Armed and ready! Shanna Moakler is confident that ex-husband Travis Barker can handle whatever comes with dating Kourtney Kardashian.
01.02.2021 - 01:05 / etcanada.com
After directing numerous episodes of “House of Cards”, Robin Wright makes her big-screen directorial debut as a director with “Land”.
The film tells the story of a woman (played by Wright, who also stars) who goes off the grid, living in a remote area of the wilderness to mourn in private after experiencing a personal tragedy, eventually coming to realize she needs the support of others.
As Page Six reports, the film and its message of showing kindness to others was directly inspired by the
Armed and ready! Shanna Moakler is confident that ex-husband Travis Barker can handle whatever comes with dating Kourtney Kardashian.
Who’s the Stupid F**king Bitch now? Perhaps all of us because this drama just doesn’t seem to end.
Robin Wright used to joke that her directorial debut had already been made. It was called “Blue Valentine,” it starred Michelle Williams and Ryan Gosling as a couple falling apart, it came out in 2010 and it was directed by Derek Cianfrance, not her.
Peter Debruge Chief Film CriticWith the Super Bowl behind us and the Oscars looming (and a pandemic-dampened Valentine’s Day as a marketing peg), American distributors are releasing their most robust slate of new releases in months this weekend.Awards contenders “Judas and the Black Messiah” (about the FBI-sanctioned murder of Fred Hampton) and “Land” (starring and directed by Robin Wright) arrive in theaters, hot off their premieres at this year’s virtual Sundance Film Festival.
her directing debut, however, is its soulfulness. Her character, Edee, isn’t some spoiled brat stranded in the woods like Tea Leoni in “Six Days Seven Nights”; she is a traumatized woman trying to rebuild her life from the ground up.Edee’s reality has been shattered by a family tragedy, so she packs up the car and leaves the city behind for a cabin deep in the Wyoming wilderness far removed from civilization.
Robin Wright used to joke that her directorial debut had already been made. It was called “Blue Valentine,” it starred Michelle Williams and Ryan Gosling as a couple falling apart, it came out in 2010 and it was directed by Derek Cianfrance, not her.
“My plan was to die before the money ran out” has become the anthem and tagline of the Sony Pictures Classics’ French Exit starring Michelle Pfeiffer as a 60-year-old penniless Manhattan socialite — a role that has been earning her plenty of awards season buzz.
Britney Spears is reportedly working on a new documentary about her life.It comes following the reaction to the recently released documentary, Framing Britney Spears, which examines the singer’s life under conservatorship.It was produced by the New York Times and broadcast in the US last weekend on FX and FX On Hulu.Now, according to the New York Post’s Page Six column, Spears is also currently “working on her own documentary about her life – said in her own words – with a top female
Britney Spears has reportedly watched the FX/New York Times documentary about her life "Framing Britney Spears," and it reportedly left her "emotional.""Britney finally feels like there is light at the end of a very long, dark tunnel," a source told Page Six. "There are parts of the film that were too hard and emotional for her to watch — the scenes that describe the most difficult times of her life, the relentless media circus and the harsh focus on her as a young mother.
Adam Richman knows how the sausage gets made — and the cookies and potato chips.The former “Man v. Food” host is gearing up for the premiere of his new show, “Modern Marvels,” which explores how some of America’s most popular mass-market brands, like Wise Snacks and Entenmann’s, make their products.
Take the nomad out of “Nomadland,” and you’re left with “Land,” Robin Wright‘s feature-directing debut (she previously directed 10 episodes of “House of Cards“), in which she also stars, as a grieving woman who, somewhat ironically given the film bows in the era of mandatory isolation, moves way up into the mountains “to get away from people.” Problem is, take the nomadic element out of “Nomadland” (she moves only once and has done with it) and you’re also left with a less interesting, much more
Also Read: Why Tessa Thompson Was 'Really Terrified' of Playing Irene in 'Passing' (Video)But Wright said she “had definitely been in the shopping mode for something to direct” after her Netflix series “House of Cards” ended and the script by Jesse Chatham and Erin Dignam spoke to her about an epidemic of real-world tragedies.“It was resonating with me so much because it was during the time of these random shootings that were going on in our country almost biweekly and I just kept thinking every
Take the nomad out of “Nomadland,” and you’re left with “Land,” Robin Wright‘s feature-directing debut (she previously directed 10 episodes of “House of Cards“), in which she also stars, as a grieving woman who, somewhat ironically given the film bows in the era of mandatory isolation, moves way up into the mountains “to get away from people.” Problem is, take the nomadic element out of “Nomadland” (she moves only once and has done with it) and you’re also left with a less interesting, much more
Sundance Film Festival on Sunday. “It was just perfect timing for me.
Peter Debruge Chief Film CriticRobin Wright spends most of “Land” alone, but that’s not how her character Edee sees it. Newly widowed and raw with sorrow for reasons left (mostly) unsaid, Edee abandons nearly everything about her old life and buys a cabin on the side of a mountain in Wyoming — barely a shack, really, with no running water or electricity, surrounded by wilderness.
Sundance Film Festival Cinema Café talk on Sunday with Rebecca Hall. “Everybody was a judge and there was so much bullying going on.