There is no denying Beyonce’s talent, stardom, or status as an enduring stronghold in show business, but would you call her “a new talent [that] represents a generation”? Because in a new interview about her role in Clint Eastwood’s A Star is Born remake , she kinda claims to be just that.
In the lead-up to Comic-Con, a handful of new images from the should-be-splatter-rific (but is actually rated PG-13) Shark Night 3-D have debuted online courtesy of Hollywood.com , and they feature one unifying trait. Not sharks, silly! Young adults screaming at off-screen terror. Which of these seven pictures are actually from the David R. Ellis-directed film? See if you can guess ahead.
Having worked on Christopher Nolan ‘s Batman films and the upcoming Man of Steel for Legendary Pictures, David S. Goyer has been tapped to re-write the company’s upcoming Godzilla reboot for Monsters director Gareth Edwards . Presumably that’ll put your geek worry to ease about the next studio attempt to revive the kaiju franchise stateside, if only a bit. After all, can any Hollywood take on Godzilla be worse than Roland Emmerich’s 1998 misfire?
As the song says, this is the end. With the release of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 on Friday at 12 a.m., the most lucrative film franchise falls to a close. All that’s left now is the armchair quarterbacking, specifically: where do the film’s young stars go from here? Good question! Ahead, Movieline runs down the future career prospects of Potter ‘s young cast, and offers up one movie star whose career they would be wise to follow.
In 2007, a dapper young star named Shia LaBeouf appeared on the cover of Vanity Fair next to an interesting caption: “Can Hollywood Turn 21-Year-Old Shia LaBeouf Into the Next Tom Hanks?” Provocative. Of course, LaBeouf’s career shifted from that of a Hanks-ian, potential Oscar nominee to the domain of a de rigueur action star. The youngster may not have followed Vanity Fair ‘s wish list since starring in the first Transformers film, but maybe he scored a more interesting feat — becoming our generation’s Michael J. Fox.