To celebrate the release of Teen Wolf coming to Blu-Ray and DVD on September 4th we have 2 Blu-Rays to give away!
Teen Wolf is an outrageous comedy about a shy teenager with more than a changing voice to contend with- he’s a budding young werewolf! And when his newfound powers help him score at basketball – and with the popular girls – he has some pretty hairy decisions to make.
Cast: Michael J. Fox, James Hampton, Scott Paulin, Susan Ursitti, Jerry Levine and Jay Tarses.
What’s a high school kid got to do to be popular? Just let down his hair and howl! Michael J. Fox (Back to the Future Trilogy) stars in the 1985 classic 80s cult comedy Teen Wolf on DVD and Blu-Ray.
Extras: Never. Say. Die. The Story of Teen Wolf – A comprehensive documentary about the making and legacy of the film, including brand-new interviews with the writers Jeph Loeb and Matthew Weisman,...
Teen Wolf is an outrageous comedy about a shy teenager with more than a changing voice to contend with- he’s a budding young werewolf! And when his newfound powers help him score at basketball – and with the popular girls – he has some pretty hairy decisions to make.
Cast: Michael J. Fox, James Hampton, Scott Paulin, Susan Ursitti, Jerry Levine and Jay Tarses.
What’s a high school kid got to do to be popular? Just let down his hair and howl! Michael J. Fox (Back to the Future Trilogy) stars in the 1985 classic 80s cult comedy Teen Wolf on DVD and Blu-Ray.
Extras: Never. Say. Die. The Story of Teen Wolf – A comprehensive documentary about the making and legacy of the film, including brand-new interviews with the writers Jeph Loeb and Matthew Weisman,...
- 8/29/2023
- by Competitions
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Rolling Stone may receive an affiliate commission.
Audiophile-beloved features have only become more in-reach over the past few years, paving the way for premium, but yet still relatively accessible, headphones with Anc (active noise cancellation) and Hi-Fi audio support to be everywhere on the market. But for every Subaru packed with power and affordability, you’ve got to have your Lamborghinis. Mark Levinson’s new Mark Levinson No. 5909 pair are the Lamborghinis of wireless noise-canceling headphones.
Audiophile-beloved features have only become more in-reach over the past few years, paving the way for premium, but yet still relatively accessible, headphones with Anc (active noise cancellation) and Hi-Fi audio support to be everywhere on the market. But for every Subaru packed with power and affordability, you’ve got to have your Lamborghinis. Mark Levinson’s new Mark Levinson No. 5909 pair are the Lamborghinis of wireless noise-canceling headphones.
- 1/27/2022
- by Sage Anderson
- Rollingstone.com
TheWrap and the Breakthrough Prize Foundation on Monday announced the launch of a new film competition created to promote and support the development of films dedicated exclusively to science and scientists.
Heroes of Science: Breakthrough Filmmakers Challenge represents an unprecedented partnership between leading digital entertainment news outlet TheWrap and Breakthrough Prize, the world’s largest monetary science prize, as well as the coming together of two pursuits that are too often at odds in popular culture — art and science.
Through the competition, Breakthrough Prize and TheWrap hope to identify talented filmmakers who are passionate about bringing scientific ideas to life and who have the visual storytelling skill to create short films that express the beauty and significance of these ideas, as well as the characters of the scientists who discover them. Winning candidates will have the possibility of making a film for this year’s internationally broadcast Breakthrough Prize ceremony.
Heroes of Science: Breakthrough Filmmakers Challenge represents an unprecedented partnership between leading digital entertainment news outlet TheWrap and Breakthrough Prize, the world’s largest monetary science prize, as well as the coming together of two pursuits that are too often at odds in popular culture — art and science.
Through the competition, Breakthrough Prize and TheWrap hope to identify talented filmmakers who are passionate about bringing scientific ideas to life and who have the visual storytelling skill to create short films that express the beauty and significance of these ideas, as well as the characters of the scientists who discover them. Winning candidates will have the possibility of making a film for this year’s internationally broadcast Breakthrough Prize ceremony.
- 1/28/2020
- by Emily Vogel
- The Wrap
Tidal has announced a long-term partnership with the nation’s foremost nonpartisan nonprofit dedicated to building the political power of young people, Rock the Vote.
The partnership will kick off with Tidal X Rock The Vote, a benefit concert to raise funds and awareness for voter registration, education and rights. Taking place on Monday, October 21st at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, NY, Tidal’s 5th annual concert will be hosted by Angie Martinez and feature performances from Alicia Keys, Farruko, French Montana, Becky G, G-Eazy, Ty Dolla $ign, Carnage, Cnco, Moneybagg Yo, Doja Cat, Gashi, Dermot Kennedy, Lucky Daye, Angelica Vila, Nicole Bus and many more.
The 2020 election will be a critical moment for our communities and it is imperative to ensure record-breaking youth voter turnout. One hundred percent of net proceeds from ticket sales and campaign will be donated to Rock The Vote to register and prepare new voters...
The partnership will kick off with Tidal X Rock The Vote, a benefit concert to raise funds and awareness for voter registration, education and rights. Taking place on Monday, October 21st at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, NY, Tidal’s 5th annual concert will be hosted by Angie Martinez and feature performances from Alicia Keys, Farruko, French Montana, Becky G, G-Eazy, Ty Dolla $ign, Carnage, Cnco, Moneybagg Yo, Doja Cat, Gashi, Dermot Kennedy, Lucky Daye, Angelica Vila, Nicole Bus and many more.
The 2020 election will be a critical moment for our communities and it is imperative to ensure record-breaking youth voter turnout. One hundred percent of net proceeds from ticket sales and campaign will be donated to Rock The Vote to register and prepare new voters...
- 10/10/2019
- Look to the Stars
Kim Cattrall says she prioritized her role as Samantha on Sex and the City over having children.
The actress, 61, opened up about having considered motherhood during an appearance on Monday’s episode of Piers Morgan’s Life Stories, saying that after she got married to her third husband Mark Levinson in 1998, she thought about starting IVF treatments but decided against it because of the hectic shooting schedule for Satc — which premiered that June.
“I thought to myself, ‘Wow, I have 19-hour days on this series. … My Monday morning would start at 4:45 a.m. and go to one or two in the morning.
The actress, 61, opened up about having considered motherhood during an appearance on Monday’s episode of Piers Morgan’s Life Stories, saying that after she got married to her third husband Mark Levinson in 1998, she thought about starting IVF treatments but decided against it because of the hectic shooting schedule for Satc — which premiered that June.
“I thought to myself, ‘Wow, I have 19-hour days on this series. … My Monday morning would start at 4:45 a.m. and go to one or two in the morning.
- 10/23/2017
- by Maria Pasquini
- PEOPLE.com
Kim Cattrall is getting candid about her real-life relationship with her Sex and the City co-stars.
Cattrall recently appeared on ITV's Piers Morgan’s Life Stories, and in a newly released excerpt from the upcoming interview, Cattrall says she never had a close friendship with her on-screen best friends -- Sarah Jessica Parker, Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis.
"We’ve never been friends," Cattrall said, according to The Daily Mail. "We‘ve been colleagues and in some ways, it’s a very healthy place to be because then you have a clear line between your professional life and relationship and your personal."
"They all have children and I am 10 years older, and since, specifically, the series ended, I have been spending most of my time outside of New York, so, I don’t see them," the 61-year-old actress continued. "The common ground that we had was the series, and the series is over."
Kim Cattrall Says [link=nm...
Cattrall recently appeared on ITV's Piers Morgan’s Life Stories, and in a newly released excerpt from the upcoming interview, Cattrall says she never had a close friendship with her on-screen best friends -- Sarah Jessica Parker, Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis.
"We’ve never been friends," Cattrall said, according to The Daily Mail. "We‘ve been colleagues and in some ways, it’s a very healthy place to be because then you have a clear line between your professional life and relationship and your personal."
"They all have children and I am 10 years older, and since, specifically, the series ended, I have been spending most of my time outside of New York, so, I don’t see them," the 61-year-old actress continued. "The common ground that we had was the series, and the series is over."
Kim Cattrall Says [link=nm...
- 10/23/2017
- Entertainment Tonight
An extraordinary year for the Colombian Oscar nominee continued as Ciro Guerra’s drama was announced on Wednesday as winner of the 2016 Alfred P. Sloan Feature Film Prize.
A jury comprising former winners Mike Cahill and Shane Carruth, Kerry Bishé from Catch And Release, science professor Clifford Johnson, and Harvard director of space genetics Ting Wu awarded the $20,000 cash award.
They cited the film for its “original and provocative portrait of a scientist and a scientific journey into the unknown, and for its unconventional depiction of how different cultures seek to understand nature.”
For the first time the Institute said it will add a Fellowship for a writer with an early-stage episodic project to support its development for television.
Writer-director Mark Levinson has been awarded the $15,000 Sundance Institute / Sloan Fellowship for The Gold Bug Variations, while co-writers Darcy Brislin and Dyana Winkler (Bell) each receive $12,500 Sundance Institute / Sloan Commissioning Grants.
“Our Science-in-Film...
A jury comprising former winners Mike Cahill and Shane Carruth, Kerry Bishé from Catch And Release, science professor Clifford Johnson, and Harvard director of space genetics Ting Wu awarded the $20,000 cash award.
They cited the film for its “original and provocative portrait of a scientist and a scientific journey into the unknown, and for its unconventional depiction of how different cultures seek to understand nature.”
For the first time the Institute said it will add a Fellowship for a writer with an early-stage episodic project to support its development for television.
Writer-director Mark Levinson has been awarded the $15,000 Sundance Institute / Sloan Fellowship for The Gold Bug Variations, while co-writers Darcy Brislin and Dyana Winkler (Bell) each receive $12,500 Sundance Institute / Sloan Commissioning Grants.
“Our Science-in-Film...
- 1/27/2016
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
The Sundance Institute is including a touch of Cannes this week as the likes of Pippa Bianco (her short Share was the 2015 winner of Cannes Cinefondation), Alistair Banks Griffin (Two Gates of Sleep premiered in Directors’ Fortnight in 2010), and the Fabio Grassadonia and Antonio Piazza tandem (from Critics’ Week Grand Prize in 2013 for Salvo) are among the dozen selected projects for the 2016 January Screenwriters Lab. The immersive, five-day writers’ workshop takes place just prior to the festival at the Sundance Resort in Utah, January 15-20. Look for several of these projects to one day break into not only Sundance, but other major film fests. Here are the selected people & projects:
The projects and fellows selected for the 2016 January Screenwriters Lab are:
Bull (U.S.A.) / Annie Silverstein (Co-writer/Director) and Johnny McAllister (Co-writer)
In a near-abandoned subdivision west of Houston, a wayward teen runs headlong into her equally willful and unforgiving neighbor,...
The projects and fellows selected for the 2016 January Screenwriters Lab are:
Bull (U.S.A.) / Annie Silverstein (Co-writer/Director) and Johnny McAllister (Co-writer)
In a near-abandoned subdivision west of Houston, a wayward teen runs headlong into her equally willful and unforgiving neighbor,...
- 1/11/2016
- by Eric Lavallee
- IONCINEMA.com
Two films forgotten by the Academy, the animated adventure "The Lego Movie" and the Roger Ebert Documentary "Life Itself," triumphed at the recently concluded 2015 Producers Guild Awards.
"The Lego Movie" took home the Award for Outstanding Producer of Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures for producer Dan Lin while "Life Itself" won the Award for Outstanding Producer of Documentary Theatrical Motion Pictures for producers Garrett Basch, Steve James, and Zak Piper.
Meanwhile, Alejandro G. Iñárritu, John Lesher, and James W. Skotchdopole took the Oscar glitter away from Richard Linklater's "Boyhood" when "Birdman" was awarded the Darryl F. Zanuck Award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures.
The Oscars just got interesting! Will "Boyhood" triumph over "Birdman" at the Academy Awards?
In TV land, NBC was the big winner of the evening with two of their shows taking home trophies for Competition Television ("The Voice") and Live Entertainment & Talk Television ("The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon...
"The Lego Movie" took home the Award for Outstanding Producer of Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures for producer Dan Lin while "Life Itself" won the Award for Outstanding Producer of Documentary Theatrical Motion Pictures for producers Garrett Basch, Steve James, and Zak Piper.
Meanwhile, Alejandro G. Iñárritu, John Lesher, and James W. Skotchdopole took the Oscar glitter away from Richard Linklater's "Boyhood" when "Birdman" was awarded the Darryl F. Zanuck Award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures.
The Oscars just got interesting! Will "Boyhood" triumph over "Birdman" at the Academy Awards?
In TV land, NBC was the big winner of the evening with two of their shows taking home trophies for Competition Television ("The Voice") and Live Entertainment & Talk Television ("The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon...
- 1/26/2015
- by Manny
- Manny the Movie Guy
Birdman, Nightcrawler and Gone Girl are among the films nominated for the 26th annual Producers Guild of America (PGA) Awards.
The Producers Guild announced 10 nominees for the Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures prize on Monday (January 5).
Breaking Bad, Louie and True Detective amid PGA Awards nominees
Bradley Cooper and Clint Eastwood's American Sniper has also been nominated, alongside Richard Linklater's Boyhood, Wes Anderson and Scott Rudin's The Grand Budapest Hotel, and Jason Blum's Whiplash.
Foxcatcher, The Imitation Game and The Theory of Everything have also been recognised in what is considered an indication of potential Oscar winners. Selma was a noticeable absence from the PGA nominations, after studio Paramount did not send screeners to voters in time.
How To Train Your Dragon 2 and The Lego Movie are two of the motion pictures nominated in the Outstanding Producer of Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures category.
The...
The Producers Guild announced 10 nominees for the Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures prize on Monday (January 5).
Breaking Bad, Louie and True Detective amid PGA Awards nominees
Bradley Cooper and Clint Eastwood's American Sniper has also been nominated, alongside Richard Linklater's Boyhood, Wes Anderson and Scott Rudin's The Grand Budapest Hotel, and Jason Blum's Whiplash.
Foxcatcher, The Imitation Game and The Theory of Everything have also been recognised in what is considered an indication of potential Oscar winners. Selma was a noticeable absence from the PGA nominations, after studio Paramount did not send screeners to voters in time.
How To Train Your Dragon 2 and The Lego Movie are two of the motion pictures nominated in the Outstanding Producer of Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures category.
The...
- 1/5/2015
- Digital Spy
Movies made by women directors were snubbed by the Producers Guild of America when they announced the nominees today! Both "Selma" by Ava DuVernay and "Unbroken" by Angelina Jolie were left in the dust. I agree with not nominating the latter movie (sorry Ms. Jolie but "Unbroken" is too earnest for my taste) but "Selma" deserved a nod! It's a profound movie aided by DuVernay's skilled directing and David Oyelowo's fine performance as Martin Luther King Jr.
You know who I'm blaming for this? Paramount! The studio did not send screeners to Academy voters. Heck, they did not sent one to us, the Broadcast Film Critics Association. But after begging, they did send a link so I could watch "Selma" in time for our Critics' Choice Movie Award nominations.
"Selma" is a "late to the party" entry that is gaining momentum dashed by the PGA! If you remember, Clint Eastwood...
You know who I'm blaming for this? Paramount! The studio did not send screeners to Academy voters. Heck, they did not sent one to us, the Broadcast Film Critics Association. But after begging, they did send a link so I could watch "Selma" in time for our Critics' Choice Movie Award nominations.
"Selma" is a "late to the party" entry that is gaining momentum dashed by the PGA! If you remember, Clint Eastwood...
- 1/5/2015
- by Manny
- Manny the Movie Guy
The Producers Guild of America announced today the motion picture and long-form television nominations for the 26th Annual Producers Guild Awards. On the list are American Sniper, Birdman, Boyhood, Foxcatcher, Gone Girl, The Grand Budapest Hotel, The Imitation Game, Nightcrawler, The Theory Of Everything and Whiplash.
Noticeably absent among the ten are Selma and Unbroken.
Last year’s PGA winners were 12 Years A Slave and Gravity.
The Directors Guild of America nominees will be announced on January 13, 2015. The 87th Academy Awards nominations will be announced live on Thursday, January 15, 2015, at 5:30 a.m. Pt in the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater.
2006 was the last time a film (The Departed) won the Oscar for Best Picture, while the PGA’s The Darryl F. Zanuck Award went to Little Miss Sunshine. The last seven years in a row the PGA winner ultimately went onto win the Academy Award – No Country For Old Men,...
Noticeably absent among the ten are Selma and Unbroken.
Last year’s PGA winners were 12 Years A Slave and Gravity.
The Directors Guild of America nominees will be announced on January 13, 2015. The 87th Academy Awards nominations will be announced live on Thursday, January 15, 2015, at 5:30 a.m. Pt in the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater.
2006 was the last time a film (The Departed) won the Oscar for Best Picture, while the PGA’s The Darryl F. Zanuck Award went to Little Miss Sunshine. The last seven years in a row the PGA winner ultimately went onto win the Academy Award – No Country For Old Men,...
- 1/5/2015
- by Michelle McCue
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Producers Guild of America Announces Nominees American Sniper (Warner Bros. Pictures) Producers: Bradley Cooper, p.g.a., Clint Eastwood, p.g.a., Andrew Lazar, p.g.a., Robert Lorenz, p.g.a., Peter Morgan, p.g.a. Birdman (Fox Searchlight Pictures) Producers: Alejandro G. Iñárritu, John Lesher, James W. Skotchdopole Boyhood (IFC Films) Producers: Richard Linklater, p.g.a., Cathleen Sutherland, p.g.a. Foxcatcher (Sony Pictures Classics) Producers: Megan Ellison, p.g.a., Jon Kilik, p.g.a., Bennett Miller, p.g.a. Gone Girl (20th Century Fox) Producer: Ceán Chaffin, p.g.a. The Grand Budapest Hotel (Fox Searchlight Pictures) Producers: Wes Anderson & Scott Rudin, Jeremy Dawson, Steven Rales The Imitation Game (The Weinstein Company) Producers: Nora Grossman, p.g.a., Ido Ostrowsky, p.g.a., Teddy Schwarzman, p.g.a. Nightcrawler (Open Road Films) Producers: Jennifer Fox, Tony Gilroy The Theory of Everything (Focus Features) Producers: Tim Bevan & Eric Fellner,...
- 1/5/2015
- by HollywoodNews.com
- Hollywoodnews.com
American Sniper, Birdman, Boyhood, Foxcatcher, Gone Girl, The Grand Budapest Hotel, The Imitation Game, Nightcrawler, The Theory Of Everything and Whiplash have been nominated for the Darryl F. Zanuck Award for Outstanding Producer of Theatrical Motion Pictures, the PGA announced today. There were some surprising omissions– Selma, Unbroken, Interstellar and Into The Woods. On the TV side, American Horror Story: Freak Show, Fargo, The Normal Heart, The Roosevelts: An Intimate History and Sherlock are the nominees for the David L. Wolper Award for Outstanding Producer of Long-Form Television. Big Hero 6, The Book Of Life, The Boxtrolls, How To Train Your Dragon 2, and The Lego Movie were nominated in the Animated Feature category. The 2015 PGA Award winners will be announced January 24 at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza in Los Angeles.
This year, the Producers Guild will present special honors to Jon Feltheimer (Milestone Award), Mark Gordon (Norman Lear Achievement...
This year, the Producers Guild will present special honors to Jon Feltheimer (Milestone Award), Mark Gordon (Norman Lear Achievement...
- 1/5/2015
- by The Deadline Team
- Deadline
The Producers Guild of America (PGA) added to the industry mix Monday morning with a list of 10 nominees to keep the awards season grist mill churning. "Gone Girl" popped up again, and it shouldn't be a surprise. It's one of the year's biggest hits. And speaking of hits, I had a hunch "Nightcrawler" would find a place after becoming such a well-liked, profitable success. There it sits. The question for both of these films is whether this on-going industry/guild love ends up translating to Oscar recognition. After the "Dragon Tattoo" rush a few years ago, I'm pretty much wait-and-see on stuff like this. Absent from the list was anything out of the Marvel Studios comic book factory, notable as both "Guardians of the Galaxy" and "Captain America: The Winter Soldier" were both on the top tier of box office earners in 2014. The former currently maintains the throne, though it...
- 1/5/2015
- by Kristopher Tapley
- Hitfix
In a lousy session for new releases, Nightcrawler was the best of a bad lot in Australian cinemas last weekend.
Jake Gyllenhaal.s chilling turn as a sociopath in writer-director Dan Gilroy.s biting satire of media exploitation and corruption delivered $576,000 on 96 screens.
That's a reasonable start for the indie thriller co-starring Riz Ahmed, Rene Russo and Bill Paxton, which has earned $US28.7 million in its first month in the Us.
Nationwide takings plunged by 37% to $11.1 million, which was way below the corresponding week for the past two years, according to Rentrak.s estimates.
The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 1 raked in nearly $5.8 million, despite selling around half as many tickets as in the opening weekend, but has amassed a lucrative $20.8 million.
Chris Nolan.s Interstellar banked $1.6 million in its fourth orbit, down 25%, advancing to $15.6 million.
Paul Fenech's Fat Pizza vs Housos opened with a mediocre $296,000 on 121 screens,...
Jake Gyllenhaal.s chilling turn as a sociopath in writer-director Dan Gilroy.s biting satire of media exploitation and corruption delivered $576,000 on 96 screens.
That's a reasonable start for the indie thriller co-starring Riz Ahmed, Rene Russo and Bill Paxton, which has earned $US28.7 million in its first month in the Us.
Nationwide takings plunged by 37% to $11.1 million, which was way below the corresponding week for the past two years, according to Rentrak.s estimates.
The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 1 raked in nearly $5.8 million, despite selling around half as many tickets as in the opening weekend, but has amassed a lucrative $20.8 million.
Chris Nolan.s Interstellar banked $1.6 million in its fourth orbit, down 25%, advancing to $15.6 million.
Paul Fenech's Fat Pizza vs Housos opened with a mediocre $296,000 on 121 screens,...
- 12/1/2014
- by Don Groves
- IF.com.au
With year end lists already flooding the interwebs a full month before the actual year’s end, its hard to ignore the fact that awards season is now in full swing. Tons of documentary awards have already been handed out, whether its for Ida (not Pawel Pawlikowski’s gorgeous new film) or for Cinema Eye Honors, there are plenty of worthy films getting their due recognition. Plus, several international festivals have handed out major awards this month, including Idfa, which hosted their awards ceremony just minutes ago. The full roundup is just below:
Dok Leipzig – Germany – October 27th – November 2nd
At the close of the 57th edition of the German documentary festival the Golden Dove Award, the festival’s highest honor, was given to Claudine Bories and Patrice Chagnard’s Rules of the Game, while the Leipziger Ring Film Prize went to Laura Poitras’s Edward Snowden doc Citizenfour, the...
Dok Leipzig – Germany – October 27th – November 2nd
At the close of the 57th edition of the German documentary festival the Golden Dove Award, the festival’s highest honor, was given to Claudine Bories and Patrice Chagnard’s Rules of the Game, while the Leipziger Ring Film Prize went to Laura Poitras’s Edward Snowden doc Citizenfour, the...
- 11/29/2014
- by Jordan M. Smith
- IONCINEMA.com
Other leading nominees are Life Itself and 20,000 Days on Earth.
Laura Poitras’ Citizenfour, about Nsa whistleblower Edward Snowden, leads the pack at the Cinema Eye Awards nominations, with six nods.
Steve James’ Life Itself about Roger Ebert and Iain Forsythe and Jane Pollard’s 20,000 Days on Earth about Nick Cave followed close behind with five nominations each.
The nominees for the awards, which recognise exemplary craft and innovation in nonfiction film, were announced last night at an industry party at Cph: Dox in Copenhagen.
In addition to those three, the other nominations for the Nonfiction Feature Film were Jesse Moss’ The Overnighters and Orlando von Einsiedel’s Virunga.
Poitras and James are also nominated in the Direction category, and each has previously won that Cinema Eye prize, Poitras with The Oath in 2011 and James in 2012 with The Interrupters. Poitras becomes the most nominated filmmaker in Cinema Eye history with nine nominations.
Other films nominated...
Laura Poitras’ Citizenfour, about Nsa whistleblower Edward Snowden, leads the pack at the Cinema Eye Awards nominations, with six nods.
Steve James’ Life Itself about Roger Ebert and Iain Forsythe and Jane Pollard’s 20,000 Days on Earth about Nick Cave followed close behind with five nominations each.
The nominees for the awards, which recognise exemplary craft and innovation in nonfiction film, were announced last night at an industry party at Cph: Dox in Copenhagen.
In addition to those three, the other nominations for the Nonfiction Feature Film were Jesse Moss’ The Overnighters and Orlando von Einsiedel’s Virunga.
Poitras and James are also nominated in the Direction category, and each has previously won that Cinema Eye prize, Poitras with The Oath in 2011 and James in 2012 with The Interrupters. Poitras becomes the most nominated filmmaker in Cinema Eye history with nine nominations.
Other films nominated...
- 11/13/2014
- by wendy.mitchell@screendaily.com (Wendy Mitchell)
- ScreenDaily
Documentary awards took place last night [Nov 3] at London’s Queen Elizabeth Hall.
Particle Fever and Cutie and the Boxer were among the film winners at last night’s Grierson Awards, held in association with Sky Atlantic and Shell.
Mark Levinson’s Particle Fever, about the quest for find the Higgs boson, won the Satusfaction Best Science or Natural History Documentary and was praised as a “stunning piece of work” by the jury, while Zachary Heinzerling’s Cutie and the Boxer scooped the Bertha Dochouse Best Cinema Documentary award with the jury calling it a “true gem”.
The big winner on the night was Channel 4 as it took a record eight of the 13 award available, including two wins for Education Yorkshire for Envy Best Documentary Series Award and Radio Times Reader’s Choice Award.
Peter Aker’s Sing Your Heart Out received the Sky Atlantic Best Student Documentary, while former Wall To Wall chief executive Alex Graham was awarded...
Particle Fever and Cutie and the Boxer were among the film winners at last night’s Grierson Awards, held in association with Sky Atlantic and Shell.
Mark Levinson’s Particle Fever, about the quest for find the Higgs boson, won the Satusfaction Best Science or Natural History Documentary and was praised as a “stunning piece of work” by the jury, while Zachary Heinzerling’s Cutie and the Boxer scooped the Bertha Dochouse Best Cinema Documentary award with the jury calling it a “true gem”.
The big winner on the night was Channel 4 as it took a record eight of the 13 award available, including two wins for Education Yorkshire for Envy Best Documentary Series Award and Radio Times Reader’s Choice Award.
Peter Aker’s Sing Your Heart Out received the Sky Atlantic Best Student Documentary, while former Wall To Wall chief executive Alex Graham was awarded...
- 11/4/2014
- by ian.sandwell@screendaily.com (Ian Sandwell)
- ScreenDaily
Documentary awards took place last night [Nov 3] at London’s Queen Elizabeth Hall.
Particle Fever and Cutie and the Boxer were among the film winners at last night’s Grierson Awards, held in association with Sky Atlantic and Shell.
Mark Levinson’s Particle Fever, about the quest for find the Higgs boson, won the Satusfaction Best Science or Natural History Documentary and was praised as a “stunning piece of work” by the jury, while Zachary Heinzerling’s Cutie and the Boxer scooped the Bertha Dochouse Best Cinema Documentary award with the jury calling it a “true gem”.
The big winner on the night was Channel 4 as it took a record eight of the 13 award available, including two wins for Education Yorkshire for Envy Best Documentary Series Award and Radio Times Reader’s Choice Award.
Peter Aker’s Sing Your Heart Out received the Sky Atlantic Best Student Documentary, while former Wall To Wall chief executive Alex Graham was awarded...
Particle Fever and Cutie and the Boxer were among the film winners at last night’s Grierson Awards, held in association with Sky Atlantic and Shell.
Mark Levinson’s Particle Fever, about the quest for find the Higgs boson, won the Satusfaction Best Science or Natural History Documentary and was praised as a “stunning piece of work” by the jury, while Zachary Heinzerling’s Cutie and the Boxer scooped the Bertha Dochouse Best Cinema Documentary award with the jury calling it a “true gem”.
The big winner on the night was Channel 4 as it took a record eight of the 13 award available, including two wins for Education Yorkshire for Envy Best Documentary Series Award and Radio Times Reader’s Choice Award.
Peter Aker’s Sing Your Heart Out received the Sky Atlantic Best Student Documentary, while former Wall To Wall chief executive Alex Graham was awarded...
- 11/4/2014
- by ian.sandwell@screendaily.com (Ian Sandwell)
- ScreenDaily
Most festival guests’ travels aren’t impacted by the unrest in Israel; festival makes minor scheduling changes.
The Jerusalem Film Festival got underway last night, and is making very minor adjustments in the wake of security issues. Yet the organisers are mostly aiming for business as usual. In addition to postponing the Sultan’s Pool gala of Dancing Arabs by one week (full story here), the festival has also made other scheduling tweaks.
Instead of the Sultan’s Pool gala on opening night last night with 6,000 guests in an open-air screening, the festival welcomed 200local and international guests with a smaller reception in the garden at the host Cinematheque. Films that screened on the opening night included Kevin Macdonald’s How I Live Now; Gotz Spielmann’s October-November; and Mark Levinson’s Particle Fever.
The awards ceremony will now be held on Saturday night instead of Thursday at the Mishkenot Sha’ananim (to avoid a clash with the...
The Jerusalem Film Festival got underway last night, and is making very minor adjustments in the wake of security issues. Yet the organisers are mostly aiming for business as usual. In addition to postponing the Sultan’s Pool gala of Dancing Arabs by one week (full story here), the festival has also made other scheduling tweaks.
Instead of the Sultan’s Pool gala on opening night last night with 6,000 guests in an open-air screening, the festival welcomed 200local and international guests with a smaller reception in the garden at the host Cinematheque. Films that screened on the opening night included Kevin Macdonald’s How I Live Now; Gotz Spielmann’s October-November; and Mark Levinson’s Particle Fever.
The awards ceremony will now be held on Saturday night instead of Thursday at the Mishkenot Sha’ananim (to avoid a clash with the...
- 7/11/2014
- by wendy.mitchell@screendaily.com (Wendy Mitchell)
- ScreenDaily
The 61st Sydney Film Festival today announced 32 films to be featured in this year.s event (June 4-15) in advance of the full program launch on May 7.
The line-up includes the world premiere of The Redfern Story, 19 Australian premieres, 13 features, 11 documentaries and an eight-film retrospective on maverick American filmmaker Robert Altman. Altman.s son, filmmaker Michael Altman, will attend festival and introduce several of the Altman screenings.
Darlene Johnson.s The Redfern Story chronicles the volatile birth of the first all-Indigenous theatre company, the National Black Theatre. It features interviews with indigenous media pioneer Lester Bostock, writer Gerry Bostock, actor Lillian Crombie, activist-academic Gary Foley, academic Marcia Langton, actors Rachael Maza, Bryan Brown and Bindi Williams. .We are pleased to present this sneak preview of 32 of the 180-plus films in this year.s program,. said Festival Director Nashen Moodley. .We have gathered a selection of the best films from the...
The line-up includes the world premiere of The Redfern Story, 19 Australian premieres, 13 features, 11 documentaries and an eight-film retrospective on maverick American filmmaker Robert Altman. Altman.s son, filmmaker Michael Altman, will attend festival and introduce several of the Altman screenings.
Darlene Johnson.s The Redfern Story chronicles the volatile birth of the first all-Indigenous theatre company, the National Black Theatre. It features interviews with indigenous media pioneer Lester Bostock, writer Gerry Bostock, actor Lillian Crombie, activist-academic Gary Foley, academic Marcia Langton, actors Rachael Maza, Bryan Brown and Bindi Williams. .We are pleased to present this sneak preview of 32 of the 180-plus films in this year.s program,. said Festival Director Nashen Moodley. .We have gathered a selection of the best films from the...
- 4/1/2014
- by Staff writer
- IF.com.au
Mark Levinson's "Particle Fever" is the first great doc of the year (and let's hope it gets remembered next awards season). It's about the ground-breaking, Nobel Prize-winning experiment that helped unravel the nature of existence. Veteran editor-sound designer Walter Murch ("Apocalypse Now"), who's always had a fascination for physics, was brought on to "galvanize" the project but ended up spending a year humanizing this compelling work about the collision of science and art. "Particle Fever" follows six leading scientists during the launch of the Large Hadron Collider (built by the European Organization for Nuclear Research from 1998 to 2008). This marked the start-up of the biggest and most expensive experiment in history (costing around $10 billion), with 10,000 scientists from more than 100 countries joining forces to recreate conditions that existed just moments after the Big Bang and find the elusive Higgs boson, the key particle that holds the universe together,...
- 3/14/2014
- by Bill Desowitz
- Thompson on Hollywood
A funny, exhilarating, suspenseful documentary about the Large Hadron Collider, and how physics is more akin to philosophy and art than you may have imagined. I’m “biast” (pro): I’m a total science geek
I’m “biast” (con): nothing
(what is this about? see my critic’s minifesto)
If you don’t think quantum physics is exciting… you will after this funny, exhilarating, suspenseful documentary look at the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland, the people who built it and make it go, and the people who are using what it does to uncover the secrets of the universe. The Lhc is the biggest machine ever built by humans doing the most thrilling science experiment ever: searching for evidence of the Higgs boson, which brainiacs had figured must exist, in the same way that you can tell when there’s a piece missing from a jigsaw puzzle cuz...
I’m “biast” (con): nothing
(what is this about? see my critic’s minifesto)
If you don’t think quantum physics is exciting… you will after this funny, exhilarating, suspenseful documentary look at the Large Hadron Collider in Switzerland, the people who built it and make it go, and the people who are using what it does to uncover the secrets of the universe. The Lhc is the biggest machine ever built by humans doing the most thrilling science experiment ever: searching for evidence of the Higgs boson, which brainiacs had figured must exist, in the same way that you can tell when there’s a piece missing from a jigsaw puzzle cuz...
- 3/7/2014
- by MaryAnn Johanson
- www.flickfilosopher.com
Supersymmetry Vs. Multiverse: Levinson’s Doc A Non-Experiment
Over three decades ago, the European Organization for Nuclear Research (Cern) began it’s initial steps toward constructing the world’s largest and most powerful particle collider beneath the earth through a seventeen mile circular tunnel that crosses the French and Swiss borders. The massive construct would allow physicists to test long contemplated theories of particle physics, potentially unlocking the mysteries of our seemingly miraculous existence. In 2008, with the collaboration of thousands of scientists and engineers from hundreds of countries around the globe, the Large Hadron Collider (Lhc) was finally completed. Adding in the involvement of six of the passionate and kooky physicists directly involved with the project or patiently awaiting the results of the first particle collision experiments, this is where Mark Levinson’s entertaining, yet dryly verbose Particle Fever begins.
Having completed a doctorate in particle physics from Berkeley long before he became a filmmaker,...
Over three decades ago, the European Organization for Nuclear Research (Cern) began it’s initial steps toward constructing the world’s largest and most powerful particle collider beneath the earth through a seventeen mile circular tunnel that crosses the French and Swiss borders. The massive construct would allow physicists to test long contemplated theories of particle physics, potentially unlocking the mysteries of our seemingly miraculous existence. In 2008, with the collaboration of thousands of scientists and engineers from hundreds of countries around the globe, the Large Hadron Collider (Lhc) was finally completed. Adding in the involvement of six of the passionate and kooky physicists directly involved with the project or patiently awaiting the results of the first particle collision experiments, this is where Mark Levinson’s entertaining, yet dryly verbose Particle Fever begins.
Having completed a doctorate in particle physics from Berkeley long before he became a filmmaker,...
- 3/6/2014
- by Jordan M. Smith
- IONCINEMA.com
Science! You either see it as the backbone to understanding or you don’t, and everyone who doesn’t, may want to avoid Mark Levinson‘s Particle Fever because it’s first and foremost a document about the subject’s cool factor and importance. If you’re a creationist and everything you hold true about our origin comes from a book [...]...
- 3/5/2014
- by Jared Mobarak
- The Film Stage
Stakes come no higher than in Particle Fever, a dazzling, dizzying documentary about nothing less than whether we exist in a coherent universe of ordered, even beautiful laws — or whether, as Princeton physicist Nima Arkani-Hamed theorizes, our universe is one of an infinite set of other universes defined by a chaotic mash-up of unstable, inexplicable, random conditions. (The final verdict, unsurprisingly: still out!)
The film follows the first proton-smashing experiments conducted in Switzerland's Large Hadron Collider; through compelling interviews with physics theorists and experimentalists, and effervescent science animation from MK12, director Mark Levinson — himself the holder of a doctorate in theoretical particle physics — makes the search for t...
The film follows the first proton-smashing experiments conducted in Switzerland's Large Hadron Collider; through compelling interviews with physics theorists and experimentalists, and effervescent science animation from MK12, director Mark Levinson — himself the holder of a doctorate in theoretical particle physics — makes the search for t...
- 3/5/2014
- Village Voice
If you're interested in science at all, then you've likely heard of the Large Hadron Collider, an enormous particle accelerator that allows physicists to test the predictions of different theories of particle physics and high-energy physics, and particularly prove or disprove the existence of the theorized Higgs particle, or God particle as it's better known. Now for those who may want to know a bit more, there's a documentary about the collider coming called Particle Fever, and it follows six of the 100,000 scientists who help put the ambitious project together as they attempt to find the origin of life, the universe and everything. Watch it! Here's the first trailer for Mark Levinson's Particle Fever, originally from Yahoo: Particle Fever is directed by Mark Levison, making his documentary feature directorial debut. The film chronicles the launch of the Large Hadron Collider, the particle accelerator built 100 yards below the ground outside of Geneva,...
- 1/22/2014
- by Ethan Anderton
- firstshowing.net
This morning, the Nobel Prize for Physics was awarded to François Englert and Peter W. Higgs for their discovery of the Higgs boson, aka the elusive "God Particle." In timely fashion, the stateside theatrical distribution of documentary "Particle Fever" has been announced, kicking off a week run at Film Forum on March 5, 2014. The doc follows the inside story of the six scientists who made the discovery of the Higgs boson at the Large Hardron Collider, one of the most significant scientific breakthroughs in history. "Particle Fever" is helmed by Mark Levinson ("Prisoner of Time") and edited by Oscar winner Walter Murch ("Apocalypse Now," "The Godfather" trilogy). This marks Murch’s first foray into documentary features.The film, which had its North American premiere at this year’s Telluride Film Festival, sold out its Nyff screenings and won the Sheffield Doc/Fest Audience Award. Abramorama and Bond Strategy and Influence will handle the distribution and marketing.
- 10/8/2013
- by Beth Hanna
- Thompson on Hollywood
Apart from the three sneak screening titles that will stir up the buzz in the coming days, Julie Huntsinger and Tom Luddy’s 40th edition of the Telluride Film Festival excels in bringing a concentration of solid docus from the likes of Errol Morris and Werner Herzog who this year cuts the ribbon on a theatre going by his name and introduces Death Row, a pinch of Berlin Film Fest items (Gloria, Slow Food Story, Fifi Howls from Happiness) Palme d’Or winner (this year Abdellatif Kechiche will be celebrated), upcoming Sony Pictures Classics items (Tim’s Vermeer, The Lunchbox), Venice to Telluride to Tiff titles (Bethlehem, Tracks and Under the Skin), the latest Jason Reitman film (Labor Day) and the barely known docu-home-movie whodunit (by helmers Dan Geller and Dayna Goldfine) The Galapagos Affair: Satan Came to Eden which features narration from the likes of Cate Blanchett, Diane Kruger and Connie Nielsen.
- 8/28/2013
- by Eric Lavallee
- IONCINEMA.com
The Film Society Of Lincoln Center has added programming to the New York Film Festival (Nyff) that includes documentaries and restored works.
The programmes feature a spotlight on three documentary sections – Applied Sciences, Motion Portraits and How Democracy Works Now.
Motion Portraits will focus on cinematic portraiture and includes Nancy Buirski‘s Afternoon Of A Faun: Tanaquil Le Clercq and Nadav Schirman’s In The Dark Room.
Applied Science features three films, each built around obsessive projects: Ben Lewis’s Google And The World Brain (pictured), Mark Levinson’s Particle Fever and Teller’s Tim’s Vermeer.
How Democracy Works Now is a series of films by the filmmaking team of Michael Camerini and Shari Robertson who have trained their cameras on immigration reform.
The Revivals section will feature among others Martin Scorsese’s The Age Of Innocence and Arthur Ripley’s The Chase.
The Nyff runs from Sept 27-Oct 13.
The programmes feature a spotlight on three documentary sections – Applied Sciences, Motion Portraits and How Democracy Works Now.
Motion Portraits will focus on cinematic portraiture and includes Nancy Buirski‘s Afternoon Of A Faun: Tanaquil Le Clercq and Nadav Schirman’s In The Dark Room.
Applied Science features three films, each built around obsessive projects: Ben Lewis’s Google And The World Brain (pictured), Mark Levinson’s Particle Fever and Teller’s Tim’s Vermeer.
How Democracy Works Now is a series of films by the filmmaking team of Michael Camerini and Shari Robertson who have trained their cameras on immigration reform.
The Revivals section will feature among others Martin Scorsese’s The Age Of Innocence and Arthur Ripley’s The Chase.
The Nyff runs from Sept 27-Oct 13.
- 8/26/2013
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
Kevin Macdonald’s How I Live Now will close the festival, which has assembled it largest programme to date.
The 33rd Cambridge Film Festival (Sept 19-29) has unveiled its 2013 line-up, comprising 150 titles from 40 countries.
As previously announced, Professor Stephen Hawking will attend the opening night gala of documentary Hawking, which will be broadcast live to more than 60 screens across the UK.
The festival will close with Kevin Macdonald’s How I Live Now, an Orwellian vision of a post-apocalyptic future starring Saoirse Ronan and George MacKay.
Alongside Hawking, other special guests to the festival will include directors Lucy Walker (The Crash Reel), Roland Klick (Deadlock), Mark Levinson (Particle Fever), Julien Temple (Oil City Confidential), Ramon Zürcher (The Strange Little Cat), Małgośka Szumowska (In The Name Of), Marzin Malaszczak (Sieniawka), Matt Hulse (Dummy Jim) and Andrew Mudge (The Forgotten Kingdom), Bob Stanley, John Pearse and actress Stephanie Stremler (Dust On Our Heart).
Strands include Young Americans, aimed at showcasing...
The 33rd Cambridge Film Festival (Sept 19-29) has unveiled its 2013 line-up, comprising 150 titles from 40 countries.
As previously announced, Professor Stephen Hawking will attend the opening night gala of documentary Hawking, which will be broadcast live to more than 60 screens across the UK.
The festival will close with Kevin Macdonald’s How I Live Now, an Orwellian vision of a post-apocalyptic future starring Saoirse Ronan and George MacKay.
Alongside Hawking, other special guests to the festival will include directors Lucy Walker (The Crash Reel), Roland Klick (Deadlock), Mark Levinson (Particle Fever), Julien Temple (Oil City Confidential), Ramon Zürcher (The Strange Little Cat), Małgośka Szumowska (In The Name Of), Marzin Malaszczak (Sieniawka), Matt Hulse (Dummy Jim) and Andrew Mudge (The Forgotten Kingdom), Bob Stanley, John Pearse and actress Stephanie Stremler (Dust On Our Heart).
Strands include Young Americans, aimed at showcasing...
- 8/21/2013
- by michael.rosser@screendaily.com (Michael Rosser)
- ScreenDaily
Audience Award winners revealed as documentary festival reports record numbers.
International and UK delegate attendance at the 20th Sheffield Doc/Fest rose by 18%, breaking all previous records.
A total of 3,129 delegates from more than 60 countries attended the five-day festival – up from 2,657 in 2012.
The festival, which ran from June 12-16, has also revealed the Audience Award winners for best feature and short-form documentary – and the count revealed a tie in both categories.
The Audience Award for best feature doc was shared between Joshua Oppenheimer’s The Act of Killing and Particle Fever, directed by Mark Levinson and edited by Walter Murch (Apocalypse Now).
Oppenheimer’s film, which features former Indonesian death squad leaders re-enacting mass killings, was originally pitched at Doc/Fest’s MeetMarket in 2008 and also won the festival’s Special Jury Award.
The Audience Award for best short doc was shared between Slomo, directed by Josh Izenberg, and Solipsist Part 1, directed by Andrew Huang.
At Doc/Fest...
International and UK delegate attendance at the 20th Sheffield Doc/Fest rose by 18%, breaking all previous records.
A total of 3,129 delegates from more than 60 countries attended the five-day festival – up from 2,657 in 2012.
The festival, which ran from June 12-16, has also revealed the Audience Award winners for best feature and short-form documentary – and the count revealed a tie in both categories.
The Audience Award for best feature doc was shared between Joshua Oppenheimer’s The Act of Killing and Particle Fever, directed by Mark Levinson and edited by Walter Murch (Apocalypse Now).
Oppenheimer’s film, which features former Indonesian death squad leaders re-enacting mass killings, was originally pitched at Doc/Fest’s MeetMarket in 2008 and also won the festival’s Special Jury Award.
The Audience Award for best short doc was shared between Slomo, directed by Josh Izenberg, and Solipsist Part 1, directed by Andrew Huang.
At Doc/Fest...
- 6/19/2013
- by michael.rosser@screendaily.com (Michael Rosser)
- ScreenDaily
The Sheffield Doc/Fest is hosting the World Premiere of Mark Levinson's new film "Particle Fever," edited by Walter Murch ("Apocalypse Now"). The film follows six international scientists as they work on the most expensive science experiment in history. They're looking to recreate the creation of the universe, to find the Higgs boson, the "God" particle. So what does the machine that is set up to recreate the conditions of the just-after-the-Big-Bang world look like? That's where this exclusive clip comes into play. Here's a look behind-the-scenes of the Large Hadron Collider, in a clip from "Particle Fever":...
- 6/14/2013
- by Bryce J. Renninger
- Indiewire
The 54-year-old actress – whose two-year union to Larry Davis was annulled in 1979, and who has also been wed to Andre J. Lyson and Mark Levinson – insists her previous experiences haven't put her off walking down the aisle again in future.
She said: "It hasn't put me off at all. In face, my attitude is I'm quite hopeful.
"I think I'm in a really good place and I hope I'll meet someone who's in a good place too. Who knows what will happen?"
Kim admits her career can be "lonely" so she has learned to use her spare time well in order to keep busy and stop herself missing her loved ones when she is away on location.
She explained to Stylist magazine: "I have learned that acting is your craft but you also need to have a life.
"You need to recognise that three months on location in the middle of nowhere,...
She said: "It hasn't put me off at all. In face, my attitude is I'm quite hopeful.
"I think I'm in a really good place and I hope I'll meet someone who's in a good place too. Who knows what will happen?"
Kim admits her career can be "lonely" so she has learned to use her spare time well in order to keep busy and stop herself missing her loved ones when she is away on location.
She explained to Stylist magazine: "I have learned that acting is your craft but you also need to have a life.
"You need to recognise that three months on location in the middle of nowhere,...
- 7/7/2011
Kim would only come back for a third movie if the script was right — but until then she’s trying to break away from Samantha Jones!
Sex and the City fans have been wondering for a long time if there’s going to be a third movie. With the second one garnering such bad reviews, would the original cast Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis even sign on? Well Kim tells HollywoodLife.com that she totally would, but there’s one condition — it has to be good!
“To me, it all boils down to the script — whether ‘Sex and the City 3‘ or a new movie,” says Kim. “If the script is good, [then yes I would do it.]”
However, Kim is concerned a third movie could be too much of a good thing. “This was always the contention of ‘have we stayed too long?’,” explains Kim. “Do we have something more to say?...
Sex and the City fans have been wondering for a long time if there’s going to be a third movie. With the second one garnering such bad reviews, would the original cast Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall Cynthia Nixon and Kristin Davis even sign on? Well Kim tells HollywoodLife.com that she totally would, but there’s one condition — it has to be good!
“To me, it all boils down to the script — whether ‘Sex and the City 3‘ or a new movie,” says Kim. “If the script is good, [then yes I would do it.]”
However, Kim is concerned a third movie could be too much of a good thing. “This was always the contention of ‘have we stayed too long?’,” explains Kim. “Do we have something more to say?...
- 5/11/2011
- by lindsey
- HollywoodLife
Actress Kim Cattrall hasn't ruled out getting married for a third time, but she accepts any dreams she might have had of starting a family are unrealistic.
The 54-year-old Sex and the City star has two failed marriages and an annulment behind her, but she can still see herself settling down with the right man.
But she tells CNN newsman Piers Morgan, "I'm also realistic and I think that one of the main reasons that people do get married is to create a home for children and that's not going to happen.
"But I find that there's very many ways to be a mother in the world and I have nieces and nephews and I have young actors who are trying to make a go of it and, in some ways, that's what I'm here for - to pass the baton."
Cattrall divorced her last husband, Mark Levinson, in 2004.
The 54-year-old Sex and the City star has two failed marriages and an annulment behind her, but she can still see herself settling down with the right man.
But she tells CNN newsman Piers Morgan, "I'm also realistic and I think that one of the main reasons that people do get married is to create a home for children and that's not going to happen.
"But I find that there's very many ways to be a mother in the world and I have nieces and nephews and I have young actors who are trying to make a go of it and, in some ways, that's what I'm here for - to pass the baton."
Cattrall divorced her last husband, Mark Levinson, in 2004.
- 4/17/2011
- WENN
The 54-year-old "Sex and the City" star, Kim Cattrall has two failed marriages and an annulment behind her, but she can still see herself settling down with the right man.
But she tells CNN newsman Piers Morgan, "I'm also realistic and I think that one of the main reasons that people do get married is to create a home for children and that's not going to happen."
"But I find that there's very many ways to be a mother in the world and I have nieces and nephews and I have young actors who are trying to make a go of it and, in some ways, that's what I'm here for - to pass the baton."
Kim Cattrall divorced her last husband, Mark Levinson, in 2004.
But she tells CNN newsman Piers Morgan, "I'm also realistic and I think that one of the main reasons that people do get married is to create a home for children and that's not going to happen."
"But I find that there's very many ways to be a mother in the world and I have nieces and nephews and I have young actors who are trying to make a go of it and, in some ways, that's what I'm here for - to pass the baton."
Kim Cattrall divorced her last husband, Mark Levinson, in 2004.
- 4/17/2011
- by AceShowbiz.com
- Aceshowbiz
Kim Cattrall admits her maneater role in "Sex and the City" has had a negative effect on her love life.
The 54-year-old actress, who played serial dater Samantha Jones in the TV series and two films, is currently single and is looking for her "Mr. Right" but thinks her racy alter-ego puts men off.
The stunning blond revealed her dating dilemma during an appearance on the "Ellen DeGeneres Show", which airs in the Us today, April 8.
While discussing her quest to meet a new guy, Kim said, "It's very difficult," to which Ellen replied, "I would think that it would be difficult, that men would be intimidated."
The actress responded, "A little bit. Yeah. Writing a book about the female orgasm didn't help my dating career either! Men like to think that they know it all, especially in that department."
Kim was referring to the tome "Satisfaction, The Art of...
The 54-year-old actress, who played serial dater Samantha Jones in the TV series and two films, is currently single and is looking for her "Mr. Right" but thinks her racy alter-ego puts men off.
The stunning blond revealed her dating dilemma during an appearance on the "Ellen DeGeneres Show", which airs in the Us today, April 8.
While discussing her quest to meet a new guy, Kim said, "It's very difficult," to which Ellen replied, "I would think that it would be difficult, that men would be intimidated."
The actress responded, "A little bit. Yeah. Writing a book about the female orgasm didn't help my dating career either! Men like to think that they know it all, especially in that department."
Kim was referring to the tome "Satisfaction, The Art of...
- 4/8/2011
- by celebrity-mania.com
- Celebrity Mania
Kim Cattrall knows the importance of a satisfying love life - she blames bad sex for the breakdown of two of her marriages. The "Sex and the City" star has wed three times - she was married to Larry Davis for two years in the late 1970s, to Andre J. Lyson from 1982 to 1989, and a six-year union with Mark Levinson ended in 2004.
And she is adamant she knows why her relationships with Davis and Lyson failed - she was not compatible with them in bed. Cattrall tells Britain's The Sun, "I would constantly make excuses for bad sexual experiences. Poor sex was a factor in the first two of three marriages breaking up."
"It is one thing to have patience and build up a good sexual relationship, through love. But, with some men - I would say, in my experience, the majority of men - it is just never going to happen.
And she is adamant she knows why her relationships with Davis and Lyson failed - she was not compatible with them in bed. Cattrall tells Britain's The Sun, "I would constantly make excuses for bad sexual experiences. Poor sex was a factor in the first two of three marriages breaking up."
"It is one thing to have patience and build up a good sexual relationship, through love. But, with some men - I would say, in my experience, the majority of men - it is just never going to happen.
- 10/26/2010
- by AceShowbiz.com
- Aceshowbiz
Kim Cattrall knows the importance of a satisfying love life - she blames bad sex for the breakdown of two of her marriages.
The Sex and the City star has wed three times - she was married to Larry Davis for two years in the late 1970s, to Andre J. Lyson from 1982 to 1989, and a six-year union with Mark Levinson ended in 2004.
And she is adamant she knows why her relationships with Davis and Lyson failed - she was not compatible with them in bed.
Cattrall tells Britain's The Sun, "I would constantly make excuses for bad sexual experiences. Poor sex was a factor in the first two of three marriages breaking up.
"It is one thing to have patience and build up a good sexual relationship, through love. But, with some men - I would say, in my experience, the majority of men - it is just never going to happen. I wish I had not made an orgasm my only goal. It is all about all-round sexual fulfilment."
Cattrall has also realised where she went wrong when choosing a man - because good-looking hunks are not always the best lovers.
She adds, "I wish I had realised that good looks mean nothing when it comes to sex. Everyone expects great-looking guys and women to be having great sex. That's not true.
"I always had a sexy image, on camera, but I was not having a fabulous sex life. You cannot be intimate with an image. I remember going to bed with a real good-looking ladies' man, in the hope that he would teach me what I had been missing. He didn't."...
The Sex and the City star has wed three times - she was married to Larry Davis for two years in the late 1970s, to Andre J. Lyson from 1982 to 1989, and a six-year union with Mark Levinson ended in 2004.
And she is adamant she knows why her relationships with Davis and Lyson failed - she was not compatible with them in bed.
Cattrall tells Britain's The Sun, "I would constantly make excuses for bad sexual experiences. Poor sex was a factor in the first two of three marriages breaking up.
"It is one thing to have patience and build up a good sexual relationship, through love. But, with some men - I would say, in my experience, the majority of men - it is just never going to happen. I wish I had not made an orgasm my only goal. It is all about all-round sexual fulfilment."
Cattrall has also realised where she went wrong when choosing a man - because good-looking hunks are not always the best lovers.
She adds, "I wish I had realised that good looks mean nothing when it comes to sex. Everyone expects great-looking guys and women to be having great sex. That's not true.
"I always had a sexy image, on camera, but I was not having a fabulous sex life. You cannot be intimate with an image. I remember going to bed with a real good-looking ladies' man, in the hope that he would teach me what I had been missing. He didn't."...
- 10/25/2010
- WENN
London, May 14 – Kim Cattrall has doled out the ultimate fashion advice – go panty-free to lead a “healthier” life.
The Sex and the City star, 53, also admitted that she rarely wears undergarments beneath her clothes, reports The Daily Express.
She tells Look magazine, “My ultimate fashion advice is that it’s a proven fact that if you don’t wear underwear it’s more ventilation and that’s maybe healthier.”
Meanwhile, Cattrall has vowed never to wed again.
The actress has been married three times and split from her last husband, Mark Levinson, in 2004.
The Sex and the City star, 53, also admitted that she rarely wears undergarments beneath her clothes, reports The Daily Express.
She tells Look magazine, “My ultimate fashion advice is that it’s a proven fact that if you don’t wear underwear it’s more ventilation and that’s maybe healthier.”
Meanwhile, Cattrall has vowed never to wed again.
The actress has been married three times and split from her last husband, Mark Levinson, in 2004.
- 5/14/2010
- by News
- RealBollywood.com
London, May 11 – Actress Kim Cattrall says she will never get married again as she feels it isn’t ‘necessary’.
‘I’ll never marry again. I don’t want children. I am self-sufficient. If I decide to spend time with someone, then I will. If marriage means something to someone else, then I guess it could be a… negotiated point. But I really don’t feel it’s necessary,’ imdb.com quoted her as saying.
The actress has been married three times, and split from her last husband, Mark Levinson, in 2004.
‘I’ll never marry again. I don’t want children. I am self-sufficient. If I decide to spend time with someone, then I will. If marriage means something to someone else, then I guess it could be a… negotiated point. But I really don’t feel it’s necessary,’ imdb.com quoted her as saying.
The actress has been married three times, and split from her last husband, Mark Levinson, in 2004.
- 5/11/2010
- by realbollywood
- RealBollywood.com
London, May 11 – ‘Sex And The City’ star Kim Cattrall has vowed not to marry again.
The actress, who has been married three times, parted ways with her last husband, Mark Levinson, in 2004.
Cattrall, however, insists that she wont marry for the fourth time.
“I’ll never marry again. I don’t want children. I am self-sufficient. If I decide to spend time with someone then I will,” the Daily Express quoted her as saying.
“If marriage means something to someone else then I guess it could be a… negotiated point. But I really don’t.
The actress, who has been married three times, parted ways with her last husband, Mark Levinson, in 2004.
Cattrall, however, insists that she wont marry for the fourth time.
“I’ll never marry again. I don’t want children. I am self-sufficient. If I decide to spend time with someone then I will,” the Daily Express quoted her as saying.
“If marriage means something to someone else then I guess it could be a… negotiated point. But I really don’t.
- 5/11/2010
- by News
- RealBollywood.com
Kim Cattrall has vowed never to wed again, because marriage isn't "necessary". The actress has been married three times and split from her last husband, Mark Levinson, in 2004 after a six-year union - and she insists there won't be a fourth wedding.
The "Sex and the City" star says, "I'll never marry again. I don't want children. I am self-sufficient. If I decide to spend time with someone then I will. If marriage means something to someone else then I guess it could be a... negotiated point. But I really don't feel it's necessary." Cattrall split from toyboy Alan Wyse last year.
Personal life aside, Kim Cattrall will soon reprising his role as Samantha Jones in "Sex and the City 2" alongside Sarah Jessica Parker, Kristin Davis and Cynthia Nixon. Beside acting in front of the camera, Kim also teams up with her co-stars to record a soundtrack for the film.
The "Sex and the City" star says, "I'll never marry again. I don't want children. I am self-sufficient. If I decide to spend time with someone then I will. If marriage means something to someone else then I guess it could be a... negotiated point. But I really don't feel it's necessary." Cattrall split from toyboy Alan Wyse last year.
Personal life aside, Kim Cattrall will soon reprising his role as Samantha Jones in "Sex and the City 2" alongside Sarah Jessica Parker, Kristin Davis and Cynthia Nixon. Beside acting in front of the camera, Kim also teams up with her co-stars to record a soundtrack for the film.
- 5/11/2010
- by AceShowbiz.com
- Aceshowbiz
Kim Cattrall has vowed never to wed again, because marriage isn't "necessary".
The actress has been married three times and split from her last husband, Mark Levinson, in 2004 after a six-year union - and she insists there won't be a fourth wedding.
The Sex and The City star says, "I'll never marry again. I don't want children. I am self-sufficient. If I decide to spend time with someone then I will. If marriage means something to someone else then I guess it could be a... negotiated point. But I really don't feel it's necessary."
Cattrall split from toyboy Alan Wyse last year.
The actress has been married three times and split from her last husband, Mark Levinson, in 2004 after a six-year union - and she insists there won't be a fourth wedding.
The Sex and The City star says, "I'll never marry again. I don't want children. I am self-sufficient. If I decide to spend time with someone then I will. If marriage means something to someone else then I guess it could be a... negotiated point. But I really don't feel it's necessary."
Cattrall split from toyboy Alan Wyse last year.
- 5/11/2010
- WENN
For the Sex and the City star, it's a return to her first love and her roots – playing Shakespeare's greatest erotic heroine Cleopatra at the Liverpool Playhouse
The room was full of spray-varnished stars of the stage that day, all looking their best for the prize-giving ceremony ahead. Many were talented and some were good looking too, but there was only one actress that guests at the Laurence Olivier awards were queuing up to meet.
Regal in a long, strappy dress, her hair worn up, Kim Cattrall was belle of the ball, serenely gliding past Kevin Spacey and Patrick Stewart in the manner of Cleopatra, the Egyptian queen she has just announced she is to play later this year. Then, in 2005, the star of Sex and the City was fresh to the West End scene and so was still imbued with a kind of transatlantic glow. One might mention her...
The room was full of spray-varnished stars of the stage that day, all looking their best for the prize-giving ceremony ahead. Many were talented and some were good looking too, but there was only one actress that guests at the Laurence Olivier awards were queuing up to meet.
Regal in a long, strappy dress, her hair worn up, Kim Cattrall was belle of the ball, serenely gliding past Kevin Spacey and Patrick Stewart in the manner of Cleopatra, the Egyptian queen she has just announced she is to play later this year. Then, in 2005, the star of Sex and the City was fresh to the West End scene and so was still imbued with a kind of transatlantic glow. One might mention her...
- 5/8/2010
- by Vanessa Thorpe
- The Guardian - Film News
"Sex and the City" star Kim Cattrall has no regrets about ending up single and childless at 53. The actress has been married three times, with her last divorce in 2004 after a six-year union with audio designer Mark Levinson.
Her last relationship, with chef Alan Wyse, came to an end in 2009 and Cattrall blamed her romance woes on her heavy workload. But the star is adamant she's learned to love life as a single woman - even though she's missed out on starting a family.
She tells Britain's Evening Standard newspaper, "I don't regret (not having children). It's fine, it really is. I'm a pretty good auntie and I have a lot of friends with kids. At the end of the day I like to go home and be quiet and have time to relax."...
Her last relationship, with chef Alan Wyse, came to an end in 2009 and Cattrall blamed her romance woes on her heavy workload. But the star is adamant she's learned to love life as a single woman - even though she's missed out on starting a family.
She tells Britain's Evening Standard newspaper, "I don't regret (not having children). It's fine, it really is. I'm a pretty good auntie and I have a lot of friends with kids. At the end of the day I like to go home and be quiet and have time to relax."...
- 2/16/2010
- by AceShowbiz.com
- Aceshowbiz
Kim Cattrall has insisted that she has no regrets about never starting a family. The 53-year-old has been married three times, with her final divorce coming in 2004 following a six-year relationship with producer Mark Levinson. The actress ended her last romance when she split with chef Alan Wyse last year, which she later blamed on her heavy workload. However, Cattrall maintained that she is fond of (more)...
- 2/15/2010
- by By Oli Simpson
- Digital Spy
Sex And The City star Kim Cattrall has no regrets about ending up single and childless at 53.
The actress has been married three times, with her last divorce in 2004 after a six-year union with audio designer Mark Levinson.
Her last relationship, with chef Alan Wyse, came to an end last year and Cattrall blamed her romance woes on her heavy workload.
But the star is adamant she's learned to love life as a single woman - even though she's missed out on starting a family.
She tells Britain's Evening Standard newspaper, "I don't regret (not having children). It's fine, it really is. I'm a pretty good auntie and I have a lot of friends with kids. At the end of the day I like to go home and be quiet and have time to relax."...
The actress has been married three times, with her last divorce in 2004 after a six-year union with audio designer Mark Levinson.
Her last relationship, with chef Alan Wyse, came to an end last year and Cattrall blamed her romance woes on her heavy workload.
But the star is adamant she's learned to love life as a single woman - even though she's missed out on starting a family.
She tells Britain's Evening Standard newspaper, "I don't regret (not having children). It's fine, it really is. I'm a pretty good auntie and I have a lot of friends with kids. At the end of the day I like to go home and be quiet and have time to relax."...
- 2/15/2010
- WENN
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