Anna Kendrick has a new job title: film director. The Pitch Perfect actress makes her directorial debut with Woman of the Hour, an upcoming thriller based on the real-life story of Dating Game Killer Rodney Alcala. Along with directing, Kendrick stars as Cheryl Bradshaw, the game show contestant who picks Alcala, "bachelor number one," as her "winner," during an appearance on The Dating Game in 1978.
During a recent interview, cult director Kevin Smith reflected on the intense backlash he received from religious and right-wing groups following the premiere of his most "controversial" movie, Dogma. Released in 1999, Dogma followed Loki (Matt Damon) and Bartleby (Ben Affleck), two fallen angels desperate to get back into heaven.
The best kept secret in action movies (a secret that is slowly, and finally, getting out thanks to his role in John Wick: Chapter 4), Scott Adkins does what he does best in the newly released trailer for the upcoming action thriller Take Cover. Starring Adkins as a disillusioned hitman, the actor himself took to social media to share that early reactions to Take Cover have declared the movie, Pulse-pounding action that will keep you on the edge of your seat, and Explosive carnage reminiscent of a classic John Woo film.
In between all of the whirling interviews with the press and all the buzzing about his Dawson's Creek heydays, not to mention those fashionable toe condoms he sported at the Emmys, actor Joshua Jackson still couldnt escape questions about his appearance in The Karate Kid. Jackson reportedly portrays a character named Victor in the highly anticipated film, which will team up Karate Kid alums Ralph Macchio and Jackie Chan on the Silver Screen in 2025.
Bruce Waynes "batty" alter ego is about to receive a serious upgrade, as the Joker (Jack Nicholson) would say, where all of those wonderful toys are concerned. Yes, theres now a star in the Batman's future, but it wont need to be displayed in Wayne Manor. Rather, it will be added to the Hollywood Walk of Fame (per a press release).
The Friday the 13th (1980) franchise has had a tumultuous time for more that decade, with legal battles preventing any new movies or shows being made. While that seems to be coming to an end, the director of the original 1980 movie, Sean S. Cunningham has been remembering one of the Jason kills he never got to shoot when his own attempts at a TV show collapsed.