“Wolfs,” directed by Jon Watts, reunites George Clooney and Brad Pitt in a traditional action-comedy. The film follows two unnamed “fixers” — professionals privately...
The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) is currently presenting "Vanity Fair Portraits: Photographs 1913–2008," the first major exhibition bringing together the magazine's historic archive of rare vintage photographs and magazine covers with its contemporary photos. The exhibition, which opened Oct. 28, 2008, explores the ways in which photography and celebrity have interacted and changed, with portraits from the magazine's early period (1913–1936) and the contemporary Vanity Fair period (1983–present) as well as behind-the-scenes videos from key Vanity Fair shoots.
It has been deemed one of the greatest love stories of all time, and the chemistry between the film's on-screen couple remains the stuff of legends. Its massive box office success has spawned many remakes in the years since its original 1995 release, but none could truly capture the beauty of the original film, nor the sheer size of its fan base. The film is the Indian "Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge," loosely translated as "Those of Heart Will Take the Bride," the mid-1990s blockbuster which, 13 years later, is the longest-running film in Indian cinema, setting the record in April 2007 when it celebrated a whopping 600 weeks of continuous play in Mumbai theaters while continuing to provoke massive outbreaks of swooning among generations of South Asian women. In fact, rumor has it that there is still a theater in India that plays the film every week to a packed house.
In the second episode of 'South Park''s 10th season, Comedy Central's most lucrative and long standing series, established that they intend to put nontopical, original plotlines on the back burner, and continue to satirize everything and anything in their