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Bill Newcott

And so The Year of Barbara has a firm end-date: May 16.
On the night I got to know Mickey Rooney, I had to keep reminding myself that the little - very little - old man sitting across from me was once the biggest star on Planet Earth.
No one can claim to be a film fan without trying to come to terms with Jerry Lewis.
Frances Fisher is all over the place these days; besides her new ABC TV series Resurrection, premiering Sunday March 7, she was a recent guest star on the network's popular Castle, and next month she costars in a movie, The M Word.
Wes Anderson devotees are rewarded with the director's most fully realized film The Grand Budapest Hotel and boomer cartoon buffs get a surprisingly satisfying update of a '60 TV classic in Mr. Peabody & Sherman. Also, it's the last week to catch many of the Oscar winners in theaters before they go…
For movie lovers, Oscar Weekend is better than the Super Bowl. Few television events draw an international audience in real time anymore but Oscars is expected to bring some 40 million viewers. Of course being up to speed on all the movies is part of the fun. Throw in a matinee or two and you can…
One more week until the Oscars: Most of the major nominees are still in theaters-and one opens this weekend-so you can still catch them before March 2. And if you're all up to date, you could sit back, pop on your 3-D glasses, and enjoy the destruction of an ancient Roman City.
Kevin Costner has starred in his share of action films - No Way Out and Waterworld come to mind - but there's this nagging sense that his new shoot-'em-up, 3 Days to Kill, is Costner's attempt to "pull a Liam Neeson" - that is, to supercharge his career at midlife by starring in an over-the-top…
It was a night for classic Hollywood star power to blend with the youthful glow of filmmaking's future as the 13th Annual Movies for Grownups Awards Gala unfolded in Beverly Hills, Calif., on Monday.
George Clooney and an all-star cast go in search of stolen art and a bunch of blockheads turn up in the year's most surprising comedy. Both are fun in their own ways.
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