Sex and the City Movie Clip of the Day
Here's another clip from Sex and the City: The Movie. Need we remind fans that it opens on May 30?
No? You already knew that and have had the date circled for the past six months? We figured as much.
Here's another clip from Sex and the City: The Movie. Need we remind fans that it opens on May 30?
No? You already knew that and have had the date circled for the past six months? We figured as much.
On the set of her next movie, My Sister's Keeper, Cameron Diaz shows her commitment to acting.
Yes, this is the beautiful actress... with no hair:
Cameron Diaz has no hair. And looks happy about it!
Adam Sandler appeared in a commercial for the NBA Playoffs a few weeks ago, in an attempt to hype his movie You Don't Mess with the Zohan.
Mike Myers, though, took self-promotion a step further this week: he starred in a segment on the American Idol finale. Dressed as the character of Pitka from The Love Guru, the actor attempted to shave eventually winner David Cook. He was unsuccessful.
Will War, Inc. be the first war-related movie to actually make money at the box office? Maybe the trailer below will give us an idea:
Kristin Davis has returned to playing Charlotte York - sorry, Charlotte York Goldenblatt - after a four-year hiatus. She recently spoke to Entertainment Weekly about filming Sex and the City: The Movie.
There was also all the insane media scrutiny and hordes of paparazzi while you were shooting. Was that distracting?
Certainly, sometimes, definitely. There's this huge energetic thing that happens in New York. So I feel like it made me go into super-focus land, which is actually a good thing. At one point, my back was to the crowd and the paparazzi â" the other girls were facing me â" and the paparazzi were like, ''Kristin, move over! Move to the left!'' And I did it because everyone is shouting at me.
It's like you're a robot. So I move over to the left and I'm like, ''What?! Wait a minute! My mark is over there. I'm supposed to be doing a scene!'' So it was a little challenging, but I don't think the movie would have been made if we didn't have that kind of fan support.
How is Charlotte doing, when we find her?
Well, her journey has been that she now has gotten these things that she has wanted for so long. Yes, they look different than she [originally] wanted, but it's been a satisfying shift for her and she's more grounded, a little bit less high-strung, a little bit less controlling.
The apartment isn't solid white â" there's some color! And then I would say the biggest issue is that she kind of feels guilty. It's hard when you actually get the things that you fight for so hard and for so long and then maybe your friends don't have them. She feels a little separate from them, which she doesn't want to feel.
As talk of numerous follow-ups dominate Hollywood - from Jurassic Park 4 to S. Darko - Jack Black has confirmed he may be involved in a future sequel.
From The Cannes Film Festival, the comedian said there's already a script written for School of Rock 2. Moreover, he's anxious to return to the role of music teacher Dewey Finn, even though nothing is signed just yet.
"In a few weeks we have to decide if we go through with the project or not," Black said.
Would you go see School of Rock 2?
It's hard to figure out the funniest part of this new poster for The Love Guru.
Is it Mike Myers, dressed up as yet another ridiculous character? Verne Troyer, re-joining his Austin Powers co-star? Or Justin Timberlake looking like, well, a 1970s porn star?
You tell us!
There's little doubt you can pencil in Sex and the City: The Movie at the top of the box office rankings for next week. But does this mean the film is actually any good?
While many viewers may not even care - they'll be more focused on Carrie and company's fashion choices - we asked a handful of critics for their take on this anticipated remake...
- Will give female audiences a jolt of excitement in the same way that seeing Indiana Jones back in action will thrill male audiences this summer... -- Boxoffice Magazine
- For a series so steeped in romance, the eagerly awaited Sex and the City movie feels a trifle half-hearted... -- Variety
- Yes, it's good to see the Fab Four together again. You just wish they were in a funnier and wittier film than this indulgent and essentially middlebrow saga that feels like six TV episodes glued together, with a running time of two and a half hours... -- Emanuel Levy
- One thing's for sure: fans of the series will lap this film up... -- The Daily Telegraph
James Cameron is not known for being modest. Upon winning Best Director at the Academy Awards, he recited a Titanic quote and announced: I'm the king of the world!
Therefore, it came as no surprise this week when, at Microsoft Advance '08, the director hyped up his highly-anticipated Avatar, which opens on December 18, 2009.
"Avatar will make people truly experience something," said Cameron. "One more layer of the suspension of disbelief will be removed. All the syn-thespians are photo-realistic. Now that we've achieved it, we discovered CG characters in 3D look more real than in 2D. Your brain is cued, it's a real thing not a picture, and discounting part of [the] image that makes it look fake."
Cameron continued with his high praise for, well, himself and his upcoming movie:
"Avatar is the single most complex piece of filmmaking ever made. We have 1,600 shots for a 2.5 hour movie. It's not with a single CGI character, like King Kong or Gollum. We have hundreds of photo-realistic CG characters. We were Microsoft's sandbox for filmmaking beyond the cutting edge."
As part of their promotional campaign for Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (as if that movie even needs to be promoted), Harrison Ford and Shia LaBeouf showed up on MTV's Total Request Live this week.
When asked about a fifth Indiana Jones film - which George Lucas has admitted to contemplating - Shia smiled and said:
"I know Harrison would love to, I know that Harrison, when he's 80, will still be jacked. Is there going to be an 80-year-old Indiana Jones? No one can say never."