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The Community actor will guest-star in the six-episode season as Tad O'Malley, a popular conservative Internet news anchor who becomes an unlikely ally for Mulder (David Duchovny).
Priyanka Chopra might be a new face to many when her ABC series Quantico debuts this fall, but for many around the world, she's been an A-list celebrity for years.
Born in India, Chopra, 32, made her acting debut in the 2002 Tamil film Thamizhan. From there, she starred in a bunch of box-office hits,
Hot on the heels of HBO Now, Showtime has announced that it will also begin offering a stand-alone streaming service.
Starting in July, fans will be able to subscribe to Showtime on their iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch and Apple TV for a monthly subscription of $10.99. That means even if you don't have
While The Hollywood Reporter calls it a remake, there’s still a chance this could turn into a second sequel to the 1992 smash hit music-crammed comedy that saw Whoopi Goldberg’s singer Deloris go into hiding in a convent after witnessing a mob crime. Though the studio acted quickly to crank out a sequel (1993’s Sister Act 2: Back In The Habit), the returns weren’t quite as impressive and the nascent franchise has been dormant on the big screen since then. It did, however, spawn a Tony-winning musical that played here in 2009 before transferring to Broadway in 2011.
Now Disney feels that writers Kirsten Smith and Karen McCullah – who have worked on the likes of Legally Blonde and The House Bunny – are the people perfectly positioned to either completely reboot the story or possibly bring back Goldberg for some torch-passing business. The musical’s success clearly shows there’s still an audience for the story’s feel-good tunes and laughs, but the idea of a remake might not play with everyone. Still, if it is successful, at least Disney won’t try spinning off a Sister Act shared universe right? Right? Mother Superior: Origins, coming to a screen near you in 2019…
Looking to take a hard stare at the inequalities present in modern-day America, drama 99 Homes has Andrew Garfield desperately trading in his morality for the sake of his family. Take a look at the first trailer.
99 Homes finds Garfield as Dennis Nash, a construction contractor trying desperately to stay afloat. But when his finances head down the toilet and the bank forecloses on his home, he meets Rick Carver (Michael Shannon), the charming, powerful, greedy, gun-happy real-estate broker who snapped up the place.
Deciding that the only way to provide for his family including son Connor (Noah Lomax) and mother Lynn (Laura Dern), Nash offers to work for Carver, helping him prepare homes for eviction and eventually assist with making families leave. As he worries about the ethics and the danger, he knows that it’s helping his own life.
With Shannon going full Gordon Gekko, this could be a great clash of actors and a timely exploration of a tough subject. With Ramin Bahrani directing, 99 Homes arrives in the US on September 25 and lands in the UK on October 16.
The film, which is set just after the US Civil War, will find her as a lone bounty hunter who specializes in revenge killing, tracking down and shooting people she’s hired to find. But then a client brings her information about her mother’s murderer, and as she digs into the case, she realises, to her horror, that she knows exactly who is to blame.
Free Ride director Shana Betz is on to call the shots, working from a script by Tasha Huo. The cameras should be cranking, and the bullets flying, this September.
Kravitz, who also appears in the Divergent films, will next be seen in comedy drama Dope, which is out here on September 4. She’ll be back on Divergent duty for Allegiant: Part 1, which is scheduled to arrive next March.
Dracula Untold writers Matt Sazama and Burk Sharpless are tackling the challenge of turning the roughly 11-minute sequence (which you can see above) into a dark fantasy adventure. They’ll be using the Maleficent model of filling in some backstory for the dark, winged creature who raises spirits from the dead for a night of mayhem before they start to fade in the light of the rising sun.
The original 1940s animated outing used Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky music, composed in 1867 and arranged by Leopold Stokowski for the film, which brought the music to wider audiences.
This one is still in the early development stages, so it likely has a few years to go before it hits screens, assuming the pair can crack the idea. The writers’ next gig is The Last Witch Hunter, which they wrote with Cory Goodman, and arrives here on November 6. As for Disney’s animated-to-live-action output? The latest title from that batch will be Wonderland sequel Alice Through The Looking Glass, due in the UK on May 27 next year.