishwoman but was also indelible in one of the most sexually provocative scenes of the 1950s.
It won’t reach theaters until November 21st, but as far as Disney’s concerned, Enchanted is already a franchise in the making.