Sentences with phrase «new kids films»

The latest from the comedic team behind the NEW KIDS films and BROs BEFORE HOs.

Not exact matches

Those include 14 new seasons of series, 13 comedy specials, six documentaries, two documentary series, nine feature films, and seven seasons of TV for kids.
Currently the newest restaurant in Fort Point, Internal Matter is open early in the morning to late at night; it's a community oriented place that has crayons and games for the kids, but wine and late night films for the grown ups.
The request is nothing new: It seems there's always someone crying out against film students or East Asian studies majors, wondering why these damn kids don't just study petroleum chemistry.
Hollywood's cutest couple, who teamed up for the film Friends With Kids, coordinate perfectly in their ivory ensembles — he in Salvatore Ferragamo, she in kate spade new york — for a photocall for the film.
The Extras There is an incredible amount of extras for what could be considered just a kids movie, starting with a new Ice Age short film, starring John Leguizamo's sloth character.
Alvin and the Chipmunks are actually overshadowed for a while by the new chipettes, which kind of dulls the film at points, but when they are on screen it's still a cute kids film.
Our weekly film column returns after a holiday hiatus with brand new trailers for Wes Anderson's «Moonrise Kingdom,» the promising comedy «Friends with Kids,» and more upcoming films.
This week, get a first look at «Damsels in Distress» and «Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter,» watch new trailers and clips for «John Carter,» «Friends with Kids,» and more, and catch up on the week's film news.
Moving on to films, Loughlin appeared in the horror sequel Amityville 3 - D (1983), the romantic comedy Secret Admirer (1985), the thriller The New Kids (1985), and the Frankie Avalon - Annette Funicello retro - romp Back to the Beach (1987).
If your kids have seen any of the other Avengers films, nothing in this one will be new to them.
Filing off what little edge there was from the first film's supervillainy, introducing a host of mostly forgettable new characters (Al Pacino was initially down to voice the bad guy, but dropped out at the last minute), and doubling down on the adored - by - kids, annoying - to - adults Minions, the film has occasional moments of wit and invention, but it's mostly a bland retread without the heart of its predecessor.
The night also saw a new look at the John Krasinski - directed horror film that stars himself and his off - screen wife, Emily Blunt, as a couple protecting their kids from monsters that use sound to attack.
Seconds (1966), arty and opaque where Grand Prix was vapid and commercial, is a kid's toy - box of a film, a self - conscious appropriation of European New Wave themes and techniques in the same vein as Arthur Penn's contemporaneous Mickey One.
In this often overlooked film, Hayden Christensen (right before he joined «Star Wars») plays whiz kid New Republic writer Stephen Glass, the infamous fabricator who faked quotes, sources and entire stories.
The film stars Quvenzhané Wallis (Beasts of the Southern Wild) in the title role as a young, happy, street - tough foster kid living with the mean Miss Hannigan (Cameron Diaz) who is taken in by New York...
We hope King and co are able to recapture some of the magic of the original, which for our money is one of the best kids» films of the new millennium.
The film itself can't seem to decide whether it's a Saturday morning serial for the kids, a new Indiana Jones, or something with a bit more dramatic heft
It is certainly not a film for everybody and most definitely not for kids unless you want them to get in trouble on their last days of school for repeating many of the new things they'll learn.
Previews for the new kids» film Real Steel, which have been running in theatres for the better part of a year, forewarned a mash - up of the vintage game Rock»em Sock»em Robots with the hoary father - son drama The Champ (1931, 1979), about a washed - up boxer and his plucky kid.
Wearing red gloves in a cold, blue world, Heidi has the warm hands, warm heart that don't come so easily to her emotionally troubled, noncommittal new boyfriend (but do come easily to the gratuitous local kid with Asperger syndrome, the film's sole unspoiled man).
«Blazing a New Path» (8:31) details the project's origins (a conversation with a clergyman getting Cage's gears going) and surprisingly acknowledges that the first film (which is declared «a kids» movie») didn't work
A lot of moviegoers still believe that low quality CGI toon projects should get a pass because they're just «kid movies» but films like Wreck - It - Ralph remind us that superior animated pictures are more than just cheep gags and one - note cliches — considering the film puts a new spin on tried - and - true stories about friendship and heroism.
This was seemingly the case with the Dardenne brothers at this year's Cannes, where their latest film, The Unknown Girl, received a considerably more lukewarm response than the likes of Two Days, One Night and The Kid with a Bike, with some suggestions that the Belgian duo had finally reached a stage of auto - pilot writing and directing and others implying that the new film was their first outright failure.
The film tells the story of Ricky (Dennison), a defiant young city kid, who finds himself on the run with his cantankerous foster uncle (Neill) in the wild New Zealand bush.
Those two films kept pretty much everyone else at bay in the Middle Kingdom, although as the only new kids offering, Sony's Peter Rabbit had a good start at $ 12.7 M.
The film was released this past January which was perfect timing for kids and parents looking for something new since «Frozen» took over the marketplace and it became a nice little hit.
The new Fright Night, which remakes and updates Tom Holland's enduring and entertaining 1985 film about a high school kid who finds that a vampire has moved into the house next door, is about vampires and feelings, but not vampires with feelings.
Pennywise the clown is back to terrify a new generation of kids in this year's new feature film remake of the classic Stephen King novel It, and the first official teaser trailer has just emerged from the sewer for you to check out.
OPENING THIS WEEK Kam's Kapsules: Weekly Previews That Make Choosing a Film Fun by Kam Williams For movies opening November 23, 2007 BIG BUDGET FILMS August Rush (PG for slight violence, mild profanity and mature themes) Freddie Highmore stars as the title character in this escapist fantasy about a promising musical prodigy who runs away from an orphanage to New York City to find his parents (Keri Russell and Jonathan Rhys Myers) only to end up living with a Fagin - like wizard (Robin Williams) and lots of other kids in a makeshift shelter in an abandoned theater which was once the Fillmore East.
The show picks up three decades after the fateful events of the Under - 18 All - Valley Karate Tournament that provided the setting for the rousing climax of the ’84 film, and in a new video, the series creators reveal some never - before - seen Karate Kid footage that they'll use to recontextualize that famous martial arts match for the new show.
SUNDANCE KIDS To reach our youngest independent film fans, we have created a new section of the Festival especially for them.
British actress Helen Mccrory fears she has scarred her kids for life after they were left terrified by her appearance on the set of new film...
King, whose other horror credits include Steve Miner's «Friday the 13th Part III», Sean S. Cunningham's «The New Kids» and Craven's «The Hills Have Eyes Part II», had done a superb job altering the interiors of the old building to suit the film's Sin City setting, particularly given the presumably humble budget he was given to work with.
The first time could have been an accident, the second time a coincidence, but now Lisa Cholodenko has made three superior films — «High Art,» «Laurel Canyon» and the brand new «The Kids Are All Right» — so it's time to acknowledge her as a major filmmaker.
The film also weaves in lots of scenes that are meant to make us think that Barnum was the first 21st century - style «woke» white straight man in America — a goodhearted fellow who gave circus jobs to outcasts of one kind or another (talk about a big tent: the repertory company includes African - Americans, little people, giants, conjoined twins and a bearded lady), not just because they happened to possess certain talents or physical characteristics that Barnum could exploit (often by appealing to the majority's prurient interests or bigotries) but because the onetime poor boy Barnum sees himself in their striving, and wants to build a theatrical - carnival arts utopia in America's largest city with help from his new partner, rich kid turned playwright Philip Carlyle (Zac Efron).
Warner's newest release of the film offers a behind - the - scenes featurette shot during the making of the movie, along with a longer documentary complete with comments from the Wonka kids as adults.
The indie film community has taken notice as well, casting Dylan Harman in the title role of the new indie drama The Rainbow Kid.
Her new film stars Annette Bening and Julianne Moore as a lesbian couple with two kids, whose lives become upended when their children's birth father, an anonymous sperm donor, shows up in the likable, charming but intrusive form of Mark Ruffalo.
After an unsuccessful attempt with a «Cat People» remake at Warner Bros, Bill Condon and producer Michael Laughlin decided to collaborate on Condon's early version of «Dead Kids,» and with assistance from Hemdale and tax incentives from the New Zealand government, began production in northern New Zealand, with an eclectic mix of American actors: Dan Shor had recently appeared in John Huston's «Wise Blood»; Dey Young had just debuted in «Rock and Roll High School»; Michael Murphy was a Woody Allen alumnus; and Mark McClure had achieved a kind of immortality as Jimmy Olson in the «Superman» films.
The film interweaves two storylines following two deaf kids as they escape their homes and travel to New York City.
As if I enjoy demonstrating this, since hanging up his director's cap, Hughes has produced and / or scripted a series of junk kids movies (a few of which stuck only through sheer force of hype)-- in addition to overseeing the screenwriting debut of son James, New Port South, a teen - aimed film, like those Hughes became famous for, that may well speak to the specifics of today's youth but fails to get at anything universal.
Ably assisted by screenwriter Mike Carey, adapting his own bestseller from 2014, their film takes the elaborately overdone zombie genre and resuscitates it, while also taking and revamping a handful of well - established genre tropes ---- apocalypse premise, creepy kids, mad scientists ---- and tweaks them in eccentric and imaginative new ways.
Durkin's first film since the critically - acclaimed drama Martha Marcy May Marlene will feature Law as a businessman who brings his American wife and kids home to Britain to pursue new business opportunities, only to be plunged into the despair as their unaffordable new life in an English manor house threatens to destroy the family.
Finally, the Audience Award went to I Declare War (a film I found quite charming), the well - directed and funny Flicker won the «New Wave» Spotlight competition, The American Scream won Best Documentary, and New Kids Nitro won Best Comedy.
In the film by «X-Men: First Class» director Matthew Vaughn based on a 2012 comic book, Firth plays savvy secret agent Harry Hart, who recruits an undisciplined street kid as his prodigy, reported the New York Post.
IFC Films has debuted an official trailer for a new survival thriller titled The 12th Man, the latest film from prominent Hollywood director Harald Zwart (One Night at McCool's, Agent Cody Banks, The Pink Panther 2, The Karate Kid).
But The Green Inferno, a dopey tribute to the Italian cannibal films of his youth, takes the isolationist slant of his oeuvre to condescending new depths: Here, the college kids get munched for having the nerve to... give a shit about something and try to make a difference!
The first trailer for the new adaptation of Stephen King's IT has landed, and there's a decent chance the film will scar a new generation of viewers from clowns, while also reigniting the coulrophobia of 90s kids (raises hand) who were...
Turning his focus and attention toward directing, Robertson makes a good impression with his latest film, «The Dark Horse,» about Genesis Potini (Cliff Curtis), a Maori man and former New Zealand chess champion, who finds purpose teaching underprivileged kids about chess and life.
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