This week's episode of the Empire Podcast is perfectly balanced, as all things should be. In the first half, Chris Hewitt sits down with ol' Thanos himself, aka the one and only Josh Brolin, for a wide-ranging conversation that takes in birthday parties, Brolin's growth as an actor, his aversion to compliments, and his return as the indefatigable Gurney Halleck in Denis Villeneuve's Dune: Part Two, which opens this week (21:56 - 41:02 approx.) Chris then ticks another one off his bucket list by having a fun Zoom chat with Adam Sandler, star of the new Netflix sci-fi drama Spaceman, and his co-star Paul Dano (56:14 - 1:10:38 approx.)
Either side of those, Helen O'Hara hosts from the podbooth this week, and she, James Dyer, Alex Godfrey and Sophie Butcher tackle a couple of listener questions, one involving Muppets; discuss what passes for the week's movie news...
Either side of those, Helen O'Hara hosts from the podbooth this week, and she, James Dyer, Alex Godfrey and Sophie Butcher tackle a couple of listener questions, one involving Muppets; discuss what passes for the week's movie news...
- 3/1/2024
- by James White
- Empire - Movies
Another week, another packed episode of the Empire Podcast, and once again we're joined by some cracking guests. First, Jeffrey Wright, the freshly Oscar-nominated star of American Fiction, joins Chris Hewitt to talk about that movie, his working practices, the film's unusual original title, and more. (30:37 - 48:53)Then Alex Godfrey sits down on Zoom with The Iron Claw director, Sean Durkin, and his star Zac Efron, for a chat about wrestling, big arms, and big hearts.
And either side of those, Chris is joined in the podbooth by Helen O'Hara, James Dyer, and John Nugent to discuss a whole host of stuff. They talk about the upcoming Empire Podcast tour (Birmingham! Norwich! Sheffield! Dublin! Manchester!), which has just gone on sale now, right some Oscar wrongs for the third and final time, this time tackling Best Director, discuss the week's movie news, including the sad death of Carl Weathers,...
And either side of those, Chris is joined in the podbooth by Helen O'Hara, James Dyer, and John Nugent to discuss a whole host of stuff. They talk about the upcoming Empire Podcast tour (Birmingham! Norwich! Sheffield! Dublin! Manchester!), which has just gone on sale now, right some Oscar wrongs for the third and final time, this time tackling Best Director, discuss the week's movie news, including the sad death of Carl Weathers,...
- 2/9/2024
- by Chris Hewitt
- Empire - Movies
The final Empire Podcast of 2023 is here, folks, and it's a belter, with two incredible guests. First up, Michael Fassbender returns to the pod after an absence of a few years, and in an extended interview with Chris Hewitt, he talks about returning to the big screen with the double-whammy of David Fincher's :a[The Killer]{href='https://www.empireonline.com/movies/reviews/the-killer-2023/' } and Taika Waititi's :a[Next Goal Wins]{href='https://www.empireonline.com/movies/reviews/next-goal-wins-2023/' }. Plus, he talks about going to Anfield, home of Liverpool Football Club, for that game against Barcelona in 2019, shares his love of The Streets Of San Francisco, and confesses that he may not actually be telling the truth in interviews. It's a very fun chat that starts at 20:11, and ends at 42:09. Then, Alex Godfrey has a nice natter with Adam Driver, star of Michael Mann's :a[Ferrari]{href='https://www.
- 12/29/2023
- by Chris Hewitt
- Empire - Movies
Where do we get those wonderful guests? This week's Empire Podcast brings you the audio from our recent Empire VIP Club Q&a with the one, the only Michael Keaton, on the occasion of his return to the role of Batman in Andy Muschietti's The Flash. Hear Keaton talk to Alex Godfrey about why he signed on to play Batman for Tim Burton, coming up with that voice, and the fun he's having reteaming with Burton on Beetlejuice 2, and then sign up to the Empire VIP Club, why don't you, so you can experience events like this in person. Our other guest this week is the wonderful Alice Lowe, who talks to Mike Muncer about her Take That musical comedy, Greatest Days, and about what we can expect from her next film as a director, Timestalker.
Then, in the podbooth, Chris Hewitt hosts and is joined by Helen O'Hara...
Then, in the podbooth, Chris Hewitt hosts and is joined by Helen O'Hara...
- 6/16/2023
- by Chris Hewitt
- Empire - Movies
At Empire's exclusive Michael Keaton Q&a on Saturday night (the fascinating filling between a movie sandwich of 1989's Batman and this year's upcoming The Flash), he talked up his joy at reuniting with Tim Burton for the Beetlejuice sequel. But the not-so-small matter of Batman/Bruce Wayne was also discussed, including Keaton talking about the process of re-writing on set, developing the now-iconic "Batman voice" and working with Jack Nicholson.
It was after working on Beetlejuice together that Burton decided that his next project would seem them reunite. And, as it happens, it became the 1989 superhero movie that would forever alter a genre.
"I remember exactly where we were," Keaton told our Alex Godfrey. "He said, ‘I wanna talk to you about something… I just want you to read this, because I think I’m gonna make this movie’ What’s interesting if you think about this is that up until then,...
It was after working on Beetlejuice together that Burton decided that his next project would seem them reunite. And, as it happens, it became the 1989 superhero movie that would forever alter a genre.
"I remember exactly where we were," Keaton told our Alex Godfrey. "He said, ‘I wanna talk to you about something… I just want you to read this, because I think I’m gonna make this movie’ What’s interesting if you think about this is that up until then,...
- 6/4/2023
- by Alex Godfrey, James White
- Empire - Movies
This week's episode of the Empire Podcast lives its life a quarter of a mile at a time, with some hot peri-peri sauce on the side, as Sung Kang – aka Han from Fast X – Zooms in for an extended chat with Chris Hewitt, in which mind-blowing revelations are, um, revealed about Sung's predilection for Nando's, Tesco, and Liverpool Fc. Did he and Chris just become best friends? Yep!
Elsewhere, in the studio, Chris is joined by James Dyer and Alex Godfrey and, remotely from her Covid-cave, Helen O'Hara for a fun episode in which they tackle another Mount Rushmore question; discuss the 298 trailers that were released this week, including Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One and Gareth Edwards' comeback movie, The Creator; and review Fast X, Beau Is Afraid, and Are You There, God? It's Me, Margaret. Oh, and Chris gives a four-hour lecture on the Pink Panther...
Elsewhere, in the studio, Chris is joined by James Dyer and Alex Godfrey and, remotely from her Covid-cave, Helen O'Hara for a fun episode in which they tackle another Mount Rushmore question; discuss the 298 trailers that were released this week, including Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One and Gareth Edwards' comeback movie, The Creator; and review Fast X, Beau Is Afraid, and Are You There, God? It's Me, Margaret. Oh, and Chris gives a four-hour lecture on the Pink Panther...
- 5/19/2023
- by Chris Hewitt
- Empire - Movies
As a great lady once sang, what's love got to do with it? Everything, is usually the answer, and that certainly drives this week's episode of the Empire Podcast and, indeed, the new rom-com What's Love Got To Do With It, whose stars, Lily James and Shazad Latif, pop onto a laptop and have a Zoom chat with Chris Hewitt in which he makes a desperate pitch to become their agent, and leaves the Working Title screening room in a frightful state. And love — namely of a little green guy with big ears – drives The Mandalorian, which is gearing up to return to Disney+ on March 1, and Chris also sits down with Jon 'Favs' Favreau for an interview about the show, how to find a director for Star Wars, and working with Peter Falk.
Then, in the podbooth, Chris is joined by Ben Travis, Alex Godfrey and James Dyer for...
Then, in the podbooth, Chris is joined by Ben Travis, Alex Godfrey and James Dyer for...
- 2/24/2023
- by Chris Hewitt
- Empire - Movies
This week's episode of the Empire Podcast features more Oscar nominees than… well, not the Oscars themselves, that would be ridiculous. But certainly more Oscar nominees than you could shake a golden stick at. First, Chris Hewitt has a chat with Guillermo del Toro and Mark Gustafson, directors of Best Animated Feature frontrunner, Pinocchio (not that one). Then, Alex Godfrey gets deep with Best Actress nominee, Michelle Williams, as she tells him about how she played Steven Spielberg's mum for Steven Spielberg in Steven Spielberg's The Fabelmans. And then Dan Jolin Zooms in for a chat with The Whale director Darren Aronofsky, and his star, possible Best Actor favourite Brendan Fraser.
Plus! Either side of those chats, Chris is joined in the podbooth by Helen O'Hara and James Dyer to discuss Paul Mescal's chances of being the new Bond (and Chris comes up with a plan that should...
Plus! Either side of those chats, Chris is joined in the podbooth by Helen O'Hara and James Dyer to discuss Paul Mescal's chances of being the new Bond (and Chris comes up with a plan that should...
- 1/27/2023
- by Chris Hewitt
- Empire - Movies
Andy Serkis leads the ape rebellion against humans in Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, the role taken by Roddy McDowall in the original film saga's 1972 uprising, Conquest. So which movie chimp is boss? Find out in our 'Caesar-off'
Us box office report: Apes swings to the top
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes - first look review
Alex Godfrey on the tech used in the new movie Continue reading...
Us box office report: Apes swings to the top
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes - first look review
Alex Godfrey on the tech used in the new movie Continue reading...
- 7/15/2014
- by Stuart Heritage
- The Guardian - Film News
He freaked out audiences with a bizarre turn in Hal Ashby's tender romance, then vanished after studio rows, weirdo typecasting and a couple of car crashes. Alex Godfrey tracks down the star
Bud Cort has just come back from Ringo Starr's birthday breakfast. He has known Ringo for a while he says. "He's a dear friend and he's my dog's godfather."
Cort is, it's clear, a well-connected man; he has been in the film business for nearly 45 years, ever since playing the wide-eyed, ethereal lead in one of the key films of the 1970s, Harold and Maude, Hal Ashby's tale of a tender romance between a death-obsessed 20-year-old (Cort) and a life-loving, joyriding 79-year-old (Ruth Gordon). It is a film beloved by the likes of Cameron Crowe, Alexander Payne and Wes Anderson; Judd Apatow and Leslie Mann adore it so much they called their daughter Maude.
Continue reading.
Bud Cort has just come back from Ringo Starr's birthday breakfast. He has known Ringo for a while he says. "He's a dear friend and he's my dog's godfather."
Cort is, it's clear, a well-connected man; he has been in the film business for nearly 45 years, ever since playing the wide-eyed, ethereal lead in one of the key films of the 1970s, Harold and Maude, Hal Ashby's tale of a tender romance between a death-obsessed 20-year-old (Cort) and a life-loving, joyriding 79-year-old (Ruth Gordon). It is a film beloved by the likes of Cameron Crowe, Alexander Payne and Wes Anderson; Judd Apatow and Leslie Mann adore it so much they called their daughter Maude.
Continue reading.
- 7/10/2014
- by Alex Godfrey
- The Guardian - Film News
He freaked out audiences with a bizarre turn in Hal Ashby's tender romance, then vanished after studio rows, weirdo typecasting and a couple of car crashes. Alex Godfrey tracks down the star
Bud Cort has just come back from Ringo Starr's birthday breakfast. He has known Ringo for a while he says. "He's a dear friend and he's my dog's godfather."
Cort is, it's clear, a well-connected man; he has been in the film business for nearly 45 years, ever since playing the wide-eyed, ethereal lead in one of the key films of the 1970s, Harold and Maude, Hal Ashby's tale of a tender romance between a death-obsessed 20-year-old (Cort) and a life-loving, joyriding 79-year-old (Ruth Gordon). It is a film beloved by the likes of Cameron Crowe, Alexander Payne and Wes Anderson; Judd Apatow and Leslie Mann adore it so much they called their daughter Maude.
Continue reading.
Bud Cort has just come back from Ringo Starr's birthday breakfast. He has known Ringo for a while he says. "He's a dear friend and he's my dog's godfather."
Cort is, it's clear, a well-connected man; he has been in the film business for nearly 45 years, ever since playing the wide-eyed, ethereal lead in one of the key films of the 1970s, Harold and Maude, Hal Ashby's tale of a tender romance between a death-obsessed 20-year-old (Cort) and a life-loving, joyriding 79-year-old (Ruth Gordon). It is a film beloved by the likes of Cameron Crowe, Alexander Payne and Wes Anderson; Judd Apatow and Leslie Mann adore it so much they called their daughter Maude.
Continue reading.
- 7/10/2014
- by Alex Godfrey
- The Guardian - Film News
The critics of La, New York and Boston have spoken. We'll be reporting on their films of the year. Plus: all the rest of today's film news
In the news
- Critics in La, New York and Boston have handed out their gongs for their favourite films of 2013.
- Christian Bale says his love/hate relationship with acting started when he was a kiddie-wink.
- The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug is really not bad at all, say reviewers from pretty much everywhere.
- And Edouard Molinaro, director of Cage aux Folles, has died aged 85.
Elsewhere on the site today
- The Us box office report will see Jeremy Kay explain how Frozen is putting the competition on ice.
- We'll be starting our own countdown of the top ten films of 2013. Wadjda's in at number 10.
- Mark Brown reports from the British Independent Film Awards, where Sean Ellis's Metro Manila won big.
In the news
- Critics in La, New York and Boston have handed out their gongs for their favourite films of 2013.
- Christian Bale says his love/hate relationship with acting started when he was a kiddie-wink.
- The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug is really not bad at all, say reviewers from pretty much everywhere.
- And Edouard Molinaro, director of Cage aux Folles, has died aged 85.
Elsewhere on the site today
- The Us box office report will see Jeremy Kay explain how Frozen is putting the competition on ice.
- We'll be starting our own countdown of the top ten films of 2013. Wadjda's in at number 10.
- Mark Brown reports from the British Independent Film Awards, where Sean Ellis's Metro Manila won big.
- 12/9/2013
- The Guardian - Film News
Your daily movie bulletin bringing you the lowdown on 6 September
This bulletin is coming to you from Canada, where the curtain has lately fallen on the opening night film at this year's Toronto film festival. It was The Fifth Estate, and you can read our review here, and, quite soon, take a squiz at the red carpet action here. (You can also catch our video opening the curtains on this year's programme).
Coming up today
From Toronto we'll have reviews of Ralph Fiennes's Dickens romance The Invisible Woman (live at 9am GMT), Roger Michell's latest, Le Week-End, in which Jim Broadbent and Lindsay Duncan enjoy a Paris mini-break (live at 4.30pm GMT), as well Hugh Jackman / Jake Gyllenhaal thriller Prisoners, Pierce Brosnan/Emma Thompson divorce comedy The Love Punch, F1 drama Rush, Kate Winslet weepie Labor Day and news from the Fifth Estate press conference, as well as...
This bulletin is coming to you from Canada, where the curtain has lately fallen on the opening night film at this year's Toronto film festival. It was The Fifth Estate, and you can read our review here, and, quite soon, take a squiz at the red carpet action here. (You can also catch our video opening the curtains on this year's programme).
Coming up today
From Toronto we'll have reviews of Ralph Fiennes's Dickens romance The Invisible Woman (live at 9am GMT), Roger Michell's latest, Le Week-End, in which Jim Broadbent and Lindsay Duncan enjoy a Paris mini-break (live at 4.30pm GMT), as well Hugh Jackman / Jake Gyllenhaal thriller Prisoners, Pierce Brosnan/Emma Thompson divorce comedy The Love Punch, F1 drama Rush, Kate Winslet weepie Labor Day and news from the Fifth Estate press conference, as well as...
- 9/6/2013
- by Catherine Shoard
- The Guardian - Film News
The director's new film completes his trilogy of wistful pub-based comedies. Nostalgia is a bitter-sweet brew, he tells Alex Godfrey
When Edgar Wright was 19, he and his friends went on a pub crawl in his hometown, Wells in Somerset. "Out of 13 pubs, I managed to get through six before getting completely, wildly drunk," he laughs. "I then spent the rest of the night trying to find this girl I was going out with, forgetting she was out of town. I ran through somebody's garden into a clothesline and knocked myself out. I got a very thin purple bruise."
A couple of years later he wrote and directed his first film, A Fistful Of Fingers (tagline: The Greatest Western Ever Made … In Somerset), and followed it up with a script about his teenage pub crawl, "a big quest movie," he says. "There's a big noble sinking of the final pint followed...
When Edgar Wright was 19, he and his friends went on a pub crawl in his hometown, Wells in Somerset. "Out of 13 pubs, I managed to get through six before getting completely, wildly drunk," he laughs. "I then spent the rest of the night trying to find this girl I was going out with, forgetting she was out of town. I ran through somebody's garden into a clothesline and knocked myself out. I got a very thin purple bruise."
A couple of years later he wrote and directed his first film, A Fistful Of Fingers (tagline: The Greatest Western Ever Made … In Somerset), and followed it up with a script about his teenage pub crawl, "a big quest movie," he says. "There's a big noble sinking of the final pint followed...
- 7/15/2013
- by Alex Godfrey
- The Guardian - Film News
The action film star reveals how Stallone, marriage to a good woman and dogs pulled him back from the drug-fuelled brink
Where is Jean-Claude Van Damme? We were supposed to meet in London, until he cancelled his trip at the last minute. Then I was to visit him on a film set in Budapest, but that fell through when he wrapped his scenes early, and so he invited me instead to his parents' home in Belgium, only to go missing in action for 24 hours in the middle of negotiations. None of this is too surprising; after all, this is the self-sabotaging prima donna action star who rose in the 80s and ignominiously nose-dived in the 90s, having burned all his bridges in Hollywood.
And then, as I'm beginning to give up hope, he calls. "I just finished two movies back-to-back," he says apologetically. "When you finish a film, if you believed in your character,...
Where is Jean-Claude Van Damme? We were supposed to meet in London, until he cancelled his trip at the last minute. Then I was to visit him on a film set in Budapest, but that fell through when he wrapped his scenes early, and so he invited me instead to his parents' home in Belgium, only to go missing in action for 24 hours in the middle of negotiations. None of this is too surprising; after all, this is the self-sabotaging prima donna action star who rose in the 80s and ignominiously nose-dived in the 90s, having burned all his bridges in Hollywood.
And then, as I'm beginning to give up hope, he calls. "I just finished two movies back-to-back," he says apologetically. "When you finish a film, if you believed in your character,...
- 8/10/2012
- by Alex Godfrey
- The Guardian - Film News
The Tower Heist director has earned box office billions and the respect of his peers - but why do fanboys still hate him?
A few years ago Brett Ratner appeared on Entourage, playing a brash, belligerent and presumably heightened version of himself in a decadent scene filmed in his own Beverly Hills home. Load the clip on YouTube and there's a maelstrom of vitriol in the comments below. Suffice to say, the top-rated comment ends with "Hope he gets diarrhea".
Ratner gets a lot of this. With 14 years of feature films under his belt, including the Rush Hour franchise, the Red Dragon remake and the third X-Men movie, he's made $1.7bn for Hollywood, which irks his detractors, particularly X-Men fans disappointed by his end to the original trilogy. Ratner, though, is very comfortable with his success and very proud of his films, and it seems – certainly from the time I...
A few years ago Brett Ratner appeared on Entourage, playing a brash, belligerent and presumably heightened version of himself in a decadent scene filmed in his own Beverly Hills home. Load the clip on YouTube and there's a maelstrom of vitriol in the comments below. Suffice to say, the top-rated comment ends with "Hope he gets diarrhea".
Ratner gets a lot of this. With 14 years of feature films under his belt, including the Rush Hour franchise, the Red Dragon remake and the third X-Men movie, he's made $1.7bn for Hollywood, which irks his detractors, particularly X-Men fans disappointed by his end to the original trilogy. Ratner, though, is very comfortable with his success and very proud of his films, and it seems – certainly from the time I...
- 10/31/2011
- by Alex Godfrey
- The Guardian - Film News
That was the week in which Roland Emmerich applied his delicate style to the Bard and our writers fessed up to their favourite films
The big story
Roland Emmerich likes to destroy things. We in the film world know this: we've watched him blow the planet up for years. Let's face it, it's why we love him. But the theatre world is less familiar with his style, and this week they have been traumatised by the unleashing of his new film Anonymous, with which, in characteristic fashion, Emmerich attempts to completely obliterate the reputation of William Shakespeare.
Arguably the most inspired response to the German director's waste-laying ways came from the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, who this week took to graffitting road signs to make their point. A very sophisticated one, we should point out - if Shakespeare was "anonymous", see, then he doesn't exist. Emmerich is no doubt pulling together...
The big story
Roland Emmerich likes to destroy things. We in the film world know this: we've watched him blow the planet up for years. Let's face it, it's why we love him. But the theatre world is less familiar with his style, and this week they have been traumatised by the unleashing of his new film Anonymous, with which, in characteristic fashion, Emmerich attempts to completely obliterate the reputation of William Shakespeare.
Arguably the most inspired response to the German director's waste-laying ways came from the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, who this week took to graffitting road signs to make their point. A very sophisticated one, we should point out - if Shakespeare was "anonymous", see, then he doesn't exist. Emmerich is no doubt pulling together...
- 10/27/2011
- The Guardian - Film News
Not even Moneyball could beat The Lion King 3D at the box office this weekend, as Anthony D'Alessandro reports, but it's for Moneyball that we've got a roundup rolling on and on beyond all reason. IndieWIRE's Peter Knegt notes that "the specialty box office had a clear winner in Weekend," and we've got a roundup on that one as well.
"Wholly unrelated to the 1975 Sam Peckinpah film of the same name, Killer Elite is distinguished by one no-mercy, eye-gouging, testicle-punching brawl, and one whoppingly indifferent screenplay," writes Nick Pinkerton in the Voice. A quick sketch from Time Out Chicago's AA Dowd: Jason Statham "plays an ex-special-ops agent yanked out of retirement when someone kidnaps his mentor (Robert De Niro, in the Liam Neeson role). The guilty party, a deposed dictator with a chip on his shoulder, wants our erstwhile Transporter to knock off a trio of British mercenaries. 'I'm done with killing,...
"Wholly unrelated to the 1975 Sam Peckinpah film of the same name, Killer Elite is distinguished by one no-mercy, eye-gouging, testicle-punching brawl, and one whoppingly indifferent screenplay," writes Nick Pinkerton in the Voice. A quick sketch from Time Out Chicago's AA Dowd: Jason Statham "plays an ex-special-ops agent yanked out of retirement when someone kidnaps his mentor (Robert De Niro, in the Liam Neeson role). The guilty party, a deposed dictator with a chip on his shoulder, wants our erstwhile Transporter to knock off a trio of British mercenaries. 'I'm done with killing,...
- 9/25/2011
- MUBI
A report published this week suggests films showing smoking should automatically be classified 18
The big story
This week a report published by the medical journal Thorax recommended that all films including a scene in which a character smokes should automatically be classified as 18, regardless of any other content.
The report, produced by the UK Centre for Tobacco Contol Studies, was compiled from a survey of 5,000 teenagers who were asked if they had seen 50 films randomly selected from 366 box-office hits between 2001 and 2005. When the viewing preferences of the adolescents were compared to their smoking habits it was found that those exposed to puff-heavy plotlines were 73% more likely to have tried a cigarette and nearly 50% more likely to take up smoking in the longer term.
"More than half the films shown in the UK that contain smoking are rated 15 or below, so children and young teenagers are clearly exposed," said Dr Andrea...
The big story
This week a report published by the medical journal Thorax recommended that all films including a scene in which a character smokes should automatically be classified as 18, regardless of any other content.
The report, produced by the UK Centre for Tobacco Contol Studies, was compiled from a survey of 5,000 teenagers who were asked if they had seen 50 films randomly selected from 366 box-office hits between 2001 and 2005. When the viewing preferences of the adolescents were compared to their smoking habits it was found that those exposed to puff-heavy plotlines were 73% more likely to have tried a cigarette and nearly 50% more likely to take up smoking in the longer term.
"More than half the films shown in the UK that contain smoking are rated 15 or below, so children and young teenagers are clearly exposed," said Dr Andrea...
- 9/22/2011
- by Henry Barnes
- The Guardian - Film News
As part of Movieline's ongoing efforts to broaden the admittedly Yankeecentric scope of our entertainment coverage, we've tracked down just the man to lob over dispatches from across the pond. Please give a warm welcome to Alex Godfrey, who joins Movieline today as our Man in London. Whether you're an unabashed anglophile, a stout anti-imperialist, or just a lonesome expat craving a proper scone, we think a few moments with Alex will invariably offer you a little piece of home. Today, Alex speaks to Paul Davis, a local DJ whose Beware The Moon -- an indie doc on the making of An American Werewolf in London -- eventually found its way onto Universal's new Blu-ray re-release of the John Landis classic.
- 10/26/2009
- Movieline
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