Go to Blogger edit html and find these sentences.Now replace these sentences with your own descriptions.This theme is Bloggerized by Lasantha Bandara - Premiumbloggertemplates.com.
If you were planning to hover over your computer or tablet and grab your tickets to Star Wars: The Force Awakens in advance of its December 18 opening… Well, you’ll want to adjust your thinking back at day, at least in the UK. The film’s official Twitter feed has announced that J.J. Abrams’ trip to that galaxy far, far away will now open in Britain on December 17.
The Force Awakens will be released in the UK on December 17th. The hundred day countdown starts today! http://pic.twitter.com/GRlWtZfWMl
And that’s not even the earliest release slot. Oh no: The United Arab Emirates (which served as locations for certain scenes including those shot on the planet of Jakku) will see the movie open on December 15; and France, Italy, and several other European nations can expect it on December 16.
Abrams, who has typically been secretive about the film, has said that there will be at least one more trailer before the release, but won’t specify beyond “autumn”. But at least there's one less day to wait for the finished product.
With new franchise faces John Boyega, Daisy Ridley, Domhnall Gleeson, Andy Serkis, Gwendoline Christie and Adam Driver joining the veteran likes of Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill and Harrison Ford, Star Wars: The Force Awakens will arrive… You already know if you’ve been paying attention. But sorry Stateside readers – you still have to wait until December 18. For more on the film, check out the latest Empire.
If you were waiting for rock solid proof – despite word of Paul Greengrass and Matt Damon returning and a flurry of recent casting – that the Jason Bourne films are really, truly back, then wait no longer. Thanks to producer Frank Marshall, we have the first image of Damon as Bourne from the set.
And Damon certainly does seem to be in lithe fighting shape – leaner and meaner than in 2007’s The Bourne Ultimatum. There is still no proper plot synopsis for what the former government asset will be up to this time, though Damon has said it’ll reflect our financially risky times and is firmly set in a post-Edward Snowden world. Take that for what you will, but the last time we saw him, Bourne was doing some whistleblowing of his own, releasing the information about the illegal program codenamed Treadstone that created him and then going firmly off the grid.
With Julia Stiles back as Nicky and Alicia Vikander, Tommy Lee Jones and Vincent Cassell aboard, the new Bourne will be with us on July 29 next year.
After interviewing Caitlyn Jenner for the season premiere of The Ellen DeGeneres Show, the host herself was surprised by the former Olympian's views on same-sex marriage.
"She still has a judgment about gay marriage," Ellen DeGeneres told Howard Stern on Tuesday's installment of his SiriusXM show.
Kentucky County Clerk Kim Davis was released from jail Tuesday, according to CNN, after being imprisoned since Sept. 3 for not complying with an order to issue marriage licenses in Rowan County, Ky.
Davis, who was released to the triumphant tune of "Eye of the Tiger" was greeted by a crowd of
Good news for all fans of creepy technological terror, satire and socio-political comment. Though it has been months since we’ve heard much about new episodes, rumours that Netflix has been in talks to produce new episodes of Charlie Brooker’s series appear to have blossomed into truth. According to the Radio Times, the streaming service will be backing at least one new series.
Nothing has been made official by the company yet, but RT’s report (first spotted by Birth.Movies.Death.) mentions that Brooker and his team will be writing more episodes of the dystopian show, which has been a slow-burning hit on Netflix across the pond following its arrival in December.
As for broadcast in the UK, it appears that the show’s regular home, Channel 4, will have a first-look deal on any new episodes, meaning that they’ll debut there before heading elsewhere, possibly as a day-and-date arrangement with Netflix’s other territories. Will the first one be about how Amazon Instant Video is slowly rotting our brains?
We’re keeping our fingers crossed and saving up our merits in the hope that it’s all made official shortly.
Looking to stretch himself again after Nightcrawler, Southpaw and the upcoming Everest, Jean-Marc Vallée’s Demolition finds Jake Gyllenhaal back in contemplative mode, but with a twist. Have a look at the first trailer.
Demolition focuses on investment banker Davis Mitchell, (Gyllenhaal) who falls into an emotional disconnect after his wife Julia (Heather Lind) dies following a car crash. Under pressure from his father in law Phil (Chris Cooper) to pull things together, he begins to realise that things had been going badly for some time; he’d just been so into his routine that he didn’t pay attention.
The first inkling that he can switch things up comes even in the hospital, as a malfunctioning vending machine sends Davis into a rage, spurring letters to the company behind the money-eating metal monstrosity. That helps form a connection with customer service rep Karen (Naomi Watts) and by extension her son Chris (Judah Lewis), going through emotional and financial struggles of their own.
As Davis becomes more and more obsessed with the idea of tearing things down to find out how they work and how to fix them, he discovers that he might just be able to figure himself out for once. The film, written by Bryan Sipe, also features Wass Stevens, Polly Draper and Brendan Dooling. It’ll premiere at the Toronto Film Festival before hitting US screens on April 8 next year. There’s no word on a UK date just yet.