35 Movies You Will Be Talking About This Awards Season
Here are the most anticipated movies of the fall, and the most likely contenders for awards in 2017.
Here are the most anticipated movies of the fall, and the most likely contenders for awards in 2017.
Amy Ziering and Kirby Dick, who worked with The Weinstein Company on 2015's The Hunting Ground, have announced their next documentary will "examine abuse and cover-ups within the entertainment industry."
The news comes one day after The Weinstein Company terminated Harvey Weinstein's employment.
According to Variety, Weinstein asked Amanda Segel "highly intimate questions" and invited her to his hotel room.
Chadwick Boseman, Sterling K. Brown, and Josh Gad discuss the relevance of Marshall in 2017, their upcoming projects, and much more.
"What I'm hoping to expose is that we are much more the same than we think we are — we're just listening to two different sets of lies as our news.”
"I’ve seen little white kids dressed up as T’Challa," Chadwick Boseman tells BuzzFeed News of his Marvel character. "People call me and say, 'We wanted to buy him Spider-Man, but he kept saying Black Panther.'"
"It was so important to illustrate how important faith is to this man," Josh Gad said of his character in Marshall.
"I would take all of it back if it just meant that the kids could have a normal life," the Frozen star told BuzzFeed News.
"The opportunities are not so scarce. And that's an important moment to note."
45. I’ve officially started singing the theme song at this point.
If you have only seven hours to spend watching Friends (which is available to stream on Netflix starting Jan. 1) on New Year's Day, these are the flat out funniest episodes — ones you don't need to have any prior knowledge about the show's intricate history to enjoy. Presented in chronological order.
Kate Mulgrew and Brad William Henke tell BuzzFeed News what it was like to bring their onscreen feud to a shocking, upsetting, and bloody end. (WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD.)
While her father was directing the likes of Tom Cruise and Tom Hanks, Bryce Dallas Howard was teaching herself to cry on cue. Now she's established herself as more than someone's daughter and she's learned the haters don't deserve her tears.
Nearly 25 years after its unceremonious release, the stars and the creative minds behind the dark comedy talk to BuzzFeed News about hating the title, the stars who backed out (like Jennifer Love Hewitt), the franchise that almost was, and the loss of one of their own.
Here's to the people who stopped being polite, started getting real, and made television history in the process.
After meeting as up-and-coming comedians in the early '70s, Eugene Levy and Catherine O’Hara brought their signature brand of humor to Hollywood and — over the next 40 years — became a beloved on-screen duo. They look back on four decades of friendship, collaboration, and kissing.
With a new movie and a potential TV show he created, developed, executive produced, and could star in, Tom Welling is looking to the past to guide his future.