The Sex and the City Movie Poster
In case you somehow didn’t believe a Sex and the City movie was actually coming out (on May 30!), here’s actual proof of the event:
The Sex and the City movie poster has finally been released. Check it out:

In case you somehow didn’t believe a Sex and the City movie was actually coming out (on May 30!), here’s actual proof of the event:
The Sex and the City movie poster has finally been released. Check it out:

Yesterday, we reported that Israeli actress Ayelet Zurer had landed the female lead opposite Tom Hanks in Angels & Demons. Now, we’ve discovered that Ewan McGregor is in talks to also join the film.
In the prequel to The Da Vinci Code, McGregor would take on the role of a powerful Vatican insider who assists Hanks’ Robert Langdon.
The story centers on religious art scholar, who once again finds himself entangled with powerful forces with ancient roots: the Illuminati - the most powerful underground organization in history - and the Catholic Church.
McGregor is currently starring in Deception.
Terrence Howard recently spoke to IGN and seems to have stumbled into comments regarding the future of his character that hint at an Iron Man sequel.
In the upcoming film, Howard’s character of Jim Rhodes looks at Tony Stark’s spare Iron Man suit and says to himself: “Next time baby.”
Here’s what the actor had to say about the line:
“The beautiful thing about Marvel is that they’ve always stuck with the tradition of staying truthful to the comics and loyal to the fans. If you’ve read the comics you’ll know that that is the next phase, but there is another intermediate phase in there where he would have to put on his best friend’s suit for a period of time.”
What does this mean?
Fans of the comics know that, due to Tony Stark’s alcoholism, Rhodes is eventually forced to don the armor and become Iron Man in place of his pal. He soon begins to get headaches and his behavior becomes more erratic, leading to an all-out rampage.
Stark is then forced to build himself another suit to stop his friend. Might this be a ossible plot for Iron Man 2? Discuss!
X-Files director Chris Carter recently sat down with Entertainment Weekly to discuss the his new movie, specifically the difficulty in keeping spoilers a secret in this Internet age…
Entertainment Weekly: Just today an X-Files website announced that the film was about women being abducted. This was based on the apparent leaking of the synopsis of the film’s novelization. Do you have any comment on that?
Chris Carter: Let me say that there have been a number of ”leaks” during the making of the movie. And know that we went into this very early on knowing that, like any good enterprise, we would need to manage information via propaganda or imagery. And we considered all that as we moved forward.
Entertainment Weekly: Fair enough. Is it harder to keep things under wraps now than when you made the first movie 10 years ago?
Chris Carter: It was hard [with] the first movie. We printed the script on red paper so people couldn’t Xerox it. But I think, the first week of filming, a synopsis of the script — a very detailed one — was in the National Enquirer. So it was difficult then, but it’s even more difficult now with all the dedicated spoiler sites.
The X-Files: I Want to Believe comes out on July 25.
As we creep closer and closer to July 18 and the release of The Dark Knight, more and more movies poster are coming out for the blockbuster.
Here’s the latest:
Check out other posters for the film, as well as various The Dark Knight pics, now.
Our thanks to MoviesOnline for the following photos.
They’re taken from Mike Myers’ first on-screen role in five years, The Love Guru. And the beauty standing next to him in one of the folllowing shots? Only FHM’s second most sexy woman in the world, according to a recent poll: Jessica Alba.
As Wayne Campbell would say: Schwing!
Ignoring the catastrophe that is 88 Minutes, Al Pacino has obviously enjoyed an incredible career. Few actors are more respected.
The Oscar-winner turns 68 years old today. In a recent interview, though, he said he has no plans on retiring or even slowing down any time soon. Which is great news for movie-goers, except those that saw 88 Minutes.
Having attacked that film enough at this point, we’ll give you a quick look at a trio of classic, wildly popular Pacino movies:
In the following pair of Iron Man photos, Tony Stark first tries on his suit… and then reads about the new, familiar super hero making headlines:
Check out a slew of new Iron Man pics now at MoviesOnline.
It’s all the rage these days in Hollywood: talk about a sequel before the success of the original film is fully realized.
Already this week, we’ve posted stories on the possibility of Speed Racer 2 and Enchanted 2.
Now, Brendan Fraser is speaking out on a fourth installment of his Mummy franchise, even though the third one - The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor - doesn’t come out until August 1.
What would the next film in the series focus on?
“There are many, many possibilities,” Fraser told MTV. “There are so many archaeological rich cultures in the world that have yet to be unearthed, who’s to say we couldn’t go to the mountains of Peru?”
No one, Brendan. No one at all.
Following a series of less than serious roles - Kill Bill, My Super Ex-Girlfriend - Uma Thurman takes on a dark role in The Life Before Her Eyes. The plot of the film is pretty much as intense as it gets:
A woman is permanently scarred after a school shooting takes the life of her best friend.
So, does Uma pull off the role well? Is the film worth seeing? Let’s find out what a handful of movie critics think about those questions and others…
- The Life Before Her Eyes will draw you in, then intrigue you, then bore you, then bewilder you, then make you crazy with its incessant flashbacks and flash forwards, and finally leave you feeling like the victim of a fraud. — The Wall Street Journal
- It’s sad to see such subtle, wrenchingly emotional work expended on such trifling material. — TV Guide
- Paints a compelling and thought-provoking picture of not only school violence, but violence in general, and the trickle-down effect that a single moment in time can have on one’s whole future. – The Movie Boy
- What this heavy-handed film mainly has to endure is a clunky story structure and an ending that wasn’t original when it was seen four decades ago on The Twilight Zone. — New York Daily News