Tag Archives: james franco

James Franco’s Mom Says the Darndest Things on General Hospital

It finally happened: James Franco found a way to weave his real-life mother, author Betsy Franco , into the weird meta-arc that he has been crafting on General Hospital over the past few months. The sub-arc began yesterday when two of Port Charles’ detectives who were hot on Franco’s trail ventured out to Woodstock, New York to question Karen Anderson, whom they believed birthed the murder artist who has been terrorizing their town. But what they discovered inside Karen’s cozy, statue-cluttered home turned out to be much, much worse.

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James Franco’s Mom Says the Darndest Things on General Hospital

James Franco’s General Hospital Comeback: Even Worse Today

How could James Franco’s second day back in Port Charles be even more of a snooze than yesterday’s dramatically weird return , which featured around two minutes of the actor smiling menacingly under a hood (slide A), offering entertainment for food (slide B) and petting a toy monkey in a sinister manner (slide C)? Step into the shadowy alleyway and let Movieline explain.

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James Franco’s General Hospital Comeback: Even Worse Today

Regis Philbin Accidentally Outs David Copperfield as an Illusionist Hack at the Daytime Emmys

Let’s be honest about one thing: You did not watch yesterday’s 37th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards Ceremony. You might have tuned in if James Franco had been nominated for his scene-stealing arc on General Hospital and you would have at least TiVo’d the Las Vegas event had you known that host Regis Philbin would accidentally disprove David Copperfield’s entire career during the first 10 minutes of the telecast. But you did not, so relive the night’s most exciting and incriminating moment after the jump — and congratulate the newest Daytime Emmy winners while you’re at it.

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Regis Philbin Accidentally Outs David Copperfield as an Illusionist Hack at the Daytime Emmys

Freida Pinto, John Lithgow Join ‘Planet Of The Apes’ Prequel

‘Rise of the Apes,’ starring James Franco, sees highly intelligent apes battling humans for power. By Mawuse Ziegbe Freida Pinto Photo: Kevork Djansezian/ Getty Images Freida Pinto has signed on for “Rise of the Apes,” the upcoming “Planet of the Apes” prequel, along with actor John Lithgow. According to Entertainment Weekly, the “Slumdog Millionaire” actress will play Caroline, a primatologist. The “3rd Rock From the Sun” star is slated to portray the father of James Franco, who leads the cast as an ambitious young scientist. The news comes after buzz that Pinto and Oscar-nominated actor Don Cheadle had been offered roles . At press time, Cheadle’s involvement in the movie had not been confirmed. “Rise of the Apes” is set in present-day San Francisco, and the plot hinges on the consequences of genetic engineering experiments that result in highly intelligent apes jockeying for power with their human counterparts. Franco’s character assumes a significant role in the subsequent war between man and brainy ape. Pinto is best known for her role as a young woman navigating a life of extreme poverty in India’s slums in the runaway 2008 hit “Slumdog Millionaire.” Earlier this year it was announced that Pinto will also flex her acting chops in the upcoming Greek mythology epic “War of the Gods” opposite “The Tudors” actor Henry Cavill. Lithgow is a Hollywood vet who has appeared onscreen in the ’80s flick “Harry and the Hendersons” and the animated franchise “Shrek.” Lithgow snagged a Golden Globe earlier this year for his role as a serial killer on the hit Showtime series “Dexter.” Director Rupert Wyatt is set to helm the movie. “Rise of the Apes” is expected to start production on July 5 and is scheduled to hit theaters on June 24, 2011. For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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Freida Pinto, John Lithgow Join ‘Planet Of The Apes’ Prequel

The Definitive Baby’s Day Out Review, for All Eternity

Buzz Break: Let’s All Live in the Somewhere Poster

25 Headlines Worth Wishing For in the Great Hollywood News Drought of 2010

The American electoral climate this week may be wired with all kinds of new, polarizing developments, and the Gulf of Mexico may yet fill with 40 million gallons of BP’ s oil . The job market may be rebounding , but the economy remains sluggish overall. The Chicago Blackhawks last night won their first Stanley Cup in nearly 50 years. In other words, folks, there are things to talk about — but here at Movieline, where the entertainment industry provides the principal for all our pop-cultural news brokerage, a drought of anything remotely interesting has crippled our operation for nearly a week now. The A-Team or The Karate Kid this weekend? Come on, Hollywood! With this in mind, here are some recommended suggestions and/or arcs for stories that would make this beat infinitely more interesting, like, now . Suggest your own below.

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25 Headlines Worth Wishing For in the Great Hollywood News Drought of 2010

6 Questions Raised By the News of a Soapdish Remake

1. Why? 2. Rob Reiner is attached? Again, why? 3. According to Pajiba , the film will be set behind the scenes of a telenovela, presumably necessitating brand new characters and a passel of story changes. So…do we really need to call this Soapdish ?

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6 Questions Raised By the News of a Soapdish Remake

Bret Easton Ellis on The Golden Suicides, His New True Story of Love and Death

Bret Easton Ellis has written six books (his seventh, Imperial Bedrooms, comes out next month ), and all six have been optioned by Hollywood. Of those six, four were made into movies, and they run the gamut from iconic to underseen, acclaimed to lambasted. Each day this week, Ellis has tackled a different adaptation of his books for Movieline, giving his take on what worked, what didn’t, and what went on behind the scenes. So far this week, Movieline’s talked to Bret Easton Ellis about movies made from his own books — movies he often didn’t script himself. His upcoming screenplay, The Golden Suicides , is for a very different film entirely. Adapted by Ellis from a Nancy Jo Sales article for Vanity Fair and written for producer Gus Van Sant, it’s based on the true story of artists Jeremy Blake and Theresa Duncan (pictured above), a glamorous couple who eventually secluded themselves in a cocoon of paranoia when they believed that government organizations and Scientologists were out to get them. Duncan killed herself in July 2007, and a week later, the despondent Blake walked into the Atlantic and drowned.

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Bret Easton Ellis on The Golden Suicides, His New True Story of Love and Death

Hollywood Ink: James Franco Going to the Apes