Tag Archives: douglas

‘Captain Awesome’ Dude Gets ID’d

Filed under: Captain Awesome , You Might Want to Rethink That crazy guy who legally changed his name to “Captain Awesome” now has the official Oregon state identification to prove it. Last month, unemployed 27-year-old Douglas Allen Smith Jr. legally changed his name after a character on the TV series ” Chuck… Read more

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‘Captain Awesome’ Dude Gets ID’d

Michael Douglas and the Fam: Muggles in Paradise

Filed under: Michael Douglas , Catherine Zeta-Jones Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones took their two kids today on the Flight of the Hippogriff roller coaster as part of the The Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Orlando Resort. According to the resort, they also sampled Butterbeer, got… Read more

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Michael Douglas and the Fam: Muggles in Paradise

Brooke Hogan’s BFF Busted for DUI

Filed under: Brooke Hogan , Glenn Douglas Packard , Celebrity Justice Glenn Douglas Packard , best known for being a sidekick on ” Hogan Knows Best ,” was busted for DUI in Miami Beach early Wednesday morning. According to the arrest report, once Packard was pulled over, the office says he observed Packard with “red and… Read more

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Brooke Hogan’s BFF Busted for DUI

Catherine Zeta-Jones ‘Furious’ Over Michael Douglas’ Delayed Cancer Diagnosis

Here’s some disconcerting news for those who hope constant vigilance will help find cancer before it spreads. In an interview with People excerpted by the Denver Post , Catherine Zeta-Jones says that Michael Douglas spent months seeking medical attention for constant throat pain, only to be rebuffed. “It makes me furious they didn’t detect [his throat cancer] earlier,” said Zeta-Jones. “He sought every option and nothing was found.” [ Denver Post ]

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Catherine Zeta-Jones ‘Furious’ Over Michael Douglas’ Delayed Cancer Diagnosis

What’s On: The Big C’s Big Debut

Laura Linney debuts tonight in the Showtime series The Big C , which was formerly called The C Word . You’ll note that the new title carries fewer dubious associations.

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What’s On: The Big C’s Big Debut

Michael Douglas Battling Tumor

Unfortunate news: Michael Douglas has a tumor in his throat , which will force the 65-year-old actor to undergo eight weeks of radiation and chemotherapy (potentially putting him out of commission during the September 24 release of his next film, Oliver Stone’s Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps ). Doctors expect him to make a full recovery, and Douglas himself issued a statement saying, “I am very optimistic.” [ People ]

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Michael Douglas Battling Tumor

Michael Douglas — Anti-Gekko

Filed under: Michael Douglas Michael Douglas has a new best friend

Michael Douglas’ Family, Peers Pick His Best Role At Lincoln Center Event

Catherine Zeta-Jones, Kirk Douglas, Tobey Maguire, Brooke Shields and others honor the actor. By Eric Ditzian, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Michael Douglas Photo: MTV News Each year, the Film Society of Lincoln Center honors a Hollywood legend. Last year’s gala event feted Tom Hanks , while years past have focused on Meryl Streep, Al Pacino and Francis Ford Coppola. At Lincoln Center on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, 2010 is the year of Michael Douglas . On Monday night, Douglas and his four-decade-long career were front and center, and the actor’s friends, family and colleagues showed up for the celebration. Catherine Zeta-Jones, Kirk Douglas, Tobey Maguire, Brooke Shields, Danny DeVito and more were on hand for the festivities and to cast their votes for Douglas’ finest movie role ever. Even Douglas himself weighed in on the debate. “You work as hard on your failures as on your successes,” he said. “I’d say tonight, particularly because [director] Curtis [Hanson] is here, I liked ‘Wonder Boys’ a lot. ‘Solitary Man’ is right up there. I’m real happy with my batting average. I look at the rest, and it’s pretty good. You pick your spots.” Zeta-Jones, Douglas’ wife, also favors Hanson’s film, in which Douglas plays a novelist undone by pot smoking and creative indecision. “I don’t think ‘Wonder Boys’ had the credit it really deserved,” she said. “It’s a wonderful movie, it really is, and a great performance by everybody.” DeVito, who has known Douglas for decades, couldn’t help but pick a film in which both men starred. ” ‘The War of the Roses,’ he was brilliant,” DeVito said. “I’m a little biased, but I think without a doubt, Oliver Rose was one of his best parts.” Co-stars from across Douglas’ film career were walking the red carpet, including from one of his most celebrated films, “Traffic.” But Erika Christensen, who played his drug-addicted daughter in that movie, didn’t select that role as her fave of Douglas’ career. “I’m going to say Gordon Gekko, because it was instantly iconic,” Christensen said of Douglas’ role in “Wall Street.” “And that says a lot about how he played the role, not just how it was written. So quotable. That’s something special for an actor to make that indelible mark on the pop culture.” Brooke Shields, meanwhile, veered away from fiction when it came to her favorite Douglas role. “Honestly, and this is going to be so saccharine and gross, but him as the man that I know, as a dad and a husband, that’s what makes my knees weak,” she said. What is your favorite Michael Douglas role? Share your pick in the comments! For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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Michael Douglas’ Family, Peers Pick His Best Role At Lincoln Center Event

‘Solitary Man’: Star Time, By Kurt Loder

Michael Douglas goes for the gold. Michael Douglas in “Solitary Man” Ben Kalmen is a man who had it all: pots of money from his high-end auto franchise, a beautiful wife and daughter, a lavish Manhattan apartment, the works. Then, because he’s a complete fool, he started throwing it all away. As “Solitary Man” begins, he seems intent on completing that mission. Kalmen is an off-putting character, an ethically oblivious 60-year-old man who slavers after every woman who wanders within range of his come-ons, the younger the better. The triumph of Michael Douglas’ performance in this role is that he plays Kalmen as exactly what he is — a creep — and yet keeps us with him, wondering if this down-bound hustler can possibly come to his senses before he hits bottom — and whether we should even care. As was the case with Jeff Bridges in last year’s “Crazy Heart,” Douglas reveals himself here as a veteran actor, familiar from dozens of other movies over the last 40 years, who’s still capable of doing his best work; who can still surprise us. The picture opens with a flashback: We see Kalmen being told by a doctor that he has a heart problem, and should return for further tests. That was six years ago, and Ben never went back — physical infirmity doesn’t fit in with his self-image as an all-conquering big-city business stud. He subsequently pulled a financial scam in which a lot of people got hurt, and his reputation never recovered — one day he was on the cover of Forbes magazine, dripping success; the next he was pictured in the New York Times in handcuffs. He spent all of his money on the lawyers who barely kept him out of prison. Now we find Kalmen living in an apartment he can’t afford, hitting up his daughter (Jenna Fischer) for loans, and trying to maintain a breezy facade for the sake of his adoring young grandson (Jake Siciliano), whom he begs not to call him grandpa. He’s also dating a well-to-do divorcee named Jordan (Mary-Louise Parker) and struggling to win the approval of her teenage daughter, Allyson (Imogen Poots), which has so far not been forthcoming. Things aren’t going well for Ben, but they could be worse. Actually, they soon will be. Douglas smoothly conveys the personality flaws of which Kalmen is so blindly unaware. Ben is the kind of aging hotshot who still wears black ties with black shirts and who butts into other people’s conversations in order to talk about himself, and the actor gets this overbearing boorishness just right. The supporting cast is pretty much perfect, too. Fischer is especially moving as a woman torn between love for her father and a growing need to banish him from her life; Poots is astringently effective as a girl who’s wised-up way beyond her years; and Susan Sarandon makes concisely underplayed appearances as Ben’s ex-wife, who’s observing his southward spiral from afar. Most surprising, perhaps, is Danny DeVito, who gives a glowing performance as Kalmen’s only true friend, the owner of a diner near the college Ben attended in his long-gone youth. Hovering above the picture is our awareness of a certain resemblance between Ben Kalmen and the man who plays him. Like Ben, Michael Douglas is a highly successful businessman (among the many movies he’s produced is the 1975 Oscar-winner “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest”) with a onetime reputation for hard partying (although he says the alcoholism for which he entered rehab 20 years ago was trumped up as “sex addiction” in the press). It seems likely that his well-known past has informed his portrayal of Kalmen, and there’s an element of bravery in his taking on of such an unsympathetic character. Unlike Jeff Bridges (until recently), Douglas already has one Academy Award as an actor (for the 1987 “Wall Street”). It’s too early to bother speculating about whether he could win another for his performance in this film. But he’s already in the running. Check out everything we’ve got on “Solitary Man.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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‘Solitary Man’: Star Time, By Kurt Loder

Michael Douglas on Solitary Man, Gordon Gekko’s Legacy, and the Battle of the Sexes

After a relatively quiet decade spent dabbling in TV, studio comedies and a few underperforming indies, Michael Douglas is taking no prisoners in 2010. Currently in Cannes promoting Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps — in which he reprises his Oscar-winning role as treacherous capitalist baron Gordon Gekko — Douglas spent the earlier part of this week in New York talking to Movieline about his other cutthroat comeback kid in Solitary Man .

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Michael Douglas on Solitary Man, Gordon Gekko’s Legacy, and the Battle of the Sexes