Not exact matches
Immediately
after the
movie was finished I ran to my computer to
see where Steve Madden's stock trades today and it
turns out that the popular women's shoe company is up nearly 10 % over the last 12 months — and a whopping 567 % over the last five years.
I felt the need to state that
after my viewing of The Killing of a Sacred Deer, because this is a film that will truly make people not
see another
movie for weeks or just simply
turn it off
after the very first frame (I'm not exaggerating).
In her first scene in Phantom Thread, Krieps, the least well - known of the three principals in Anderson's
movie, does something I have never
seen a performer do onscreen: she blushes, her cheeks
turning rosy
after Alma trips and smiles at Reynolds before waiting on him.
The film sets up some of the main characters early on pretty much in the same way we've
seen in countless disaster
movies, but it takes a real
turn after the bombing and chronicles the incredibly complex and far - reaching operation that immediately went into effect.
Then finally he put together his last film, Far from Home: The Adventures of Yellow Dog [1995], with Mimi Rogers, Jesse Bradford and Bruce Davison, a
movie that was set and shot in the area of British Columbia where he was living, that has two boy characters who are named
after his own sons, and which sadly
turned out to be a film whose release he didn't
see.
Turns out, Soderbergh's less widely reported remarks clarifying his retirement as a sabbatical were more accurate because
after four years out of the director's chair, he returns with Logan Lucky, exactly the kind of
movie you hope to
see from the maker of the Ocean's trilogy and Out of Sight.
After all the drama, it
turned out that The Interview was actually a pretty bad
movie, at least according to most audiences, however it remains Google's most viewed film and you can
see the trailer for it below:
After taking on Gothic horror with Crimson Peak and post-apocalyptic Godzilla - style monster
movies with Pacific Rim, The Shape of Water
sees him
turn to Douglas Sirk romantic melodramas to color his tale.
After more reiteration of things we've already
seen, the action picks up, and the
movie turns into a visceral assault of bright colors and sight - gags and bright flashes of light and monkeys falling from the sky.
If it was the prospect of
seeing Aron Ralston's dilemma projected larger than life on a theater screen that
turned you away, you've got no reason to miss out on the
movie now, because Fox brought it to DVD and Blu - ray last week, just two days
after it came away from the Oscars empty - handed.
I haven't
seen its predecessor, Escanaba in da Moonlight (2001)-- based on Daniels's play, which he produced at his own 160 - seat theater in Chelsea, Michigan, the Purple Rose (named
after the Woody Allen
movie The Purple Rose of Cairo, which Daniels has cited as a
turning point in his career).
After seeing 2010's «Despicable Me» the first of several times, I knew that supervillain
turned Superdad Gru's little yellow assistants, the Minions, were destined to star in their own
movie.
Danny Trejo (a Rodriguez favorite) is the former Mexican federalé who
turns into a one - man strike force
after his family is massacred by a drug lord (Steven Seagal — who can't keep his accent consistent, let alone convincing — as the pudgiest Mexican drug lord yet
seen in the
movies) and he's framed for the attempted assassination of a corrupt Senator (Robert De Niro) by his drug - dealing campaign manager (Jeff Fahey).
It's hard to talk about «Edge of Tomorrow» without accidentally giving something away, so if you're squeamish about spoilers, feel free to
turn back now (just be sure to return
after you've
seen the
movie).
«I thought my
movie was going to be about happiness, but when I
saw it finished, it
turned out to be about joy,» she remarked
after completing it, «the same things my paintings are about.»