HollywoodNews.com: Alan Cumming, Garret Dillahunt, and Frances Fisher star in the poignant period drama Any Day Now, written, produced and directed by filmmaker Travis Fine (The Space Between). The film recently completed principal photography in Los Angeles and is currently in post-production. Produced by Kristine Hostetter Fine (The Space Between) and Chip Hourihan (Frozen River), the film is executive produced by Anne O’Shea (The Kids Are Alright) and Maxine Makover (The Space Between.
Set in the 1970s and inspired by a true story, the film chronicles a gay couple who take in a teenage boy with Down Syndrome who has been abandoned by his drug addicted mother. As the teen discovers the strong bonds of family for the first time in his life, disapproving authorities step in to tear the boy from the only stable environment he has ever known. As the gay men fight to adopt this extraordinary special needs child,...
Set in the 1970s and inspired by a true story, the film chronicles a gay couple who take in a teenage boy with Down Syndrome who has been abandoned by his drug addicted mother. As the teen discovers the strong bonds of family for the first time in his life, disapproving authorities step in to tear the boy from the only stable environment he has ever known. As the gay men fight to adopt this extraordinary special needs child,...
- 9/21/2011
- by Josh Abraham
- Hollywoodnews.com
Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment will add the 1990 adventure movie Captain America to its MGM’s Limited Edition Collection, the “manufacturing on demand” (Mod) program that the studio launched last fall. It will be available beginning on July 19.
The DVD will be available for sale on online retailers everywhere for a prize of approximately $19.98.
Matt Salinger is Captain America--the one from 1990.
Obviously aiming to capitalize on Paramount’s international theatrical release of Captain America: First Avenger starring Chris Evens on July 22, Fox is hit the archive to pull out the 1990 Captain America, which was directed by Albert Pyun (the man behind 1994′s Kickboxer 4: The Aggressor – need we say more?) and stars Matt Salinger (Babyfever). The story is generally the same as teh original Captain America comic, wherein a genetically-engineer WWII super-soldier emerges from a frozen slumber deep inside a hunk of Arctic ice to many years after...
The DVD will be available for sale on online retailers everywhere for a prize of approximately $19.98.
Matt Salinger is Captain America--the one from 1990.
Obviously aiming to capitalize on Paramount’s international theatrical release of Captain America: First Avenger starring Chris Evens on July 22, Fox is hit the archive to pull out the 1990 Captain America, which was directed by Albert Pyun (the man behind 1994′s Kickboxer 4: The Aggressor – need we say more?) and stars Matt Salinger (Babyfever). The story is generally the same as teh original Captain America comic, wherein a genetically-engineer WWII super-soldier emerges from a frozen slumber deep inside a hunk of Arctic ice to many years after...
- 6/16/2011
- by Laurence
- Disc Dish
Henry Jaglom makes movies about women for women. Certain kinds of women. Women who suffer from "Eating" issues and have "Babyfever" and enjoy "Going Shopping." Women who gather by the pool and drink cocktails and talk talk talk, baring their most intimate thoughts and feelings to each other and to us while his camera, listening in, pans their faces, zooming in and out.
In the latest addition to his 18-title oeuvre, the writer-director-usually editor (though not this time)-independent distributor profiles a familiar femme: the Midwestern ingénue who arrives in Los Angeles, according to Hollywood mythology, on a Greyhound bus and hangs out at sidewalk cafes hoping to get discovered, like, legend (inaccurately) has it, Lana Turner at the Schwab's soda counter.
That's the rough sketch of 2006's "Hollywood Dreams," entwined with a tragic love story. "Queen of the Lot," Jaglom says, is "a further exploration of themes" and "an...
In the latest addition to his 18-title oeuvre, the writer-director-usually editor (though not this time)-independent distributor profiles a familiar femme: the Midwestern ingénue who arrives in Los Angeles, according to Hollywood mythology, on a Greyhound bus and hangs out at sidewalk cafes hoping to get discovered, like, legend (inaccurately) has it, Lana Turner at the Schwab's soda counter.
That's the rough sketch of 2006's "Hollywood Dreams," entwined with a tragic love story. "Queen of the Lot," Jaglom says, is "a further exploration of themes" and "an...
- 11/19/2010
- Moving Pictures Magazine
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