Dolph Lundgren: The Action Man Who Fell to Earth
Dolph Lundgren was once a happy, pumped-up, fast-lane action dude. Now he's older, thinner, glummer, and out to prove he can act.
Dolph Lundgren was once a happy, pumped-up, fast-lane action dude. Now he's older, thinner, glummer, and out to prove he can act.
With marital lunacy behind him, a hit movie under his belt and Nine Months currently on the big screen, the ever-boyish but all-too-experienced Tom Arnold is launching his solo career. Here he gives us his story, hair transplants and all.
Last year she announced, "Love sucks!" and then promptly got married. Then she got unmarried, and now she's really in love. Here Drew Barrymore talks about her beloved "String Bean," describes working with her "Apple Pie" (Chris O'Donnell) and explains "her tribute to Marilyn Monroe" in Batman Forever.
Bridgette Wilson talks Hollywood, and more importantly, Japan, where she is a full-fledged starlet.
An analysis of the disturbing trend of movies with so-called protagonists who kidnap, assassinate, deal drugs, sell their bodies, rape and pillage, have sex with minors, and/or generally carry on in a manner our parents taught us not to admire.
Gillian Anderson's hit TV show "The X-Files" is more entertaining than most movies, and many people think she's a better actress than you see in most movies, too.
He's much honored for Forrest Gump and much anticipated in Apollo 13. Here Gary Sinise reminisces about slacker days gone by, sets the record straight on his relationship with John Malkovich, describes his small-screen kiss with Molly Ringwald, and--big surprise--praises Tom Hanks.
Fresh from making The Client a hit, director Joel Schumacher bravely undertakes the Batman movie that Tim Burton didn't want to make, that Michael Keaton wound up not starring in, and that Batman lovers hope won't disappoint them.
David Thomson's celebrated 1985 novel Suspects imagined what happened to various movie characters before and after the events of the movies in which we met them. Movieline now presents the first four chapters of a sequel-in-the-works, with more to come later this year.
Will Val Kilmer, stepping into the Batsuit vacated by Michael Keaton for Batman Forever, hit one clean out of the park and become, at long last, a full-fledged movie star? If a more relaxed attitude toward his work helps, he just might. "It is kind of easy to go out and subdue the bad guy," he says about playing Batman. "I mean, my preparation as an actor is to get dressed."
Suspecting that Chris O'Donnell is not the straight-laced preppy he has played in movies, our reporter asks the actor about his brushes with The Seven Deadly Sins. Hang on as O'Donnell gets frank about his favorite porno movies and admits how he might be talked into modeling condoms in the buff.
A compilation of 100 truly idiotic things Hollywood has done as of late.
After back to back hits like The Pelican Brief and Philadelphia, Oscar-winner Denzel Washington finds he doesn't much like being the center of attention everywhere he goes. "It was never my dream to be famous," he claims. "I didn't start acting to be a movie star."