Former Seeking Sister Wife star Vanessa Cobbs is now officially a married woman again. She was in the middle of the Ashley and Dimitri Snowden drama. Now, she is living her best life in Australia and has found her magic man. Read on for all of the exciting details.
Seeking Sister Wife Vanessa Cobbs A Married Woman
Vanessa Cobbs seemed like the perfect addition to the Snowden family. They did not have luck in Season 1 of Seeking Sister Wife. Then, they returned with Vanessa who was not familiar with this lifestyle. Yet, she was open and really cared for both Ashley and Dimitri. Therefore, she was willing to follow their diet and interesting rituals. In the end, she moved with and married the couple in a spiritual ceremony. By the following season, they revealed she had left them via text and they were now courting two women. The Snowdens married...
Seeking Sister Wife Vanessa Cobbs A Married Woman
Vanessa Cobbs seemed like the perfect addition to the Snowden family. They did not have luck in Season 1 of Seeking Sister Wife. Then, they returned with Vanessa who was not familiar with this lifestyle. Yet, she was open and really cared for both Ashley and Dimitri. Therefore, she was willing to follow their diet and interesting rituals. In the end, she moved with and married the couple in a spiritual ceremony. By the following season, they revealed she had left them via text and they were now courting two women. The Snowdens married...
- 3/16/2024
- by Amanda Lauren
- TV Shows Ace
On its face, Criterion’s Chantal Akerman Masterpieces, 1968–1978 is an essential set for offering key early works, some more obscure than others, from the career of one of the great film artists. But the pleasures here run deeper. Akerman used each of her initial films as a springboard to the next, and watching them in chronological order sees her consolidating and complicating her aesthetic and thematic preoccupations with each successive project.
Consider Akerman’s first film, 1968’s Saute ma ville. Akerman made this 13-minute short at the age of 18, and its debt to the antic energy and seriocomic political inclinations of the French New Wave makes it an outlier in a body of work fixated on structuralism and more meditative atmospheres. Yet in the film’s depiction of a young woman (Akerman herself) trashing her apartment emerges an outlandish expression of what will become a more somberly explored theme in upcoming shorts,...
Consider Akerman’s first film, 1968’s Saute ma ville. Akerman made this 13-minute short at the age of 18, and its debt to the antic energy and seriocomic political inclinations of the French New Wave makes it an outlier in a body of work fixated on structuralism and more meditative atmospheres. Yet in the film’s depiction of a young woman (Akerman herself) trashing her apartment emerges an outlandish expression of what will become a more somberly explored theme in upcoming shorts,...
- 1/26/2024
- by Jake Cole
- Slant Magazine
Mumbai, March 11 (Ians) Actress Ridhi Dogra, who plays the lead in the new web series "The Married Woman", says watching the show for the first time after the final edit was an emotional experience for her.
Ridhi plays the role of Astha in the show, which revolves around same-sex love or lesbianism -- a topic considered taboo by many.
"'The Married Woman' has been a great journey, which I will cherish forever. When I watched the entire show recently, I got emotional. After the last episode got over, and the song 'Bematlab' started playing, and I was crying. I was wondering why I started crying since I had only played the character. I could feel Astha's pain and journey. I am grateful to the audience and my fans for showering their love, blessings, and support," she said.
'The Married Woman' is an urban relationship drama about...
Ridhi plays the role of Astha in the show, which revolves around same-sex love or lesbianism -- a topic considered taboo by many.
"'The Married Woman' has been a great journey, which I will cherish forever. When I watched the entire show recently, I got emotional. After the last episode got over, and the song 'Bematlab' started playing, and I was crying. I was wondering why I started crying since I had only played the character. I could feel Astha's pain and journey. I am grateful to the audience and my fans for showering their love, blessings, and support," she said.
'The Married Woman' is an urban relationship drama about...
- 3/11/2021
- by Glamsham Bureau
- GlamSham
New Delhi, Feb 26 (Ians) Actress Ridhi Dogra was waiting for a big project to come her way, and she says her wish has come true with the upcoming web show, The Married Woman, which casts her in the title role.
"The biggest reason I said yes to the project was because I was eagerly waiting for an opportunity to showcase that I can carry a big project on my shoulders," Ridhi told Ians.
"When I heard it is called 'The Married Woman' and I would be playing the married woman I did not look left or right. I didn't think twice. I have been waiting as an actor to just be able to show what I can do," she added.
The Married Woman is based on author Manju Kapur's bestseller novel of the same name, and also features Monica Dogra, Imaad Shah, Divya Seth Shah, Nadira Babbar and Suhas Ahuja.
"The biggest reason I said yes to the project was because I was eagerly waiting for an opportunity to showcase that I can carry a big project on my shoulders," Ridhi told Ians.
"When I heard it is called 'The Married Woman' and I would be playing the married woman I did not look left or right. I didn't think twice. I have been waiting as an actor to just be able to show what I can do," she added.
The Married Woman is based on author Manju Kapur's bestseller novel of the same name, and also features Monica Dogra, Imaad Shah, Divya Seth Shah, Nadira Babbar and Suhas Ahuja.
- 2/26/2021
- by Glamsham Bureau
- GlamSham
Netflix may get most of the attention, but it’s hardly a one-stop shop for cinephiles who are looking to stream essential classic and contemporary films. Each of the prominent streaming platforms caters to its own niche of film obsessives.
From chilling horror fare on Shudder, to the boundless wonders of the Criterion Channel, and esoteric (but unmissable) festival hits on Film Movement Plus and Ovid.tv, IndieWire’s monthly guide highlights the best of what’s coming to every major streaming site, with an eye towards exclusive titles that may help readers decide which of these services is right for them.
Here’s the best of the best for February 2020.
“Close-Up”
The Criterion Channel invariably offers the deepest and most compelling slate of any streaming service, but this month’s additions almost border on overkill; how is anyone supposed to choose where to start? The programming lineup kicks off...
From chilling horror fare on Shudder, to the boundless wonders of the Criterion Channel, and esoteric (but unmissable) festival hits on Film Movement Plus and Ovid.tv, IndieWire’s monthly guide highlights the best of what’s coming to every major streaming site, with an eye towards exclusive titles that may help readers decide which of these services is right for them.
Here’s the best of the best for February 2020.
“Close-Up”
The Criterion Channel invariably offers the deepest and most compelling slate of any streaming service, but this month’s additions almost border on overkill; how is anyone supposed to choose where to start? The programming lineup kicks off...
- 2/10/2020
- by David Ehrlich
- Indiewire
For the discerning science fiction fan, this is the best of the Eastern-bloc Cold War Sci-fi epics, a genuinely brilliant and warmly human ‘Voyage to the End of the Universe,’ restored in 4k resolution. It’s from before 2001: A Space Odyssey, and has an equally wondrous but totally different vision of the future.
Ikarie Xb 1
Blu-ray
Nfa (Czechoslovak National Film Archive)
1963 / B&W / 2:35 widescreen / 88 min. / Street Date March, 2017
Starring: Radovan Lukavský, Zdenek Stepánek, Frantisek Smolík, Otto Lackovic, Irena Kacírková Dana Medrická
Cinematography: Jan Kalis, Sasa Rasilov
Production Designer: Jan Zázvorka
Special Effects: Jan Kalis
Film Editor: Josef Dobrichovský
Original Music: Zdenek Liska
Written by Jindrich Polák and Pavel Jurácek, adapted from the novel The Magellanic Cloud by Stanislaus Lem.
Produced by Filmové Studio Barrandov
Directed by Jindrich Polák
The trailer for the new restoration of Ikarie Xb 1 (no hyphen) pretty much tells the story. A shot...
Ikarie Xb 1
Blu-ray
Nfa (Czechoslovak National Film Archive)
1963 / B&W / 2:35 widescreen / 88 min. / Street Date March, 2017
Starring: Radovan Lukavský, Zdenek Stepánek, Frantisek Smolík, Otto Lackovic, Irena Kacírková Dana Medrická
Cinematography: Jan Kalis, Sasa Rasilov
Production Designer: Jan Zázvorka
Special Effects: Jan Kalis
Film Editor: Josef Dobrichovský
Original Music: Zdenek Liska
Written by Jindrich Polák and Pavel Jurácek, adapted from the novel The Magellanic Cloud by Stanislaus Lem.
Produced by Filmové Studio Barrandov
Directed by Jindrich Polák
The trailer for the new restoration of Ikarie Xb 1 (no hyphen) pretty much tells the story. A shot...
- 7/4/2017
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
The BBC seem to be doing well with dramas featuring big stars. Bringing in the likes of Tom Hiddleston these names attract a lot of attention, and very good performances. Apple Tree Yard is the latest, featuring one of the bests British actors in the form of Emily Watson. The question is does it make good use of her skills?
Adapted from Louise Doughty’s novel, Apple Tree Yard is the story of Yvonne Carmichael (Emily Watson). A married woman who has an exciting affair with an alluring stranger, Mark Costley (Ben Chaplin) she is at first excited by the danger of the new relationship. When things go terribly wrong though and she and her lover are accused of murder, just how much can she trust Costley and how well does she know him?
Apple Tree Yard is a lesson into the art of the reveal. Teasing a court case,...
Adapted from Louise Doughty’s novel, Apple Tree Yard is the story of Yvonne Carmichael (Emily Watson). A married woman who has an exciting affair with an alluring stranger, Mark Costley (Ben Chaplin) she is at first excited by the danger of the new relationship. When things go terribly wrong though and she and her lover are accused of murder, just how much can she trust Costley and how well does she know him?
Apple Tree Yard is a lesson into the art of the reveal. Teasing a court case,...
- 2/22/2017
- by Paul Metcalf
- Nerdly
See Full Gallery Here
Picture the scene: A happily-married woman, Susan (Amy Adams), inadvertently opens up the door to her past upon reading a manuscript titled Nocturnal Animals.
Hailing from an ex-husband (Jake Gyllenhaal) that she severed contact with some seven years ago, it’s the content of said script that really causes Susan’s skin to crawl, chronicling a family under siege by hoodlums on the highway late at night. The question then becomes, is it a harbinger of things to come?
That is, essentially, the elevator pitch to Nocturnal Animals, Tom Ford’s latest feature and the director’s first since A Single Man back in 2009. Pegged to land in the awards-friendly corridor of November, Entertainment Weekly has today peeled back the curtain on that domestic feud, as Gyllenhaal has a run-in with the law and Amy Adams, housed up safely in her home, ponders the unnerving situation at hand.
Picture the scene: A happily-married woman, Susan (Amy Adams), inadvertently opens up the door to her past upon reading a manuscript titled Nocturnal Animals.
Hailing from an ex-husband (Jake Gyllenhaal) that she severed contact with some seven years ago, it’s the content of said script that really causes Susan’s skin to crawl, chronicling a family under siege by hoodlums on the highway late at night. The question then becomes, is it a harbinger of things to come?
That is, essentially, the elevator pitch to Nocturnal Animals, Tom Ford’s latest feature and the director’s first since A Single Man back in 2009. Pegged to land in the awards-friendly corridor of November, Entertainment Weekly has today peeled back the curtain on that domestic feud, as Gyllenhaal has a run-in with the law and Amy Adams, housed up safely in her home, ponders the unnerving situation at hand.
- 7/25/2016
- by Michael Briers
- We Got This Covered
Six years ago, critics and audiences were taken completely by surprise by A Single Man. The sensitive, stylish drama, adapted from a 1964 novel by Christopher Isherwood, was about one day in the life of a dapper college professor (Colin Firth) who has decided to kill himself rather than live with the grief of his lover's death. For his poignant performance, Firth was nominated for an Academy Award. He lost - but when Firth scored the Best Actor Oscar the next year for The King's Speech, he took a moment to acknowledge A Single Man's first-time director from the podium: "And...
- 7/25/2016
- by Joe McGovern
- PEOPLE.com
Six years ago, critics and audiences were taken completely by surprise by A Single Man. The sensitive, stylish drama, adapted from a 1964 novel by Christopher Isherwood, was about one day in the life of a dapper college professor (Colin Firth) who has decided to kill himself rather than live with the grief of his lover's death. For his poignant performance, Firth was nominated for an Academy Award. He lost - but when Firth scored the Best Actor Oscar the next year for The King's Speech, he took a moment to acknowledge A Single Man's first-time director from the podium: "And...
- 7/25/2016
- by Joe McGovern
- PEOPLE.com
With a seemingly endless amount of streaming options — not only the titles at our disposal, but services themselves — we’ve taken it upon ourselves to highlight the titles that have recently hit the interwebs. Every week, one will be able to see the cream of the crop (or perhaps some simply interesting picks) of streaming titles (new and old) across platforms such as Netflix, iTunes, Amazon Instant Video, and more (note: U.S. only). Check out our rundown for this week’s selections below.
13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi (Michael Bay)
For better or worse, 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi is the purest distillation of Michael Bay’s cinematic voice. Bay’s favorite themes recur here from his brand of cheerleading GI Joe patriotism to righteous bloodlust to endlessly off-color non-sequiturs. And years of carpet bombing criticism targeted at his continued lack of political correctness and subtlety have...
13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi (Michael Bay)
For better or worse, 13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi is the purest distillation of Michael Bay’s cinematic voice. Bay’s favorite themes recur here from his brand of cheerleading GI Joe patriotism to righteous bloodlust to endlessly off-color non-sequiturs. And years of carpet bombing criticism targeted at his continued lack of political correctness and subtlety have...
- 5/27/2016
- by The Film Stage
- The Film Stage
In this episode of Off The Shelf, Ryan and Brian take a look at the new DVD and Blu-ray releases for Tuesday, May 24th 2016.
Subscribe in iTunes or RSS.
Follow-Up Keaton shorts collection Bill & Ted News Warner Archive: Unsinkable Molly Brown, They Were Expendable, She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, Victor / Victoria Kino Lorber: I Wake Up Screaming,Battle of the Sexes, Fritz Lang’s Western Union, Destiny Grindhouse Releasing: Fulci’s A Cat in the Brain Disney Movie Club: The Boatniks Signal One upcoming releases Universal: Patch Adams BFI: Carmen Jones (Released by Fox in the Us), The Crying Game, Cry of the City (Coming in September from Kino in the Us) Kickstarter: RoboDoc Links to Amazon 54 Director’s Cut Buster Keaton: The Shorts Collection 1917–1923 The Chase Devlin (1974): The Complete Series French Postcards Iphigenia Killer Dames: Two Gothic Chillers King & Four Queens Manhunter A Married Woman Mystery Science Theater 3000...
Subscribe in iTunes or RSS.
Follow-Up Keaton shorts collection Bill & Ted News Warner Archive: Unsinkable Molly Brown, They Were Expendable, She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, Victor / Victoria Kino Lorber: I Wake Up Screaming,Battle of the Sexes, Fritz Lang’s Western Union, Destiny Grindhouse Releasing: Fulci’s A Cat in the Brain Disney Movie Club: The Boatniks Signal One upcoming releases Universal: Patch Adams BFI: Carmen Jones (Released by Fox in the Us), The Crying Game, Cry of the City (Coming in September from Kino in the Us) Kickstarter: RoboDoc Links to Amazon 54 Director’s Cut Buster Keaton: The Shorts Collection 1917–1923 The Chase Devlin (1974): The Complete Series French Postcards Iphigenia Killer Dames: Two Gothic Chillers King & Four Queens Manhunter A Married Woman Mystery Science Theater 3000...
- 5/25/2016
- by Ryan Gallagher
- CriterionCast
Every week we dive into the cream of the crop when it comes to home releases, including Blu-ray and DVDs, as well as recommended deals of the week. Check out our rundown below and return every Tuesday for the best (or most interesting) films one can take home. Note that if you’re looking to support the site, every purchase you make through the links below helps us and is greatly appreciated.
A Married Woman (Jean-Luc Godard)
A Married Woman is an often overlooked masterwork from Godard’s most productive period. The plot appears to be simple: Charlotte (Macha Méril) is a young married woman having an affair with an actor. When she discovers that she is pregnant, she must decide which man is the father and which man she will stay with. In Godard’s hands, however, the film, described as a film about a woman’s beauty and the ugliness of her world,...
A Married Woman (Jean-Luc Godard)
A Married Woman is an often overlooked masterwork from Godard’s most productive period. The plot appears to be simple: Charlotte (Macha Méril) is a young married woman having an affair with an actor. When she discovers that she is pregnant, she must decide which man is the father and which man she will stay with. In Godard’s hands, however, the film, described as a film about a woman’s beauty and the ugliness of her world,...
- 5/24/2016
- by The Film Stage
- The Film Stage
Here's something special, a Godard movie about people as much as concepts, and the dialogue doesn't sound as if it belongs in cartoon bubbles. Jean-Luc Godard turns his intellect to the subject of relationships and reveals a lot about himself. It's a beautiful show too -- with the incredible Macha Méril visually cut up for study piece by piece. A Married Woman Blu-ray Entertainment One / Cohen Film Collection 1964 / B&W / 1:37 full frame / 95 min. / Un Femme Marieacute;e / Street Date May 24, 2016 / 39.98 Starring Bernard Noël, Macha Méril, Philippe Leroy, Roger Leenhardt. Cinematography Raoul Coutard Film Editor Andrée Choty, Françoise Collin, Agnès Guillemot, Gérard Pollicand. Written and Directed by Jean-Luc Godard
Reviewed by Glenn Erickson
Imagine that -- a Jean-Luc Godard film not primarily organized around destructing film language. By 1964 Godard had taken apart the conventions of film editing and structure. He'd plumbed new depths in genre autopsies and blended moving pictures...
Reviewed by Glenn Erickson
Imagine that -- a Jean-Luc Godard film not primarily organized around destructing film language. By 1964 Godard had taken apart the conventions of film editing and structure. He'd plumbed new depths in genre autopsies and blended moving pictures...
- 5/10/2016
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
The Eighth Annual Robert Classic French Film Festival — co-produced by Cinema St. Louis and the Webster University Film Series — celebrates St. Louis’ Gallic heritage and France’s cinematic legacy. The featured films span the decades from the 1920s through the early 1990s, offering a comprehensive overview of French cinema.
The fest is annually highlighted by significant restorations, and we’re especially pleased to present Jacques Rivette’s long-unavailable epic Out 1: Spectre Additional restoration highlights include Jean-Luc Godard’s A Married Woman and Max Ophüls’ too-little-seen From Mayerling To Sarajevo. Both Ophüls’ film and Louis Malle’s Elevator To The Gallows – with a jazz score by St. Louis-area native Miles Davis — screen from 35mm prints. All films will screen at Webster University’s Moore Auditorium (47- E. Lockwood)
Music fans will further delight in the Rats & People Motion Picture Orchestra’s accompaniment and original score for Carl Th. Dreyer’s...
The fest is annually highlighted by significant restorations, and we’re especially pleased to present Jacques Rivette’s long-unavailable epic Out 1: Spectre Additional restoration highlights include Jean-Luc Godard’s A Married Woman and Max Ophüls’ too-little-seen From Mayerling To Sarajevo. Both Ophüls’ film and Louis Malle’s Elevator To The Gallows – with a jazz score by St. Louis-area native Miles Davis — screen from 35mm prints. All films will screen at Webster University’s Moore Auditorium (47- E. Lockwood)
Music fans will further delight in the Rats & People Motion Picture Orchestra’s accompaniment and original score for Carl Th. Dreyer’s...
- 2/16/2016
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Fritz Lang was born on this day 125 years ago and, to celebrate, Matthew Thrift has drawn up a list of "10 essential films" for the BFI. Also in today's roundup: Claude Chabrol's episodes for the 1980 television series Fantômas, the Chiseler on William Dieterle, Eddie Cantor and Houseley Stevenson, Yorgos Lanthimos on Nikos Papatakis's The Shepherds of Calamity, a wide-ranging interview with D.A. Pennebaker, John Waters on Christmas, a new restoration of Jean-Luc Godard's A Married Woman (1964), David Lynch and Ringo Starr on music and meditation, video essays on Luis Buñuel, remembering Robert Loggia—and more. » - David Hudson...
- 12/5/2015
- Keyframe
Fritz Lang was born on this day 125 years ago and, to celebrate, Matthew Thrift has drawn up a list of "10 essential films" for the BFI. Also in today's roundup: Claude Chabrol's episodes for the 1980 television series Fantômas, the Chiseler on William Dieterle, Eddie Cantor and Houseley Stevenson, Yorgos Lanthimos on Nikos Papatakis's The Shepherds of Calamity, a wide-ranging interview with D.A. Pennebaker, John Waters on Christmas, a new restoration of Jean-Luc Godard's A Married Woman (1964), David Lynch and Ringo Starr on music and meditation, video essays on Luis Buñuel, remembering Robert Loggia—and more. » - David Hudson...
- 12/5/2015
- Fandor: Keyframe
Since any New York cinephile has a nearly suffocating wealth of theatrical options, we figured it’d be best to compile some of the more worthwhile repertory showings into one handy list. Displayed below are a few of the city’s most reliable theaters and links to screenings of their weekend offerings — films you’re not likely to see in a theater again anytime soon, and many of which are, also, on 35mm. If you have a chance to attend any of these, we’re of the mind that it’s time extremely well-spent.
Museum of the Moving Image
Thanks to “Lonely Places: Film Noir and the American Landscape,” you can see Tomorrow Is Another Day and Frank Borzage‘s Moonrise this Saturday.
Sunset Boulevard, The Godfather, and The Godfather Part II screen this weekend.
Film Forum
Several titles will play in a retrospective celebrating production designer William Cameron Menzies,...
Museum of the Moving Image
Thanks to “Lonely Places: Film Noir and the American Landscape,” you can see Tomorrow Is Another Day and Frank Borzage‘s Moonrise this Saturday.
Sunset Boulevard, The Godfather, and The Godfather Part II screen this weekend.
Film Forum
Several titles will play in a retrospective celebrating production designer William Cameron Menzies,...
- 12/4/2015
- by Nick Newman
- The Film Stage
Last year, in entry on Goodbye to Language, David Bordwell called Jean-Luc Godard the “youngest filmmaker at work today.” And today today, Jlg turns 85. In January and February, the BFI will present a major, two-part season that follows similar, relatively recent retrospectives in New York and Toronto. Starting tomorrow, a new restoration of A Married Woman (1964) screens at Bam in New York, where the 50th anniversary restoration of Pierrot le Fou will open at Film Forum on December 18. We've got trailers for both and links to tributes to Jlg in celebration. » - David Hudson...
- 12/3/2015
- Fandor: Keyframe
Last year, in entry on Goodbye to Language, David Bordwell called Jean-Luc Godard the “youngest filmmaker at work today.” And today today, Jlg turns 85. In January and February, the BFI will present a major, two-part season that follows similar, relatively recent retrospectives in New York and Toronto. Starting tomorrow, a new restoration of A Married Woman (1964) screens at Bam in New York, where the 50th anniversary restoration of Pierrot le Fou will open at Film Forum on December 18. We've got trailers for both and links to tributes to Jlg in celebration. » - David Hudson...
- 12/3/2015
- Keyframe
Ahead of BAMcinématek’s new restoration of A Married Woman we offer a primer on the new wave auteur’s essential work
Godard is as revolutionary and influential a hinge-figure in cinema as Joyce was to literature and the cubists were to painting. He saw a rule and broke it. Every day, in every movie. Incorporating what professionals thought of as mistakes (jump-cuts were only the most famous instance), mixing high culture and low without snobbish distinctions, demolishing the fourth wall between viewing himself as a maker of fictional documentaries, essay movies, and viewing his movies as an inseparable extension of his pioneering work as a film critic for Cahiers du Cinéma in the 1950s.
Related: Close up: Jean-Luc Godard pronounces film dead
Continue reading...
Godard is as revolutionary and influential a hinge-figure in cinema as Joyce was to literature and the cubists were to painting. He saw a rule and broke it. Every day, in every movie. Incorporating what professionals thought of as mistakes (jump-cuts were only the most famous instance), mixing high culture and low without snobbish distinctions, demolishing the fourth wall between viewing himself as a maker of fictional documentaries, essay movies, and viewing his movies as an inseparable extension of his pioneering work as a film critic for Cahiers du Cinéma in the 1950s.
Related: Close up: Jean-Luc Godard pronounces film dead
Continue reading...
- 12/2/2015
- by John Patterson
- The Guardian - Film News
Above: Italian poster for Weekend (Jean-Luc Godard, France, 1967).Flaming car aside, the poster above, with its emphasis on a torrid embrace that seems right off the cover of a Harlequin romance, doesn’t really scream Jean-Luc Godard. When I came across two Italian posters for Weekend the other day (the other, seen at the end of this piece, more sexploitation than romance but equally inappropriate to the film) I started to look at other Italian posters for Godard’s films and I found them all strikingly different from their French counterparts.While the Nouvelle vague in France coincided with a new wave in poster design, based mostly around photomontage, Italian distributors either resisted moving away from the kind of overtly emotional, painterly style of poster illustration that had been their stock in trade, or deliberately subverted the iconoclastic new films coming out of France with images that were more comfortingly familiar or sensationally commercial.
- 11/7/2015
- by Adrian Curry
- MUBI
In 1960, Jean-Luc Godard’s first feature film, Breathless, would make him an icon of French cinema, inaugurating a career that has consistently expanded society’s definitions and expectations of cinema. That film alone would have reason enough to consider him an important filmmaker, but Godard went on to direct fourteen more features through 1967, culminating with his attack on bourgeois culture, Weekend.
Following this extraordinary run of films, Godard found himself at a moment of great change. His romantic and artistic partnership with Anna Karina had ended, to be replaced with a new (but short-lived) marriage to Anne Wiazemsky, who would serve as a bridge to the current youth culture. Godard’s politics had also changed considerably since the 1950s. His conservatism, a relic of his parents’s politics, had been replaced with an interest in Maoism and an increasing distaste for anything evoking America. (Classic Hollywood cinema initially got a pass,...
Following this extraordinary run of films, Godard found himself at a moment of great change. His romantic and artistic partnership with Anna Karina had ended, to be replaced with a new (but short-lived) marriage to Anne Wiazemsky, who would serve as a bridge to the current youth culture. Godard’s politics had also changed considerably since the 1950s. His conservatism, a relic of his parents’s politics, had been replaced with an interest in Maoism and an increasing distaste for anything evoking America. (Classic Hollywood cinema initially got a pass,...
- 10/25/2015
- by Brian Marks
- SoundOnSight
Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture: See how Mad Max: Fury Road is shot to keep your eyes on the center of the frame (via Design Taxi): This video essay by Jacob T. Swinney highlights the major film references in Quentin Tarantino movies (via Devour): Watch a sexy new trailer for the restored and remastered re-release of Jean-Luc Godard's A Married Woman (via The Film Stage): Cosplay of the Day: Sexy Rocket Raccoon of Guardians of the Galaxy (via Superhero Hype): In honor of the new movie, here's an Honest Trailer for the Entourage TV series: In anticipation of the upcoming movie, here's a homemade shot-for-shot redo of the Jurassic World...
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- 6/3/2015
- by Christopher Campbell
- Movies.com
Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture: Channing Tatum disguised himself as an old man to prank fans at a special strip-tastic Magic Mike Xxl screening (via Geek Tyrant): See how Mad Max: Fury Road is shot to keep your eyes on the center of the frame (via Design Taxi): This video essay by Jacob T. Swinney highlights the major film references in Quentin Tarantino movies (via Devour): Watch a sexy new trailer for the restored and remastered re-release of Jean-Luc Godard's A Married Woman (via The Film Stage): Cosplay of the Day: Sexy Rocket Raccoon of Guardians of the Galaxy (via Superhero Hype): In honor of the new movie, here's an Honest Trailer for the...
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Read More...
- 6/3/2015
- by Christopher Campbell
- Movies.com
Nocturna did not rape Batwoman.
The debate’s been going on for months now – ever since Batwoman v2 #34. Did Nocturna, the vampire super villain in the Bat books, and use her vampire hypnosis powers to rape Batwoman. I say no. But it’s not as simple as that.
Let me explain.
In Batwoman v 2 # 34, Nocturna saw Batwoman fighting and found her alluring. During the fight, Batwoman’s mask was displaced and Nocturna saw Batwoman’s face, which she recognized as that of Gotham City socialite Kate Kane.
That night, Batwoman – well, Kate Kane but I’m going to call her Batwoman – was going to bed when a shadowy figure appeared in her bedroom and this happened:
Panel One: Batwoman saw a figure in the shadows and asked, “Maggs, is that you?”
(For the record, Batwoman is a lesbian. Maggs is Maggie Sawyer, Kate’s ex-fiancée, with whom she broke up earlier the same issue.
The debate’s been going on for months now – ever since Batwoman v2 #34. Did Nocturna, the vampire super villain in the Bat books, and use her vampire hypnosis powers to rape Batwoman. I say no. But it’s not as simple as that.
Let me explain.
In Batwoman v 2 # 34, Nocturna saw Batwoman fighting and found her alluring. During the fight, Batwoman’s mask was displaced and Nocturna saw Batwoman’s face, which she recognized as that of Gotham City socialite Kate Kane.
That night, Batwoman – well, Kate Kane but I’m going to call her Batwoman – was going to bed when a shadowy figure appeared in her bedroom and this happened:
Panel One: Batwoman saw a figure in the shadows and asked, “Maggs, is that you?”
(For the record, Batwoman is a lesbian. Maggs is Maggie Sawyer, Kate’s ex-fiancée, with whom she broke up earlier the same issue.
- 4/10/2015
- by Bob Ingersoll
- Comicmix.com
If the on-screen chemistry between Dakota Johnson and Jamie Dornan in Fifty Shades of Grey leaves you more bothered than hot, don’t fret, there’s plenty of other sexy movies out there to watch instead.
From steamy rom-coms (Pretty Woman, Love and Other Drugs) to swoon-worthy classics (Titanic, The Notebook) to those movies that definitely put the adult in adult drama (Unfaithful, Ghost) we’ve picked out some of the sexiest films — and their sexiest moments — of all-time to suit your every need. Who needs Fifty Shades when you’ve got these 15?
Titanic
[Photo Credit: Paramount]
A rich debutante (Kate Winslet) and a poor artist (Leonardo DiCaprio) fall in love aboard the doomed ship and their hearts go on.
Sexiest Moment: The lovers sneak away to the steerage and get it on in the back of a car. Steamy, both literally and figurative.
Unfaithful
A married woman (Diane Lane) finds herself in...
From steamy rom-coms (Pretty Woman, Love and Other Drugs) to swoon-worthy classics (Titanic, The Notebook) to those movies that definitely put the adult in adult drama (Unfaithful, Ghost) we’ve picked out some of the sexiest films — and their sexiest moments — of all-time to suit your every need. Who needs Fifty Shades when you’ve got these 15?
Titanic
[Photo Credit: Paramount]
A rich debutante (Kate Winslet) and a poor artist (Leonardo DiCaprio) fall in love aboard the doomed ship and their hearts go on.
Sexiest Moment: The lovers sneak away to the steerage and get it on in the back of a car. Steamy, both literally and figurative.
Unfaithful
A married woman (Diane Lane) finds herself in...
- 2/17/2015
- by Aly Semigran
- VH1.com
If the on-screen chemistry between Dakota Johnson and Jamie Dornan in Fifty Shades of Grey leaves you more bothered than hot, don’t fret, there’s plenty of other sexy movies out there to watch instead.
From steamy rom-coms (Pretty Woman, Love and Other Drugs) to swoon-worthy classics (Titanic, The Notebook) to those movies that definitely put the adult in adult drama (Unfaithful, Ghost) we’ve picked out some of the sexiest films — and their sexiest moments — of all-time to suit your every need. Who needs Fifty Shades when you’ve got these 15?
Titanic
[Photo Credit: Paramount]
A rich debutante (Kate Winslet) and a poor artist (Leonardo DiCaprio) fall in love aboard the doomed ship and their hearts go on.
Sexiest Moment: The lovers sneak away to the steerage and get it on in the back of a car. Steamy, both literally and figurative.
Unfaithful
A married woman (Diane Lane) finds herself in...
From steamy rom-coms (Pretty Woman, Love and Other Drugs) to swoon-worthy classics (Titanic, The Notebook) to those movies that definitely put the adult in adult drama (Unfaithful, Ghost) we’ve picked out some of the sexiest films — and their sexiest moments — of all-time to suit your every need. Who needs Fifty Shades when you’ve got these 15?
Titanic
[Photo Credit: Paramount]
A rich debutante (Kate Winslet) and a poor artist (Leonardo DiCaprio) fall in love aboard the doomed ship and their hearts go on.
Sexiest Moment: The lovers sneak away to the steerage and get it on in the back of a car. Steamy, both literally and figurative.
Unfaithful
A married woman (Diane Lane) finds herself in...
- 2/17/2015
- by Aly Semigran
- TheFabLife - Movies
Jean-Luc Godard, and more specifically his 1965 film Pierrot le Fou, literally changed my life, and set me on a path toward intense and everlasting cinephilia. Since the first time I saw that film, it has remained my favorite movie of all time and Godard my favorite director. So when I finally had the chance to see Film socialisme in 2010, his first feature film in six years, I had high hopes that the old master was going to yet again bring something new to the table. Those hopes were assuredly met. I considered the film the best of that year and still believe it is an astonishing movie, rife with so much of what defines Godard in this is fourth(?), fifth(?), in any case, current, phase of his career.
The first words of Film socialisme, at least according to the “Navajo English” subtitles, are “money – public – water.” Literally, this refers to...
The first words of Film socialisme, at least according to the “Navajo English” subtitles, are “money – public – water.” Literally, this refers to...
- 10/25/2014
- by Jeremy Carr
- SoundOnSight
The Masters section is always a Croisette and Lido heavy selection and this year is no different. From Cannes we have Jean-Luc Godard’s Goodbye to Language 3D (which is a top of the charts item according to our Blake Williams) Andrey Zvyagintsev’s Leviathan (which our Nicholas Bell thinks is near perfection and calls “cinematic sublimity with this multilayered and operatic exploration of the crushing corruption of an unchecked regime” and Abderrahmane Sissakos’ Timbuktu. On tap directly from Venice we might have the retirement films from Roy Andersson (A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence) and Ann Hui (The Golden Era), with some South Korean representation from Hong Sang-soo in Hill of Freedom and Revivre from Im Kwon-taek, but the worthy mentions are the nabbed world premiere status items from the always fascinating, taste dispenser and wide-ranging filmography in Michael Winterbottom & the always wry and humorous latest...
- 7/29/2014
- by Eric Lavallee
- IONCINEMA.com
Perhaps the most decisive film at the recent Cannes Film Festival, the Jury Prize winning Goodbye to Language has found a home in the U.S via Kino Lorber folks. THR reports that it’ll open theatrically, in 3D, in New York in late October (at the Film Society of Lincoln Center and IFC Center) and then follow with a national theatrical rollout on 3D screens. A digital VOD, home media and 3D Blu-ray release is planned for 2015.
Gist: A married woman and a single man meet. They love, they argue, fists fly. A dog strays between town and country. The seasons pass. A second film begins…
Worth Noting: This counts as Godard’s 39th feature film.
Do We Care?: Our Blake Williams found the picture to be “breathless”, equating this to a “rushing stream of often contradictory musings about (among other things) geometry, human conscience, poop, death, depth,...
Gist: A married woman and a single man meet. They love, they argue, fists fly. A dog strays between town and country. The seasons pass. A second film begins…
Worth Noting: This counts as Godard’s 39th feature film.
Do We Care?: Our Blake Williams found the picture to be “breathless”, equating this to a “rushing stream of often contradictory musings about (among other things) geometry, human conscience, poop, death, depth,...
- 7/1/2014
- by Eric Lavallee
- IONCINEMA.com
Welcome back to Cannes Check, In Contention's annual preview of the films in Competition at next month's Cannes Film Festival, which kicks off on May 14. Taking on different selections every day, we'll be examining what they're about, who's involved and what their chances are of snagging an award from Jane Campion's jury. Next up, the oldest director (with the shortest film) in the lineup: Jean-Luc Godard's "Goodbye to Language." The director: Jean-Luc Godard (French-Swiss, 83 years old). How to sum up Godard in a paragraph? One of the founding fathers of the French New Wave, and arguably its most persistently radical innovative member, with a career spanning seven decades, 39 feature films and an indeterminate number of creative phases. One of the sizable school of French filmmakers who had a formative stint as a critic for Cahiers du cinéma, Godard was born and educated in Paris -- the very city...
- 5/5/2014
- by Guy Lodge
- Hitfix
Will 2014 finally be the year we see Jean Luc-Godard's "Goodbye To Language 3D"? It has been four years since his garishly digital headscratcher "Film socialisme," and while he did contribute to the omnibus "3X3D," it's "Goodbye To Language 3D"—his first feature entirely in the format—that everyone has been waiting for. A teaser (soon yanked) dropped online as long ago as last summer, but with the Cannes Film Festival around the corner, could the movie finally be seeing release? (The status of his one is so ephemeral, we had left it as an honorable mention in our predictions for this year's fest.) Well, with a batch of stills arriving, it perhaps suggests the movie is closing in on the finish line. And while previous descriptions of the plot suggested a story about a talking dog who intervenes between a man and a woman who no longer speak the same language,...
- 3/24/2014
- by Kevin Jagernauth
- The Playlist
Zweig peeled back the veneer of Austro-Hungarian culture to expose sexual repression and the nature of love – no wonder he inspired Anderson's latest film
Why read Stefan Zweig? It is wonderful that Wes Anderson has cited him as an inspiration for his latest film, The Grand Budapest Hotel, but there have been quite a few people who would rather you didn't. Most famous of these were Hitler and Goebbels, for the very simple reason, at the same time both boring and terrifying, that Zweig was a Jew, on top of being the most translated author writing in German at the time. Being both was an intolerable affront, and if Hitler or his agents never laid hands on him, it was because they didn't have to: not only would burning all copies of Zweig's works have been a time-consuming exercise, he and his wife killed themselves, in exile in Brazil in...
Why read Stefan Zweig? It is wonderful that Wes Anderson has cited him as an inspiration for his latest film, The Grand Budapest Hotel, but there have been quite a few people who would rather you didn't. Most famous of these were Hitler and Goebbels, for the very simple reason, at the same time both boring and terrifying, that Zweig was a Jew, on top of being the most translated author writing in German at the time. Being both was an intolerable affront, and if Hitler or his agents never laid hands on him, it was because they didn't have to: not only would burning all copies of Zweig's works have been a time-consuming exercise, he and his wife killed themselves, in exile in Brazil in...
- 2/25/2014
- by Nicholas Lezard
- The Guardian - Film News
To accompany the exhaustive retrospective of the films of Jean-Luc Godard (49 programs in 21 days) that started as part of the New York Film Festival and runs through the end of October, I had planned to select my ten all-time favorite posters for Godard’s films. But when I sat down to the task and laid out the ten I’d chosen in front of me, the result was a selection of posters so overly familiar as to be banal. It looked like the postcard rack of any film bookstore in Paris. Much as I had hoped to choose less obvious designs, when it came down to it the posters created for Godard’s films in the 60s are hands down among the greatest film posters ever made: Clément Hurel’s Breathless, Chica’s Une femme est une femme, Jacques Vaissier’s Vivre sa vie, Georges Kerfyser’s Band à part and Une femme mariée,...
- 10/18/2013
- by Adrian Curry
- MUBI
#18. Jean-Luc Godard’s Goodbye To Language 3D
Gist: The idea is simple: A married woman and a single man meet. They love, they argue, fists fly. A dog strays between town and country. The seasons pass. The man and woman meet again. The dog finds itself between them. The other is in one, the one is in the other and they are three. The former husband shatters everything. A second film begins: the same as the first, and yet not. From the human race we pass to metaphor. This ends in barking and a baby’s cries. In the meantime, we will have seen people talking of the demise of the dollar, of truth in mathematics and of the death of a robin. Ought to be one of the most experimental and irreverent uses of 3D technology yet.
Prediction: Can’t see this not playing in Cannes, and if Godard...
Gist: The idea is simple: A married woman and a single man meet. They love, they argue, fists fly. A dog strays between town and country. The seasons pass. The man and woman meet again. The dog finds itself between them. The other is in one, the one is in the other and they are three. The former husband shatters everything. A second film begins: the same as the first, and yet not. From the human race we pass to metaphor. This ends in barking and a baby’s cries. In the meantime, we will have seen people talking of the demise of the dollar, of truth in mathematics and of the death of a robin. Ought to be one of the most experimental and irreverent uses of 3D technology yet.
Prediction: Can’t see this not playing in Cannes, and if Godard...
- 4/13/2013
- by Blake Williams
- IONCINEMA.com
Congratulations Janet! The singer debunked engagement rumors by revealing that she has already married her boyfriend Wissam. So cool!
Janet Jackson successfully pulled the wool over everyone’s eyes, as she revealed on Feb. 25 that she secretly married her boyfriend Wissam Al Mana in a “quiet, private, and beautiful ceremony.” Janet had been asked if she could confirm or deny engagement rumors when she admitted that she was already a wife! Read on for all the wedding details.
Janet Jackson Marries Wissam Al Mana In Secret Ceremony
Janet, 46, and Wissam, 37, were rumored to have gotten engaged last year, and they were said to have been planning an extravagant spring wedding. When asked about her marital status, Janet said that she and Wissam had already tied the knot!
“The rumors regarding an extravagant wedding are simply not true. Last year we were married in a quiet, private, and beautiful ceremony,” Janet told Et Online.
Janet Jackson successfully pulled the wool over everyone’s eyes, as she revealed on Feb. 25 that she secretly married her boyfriend Wissam Al Mana in a “quiet, private, and beautiful ceremony.” Janet had been asked if she could confirm or deny engagement rumors when she admitted that she was already a wife! Read on for all the wedding details.
Janet Jackson Marries Wissam Al Mana In Secret Ceremony
Janet, 46, and Wissam, 37, were rumored to have gotten engaged last year, and they were said to have been planning an extravagant spring wedding. When asked about her marital status, Janet said that she and Wissam had already tied the knot!
“The rumors regarding an extravagant wedding are simply not true. Last year we were married in a quiet, private, and beautiful ceremony,” Janet told Et Online.
- 2/25/2013
- by Eleanore Hutch
- HollywoodLife
After seven seasons, ten Emmys and an uncountable amount of laughs, the critically acclaimed comedy series ’30 Rock’ came to a close on Jan. 31 with an emotional final episode.
30 Rock went out with a bang! Liz Lemon (Tina Fey) got her happy ending earlier in the season by marrying hot dog vendor Criss Chross (James Marsden), but she spent the duration of the final episode on Jan. 31 rounding up the cast of Tgs, a show within the show, for one last hurrah!
The ending of Tgs is bittersweet. Scared of what the future holds, Liz finds herself miserable as a stay at home mom.
“It’s Ok to want to work,” Criss consoled Liz. “One of us has to. We just got it backwards: You’re the dad.”
“I do like ignoring your questions while I try to watch TV,” Liz agreed, before a flash forward showed her working on a...
30 Rock went out with a bang! Liz Lemon (Tina Fey) got her happy ending earlier in the season by marrying hot dog vendor Criss Chross (James Marsden), but she spent the duration of the final episode on Jan. 31 rounding up the cast of Tgs, a show within the show, for one last hurrah!
The ending of Tgs is bittersweet. Scared of what the future holds, Liz finds herself miserable as a stay at home mom.
“It’s Ok to want to work,” Criss consoled Liz. “One of us has to. We just got it backwards: You’re the dad.”
“I do like ignoring your questions while I try to watch TV,” Liz agreed, before a flash forward showed her working on a...
- 2/1/2013
- by Christopher Rogers
- HollywoodLife
Goodbye to Language (Adieu au langage)
Director/Writer: Jean-Luc Godard
U.S. Distributor: 20th Century Fox
Cast: Héloise Godet, Jessica Erickson and Kamel Abdeli
He has always been versatile with the form, questioned cinema’s shape and its role, so the curious such as myself wonder how Jean-Luc Godard will he challenge the 3D form and how he’ll appropriate it? Godard in 3D is something I definitely want to see, and apparently some buyers at a major studio think so to (aka the most bizarre pick-up of 2012).
Gist: The idea is simple: A married woman and a single man meet. They love, they argue, fists fly. A dog strays between town and country. The seasons pass. The man and woman meet again. The dog finds itself between them. The other is in one, the one is in the other and they are three. The former husband shatters everything. A...
Director/Writer: Jean-Luc Godard
U.S. Distributor: 20th Century Fox
Cast: Héloise Godet, Jessica Erickson and Kamel Abdeli
He has always been versatile with the form, questioned cinema’s shape and its role, so the curious such as myself wonder how Jean-Luc Godard will he challenge the 3D form and how he’ll appropriate it? Godard in 3D is something I definitely want to see, and apparently some buyers at a major studio think so to (aka the most bizarre pick-up of 2012).
Gist: The idea is simple: A married woman and a single man meet. They love, they argue, fists fly. A dog strays between town and country. The seasons pass. The man and woman meet again. The dog finds itself between them. The other is in one, the one is in the other and they are three. The former husband shatters everything. A...
- 1/14/2013
- by Eric Lavallee
- IONCINEMA.com
Alice, is that you? It looks like Tina's equally witty mini-me dropped by the '30 Rock' set for an adorable cameo -- and rolled her eyes like a champ! Do You think that's Tina's daughter? Tina Fey's daughter Alice Richmond, 7, appears to have the comedy chops of her hilarious parents -- dad Jeff Richmond is also a Second City alum -- and showed off her impeccable comedic timing during the Nov. 29 episode of 30 Rock. Although it hasn't been 100 percent confirmed, fans speculated it was Tina's oldest daughter who made the short cameo as a young Liz Lemon. In a flashback scene to Liz as a little kid -- to explain the history behind Liz's infamous eye roll -- it appeared to be Tina's mini-me on screen, providing the hilarious facial expression. We think it is -- she looks Just like Alice, even behind the thick prop glasses! Do You think that's Alice HollyMoms?...
- 11/30/2012
- by Christina Stiehl
- HollywoodLife
The hot singer was encouraged by his father to avoid trouble with his fans -- do You think he is listening to this advice? One Direction's Harry Styles is one of the biggest names in music, but his father warned him not to take advantage of his fame by making huge mistakes with girls! 18-year-old Harry's father Des Styles warned his son to protect himself while dating, he told British People. "I said to Harry, 'Just make sure you don’t get anyone pregnant,'" he said. "If that were to happen, it would really screw things up big time. There’s nothing I can do to stop him doing things anyway. From a One Direction aspect, it wouldn’t be great for all sorts of reasons. Still, I don’t think it would bother him too much if he did get a girl pregnant. He would be a...
- 6/30/2012
- by William Earl
- HollywoodLife
Did Niall confirm that he's dating Demi on stage? The One Directioner did the Cutest thing on stage! Read on for more details! Niall Horan is quite the romantic. The One Directioner named a stuffed-animal cat on stage after his rumored girlfriend, Demi Lovato. "If this were Niall's cat, he'd call it 'Demi Lovato,'" Niall said. So cute! What do you think, HollywoodLifers? Do You think Niall and Demi are dating? More One Direction news: One Direction Feud: Lance Bass Yells At Harry Styles Did One Direction’s Harry Styles Kiss Niall Horan? Did One Direction’s Harry Styles Have An Affair With A Married Woman?...
- 6/29/2012
- by Nicole Karlis
- HollywoodLife
Omg -- Harry was Too Cute as a little kid! We love this picture he posted on Twitter! One Direction singer Harry Styles recently tweeted this sweet pic of him cuddling a stuffed animal! We can't get over the "aww-factor" of this pic! The photo also features Harry's friend, Alice Fagan. Lucky friend! What do you think of Baby Harry, HollywoodLifers? [Twitter] -- Margaret Quigley More Harry Styles news: One Direction Feud: Lance Bass Yells At Harry Styles Did One Direction’s Harry Styles Kiss Niall Horan? Did One Direction’s Harry Styles Have An Affair With A Married Woman? [polldaddy poll=6347509]...
- 6/27/2012
- by HL
- HollywoodLife
So cute -- the couple took pics in matching sleepwear! They are totally swooning over each other! Read on for more details. You know it's true love when even your pajamas match! One Directioner Louis Tomlinson and girlfriend Eleanor Calder posted pics on Instagram wearing matching Coca-Cola pajamas. "Coca-Cola world," Eleanor wrote. We think it's totally adorable that they wear matching PJs to bed. They must be so in love! What do you think, HollywoodLifers? Weigh in below! More One Direction: One Direction Wants To Date You, Reveals Best Pickup Lines Did One Direction’s Harry Styles Have An Affair With A Married Woman? Harry Styles: I Would Love To Date A Cougar...
- 6/27/2012
- by Nicole Karlis
- HollywoodLife
Watch Justin's brand-new video interview with 'Forbes' to learn the secret(s) behind his success! Justin Bieber: venture capitalist? That's how the cover of Forbes' "Celebrity 100" issue describes the Biebs, accompanied by a photo of Justin looking sharp in a business suit. The Biebs ranks at No. 3 on the magazine's list of 2012's top-earning celebs, estimating his year-end profits at $55 million. A video interview, featuring Justin's manager Scooter Braun, reveals the secrets behind Justin's business empire. "He's extremely savvy for his age," Scooter says of his mini-mogul. "No one's ever been this young and this famous before." Justin also talks about how he tries to work some form of charity into everything he does, as he feels it's important to inspire his fans to give back. Watch the interview with Justin and Scooter below: More Justin Bieber News: Justin Bieber Reveals The Song He Wrote For His Mom Justin Bieber...
- 5/16/2012
- by HL Staff
- HollywoodLife
No matter what the haters say, Justin Bieber will always have Kim's back! Read on to find out why! Justin Bieber wears many hats: super star, songwriter, entrepreneur, boyfriend and loyal friend. Justin, 18, has been friends with Kim Kardashian for a couple of years now -- and he definitely takes that friendship very seriously. In a new interview with GQ magazine, the reporter wrote about how Justin didn't hesitate to defend Kim when one of his handlers bad-mouthed the reality TV star. "You guys are so mean, bro.... People say she doesn't do anything; she actually does do stuff.... She works hard," Justin said. Aww! So cute! Kim, you have a good friend in Jb! What do you think, HollywoodLifers? Is Justin the most loyal friend in Hollywood? Weigh in below. [GQ] More Justin Bieber News: Justin Bieber Reveals The Song He Wrote For His Mom Justin Bieber Gets Hot & Heavy...
- 5/16/2012
- by Nicole Karlis
- HollywoodLife
Weren't Justin & Carly so cute together this weekend? The Biebs is Not a bad friend to have! A hoard of screaming Beliebers went wild when Justin Bieber took the stage May 12 at Wango Tango in Carson, Calif., but the Biebs sadly was not there to give another epic "Boyfriend" performance. He was there to support fellow pop phenomenon Carly Rae Jepsen, who belted out a killer rendition of her own hit "Call Me Maybe." Watch Carly's Wango Tango performance of "Call Me Maybe" below: [flv width="600" height="350"]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=21aNPegivLk/flv] More Justin Bieber News: Justin Bieber Reveals The Song He Wrote For His Mom Justin Bieber Gets Hot & Heavy With A Married Woman — Find Out Who Justin Bieber Gets In The Ring With Boxer Floyd Mayweather...
- 5/13/2012
- by HL Staff
- HollywoodLife
Justin Bieber tweeted about working with The Lonely Island. Does that mean we'll see him in a skit on 'Saturday Night Live' tomorrow? Justin Bieber is sure getting around! With his Believe album release right around the corner, the 18-year-old pop star is promoting left and right -- and from the sound of it, we're going to see him on Saturday Night Live this weekend! "filming something very special...very funny in nyc," he tweeted May 11. Justin also wrote to the sketch comedy group, The Lonely Island, writing, "Good workout." Working with guys like Andy Samberg would be an awesome career move, especially since Justin Timberlake's "Dick in a Box" with The Lonely Island won an Emmy. Do you think we'll be seeing Justin on SNL this weekend? [Twitter] More Justin Bieber News: Justin Bieber Reveals The Song He Wrote For His Mom Justin Bieber Gets Hot & Heavy...
- 5/11/2012
- by HL Staff
- HollywoodLife
Justin reveals in a new interview all the reasons why he thinks he's good to his girlfriend Selena -- and he gives tips on how guys can take a lesson from him! Justin Bieber thinks he's a pretty awesome catch! The 18-year-old tells Extra why he makes a good boyfriend, watch the video to find out! "I would say I'm a pretty good boyfriend," he says. "I think it's not hard to be a good boyfriend you just have to be be sweet and loving and caring and don't be rude to your girl." When asked what's the most romantic thing he's ever done for Selena, guess what he said? "I can't give away the romantic things because than every guy will know!" Good point Justin! [Extra] — Chloe Melas More Justin Bieber News here: Justin Bieber Reveals The Song He Wrote For His Mom Justin Bieber Gets Hot & Heavy With A Married Woman...
- 5/10/2012
- by Chloe Melas
- HollywoodLife
Gwen passed out during an outdoor carnival at her son's school on May 6. We hope she's okay! Gwen Stefani, 42, passed out at a school function for her five-year-old son, Kingston, on May 6. An ambulance was called to the scene, and EMTs checked out the No Doubt star before advising her to go home and rest, x17Online reports. Gwen's assistant then drove her and her children home. We hope you feel better soon, Gwen! [X17Online.com] -- Kaydi Poirier More News Rihanna Gives Sexiest ‘Saturday Night Live’ Performance Ever Justin Bieber Gets Hot & Heavy With A Married Woman — Find Out Who Russell Brand Claims He Caught Robert Pattinson In the Ladies’ Room...
- 5/6/2012
- by Kaydi Poirier
- HollywoodLife
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