What’s Your Number? is a upcoming comedy film starring Anna Faris and Chris Evans. It is based on Karyn Bosnak’s book 20 Times a Lady.
Ally Darling embarks on a quest to find the best “ex” of her life…by any means necessary, when she reads a magazine article warning that people who have had 20 or more relationships have missed their chance at true love.
Watch the clip above – it’s new! I can’t wait to see this movie – I think it looks hilarious.
So here we go – moment of truth….. What’s your number? C’mon – this is the web – no one will even know who you are. Let me know in the comments below, no judgement (maybe a little)!
At last we have our first look at Cameron Crowe’s (LOVE HIM!) new film, “We Bought A Zoo” starring Matt Damon and Scarlett Johansson.
It may be cheesey (looks like it) but it’s just the kind of movie I like to see during Christmas time.
And did I mention that I love Cameron Crowe? Think ‘Almost Famous’, ‘Vanilla Sky’, ‘Jerry Maguire’, ‘Say Anything’ and ‘Singles’ – probably my favorite of them all.
LOVE HIM!
Posted Wednesday, September 14th, 2011 at 3:15pm
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Julia Roberts and Ryan Reynolds star in ‘Fireflies in the Garden’, a movie that believe it or not, actually hit the film festivals in 2008! So what took so long to get the movie released?
The film, written and directed by Dennis Lee, saw its premiere at the Berlin Film Festival in 2008. While it later hit theaters in most parts of the world, financial difficulties shelved its US distribution for nearly three years, until it was announced last week that it will finally hit theaters in select cities on October 14th.
And so, American theatergoers will at last get to see the story in which Julia Roberts, in mostly flashback footage, plays mother to a boy that will become Ryan Reynolds, who appears in the film’s present-day shots. A sweet woman and caring mom, she’s plagued by her abusive husband, played by Willem Dafoe, who leaves the boy on the side of the road one rainy day.
Seventeen years later, now fully grown and portrayed by Reynolds, he is heading home for a family reunion when a car accident kills Roberts, who is aged up with heavy makeup (at 43-years old, to Reynolds’ 34, it’s a necessity). From there, the story is a test of blood and forgiveness, trust and anger, with three generations of one family doing their best to co-exist in the wake of so much damage.
Looks like it could be pretty good, but I’m always apprehensive about movies that get shelved. Usually great movies aren’t shelved for three years before they’re released.
“Now all of this may look like some crazed hallucination,” Johnny Depp, as Hunter S. Thompson stand-in Paul Kemp, says, “but it’s all true… I think.”
And so it goes in this long-awaited big screen version of “The Rum Diary,” Depp’s latest film adaptation of a Hunter S. Thompson novel. The film, which sat on the shelf for a while, has a roundabout history that, in a very minor way, resembles that of the book; the semi-fictional story about Thompson’s time in Puerto Rico as a young journalist began being written in 1958, but went unpublished until 1998.
Depp, as Kemp, plays an alcoholic journalist who starts kicking around San Juan, Puerto Rico, writing for a failing local paper and taking LSD. It was a fearful, doomsday description of what Thompson worried he may become in the early stages of his career, though, obviously, his real life success far exceeded that of his nervous projection.
The film also stars Amber Heard, Aaron Eckhart, Giovanni Ribisi and Richard Jenkins, and hits theaters October 28th.
Ben Stiller and Eddie Murphy lead an all-star cast in Tower Heist, a comedy caper about working stiffs who seek revenge on the Wall Street swindler who stiffed them. After the workers at a luxury Central Park condominium discover the penthouse billionaire has stolen their retirement, they plot the ultimate revenge: a heist to reclaim what he took from them.
Queens native Josh Kovacs (Stiller) has managed one of the most luxurious and well-secured residences in New York City for more than a decade. Under his watchful eye, nothing goes undetected. In the swankiest unit atop Josh’s building, Wall Street titan Arthur Shaw (Alan Alda) is under house arrest after being caught stealing two billion from his investors. The hardest hit among those he defrauded? The tower staffers whose pensions he was entrusted to manage.
With only days before Arthur gets away with the perfect crime, Josh’s crew turns to petty crook Slide (Murphy) to plan the nearly impossible…to steal what they are sure is hidden in Arthur’s guarded condo. Though amateurs, these rookie thieves know the building better than anyone. Turns out they’ve been casing the place for years, they just didn’t know it.
I love both these guys – hope the movie is good! This is Eddie Murphy’s first “grown-up” movie since 2006′s ‘Dreamgirls’. Since then he’s been in Shrek and other various childrens movies. I think he’s hilarious, so it’ll be nice to see him in something more like his ‘Beverly Hills Cop’ roles.
Seems like an odd movie for Matthew Broderick, no?