Eddie Murphy: Hollywood Days / Harlem Nights
The spectacular look of Eddie Murphy's upcoming holiday opus is the product of a sure hand and a great eye.
The spectacular look of Eddie Murphy's upcoming holiday opus is the product of a sure hand and a great eye.
No longer a street-smart aleck, Bruce Willis is now asking himself the big questions.
It's lunchtime in L.A., and strategically placed around the city's trendiest restaurant tables are agents speed-talking their way through their mid-day meal. But if you had to pick them out--for a quick pitch or a let's-do-lunch--could you?
There are plenty of second and third acts in showbiz. Here are six candidates--Warren Beatty, Al Pacino, Goldie Hawn, John Travolta, Burt Reynolds, Marlon Brando--ripe for a comeback.
Comebacks, Sequels, Remakes...the movie business thrives on deja vu.
Philip Noyce, Cameron Crowe and others play My Favorite Scene with Movieline.
"HARMLESS DINNERS," proclaims the Ed Ruscha word painting that hangs inside the entrance of this year's hottest Hollywood hotspot, DC3, and since I'm arriving for an interview over supper with a married movie star, the prediction seems a safe bet. As I nurse a Pellegrino with lime at the block-long, cowhide-covered bar, my thoughts drift back to the last time I met a married woman I didn't know in public, and all the trouble that ensued. Was it worth it?
Over the last 30 years she has tried on a dozen identities, from sex kitten, to Oscar winner, to political radical, to exercise fanatic. And now, at 51, Jane Fonda describes herself as "an idea person who happens to act."
Did you ever wonder what Hollywood celebrities talk about when they cruise the Sunset Strip? Christopher Guest talks about body hair.
Andie MacDowell has trouble picturing herself as a movie star--but after sex lies and videotape, she may have to.