In a competitive situation, ITV has secured the exclusive UK television rights to CBS’s blockbuster interview between Oprah Winfrey and defected British royals Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.
12.02.2021 - 01:39 / hollywoodnews.com
It’s hard to find a new spin on a story that’s been told before. This week, The Map of Tiny Perfect Things seeks to traffic in material that we saw done to classic effect in Groundhog Day, not to mention brilliantly spun last year in Palm Springs.
This movie could have easily been derivative and a total misfire. Luckily, the flick sidesteps nearly all of the pitfalls, finding a way to make this premise still feel unique.
In a competitive situation, ITV has secured the exclusive UK television rights to CBS’s blockbuster interview between Oprah Winfrey and defected British royals Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.
Manori Ravindran International EditorITV has won the rights to air Meghan Markle and Prince Harry’s hotly anticipated interview with Oprah Winfrey, Variety can reveal.The U.K. broadcaster edged out rivals such as Sky and Discovery for the coveted CBS primetime special, which marks the couple’s first official sit-down interview since splitting from the British Royal Family a year ago.
Brent Lang Executive Editor of Film and MediaAriana Greenblatt will play Tiny Tina, the teenage explosives expert, in Eli Roth’s adaptation of the video game phenomenon “Borderlands.” She joins a cast of heavyhitters and A-listers that includes Cate Blanchett as Lilith, Kevin Hart as Roland, Jamie Lee Curtis as Dr.
Brent Lang Executive Editor of Film and MediaHosts Amy Poehler and Tina Fey kicked off the 78th Golden Globe Awards on Sunday in the shadow of a global pandemic and a controversy that is roiling the cliquish organization behind the annual broadcast.
New Idea hears inaugural winner Bec Hewitt is disappointed producers cast convicted drug smuggler, Schapelle.
Orlando von Einsiedel, the British filmmaker who won the best documentary short Oscar in 2016 for The White Helmets and was executive producer on last year’s winner Learning to Skateboard in Warzone (if you’re a girl) via his prolific Grain Media production company, has lifted the lid on his secretive debut scripted project.
If a report in Page Six is correct, a fan favourite character from “Sex and the City” won’t be returning for the upcoming HBO Max revival.
Kylie Jefferson credits for helping shape her into the woman she is today: legendary dancer, choreographer and producer Debbie Allen. At just six years old, Jefferson — who made her onscreen debut in Netflix's ballet drama and is a featured dancer in -- was the youngest student to be accepted into the famed Debbie Allen Dance Academy in Los Angeles, where she trained under the tutelage and mentorship of Allen as a young, aspiring ballet dancer.
Loose Women panel got a bit heated on today's show as the ladies discussed Meghan Markle's upcoming interview with US chat show host Oprah Winfrey.Last night, it was revealed that Harry and Meghan will sit down with Oprah for a 'tell all' interview, which is said to have made Buckingham Palace 'nervous'.The couple's decision to take part in the interview, which is reportedly worth millions of dollars, is said to have raised concerns with the Palace who claim they were unaware of the couple’s
What would you do if your forever was a single day? In most films about time-loops, we watch characters struggle to escape repetition and eventually find a hole in the plot allowing them to slip back into their regular lives. In “The Map of Tiny Perfect Things,” directed by Ian Samuels, this idea pivots by changing the motivations of the two teens stuck in the loop.
EXCLUSIVE: WME has signed writer-director Tiny Mabry, who is best known for helming the 2009 critically acclaimed film Mississippi Damned starring Tessa Thompson.
EastEnders fans were left gutted after it was revealed that Laila Morse would be leaving the soap for good after 20 years on-screen as Big Mo. While bosses insist the door has been left open for the actress, Big Mo will film her final scenes in the next two weeks.
The time-loop genre is old and diverse enough now — I've reviewed around a dozen, and I'm sure I've missed several — that there's no need to describe each new entrant as "like Groundhog Day." There's the Edge of Tomorrow-like sci-fi action loop; the Happy Death Day mystery; the teen romp; allegorical horror film; and so on.
Courtney Howard authorBefore we’re even out of the opening credits of “The Map of Tiny Perfect Things,” director Ian Samuels and screenwriter Lev Grossman waste no time clueing us into its premise revolving around a time loop that will teach its teen protagonists to accept life’s little gifts and major detours. This John Green-lite fantasy for the young-adult crowd holds many sequences that sparkle and shine, but a few that stumble and sag as well.
“12 Dates of Christmas.” All that’s left for “The Map of Tiny Perfect Things” to mine is a narrative that places teens in the center of the universe and allows them to know more than anyone else in the room. At first, anyway.That’s probably the core of the film’s appeal, and it does have appeal, even if this is ground that’s been trod over with some frequency in recent years.