Netflix is releasing another super cheesy comedy just in time for summer.
23.05.2020 - 01:47 / nypost.com
Producer/director Paul Feig is a bona-fide starmaker. His hit 2011 movie “Bridesmaids” launched Melissa McCarthy into the stratosphere; his cult TV series, “Freaks and Geeks” (1999-2000), was a major early stepping stone for Hollywood A-listers Jason Segel, Seth Rogen, James Franco, Busy Phillips and Linda Cardellini.
Feig’s latest series, “Love Life” (premiering May 27 on HBO), stars Anna Kendrick as Darby, a New Yorker trying to navigate the dating scene. Feig spoke to The Post about why he
Netflix is releasing another super cheesy comedy just in time for summer.
Brian Wilson hasn’t gone surfing for a stretch. He’s in lockdown, like the rest of us. But the Beach Boys legend did Zoom in to A Tonight Show on Thursday night (June 4) for a performance of two songs.
By Caroline Framke
Country singer Thomas Rhett has broken his silence about America’s race divide, insisting it’s time for him to speak up as the father of a black child.
ANNIE ROSS has been described as many things.
By Denise Petski
Paul Feig has lined up his next feature film, and it appears the comedy director is venturing into the world of YA fantasy in the new film, “The School of Good and Evil.” According to THR, Feig will direct the feature, based on the novel “The School of Good and Evil” written by Soman Chainani.
Paul Feig will direct Netflix’s adaptation of “The School for Good and Evil,” based on Soman Chainani’s best-selling novel of the same name, the streamer announced Thursday.
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By Dave McNary
Over the past decade, there aren’t many blockbuster films that have caused as much controversy as the 2016 remake of “Ghostbusters,” directed by Paul Feig. From the moment the first trailer dropped on YouTube, a social media movement began to discredit the film and do everything in its power to make sure the film didn’t succeed.
One lucky Elvis fan - who has a spare £30,000 - could be the owner of the jockstrap which was made for him by a fan and later ended up in the collection of Jimmy Velvet, a singer who opened an Elvis museum in Memphis.
Paul Feig believes the reaction to Hillary Clinton’s bid for U.S. presidency harmed his female-fronted Ghostbusters movie.
Paul Feig is opening up about the backlash he and his movie, Ghostbusters, recieved following the casting of Melissa McCarthy, Kristen Wiig, Kate McKinnon and Leslie Jones.
By J. Kim Murphy
Paul Feig, the director and co-writer of the 2016 “Ghostbusters” reboot, noted in a recent interview about the film that he believes the “anti-Hillary movement” played a big role in the movie’s negative perception.
By Angelique Jackson
"Everyone was at a boiling point"