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(02/24/05 5:00am)
Tommy Lee Jones + five cheerleaders = big hat. That's right. In "Man of the House," Tommy Lee Jones has a really big cowboy hat. Let's take a walk down large chapeau lane and look at some of the big hat flicks of yesteryear.
(02/17/05 5:00am)
So, you think nothing really looks good about Keanu Reeves' new horror-action flick "Constantine." Well, you can turn that frown upside down because putting the teen in "Constantine" is 18-year-old wunderkid Shia LeBeouf, star of the Disney Channel original series "Even Stevens." Let's take a walk down LeBeouf lane in appreciation of our Shia.
(02/10/05 5:00am)
For someone who could obliterate absolutely any person in his path, you wonder if Tony Jaa is just waiting for someone to give him 'tude. But Jaa seems overwhelmingly gentle, humbled and eager to talk about his abilities without at all seeming boastful.
(02/10/05 5:00am)
In "Ong-Bak: The Thai Warrior," the head of the Ong-Bak statue is stolen from a village, and Ting (Tony Jaa) travels to Bangkok to retrieve the lost head, which helps the village prosper. In order to locate the gangsters who stole the artifact, Ting must infiltrate a Muay Thai fight club and bust some skulls to save his village from drought.
(02/10/05 5:00am)
Everyone has probably seen that trailer for "Hitch." No, not the version where Will Smith kicks Eva Mendes in the face, but the one where he's teaching whiter-than-white Kevin James ("The King of Queens") how to dance. Judging by the trailer, the movie's just two hours of Will Smith helping James master dance moves. Seems like Hollywood just can't get enough of reinforcing stereotypes, and here are five more examples.
(02/07/05 5:00am)
"Sideways" was the big winner at the Screen Actor's Guild Awards on Saturday and proves to be the underdog choice for Best Picture at the Oscars on Feb. 27. For their roles in the comedy about wine, Paul Giamatti, Thomas Haden Church, Virginia Madsen and Sandra Oh took home the Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture. Both Church and Madsen are nominated for Best Supporting Actor and Best Supporting Actress, respectively, at the Oscars.
(02/03/05 5:00am)
As the romantic comedy "The Wedding Date," starring Debra Messing, hits theaters tomorrow, here are the sweetest wedding-themed movies around.
(01/27/05 5:00am)
"William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice" hits theaters tomorrow starring none other than the feisty mad dog of cinema himself Al Pacino as Shylock, Here are five of the most "hoo-ha!" Pacino performances, rated from one to five "hoo-hahs!"
(01/27/05 5:00am)
All the progress made by "The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King" by winning all of its 11 Oscar nominations last year in a triumphant onslaught of awesomeness might have just been erased. After the recent announcement of the Academy Awards nominations Tuesday, if the first words out of your mouth weren't "How could they diss Paul Giamatti two years in a row?" then you have problems.
(01/13/05 5:00am)
Hoping for a good movie in January is kind of like waiting for that snowstorm in May: The odds are just stacked against you. After studios drop their high-profile Oscar contenders in December, they typically dump surefire stinkers in the beginning of the new year ("Elektra" anyone?). However, every now and then an excellent film will come along this season and surprise you. "In Good Company" is not one of these films, but not for a lack of trying.
(01/13/05 5:00am)
In anticipation of the release of "Coach Carter," starring Samuel L. Jackson, here are some of our favorite movie coaches of all time:
(01/13/05 5:00am)
It's hard to think of 13 reasons to go see this week's guns-a-blazin' Laurence Fishburne plus Ethan Hawke with a little twist of John Leguizamo remake "Assault on Precinct 13." (The only good reason I can think of is that Ja Rule is in it! "It's murrrderrr.") Thirteen might be considered an unlucky number in reality, but in movies, it's a number that, uh, is in a lot of titles.
(12/13/04 5:00am)
Top 10 Movies of 2004
By Daniel Longino
(12/13/04 5:00am)
VIDEO GAME OF THE YEAR
'Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas'
(12/09/04 5:00am)
"Nobody puts baby in the corner."
(12/06/04 5:00am)
METROID PRIME 2: ECHOES
By DANIEL LONGINO
For Nintendo GameCube
$49.99
B+
(12/02/04 5:00am)
Over the last 10 years, Rivers Cuomo has been the most recognizable and notorious nerd rock star on the planet. The Weezer frontman has been a walking contradiction, from a devastatingly brilliant, heart-on-his-sleeve poet with an Asian fetish to a bland and boring Limp Bizkit fan sipping Mountain Dew while private messaging his cyber girlfriend on the band's online message board ... with an Asian fetish. Or, so it is according to "Rolling Stone" and "Billboard" contributor John D. Luerssen, who has taken it upon himself to chronicle the life of Weezer's oddball eccentric frontman.
(11/11/04 5:00am)
Fresh off their third album, the major-label debut "This Island," feminist dance-rock outfit Le Tigre is currently wrapping up a tour of several swing states.
(11/04/04 5:00am)
Brad Bird bleeds animation. As a young boy, the director studied under Milt Kahl, one of the original Disney "Nine Old Men" who worked on such classics as "101 Dalmations" and "The Jungle Book." After working as an animator on Disney films such as "The Fox and the Hound," Bird served as a director and executive consultant for the first eight seasons of "The Simpsons."
(11/04/04 5:00am)
If Pixar values a good story, then "The Incredibles" makes sense. As the years go by, films come and go, but no group of filmmakers in the past nine years - since the release of "Toy Story" in 1995 - has produced such consistently excellent films. From the "Toy Story" movies, to the "Seven Samurai"-inspired plot of "A Bug's Life," to stories of monsters and fish, Pixar has been a mainstay in quality filmmaking. And with "The Incredibles," Pixar will not have its first misstep.