Matthew Modine says there’s something even better about being famous than scoring courtside Knicks seats — wriggling out of speeding tickets.
Matthew Modine says there’s something even better about being famous than scoring courtside Knicks seats — wriggling out of speeding tickets.
Matthew Modine can thank one of his biggest movies for getting him out of trouble with police!
It’s been more than 20 years since “Eyes Wide Shut” debuted in 1999, and star Nicole Kidman back is looking on her experience making the erotic thriller with then-husband Tom Cruise and acclaimed director Stanley Kubrick.
Nicole Kidman to speak about her marriage to Tom Cruise, which lasted from 1990 to 2001. But in a new interview with the New York Times Magazine, Kidman opened up about a specific period in their relationship, when the couple were shooting the 1999 Stanley Kubrick movie Eyes Wide Shut.First, Kidman dismissed the "fallacy" that she and Cruise had a difficult time working on the movie, which took far longer to shoot than expected.
Nicole Kidman and Tom Cruise, y'all, because for the first time in forever, Nicole actually opened up about their 11-year marriage and what it was like filming Eyes Wide Shut together with director Stanley Kubrick back in 1999.In an interview with New York Times Magazine, Nicole revealed that she and Tom actually had a great time working on the film, despite it taking waaaaay longer than they expected. "We loved working with him.
Nicole Kidman still considers shooting Eyes Wide Shut, opposite ex-husband Tom Cruise, a career highlight.The actress insists she and Cruise were “happily married” while filming the racy drama, which marked Stanley Kubrick’s final movie.The Australian star was recently asked during a sit down with the New York Times if she had any “negative feelings” about the film, which centers on a married couple dealing with infidelity – and revealed she has nothing but fond memories of her time on set.“We
Nicole Kidman has opened up in a new interview about her marriage to Tom Cruise, nearly twenty years after their divorce.Speaking to The New York Times, the 53 year-old claims that their marriage was a 'happy' one, during the filming of Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut, which she co-starred in alongside husband Cruise, playing a married couple embroiled in a vicious web of jealousy, sex and infidelity.The pair, who were married for 11 years and share adopted children Isabella, 27 and Connor, 25,
Eyes Wide Shut together with director Stanley Kubrick back in 1999.In an interview with , Nicole revealed that she and Tom actually had a great time working on the film, despite it taking waaaaay longer than they expected. "We loved working with him.
Nicole Kidman and Tom Cruise were married from December 1990 to February 2001. For almost 20 years, there are rare moments when Nicole has spoken about her marriage with the Mission: Impossible actor.
New York Times about their experience filming Eyes Wide Shut together with the late Stanley Kubrick in 1998.Kubrick is known for putting his actors through hell and while the couple had signed onto the project expecting it to be finished in three month’s time, they didn’t wrap for two years.‘We were happily married through that,’ she explained.‘We would go go-kart racing after those scenes. We’d rent out a place and go racing at three in the morning.
Nicole Kidman is opening up (a bit?) about her 11-year marriage to Tom Cruise… and she’s being cryptic about it, at that!
Nicole Kidman opened up about her marriage to Tom Cruise — and revealed that she doesn’t want to dwell on any “negative feelings.”The Australian actress, 53, reflected on her time filming Eyes Wide Shut with Cruise, 58, and late director Stanley Kubrick. Kidman met her now-ex in November 1989, and the duo wed one month later.
Nicole Kidman was “happily married” to Tom Cruise while filming Stanley Kubrick’s “Eyes Wide Shut” over a two-year period.
Every Tuesday, discriminating viewers are confronted with a flurry of choices: new releases on disc and on-demand, vintage, and original movies on any number of streaming platforms, catalog titles making a splash on Blu-ray or 4K. This biweekly column sifts through all of those choices to pluck out the movies most worth your time, no matter how you’re watching.
Remember Netflix’s 2018’s Halloween hit, “The Haunting of Hill House.” Well, series creator and nu-horror maestro Mike Flanagan is back with its follow-up, “The Haunting of Bly Manor.” Flanagan made his name with smaller, well-received horror films like “Hush,” and then after a string of hits, “Ouija: Origin of Evil” (all 2016), “Gerald’s Game” (2017), found his way into following up Stanley Kubrick‘s “The Shining” with “Doctor Sleep” last year.
Evoking realism, hyperrealism, and the surreal, Elem Klimov’s nightmarish, technically marvelous 1985 movie “Come and See,” is a mesmerizing and legendary, if little-seen, WWII masterpiece that finally received its due earlier this summer thanks to the Criterion Collection.
“Eyes Wide Shut” is a significant film in the career of the legendary filmmaker Stanley Kubrick. It’s the final film that was completed before his death, and it’s also a project that the director held near and dear to his heart for decades prior, attempting to get it made 30 years before it was finally released.
You’d think Terry Gilliam would like to take a break after finally getting his Don Quixote movie “The Man Who Killed Don Quixote” out to the public after nearly 30 years, or after giving one problematic comment after another. Apparently, the filmmaker has no intention of taking a break, and he was even going to start shooting a film based on an idea by Stanley Kubrick this September before the lockdown put a stop to it.
Stanley Kubrick is one of the most acclaimed and iconic filmmakers in the history of cinema. Period.
“Alien” is a film full of influential and iconic moments. Whether it’s the simple premise that has been copied time after time, the strong female action star at the center, the way the Xenomorph is designed, or any number of moments, “Alien” has stood the test of time to constantly be brought up as one of the greatest films of all time.
A documentary built around previously unheard audiotaped interviews with Stanley Kubrick captures a director who didn't like to talk about his films...talking about his films.
For his lucid and perceptive look at Stanley Kubrick's unparalleled body of work, Gregory Monro excerpts a number of archival clips. It's not the filmmaker who's at the center of most of them but his collaborators, testifying to his exacting methods.
Stanley Kubrick is one of the greatest filmmakers ever.
Canadian actress and activist Shirley Douglas, known for her work alongside acclaimed directors such as Stanley Kubrick ("Lolita"), David Cronenberg ("Dead Ringers") and winning a Gemini Award for her performance in the 1999 TV film “Shadow Lake,” has died at age 86. Her son, actor Kiefer Sutherland, announced his mother’s death on Twitter, saying she succumbed to complications surrounding pneumonia.
Shirley Douglas, an actress in films directed by Stanley Kubrick and David Cronenberg and the mother of actor Kiefer Sutherland, died Sunday. She was 86.
Most Stephen King fans know his work exists in two worlds. First, there’s the page, where images of psychotic, otherworldly clowns, reanimated pet corpses, the ghosts of murdered young girls and haunted cars are injected into our imagination. Then there’s the screen, where we actually see them.
I just stumbled across this cool new video titled Tarantino Jukebox, a ten-minute piece from Film Radar which breaks down the use of music in the movies of Quentin Tarantino and how he puts his iconic soundtracks together.
Heeeeere's Bryan!
Here’s Mountain Dew Zero! Bryan Cranston and Tracee Ellis Ross revisited The Shining for a new Super Bowl ad promoting the popular soda brand.
Surely, the first thought you have upon mention of Mountain Dew is Stanley Kubrick’s “The Shining,” right?
All work and no play makes Rory O’Hara a dull boy — which is to say, one can scarcely overlook the connections between Sean Durkin’s subtly unsettling second feature, “The Nest,” and Stanley Kubrick’s “The Shining,” even if this is by far the more tedious of the two movies. While the obsessive dad Law plays here doesn’t fly off the handle quite so spectacularly as Jack Nicholson did, the horror hits closer to home, since what’s haunting the O’Haras isn’t supernatural.
What about having some fun reading the latest showbiz news & updates on Stanley Kubrick? Those who enter popstar.one once will stay with us forever! Stop wasting time looking for something else, because here you will get the latest news on Stanley Kubrick, scandals, engagements and divorces! Do not miss the opportunity to check out our breaking stories on Hollywood's hottest star Stanley Kubrick!