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There was nothing magical about Holly Madison's time living in the Playboy Mansion and, in fact, it sounds pretty damn awful.
In her new memoir, Down the Rabbit Hole: Curious Adventures and Cautionary Tales of a Former Playboy Bunny, which Us Weekly has excerpted, Madison details how her
It's a few months now since the first trailer and images for Guy Ritchie's The Man From U.N.C.L.E. first arrived. So with mere weeks left until its release, here's a new trailer to remind us it's on the way.
And that's not all! There's a fresh poster to boot. Napoleon Solo (Henry Cavill) and Illya Kuryakin (Armie Hammer) are, as you'd expect, prominent, against the backdrop of Rome's Colosseum. Alicia Vikander’s Gaby Teller is given equal background status with a car, and Elizabeth Debicki as Victoria Vinciguerra rather perculiarly looms over everything from the sky. The last poster was very yellow. This one's opted for turquoise and red.{New Man From UNCLE Poster}
Transplanting the 1960s spy series to the big screen and boosting the budget, Ritchie’s version finds Solo forced to team up with former KGB enemy Kuryakin in the United Network Command for Law Enforcement to take down a mysterious criminal organisation bent on destabilising the fragile balance of power through the proliferation of nuclear weapons and technology. The duo’s only lead is the daughter of a vanished German scientist, who is the key to infiltrating the criminal organisation, and they must race against time to find him and prevent a worldwide catastrophe.{The Man From U.N.C.L.E. Poster}
Channelling the location-hopping style and slightly tongue-in-cheek feel of the show, this promises to see Cavill shrugging off Man Of Steel's cape to have a little fun, and plenty of origin story drama between him and Hammer. With Vikander, Debicki, Jared Harris and Hugh Grant along for the ride, The Man From U.N.C.L.E. is out on August 14.
He's in talks to co-produce and star in a new drama
Partly thanks to his thundering performance in Selma, David Oyelowo is a busy man at the moment. He has plenty of current acting jobs to keep him busy, is in demand for others and continues to push into producing. He’s now in talks – alongside Selma executive producer Oprah Winfrey – to join Disney’s new original drama The Water Man.
Despite the box office issues with Tomorrowland, it seems the Mouse House is still happy to bet on original stories, though this one should come with a much more affordable price tag. Emma Needell, who has spent years working as an assistant while honing her writing chops, sold the script to the company influenced by her experiences in rural Colorado.
The Water Man finds a precocious lad desperately trying to save his ailing mother. Constantly at odds with his father, he runs away from home to find a mythical person known as The Water Man who, rumour has it, can cheat death. As his father, Amos, heads out to look for the boy, he starts to understand his son a little better. Oyelowo has his eye on the role of Amos and would also produce alongside Winfrey’s Harpo Films, but both are still just at the early negotiation stage.
Oyelowo will be seen in Nina, Five Nights In Maine, Captive and Queen Of Katwe, which is shooting now. He’s also attached to prison thriller Three Seconds alongside Luke Evans.
It’s really not that tricky if you’ve ever watched a Disney cartoon that’s filled with chatty animals, but still… Zootropolis, co-directed by Tangled's Byron Howard and Wreck-It Ralph's Rich Moore, is set in a world where anthropomorphic animals inhabit a modern mammalian metropolis that boasts neighbourhoods such as swanky Sahara Square and frosty Tundratown. Judy (Ginnifer Goodwin) is a small-town rabbit from Bunny Burrows who arrives in the big city to do some good as a cop – though usually ends up with traffic duty. When she meets sly scam artist fox Nick Wilde (Bateman), the vibe is immediately hate-hate. But that changes when they need each other’s help.
There’s no actual footage from the film here (unless you count the crowd of animals walking around, removed from any background), but it’s a witty introduction to the basic story that makes good use of a tranquilizer dart. Zootropolis – which is known as Zootopia in the US – will grace our screens on March 25 next year.
The race to get a film about the cheating, drug-enhanced winning ways of cyclist Lance Armstrong has been hotly contested, but it appears Stephen Frears has pulled ahead of the pack, with The Program arriving this year. Check out the first trailer for the film, with the poster lurking lower down the page.
Adapted from sports journalist David Walsh’s book Seven Deadly Sins: My Pursuit Of Lance Armstrong, the film will follow the cyclist’s meteoric rise, battles with cancer and equally fast fall once it was proved that he had been using performance enhancing drugs during his successful years.
Frears has Chris O’Dowd playing Walsh, with Ben Foster as Armstrong. From the looks of this, it’s a dramatic re-telling of Armstrong’s Tour de France years and then what happened when the truth came out, and the rabbit hole proved to be far deeper than anyone suspected. {The Program poster}
With Lee Pace, Jesse Plemons, Guillaume Canet, Dustin Hoffman and Bryan Greenberg also in the cast, The Program is set to hit the UK later this year but doesn’t have a locked down date just set.
Love her or hate her, Miley Cyrus has been making a statement over the last few years and in the newest cover story for Paper, she opens up about how she knew she was bisexual at 14 and stands behind some of her controversial moments, saying, "As long as you're not hurting anyone, your choices are