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[url]https://screenrant.com/dceu-supergirl-possible-movie-storylines/[/url] Somebody on Reddit recently said that Michael Mann seemed to aim for being dramatic instead of what was logical. [url]https://www.reddit.com/r/movies/comments/mip2m2/heat_1995/gt6ugdp/?utm_source=reddit&utm_medium=web2x&context=3[/url] My point is that don't come in calling what I addressed and brought up "ridiculous" if you claim that you don't remember very well. And you're also taking what I said out of context. The whole point was that if the movie was told from a different point of view or edited differently, then Martin Riggs might not exactly be interpreted or seen as the hero. If you don't remember (since it has been a while since you've seen the movie), then you can't flat out say that my comment is ridiculous, since you aren't 100% sure that Riggs "restrained" her at all. I was reading the comments section on YouTube of Oliver Harper's review of Die Hard 2. And somebody said that the crashing of Windsor 114, to this day remains one of the most evil, dastardly and vicious acts committed by any film villain. Not even Hans went as far as Stuart went in Die Hard 1. [url]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=shnckGNO_Kw&lc=UgzTAwBLf21nWF5qhLV4AaABAg[/url] CBS Sunday Morning criticizes itself for giving Woody Allen "legitimacy" showing shelved interview [url]https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/cbs-critiques-itself-over-legitimizing-woody-allen-interview[/url] On Saturday, CBS announced Paramount+ will be streaming an unaired CBS Sunday Morning interview that correspondent Lee Cowan conducted with Allen last year for a special delving into the director's career and controversies timed to the release of his memoir. The interview would be packaged with Gayle King's 2018 interview with Dylan Farrow as a Paramount+ special. This morning during a segment on "Cancelled Culture: Reconsidering the art of controversial artists," CBS Sunday Morning correspondent Erin Moriarty took aim at the interview -- which, again, never aired on CBS -- by quoting art critic Aruna D'Souza. "If someone is there being interviewed, they're given a kind of legitimacy just by the fact that they're being interviewed on a big newscast," D'Souza said. As The Hollywood Reporter's Alex Weprin notes, the long-delayed interview raised eyebrows since it was Allen's first one-on-one TV interview with a U.S. broadcaster in nearly 30 years (his last interview was with CBS' 60 Minutes in 1992) and came after his memoir was canceled by Hachette. "Normally, an exclusive interview of that nature would be a significant booking, given the renewed accusations of abuse by Dylan Farrow. However, CBS ended up letting the interview sit on the shelf, until now," says Weprin. In a statement, CBS News says that the interview was shelved due to the "active news cycle" last year, with COVID-19 raging, the presidential election and social justice protests across the country. The decision to air it on Paramount+ was due to "renewed interest in the controversy surrounding the filmmaker," given the recent HBO docuseries Allen v. Farrow. [url]https://www.quora.com/Shelley-Long-was-one-of-my-favorite-actresses-of-the-1980s-in-the-sitcom-Cheers-Would-she-have-had-a-better-career-if-she-had-stayed-with-the-show/answer/Jon-Mixon-1[/url] [quote]Jane Fonda was an A-list actor throughout the 1970s, and into the early 1980s. Her only “break” was from 1973 when she married activist/politician Tom Hayden and gave birth to their son, to 1976 when she returned to films with the commercial bomb The Blue Bird, an animated film which today is nearly impossible to find on television (See below). However when she came back, she came back strong. Her next 10 films were all box office and mostly critical hits, including the Vietnam protest film Coming Home, the prescient (thanks to the Three Mile Island nuclear event that occurred around the time that it opened) China Syndrome, the eponymous film created from singer Dolly Parton’s pop hit 9 to 5, and her her father’s final feature film, On Golden Pond. In fact, had Rollover (her pairing with then A-lister Kris Kristofferson), The Morning After, and Agnes of God hit, Jane Fonda would have been the biggest female performer of the 1980s, as well. [b]However, they didn’t, and Fonda’s foray into exercise videos and her burgeoning relationship (and then marriage) to billionaire media mogul Ted Turner, made it largely unnecessary for her to perform. The commercial bomb that was Stanley & Iris (her pairing with then-A-lister Robert Deniro) led to a fifteen year hiatus from the big screen.[/b] She came back with the truly awful (although commercially successful) Monster-in-Law with the then A-lister Jennifer Lopez.[/quote] Also, once Marty and Jennifer go to the future, shouldn't it create an alternate timeline 2015 where they mysteriously vanished in 1985? The Rosa Parks analogy threw me off because it isn't like Rosa Parks went on the run and took on an entire army of policemen like John Rambo. More to the point, how come Michael Keaton never worked with Michael Douglas? It would've been kind of funny if they did something about mistaken or stolen identity like Face/Off since Michael Keaton's real and still legal name is Michael John Douglas. He had to change his stage name because the Screen Actors Guild doesn't allow people with similar names. Rena Sofer: [url]https://www.facebook.com/groups/1363051637386161[/url] 'Bewitched' reboot film in works at Sony [quote][url]https://www.thewrap.com/bewitched-film-reboot-in-the-works-at-sony/amp/?__twitter_impression=true[/url] ‘Bewitched’ Film Reboot in the Works at Sony "MacGyver" and "12 Monkeys" creators Travis Fickett and Terry Matalas are writing the script based on the '60s sitcom Sony Pictures is in early development on a new movie take on the ’60s sitcom “Bewitched” that starred Elizabeth Montgomery. The new “Bewitched” movie will be written by Terry Matalas and Travis Fickett, who are the creators behind the series “MacGyver” and “12 Monkeys.” John Davis and John Fox (“Dolemite is My Name,” “Game Night”) are developing the film that’s based on the original sitcom series. Deadline first reported the news. More to come…[/quote] I'm starting to think that Sean Young may have a point when she says that they could've plausibly worked around her injury. *Hollywood was able to work around Jeremy Renner's broken ARMS. *When Brad Pitt broke his arm on the set of Seven, they wrote it into the movie *Nicole Kidman injured her knee while filming Moulin Rouge and she was able to film her scenes sitting down *Daryl Hannah chipped her elbow in eight places and still has a scar following an accident on the set of Blade Runner. They worked around it [url]https://www.quora.com/What-are-some-of-the-most-interesting-ways-an-actors-injuries-were-incorporated-into-the-story-of-the-series-or-movie[/url] [url]https://www.ranker.com/list/real-actor-injuries-written-into-movies/jim-rowley[/url] [url]https://www.digitalspy.com/movies/g25448/real-actor-injuries-in-movie-blade-runner-brad-pitt/[/url] [url]https://www.looper.com/221131/actor-injuries-that-were-written-into-storylines/[/url] [url]https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/WrittenInInfirmity[/url] [url]http://www.agcwebpages.com/BLINDITEMS/2021/MARCH.html[/url] [b]220. ENTERTAINMENT LAWYER 03/22 **3**[/b] [url]https://www.crazydaysandnights.net/2021/03/blind-item-3_22.html[/url] The former child/tween/teen actress turned adult actress and documentary maker left out an important part of the suicide of this actor. He was being constantly abused by the disgraced director and the director's friends. She didn't want to say it, so I will. [i]Soleil Moon Frye/Jonathan Brandis (Suicide of Friend Jonathan Brandis: 'I Carry His Memories with Me')[/i] [url]https://lebeauleblog.com/2014/11/20/what-might-have-been-sean-young/5/[/url] [quote]Young was originally cast as Vicki Vale opposite Michael Keaton in Batman. However, during rehearsals she fell from a horse and broke her collarbone. As a result, she had to drop out of the movie and was replaced at the last minute by Kim Basinger. After the injury, the horse riding scene was cut from the movie. Fallout: Batman was a big movie. It cemented Basinger as an A-list star. It’s easy to imagine that it would have had a similar impact on Young’s career. Instead, Young’s career cooled through the 90s. Verdict: Missed Opportunity[/quote] [url]https://www.denofgeek.com/movies/what-went-wrong-with-teenage-mutant-ninja-turtles-2-secret-of-the-ooze/[/url] [quote]Elias Koteas also failed to return as the ice hockey stick-wielding vigilante and ally Casey Jones – though that was more down to the film’s shift away from adult themes and one of the more violent human characters. “Casey was discussed but the reason he dropped out – and I don’t think this was a major issue – was the direction we wanted to take the film,” Gray says. “We wanted to go lighter. That was part of cleaning up the act.” In his place came Ernie Reyes Jr, a rising martial arts star who had served as a stuntman on the first film and was introduced as Keno, a pizza delivery boy who befriends the turtles. It was a stark departure from Koteas’s character but, once again, it was one Gray says came with the backing of the TMNT hierarchy. “If Peter and Kevin had wanted Elias back, he would have been back. So, either we were able to convince them that we wanted to go with Ernie and they went along with it.”[/quote] [url]https://www.denofgeek.com/movies/what-went-wrong-with-teenage-mutant-ninja-turtles-2-secret-of-the-ooze/[/url] [quote][b]Tokka and Rahzar[/b] One of the most noted criticisms of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2 concerned the decision to introduce two new sidekicks alongside returning villain Shredder, rather than draw on the wild array of mutant animals that had featured in the comics and TV series. Many fans had expected to see Bebop and Rocksteady, the mutant warthog and rhinoceros supervillains made famous in the cartoon, feature. However, that cartoon outing proved both a blessing and a curse. “I didn’t want them in any of the movies,” Laird later revealed on his personal blog. “It’s not so much that I disliked the characters so intensely, but more that I found their constant one-note shtick in the first animated series to be extremely annoying and silly to the point of being stupid.” Gray’s version of events differs slightly. “We wanted new villains because we would get a piece of the royalty, which we didn’t have with the first movie. We figured if we created something they didn’t come up with we would get a piece of the pie. It was a business decision.”[/quote] [b]Could Kim Basigner have a renaissance in her acting career and make a big comeback in Hollywood?[/b] [quote][url]https://www.datalounge.com/thread/28183353-could-kim-basigner-have-a-renaissance-in-her-acting-career-and-make-a-big-comeback-in-hollywood-[/url] Do you like the prospect? She had a small but important role in the the last two fifty shades of grey films but nothing since. Has she got what it takes to return to the silver screen or television screens? [url]https://www.instagram.com/p/CEF_2FNBtB5/?igshid=jjqh6ba9q03s[/url][/quote] A brand new Facebook group devoted to Savannah Guthrie's attire at the 2016 Iowa Caucus on February 1: [url]https://www.facebook.com/groups/366962391065111[/url] [url]https://www.quora.com/Why-is-Bruce-Willis-in-so-many-crappy-movies-even-though-hes-supposed-to-be-an-A-list-actor/answer/Jon-Mixon-1[/url] As to why he’s in so many crappy movies: [quote]1. Willis is a mediocre actor - With rare exceptions like Nobody’s Fool, Billy Bathgate, and arguably Pulp Fiction, Willis’ roles have been him portraying himself. No one wants to hire a mediocre actor when so many others are available. 2. He needs the money - 30 years ago, Willis and several other name actors (I don’t want to type out their names) invested in the Planet Hollywood franchise. That alone should have made Willis so wealthy that he didn’t need to act. However it appears that he’s experienced some financial setbacks and he continues to act as a result. 3. Nobody wants to pay his salary - Willis still seems to believe that he’s worth the 20+ million USD that he used to command per film. Unfortunately for him, not too many people are lining up to pay him that sum, so he has to take what is offered to him. 4. He’s not particularly likeable - Many people don’t seem to care for Willis and they don’t hire him as a result. He basically has to take what is offered to him and that’s been mostly “the dregs” in the last few years.[/quote]