Liev Schreiber: Liev to Tell
Liev Schreiber's character bores his fellow cast in The Daytrippers with hilarious results.
Liev Schreiber's character bores his fellow cast in The Daytrippers with hilarious results.
The Canuck actress hits the big screen in the intense high school drama, 187, starring Samuel L. Jackson.
Sloe-eyed NEVE CAMPBELL smokes with a late-night fervor that suggests a dark side you don't get a hint of from the brunette girl-next-door she plays in "Party of Five."
The South African model-cum-actress emerges from the page to the screen in the unholy horror Devil's Advocate.
Where did the current blaze of extraordinary African-American talent on the big screen come from? A long, troubling history of greatness.
We asked 65 African-American industry players to tell us about the film that had the greatest impact on their personal lives.
Hot off The Nutty Professor, Jada Pinkett is ready for leading-lady status. Here she talks about finally getting to shoot guns in her new film Set It Off, about not wanting to marry her boyfriend, Will Smith, just now, and about her sense that "where is a higher power that's been looking over me for whatever reason."
The movies' most promising funnyman, Damon Wayans, reveals the rage underneath the wisecracks, compares his family to the Corleones, and says he's ready to tackle his biggest challenge: portraying Richard Pryor.
Award-winning actor and box office-grabbing director Forest Whitaker defends the male characters in Waiting to Exhale, explains why he'd rather direct than act, and presents a cabalistic theory of Creation.
Award-winning actor and box office-grabbing director Forest Whitaker defends the male characters in Waiting to Exhale, explains why he'd rather direct than act, and presents a cabalistic theory of Creation.
Will Smith gives us the lowdown on how the megasuccess of Independence Day has changed his life--like, now he gets first crack at hot scripts and has to cope with female fans who want him to sign their breasts.
The weather's great. The people are beautiful. There's money everywhere. A poor kid from Poughkeepsie can hit the big time here. What's not to like? Read on.
With a name that sounds like he might be a Mafia numbers runner, Viggo Mortensen has played mostly mysterious, and often dangerous, since his debut as Alexander Godunov's brother in 1985's Witness.
I'm meeting Richard Lewis in a bar, in part because his new movie is called Drunks, but largely because I must, for personal, therapeutic reasons, hear the famously neurotic, anxious comedian kvetch about women and shrinks--two of his favorite topics--while we laugh and cry into large tumblers of whiskey.