No matter which actor is wearing the tuxedo and drinking the martini, there’s one thing all James Bonds have in common—their presentation is exquisite. The same can be said about the films, themselves.
01.12.2021 - 01:25 / nypost.com
according to Variety.Lane shot to prominence after appearing in Richard Roundtree’s classic crime film “Shaft” — widely perceived as one of the most important films of the 1970s. Indiewire declared the movie “changed history” as it proved “a black film made by a black director for a black audience could be a huge hit.”Lane had a small part in the film, playing Leroy, a character who crashed through protagonist and private eye John Shaft’s office window.
No matter which actor is wearing the tuxedo and drinking the martini, there’s one thing all James Bonds have in common—their presentation is exquisite. The same can be said about the films, themselves.
Mario Cantone is remembering his on-screen husband Willie Garson. The actor, who famously starred as Carrie Bradshaw’s (Sarah Jessica Parker) best friend Stanford Blatch) in the "Sex and the City" franchise, passed away in September from pancreatic cancer.
SPOILER ALERT: Reading further will reveal crucial plot points for “No Time to Die” that could hamper the enjoyment of those who haven’t yet seen the film.
James Bond film, No Time To Die.The actor reflected upon his exit from the franchise – which saw him killed off in in no uncertain terms to save his family – on the No Time To Die: The Official James Bond Podcast.“There were lots of different ideas that came and went and some of it stuck.
Tommy Lane, an actor and stuntman who appeared in such classic films as Shaft and Live and Let Die, died on Monday at Florida Medical Center in Fort Lauderdale, following a long battle with COPD. He was 83.
Pat Saperstein Deputy EditorStuntman and actor Tommy Lane, who appeared in films including “Live and Let Die” and “Shaft,” died Monday in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
Owen Gleiberman Chief Film CriticReviewing a lavish new Hollywood musical in the Sept. 29, 1968, issue of The New Yorker, Pauline Kael wrote, “Barbra Streisand arrives on the screen, in ‘Funny Girl,’ when the movies are in desperate need of her.
“Diamonds Are Forever” and simultaneously entered into an affair with star Sean Connery.Wood, 75, revealed to Fox News why the fling ended and the two went their separate ways.“I knew Sean,” said the younger sister of late Hollywood icon Natalie Wood. “I had met him years ago.