Tag Archives: 20px-20px

Here’s Your Chance to See (and Judge) Catfish For Free

“Don’t let anyone tell you what it is,” reads the tagline hooked to Catfish ‘s current marketing campaign. Oh, really? What if I tell you that next week in L.A., for one night only, the controversial Sundance darling (and September theatrical release) is… free? Believe it! Finally, consensus. Read on for details.

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Here’s Your Chance to See (and Judge) Catfish For Free

You’ll Never Guess Who Might Replace Steve Carell on The Office

No, seriously: You won’t. “He’s probably the only guy who can do it, and he’s doing TV now,” said executive producer Paul Lieberstein of the Oscar-winning actor he hopes to add to the cast in the wake of Steve Carell’s imminent departure. Just who is this mystery actor? Here’s a hint: He’s Harvey Keitel.

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You’ll Never Guess Who Might Replace Steve Carell on The Office

What’s On: To the Moon, Padma!

Let’s talk about how wacky tonight’s Top Chef challenge is: It’s so bizarre that the show may lose the dignity it accrued by winning the Best Reality Competition Series Emmy. You might even call the challenge “out of this world.” And you would be correct. Literally.

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What’s On: To the Moon, Padma!

Buzz Break: See Rihanna Board Battleship (-ip, -ip)

Today in Machete: Lindsay Lohan No-Shows, Racist Poster Remix

It’s the Wednesday before Labor Day, which means we’re all in this long late-summer slog together. Bless Fox’s heart, they’ve given us a fairly decent means of whiling away at least a little of that time — first by setting the megaviolent spectacle Machete for release this Friday, and then by supplementing it with random Lindsay Lohan gossip and vaguely racist posters for film bloggers to play with.

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Today in Machete: Lindsay Lohan No-Shows, Racist Poster Remix

NBC Developing ‘Harry Potter For Adults’

While Kelsey Grammer prays that NBC may be interested in Frasier: The Next Generation , the network is busy developing a much larger-scale project with the help of Battlestar Galactica creator Ronald D. Moore. The still-untitled drama is being described as “an adult Harry Potter set in a world ruled not by science but by magic,” and let’s just hope that no one asks Conan O’B rien for advice on what it should be called . [ Deadline ]

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NBC Developing ‘Harry Potter For Adults’

Hollywood Ink: Dwayne Johnson Blah Blah Sequel Blah Blah 3D

Also today in Hollywood Ink: Shark Night 3D is apparently a real thing with a real budget paying real actors to say lines… Everybody Loves Whales adds two more actors… and at least a little bit more after the jump.

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Hollywood Ink: Dwayne Johnson Blah Blah Sequel Blah Blah 3D

TV Bites: Who Turned Down Dancing with the Stars?

Also in this morning’s TV Bites: Seth Green’s new reality show calls forth the apocalypse… a former Heroes star visits The Mentalist … and slightly more ahead. (Just because it’s September, doesn’t mean it can’t feel like August!)

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TV Bites: Who Turned Down Dancing with the Stars?

VIDEO: Chris Evans Talks Captain America, Toddlers Falling Down

Chris Evans didn’t plan to sign up for so many comic book movies — really! So how did his superhero-studded career come together? The newly minted Captain America told Elle all about it, and Movieline has the first look.

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VIDEO: Chris Evans Talks Captain America, Toddlers Falling Down

REVIEW: George Clooney, The American Prove They Do Make Movies Like They Used To

Anton Corbijn’s The American looks and feels like a movie made by a filmmaker who hasn’t been to the movies since the ’70s — and I mean that as the highest compliment. This is Corbijn’s second feature: His first was the elegiac and gorgeously shot (by Martin Ruhe) Control, based on the life story of Ian Curtis, lead singer of the influential and much-loved Manchester band Joy Division, who committed suicide at age 23 in 1980. Before Corbijn was a filmmaker, or even a director of videos for the likes of U2 and Depeche Mode, he was a photographer specializing in rock ‘n’ roll types as subjects; he had photographed Curtis and the other members of Joy Division early in his career, having left his native Holland for England because, as he’s said in interviews, he wanted “to be where that music comes from.”

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REVIEW: George Clooney, The American Prove They Do Make Movies Like They Used To