
As Donald Trump wants to introduce tariffs for films and TV shows made outside America, there’s a chance emerging to reset parts of the entertainment industry.
There’s a line in 1988’s Die Hard, where the villainous Hans Gruber is – spoiler light! – looking to smoke out John McClane. As part of that, into the frame comes the coked-up (in two senses) character of Ellis. It’s a beautifully played moment in a much-loved movie, and Alan Rickman’s Gruber ultimately declares to McClane that “sooner or later, I might get to someone you do care about.”
Following the second coming of US President Donald Trump has been a bit like that for many. He appears to be throwing darts at an assortment of targets, in an attempt to provoke a reaction. If he’s not irked you yet, rest assured he’s going to keep trying, and is likely...
There’s a line in 1988’s Die Hard, where the villainous Hans Gruber is – spoiler light! – looking to smoke out John McClane. As part of that, into the frame comes the coked-up (in two senses) character of Ellis. It’s a beautifully played moment in a much-loved movie, and Alan Rickman’s Gruber ultimately declares to McClane that “sooner or later, I might get to someone you do care about.”
Following the second coming of US President Donald Trump has been a bit like that for many. He appears to be throwing darts at an assortment of targets, in an attempt to provoke a reaction. If he’s not irked you yet, rest assured he’s going to keep trying, and is likely...
- 06/05/2025
- par Simon Brew
- Film Stories


President Donald Trump sent shockwaves through the entertainment industry on Sunday with a social media post threatening tariffs on international productions.
“The Movie Industry in America is Dying a very fast death. Other Countries are offering all sorts of incentives to draw our filmmakers and studios away from the United States. Hollywood, and many other areas within the U.S.A., are being devastated,” Trump wrote. “This is a concerted effort by other Nations and, therefore, a National Security threat. It is, in addition to everything else, messaging and propaganda! Therefore, I am authorizing the Department of Commerce, and the United States Trade Representative, to immediately begin the process of instituting a 100% Tariff on any and all Movies coming into our Country that are produced in Foreign Lands. We Want Movies Made In America, Again!”
Typical of the president, the proclamation came with few details and was quickly denounced as unlikely,...
“The Movie Industry in America is Dying a very fast death. Other Countries are offering all sorts of incentives to draw our filmmakers and studios away from the United States. Hollywood, and many other areas within the U.S.A., are being devastated,” Trump wrote. “This is a concerted effort by other Nations and, therefore, a National Security threat. It is, in addition to everything else, messaging and propaganda! Therefore, I am authorizing the Department of Commerce, and the United States Trade Representative, to immediately begin the process of instituting a 100% Tariff on any and all Movies coming into our Country that are produced in Foreign Lands. We Want Movies Made In America, Again!”
Typical of the president, the proclamation came with few details and was quickly denounced as unlikely,...
- 05/05/2025
- par Christopher Rosen
- Gold Derby


Stars: Adrien Brody, Guy Pearce, Felicity Jones, Joe Alwyn, Raffey Cassidy, Stacy Martin, Isaach De Bankolé, Alessandro Nivola | Written by Brady Corbet, Mona Fastvold | Directed by Brady Corbet
Dark screens are broken by the reading of a letter, and a scramble of people across the screen, all of them fighting to see their new world of freedom. The land of dreams: America. The crashing brass of an overture fills the room, and you sit up, realising this is something very different. When movies were in their golden age and films felt like an event, an overture would often ring out before any images were seen, or over the opening titles. Think of films such as Lawrence of Arabia, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Ben Hur, Gone with the Wind, and many more. Grand films that feel made for the big screen, that seem to invoke the very voice of cinema. If...
Dark screens are broken by the reading of a letter, and a scramble of people across the screen, all of them fighting to see their new world of freedom. The land of dreams: America. The crashing brass of an overture fills the room, and you sit up, realising this is something very different. When movies were in their golden age and films felt like an event, an overture would often ring out before any images were seen, or over the opening titles. Think of films such as Lawrence of Arabia, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Ben Hur, Gone with the Wind, and many more. Grand films that feel made for the big screen, that seem to invoke the very voice of cinema. If...
- 30/04/2025
- par Alex Ginnelly
- Nerdly

The 1960s were a decade when the movie industry made leaps and bounds in terms of storytelling, technology, and expansion beyond the American borders. This era came up with so many fantastic films that it was hard to pick the ten ultimate 60s movie classics from among them. In our quest to find the top ten, we are sure that we may have missed quite a few fan-favorites.
However, the movies in this list are not just great films from the 60s, but also some of the greatest in cinema history. The classics of legendary directors like Roman Polanski, Alfred Hitchcock, and Stanley Kubrick have made it to this list. This list also features some of the best in the genres like horror, Western, rom-com, and sci-fi.
10. Breakfast At Tiffany’s (1961)
Audrey Hepburn’s eccentric Manhattan socialite stole the show in this rom-com classic. Truman Capote’s 1958 novella translated amazingly into film format,...
However, the movies in this list are not just great films from the 60s, but also some of the greatest in cinema history. The classics of legendary directors like Roman Polanski, Alfred Hitchcock, and Stanley Kubrick have made it to this list. This list also features some of the best in the genres like horror, Western, rom-com, and sci-fi.
10. Breakfast At Tiffany’s (1961)
Audrey Hepburn’s eccentric Manhattan socialite stole the show in this rom-com classic. Truman Capote’s 1958 novella translated amazingly into film format,...
- 28/04/2025
- par Hashim Asraff
- FandomWire

American Film With Highest Ticket Sales(Photo Credit –Hotstar)
Box office numbers are often the first metric people look at when measuring a film’s success, but ticket sales tell a deeper, more enduring story. While gross revenue can be swayed by inflation, 3D surcharges, and premium formats, ticket sales reveal how many people actually sat down in a theatre to experience a film firsthand. It’s an old-school measure of mass appeal. It is the one that reflects genuine audience turnout across decades and generations, even over Avatar and Endgame.
Hollywood has produced its fair share of record-shattering hits, from epic romances and war dramas to superhero spectacles and animated sensations. Yet when it comes to the sheer volume of tickets sold, without adjusting for the price of popcorn or the latest IMAX upcharge, the list looks very different from today’s billion-dollar club. Some titles made history by becoming cultural moments,...
Box office numbers are often the first metric people look at when measuring a film’s success, but ticket sales tell a deeper, more enduring story. While gross revenue can be swayed by inflation, 3D surcharges, and premium formats, ticket sales reveal how many people actually sat down in a theatre to experience a film firsthand. It’s an old-school measure of mass appeal. It is the one that reflects genuine audience turnout across decades and generations, even over Avatar and Endgame.
Hollywood has produced its fair share of record-shattering hits, from epic romances and war dramas to superhero spectacles and animated sensations. Yet when it comes to the sheer volume of tickets sold, without adjusting for the price of popcorn or the latest IMAX upcharge, the list looks very different from today’s billion-dollar club. Some titles made history by becoming cultural moments,...
- 25/04/2025
- par Piyush Yadav
- KoiMoi


Some irresponsible reviews of this important film have spoken of how the film doesn’t provide enough entertainment. It is like saying Gone With The Wind doesn’t have enough wind in its sail. Some cinematic experiences need to be judged beyond what we define as “entertainment”.
And what a heinous crime against all humane yardsticks it would be if a film on the monstrous aftermath of terror attacks would be entertaining. Yuck, yuck, yuck!
Except for a weak central performance by Emraan Hashmi and ridiculously underwritten roles for the two female leads, Ground Zero strikes all the right chords from the word go. In one of its opening sequences, an affable Bsf jawaan in a busy area of Kashmir is shot point-blank in his head.
One minute, he is laughing and joking with his colleague, buying Kit Kat chocolate from a roadside shopkeeper who refuses to charge money (the...
And what a heinous crime against all humane yardsticks it would be if a film on the monstrous aftermath of terror attacks would be entertaining. Yuck, yuck, yuck!
Except for a weak central performance by Emraan Hashmi and ridiculously underwritten roles for the two female leads, Ground Zero strikes all the right chords from the word go. In one of its opening sequences, an affable Bsf jawaan in a busy area of Kashmir is shot point-blank in his head.
One minute, he is laughing and joking with his colleague, buying Kit Kat chocolate from a roadside shopkeeper who refuses to charge money (the...
- 25/04/2025
- par Subhash K Jha
- Bollyspice

Global Cinema Blockbuster Hits(Photo Credit –Prime Video)
Box office records are like shifting sands, always moving, always reshaping cinema history. Every few decades, a film arrives that doesn’t just entertain but redefines what’s possible commercially. Whether through technological innovation, sweeping love stories, intergalactic battles, or groundbreaking effects, these films create cultural events that bring people to theatres in droves. Some dominate for years, others are surpassed swiftly, but all of them, at some point, claimed the same title: the highest-grossing movie of all time.
This title isn’t just about bragging rights, it’s a reflection of a film’s reach and the evolution of cinema itself. From hand-painted reels of the early 20th century to CGI spectacles of today, the list of box office kings tells a parallel story of filmmaking innovation and audience taste. And while the numbers keep climbing, only a rare few have worn the crown.
Box office records are like shifting sands, always moving, always reshaping cinema history. Every few decades, a film arrives that doesn’t just entertain but redefines what’s possible commercially. Whether through technological innovation, sweeping love stories, intergalactic battles, or groundbreaking effects, these films create cultural events that bring people to theatres in droves. Some dominate for years, others are surpassed swiftly, but all of them, at some point, claimed the same title: the highest-grossing movie of all time.
This title isn’t just about bragging rights, it’s a reflection of a film’s reach and the evolution of cinema itself. From hand-painted reels of the early 20th century to CGI spectacles of today, the list of box office kings tells a parallel story of filmmaking innovation and audience taste. And while the numbers keep climbing, only a rare few have worn the crown.
- 24/04/2025
- par Piyush Yadav
- KoiMoi

Which 1939 movie still holds an unbeatable box office record? (Photo Credit – Prime Video)
In an era of billion-dollar blockbusters, IMAX screens, and global releases spanning over 100 countries, it might be easy to assume that the biggest box office hit of all time is a recent CGI-heavy spectacle. Films like Avatar and Avengers: Endgame have dominated headlines and shattered records since their release and are hailed as the pinnacle of cinematic commercial success. But when the numbers are adjusted for inflation, the true champion isn’t blue-skinned aliens or Marvel superheroes. It’s a sweeping epic from 1939 that continues to wear the crown.
Released more than eight decades ago, Gone with the Wind still stands at the summit of box office history when ticket sales are calculated with inflation factored in. It was a cinematic phenomenon in its time, and its popularity has endured across generations, despite the cultural conversations it continues to ignite.
In an era of billion-dollar blockbusters, IMAX screens, and global releases spanning over 100 countries, it might be easy to assume that the biggest box office hit of all time is a recent CGI-heavy spectacle. Films like Avatar and Avengers: Endgame have dominated headlines and shattered records since their release and are hailed as the pinnacle of cinematic commercial success. But when the numbers are adjusted for inflation, the true champion isn’t blue-skinned aliens or Marvel superheroes. It’s a sweeping epic from 1939 that continues to wear the crown.
Released more than eight decades ago, Gone with the Wind still stands at the summit of box office history when ticket sales are calculated with inflation factored in. It was a cinematic phenomenon in its time, and its popularity has endured across generations, despite the cultural conversations it continues to ignite.
- 14/04/2025
- par Piyush Yadav
- KoiMoi

Here’s a little something that may knock your popcorn out of your hand: Titanic and Avengers: Endgame — the two films we’ve often salivated over for breaking records —don’t actually top the list of highest-grossing movies of all time if you adjust for inflation.
Indeed, despite Kevin Feige’s Avengers: Endgame dominating the box office for a solid minute and Titanic being a household name for decades, the crown doesn’t rest on their heads when we bring inflation into the picture. Mind-blowing, right?
Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet in Titanic | Credit: Paramount Pictures
You see, money doesn’t grow on trees, but it sure does lose its value over time. When you throw inflation into the mix, the movies that were once deemed the titans of the box office might start looking like minnows. Let’s break this down and uncover which film truly takes the cake...
Indeed, despite Kevin Feige’s Avengers: Endgame dominating the box office for a solid minute and Titanic being a household name for decades, the crown doesn’t rest on their heads when we bring inflation into the picture. Mind-blowing, right?
Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet in Titanic | Credit: Paramount Pictures
You see, money doesn’t grow on trees, but it sure does lose its value over time. When you throw inflation into the mix, the movies that were once deemed the titans of the box office might start looking like minnows. Let’s break this down and uncover which film truly takes the cake...
- 08/04/2025
- par Siddhika Prajapati
- FandomWire

It's almost impossible for an actor to be proud of every single thing they've ever made, even when they're the caliber of Academy Award-winner Nicole Kidman. Over the years, the Australian performer has starred in all kinds of films, from Baz Luhrmann's romantic and tragic musical "Moulin Rouge!" to Alejandro Amenábar's truly terrifying ghost story "The Others, but one in particular apparently gives her pause in retrospect.
In an interview with the Australian radio station 2dayFM (via The Daily Mail), Kidman revealed that she was embarrassed when she saw her performance in Luhrmann's 2008 historical epic "Australia." The movie received middling-to-poor reviews from critics and wasn't especially loved by audiences either, and Kidman's starring role as British aristocrat Lady Sarah Ashley, who moves to Australia after she inherits the cattle ranch Faraway Downs, doesn't really help matters. Her performance isn't the worst thing about the movie, of course, as...
In an interview with the Australian radio station 2dayFM (via The Daily Mail), Kidman revealed that she was embarrassed when she saw her performance in Luhrmann's 2008 historical epic "Australia." The movie received middling-to-poor reviews from critics and wasn't especially loved by audiences either, and Kidman's starring role as British aristocrat Lady Sarah Ashley, who moves to Australia after she inherits the cattle ranch Faraway Downs, doesn't really help matters. Her performance isn't the worst thing about the movie, of course, as...
- 06/04/2025
- par Danielle Ryan
- Slash Film

Travel back in time to Hollywood’s heyday with these streaming services.
While the Streaming Age of TV and movies has no doubt made its stamp on the history of video entertainment in the United States, the Golden Age of Hollywood is still considered one of the best periods of film and TV production by most viewers. Roughly spanning the 1930s through the 1960s, the Golden Age produced scores of titles that are still beloved today, and even younger viewers are taking an interest in content that was first introduced a long time ago.
With that in mind, we decided to assemble this bundle of streaming services that will allow you to watch shows and movies from the Golden Age of Hollywood for only $10! Check out the three services in our expert-curated bundle below.
Which services will allow you to watch Golden Age content for $10 per month?
Max
Kanopy
Pluto...
While the Streaming Age of TV and movies has no doubt made its stamp on the history of video entertainment in the United States, the Golden Age of Hollywood is still considered one of the best periods of film and TV production by most viewers. Roughly spanning the 1930s through the 1960s, the Golden Age produced scores of titles that are still beloved today, and even younger viewers are taking an interest in content that was first introduced a long time ago.
With that in mind, we decided to assemble this bundle of streaming services that will allow you to watch shows and movies from the Golden Age of Hollywood for only $10! Check out the three services in our expert-curated bundle below.
Which services will allow you to watch Golden Age content for $10 per month?
Max
Kanopy
Pluto...
- 06/04/2025
- par David Satin
- The Streamable


Over the past few years, the future of studios’ ability to assert First Amendment protections in casting decisions appeared to be compromised thanks to a couple of high-profile decisions from courts overseeing discrimination lawsuits filed by actors. The most recent came last year when a court rebuffed Disney’s bid to dismiss a case over Gina Carano’s firing from The Mandalorian in a ruling that explored whether free speech allows private companies to fire employees who publicly clash with their values. Before that was an order by another court advancing a lawsuit from Brent Sexton against Apple Studios, finding that the company may have discriminated against him by pulling a deal for him to star as Andrew Johnson in Manhunt for refusing the Covid-19 vaccine.
But on Friday, California’s Second Appellate District reversed that ruling under a California law that allows for the early dismissal of claims intended to chill free speech.
But on Friday, California’s Second Appellate District reversed that ruling under a California law that allows for the early dismissal of claims intended to chill free speech.
- 01/04/2025
- par Winston Cho
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News


Exploring how the power of storytelling in historical fiction deepens our understanding of the complexities of real-world history. Not to be confused with Alternate History, which focuses on a slight yet impactful change in our historical timeline, nor with the Historical Drama that attempts to make actual historical events more entertaining and dramatic. Historical Fiction still maintains a historical setting, borrowing the era’s manners, events, and social context to create a fictional narrative in order to educate and offer a unique perspective on a particular moment of Human History. While many view the genre negatively due to the titled historical inaccuracy, the Historical Fiction genre still is able to act as a unique form of educational entertainment. Not only giving audiences a glimpse into how life was in certain eras gone by outside from the nobility and those embedded into the pages of the history books, but it also...
- 17/03/2025
- par Mario Martinez Ignacio
- Hollywood Insider - Substance & Meaningful Entertainment

The Academy Awards are the industry's greatest acknowledgment for movies. For almost a hundred years, the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences has rewarded the best in cinema with the Oscar statuette. Indeed, many classic movies like Gone with the Wind, Casablanca, The Godfather, The Silence of the Lambs, Titanic, and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King have claimed the ceremony's most prestigious award: Best Picture.
- 12/03/2025
- par David Caballero
- Collider.com


If you have the requisite cones and rods, the moment is imprinted on your retina: Dorothy Gale awakens from a nasty bump on the head, opens the door of her drab sepia-toned farmhouse, and crosses over into an eye-popping realm of dazzling primary colors — ruby slippers, yellow brick roads and emerald cities.
Not only aren’t we in Kansas anymore, we aren’t in Hollywood anymore, at least not the usual black and white palette of all but 15 feature films that year. The portal into Oz did not open the curtain on cinematic color — nor was it alone in showcasing the polychromatic spectrum that year — 1939, after all, also saw the release of Gone With the Wind, whose painterly swatches of shimmering golden-hour hues made Oz look garish. But The Wizard of Oz drew the most vivid contrast between two possible screen worlds, a grim monochromatic Depression-scape and what was called...
Not only aren’t we in Kansas anymore, we aren’t in Hollywood anymore, at least not the usual black and white palette of all but 15 feature films that year. The portal into Oz did not open the curtain on cinematic color — nor was it alone in showcasing the polychromatic spectrum that year — 1939, after all, also saw the release of Gone With the Wind, whose painterly swatches of shimmering golden-hour hues made Oz look garish. But The Wizard of Oz drew the most vivid contrast between two possible screen worlds, a grim monochromatic Depression-scape and what was called...
- 11/03/2025
- par Thomas Doherty
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News

It's hard to believe that we're more than a decade removed from the last feature-length Muppet movie. In the spring of 2014, Disney released the final Muppets movie -- at least, the final one for now. "Muppets Most Wanted" was, like its 2011 predecessor "The Muppets," a fun, family-friendly homage to the Muppet movies of old. The 2011 film, starring Jason Segel and Amy Adams, was as much about the Muppets themselves as it was a reference-laden film riffing on the 1979 classic "The Muppet Movie." And just as "The Great Muppet Caper" sent Kermit the Frog, Fozzie Bear, Gonzo, and Miss Piggy to Europe for a rollicking heist movie, "Muppets Most Wanted" sent its gaggle of Muppet characters away from the United States for an adventure that ran them afoul of Interpol and the world's first and second greatest criminal masterminds.
Muppet movies are also nothing if they're not delightfully self-referential, breaking the fourth wall with ease.
Muppet movies are also nothing if they're not delightfully self-referential, breaking the fourth wall with ease.
- 08/03/2025
- par Josh Spiegel
- Slash Film

Best Actor Oscar Winners List (Photo Credit – Instagram/Wikipedia)
The Academy Awards have long vaunted acting titans, and a rare few male actors have commandeered the Best Actor statuette more than once, with Daniel Day-Lewis scaling the peak thrice. From living legends like Tom Hanks to recent winners such as Adrien Brody, 10 men are trailing Day-Lewis’ record. Here is every name with two or more wins in this hallowed category.
1. Daniel Day-Lewis
Sir Daniel Day-Lewis stands alone with three Best Actor Oscars, a feat no other man has matched. His wins were facilitated thanks to dramatic transformations for My Left Foot, There Will Be Blood, and Lincoln—roles that exhibit him as an unforgettable chameleon. The Irish actor has retired since 2017’s Phantom Thread, but his five nominations out of fewer than a couple dozen movies certainly make us wonder whether Day-Lewis could come back for that gold once again...
The Academy Awards have long vaunted acting titans, and a rare few male actors have commandeered the Best Actor statuette more than once, with Daniel Day-Lewis scaling the peak thrice. From living legends like Tom Hanks to recent winners such as Adrien Brody, 10 men are trailing Day-Lewis’ record. Here is every name with two or more wins in this hallowed category.
1. Daniel Day-Lewis
Sir Daniel Day-Lewis stands alone with three Best Actor Oscars, a feat no other man has matched. His wins were facilitated thanks to dramatic transformations for My Left Foot, There Will Be Blood, and Lincoln—roles that exhibit him as an unforgettable chameleon. The Irish actor has retired since 2017’s Phantom Thread, but his five nominations out of fewer than a couple dozen movies certainly make us wonder whether Day-Lewis could come back for that gold once again...
- 08/03/2025
- par Aman Goyal
- KoiMoi

Disney’s first feature-length color animated movie, “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,” opened in Technicolor in 1937, and the company came full circle when Technicolor’s flagship visual effects company Mpc was called upon to create effects on Disney’s upcoming live-action adaptation of the classic. But the timing now marks the sad end of Technicolor, which was founded in 1915 and went on to become one of Hollywood’s most recognizable brands, working on classic films such as “The Wizard of Oz” and “Gone with the Wind.”
On Friday, Feb. 21, Technicolor began alerting customers and employees that it was facing “severe financial challenges.” This included sending U.S. employees a Warn notice as required by law for large companies that anticipate closings and mass layoffs. Technicolor’s leadership worked through the weekend to find a solution, but by Monday CEO Caroline Parot admitted in a company memo to an “inability...
On Friday, Feb. 21, Technicolor began alerting customers and employees that it was facing “severe financial challenges.” This included sending U.S. employees a Warn notice as required by law for large companies that anticipate closings and mass layoffs. Technicolor’s leadership worked through the weekend to find a solution, but by Monday CEO Caroline Parot admitted in a company memo to an “inability...
- 04/03/2025
- par Carolyn Giardina
- Variety Film + TV

Can Adrien Brody ever truly own his Oscar?(Photo Credit – theacademy/Instagram)
Adrien Brody may have claimed the Best Actor title at this year’s Oscars, but the golden trophy in his hands? That doesn’t technically belong to him.
Of course, that won’t stop The Brutalist star from proudly displaying it on his mantle, at least for now. After a fierce competition against Timothée Chalamet (A Complete Unknown), Colman Domingo (Sing Sing), Sebastian Stan (The Apprentice), and Ralph Fiennes (Conclave), Brody emerged victorious for his portrayal of László Tóth, an architect striving to rebuild his life in America.
Adrien Brody takes extra time to call out Jew-hate and racism while accepting his second Oscar for Best Actor.
He also deserves the award for Best Humanity at the Oscars.
Thank you, Adrien.
Adrien Brody may have claimed the Best Actor title at this year’s Oscars, but the golden trophy in his hands? That doesn’t technically belong to him.
Of course, that won’t stop The Brutalist star from proudly displaying it on his mantle, at least for now. After a fierce competition against Timothée Chalamet (A Complete Unknown), Colman Domingo (Sing Sing), Sebastian Stan (The Apprentice), and Ralph Fiennes (Conclave), Brody emerged victorious for his portrayal of László Tóth, an architect striving to rebuild his life in America.
Adrien Brody takes extra time to call out Jew-hate and racism while accepting his second Oscar for Best Actor.
He also deserves the award for Best Humanity at the Oscars.
Thank you, Adrien.
- 04/03/2025
- par Arunava Chakrabarty
- KoiMoi


The 2025 Best Actress Oscar race was one for the ages. Mikey Madison won the award Sunday night for Anora to enter the Oscar annals as one of the youngest champs in the category ever.
At 25 years and 342 days old, Madison is the ninth youngest Best Actress winner. She displaces Vivien Leigh from the top 10 youngest list. Leigh was 26 years and 116 days old when she won her first Oscar for 1939's Gone with the Wind. Here is the new youngest top 10 (their ages calculated at the time of the award):
1. Marlee Matlin, Children of a Lesser God (1986): 21 years, 218 days
2. Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook (2012): 22 years, 193 days
3. Janet Gaynor, 7th Heaven, Street Angel, and Sunrise (1927/28): 22 years, 222 days
4. Joan Fontaine, Suspicion (1941): 24 years, 127 days
5. Audrey Hepburn, Roman Holiday (1953): 24 years, 325 days
6. Jennifer Jones, The Song of Bernadette (1943): 25 years, 0 days
7. Grace Kelly, The Country Girl (1954): 25 years, 138 days
8. Hilary Swank,...
At 25 years and 342 days old, Madison is the ninth youngest Best Actress winner. She displaces Vivien Leigh from the top 10 youngest list. Leigh was 26 years and 116 days old when she won her first Oscar for 1939's Gone with the Wind. Here is the new youngest top 10 (their ages calculated at the time of the award):
1. Marlee Matlin, Children of a Lesser God (1986): 21 years, 218 days
2. Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook (2012): 22 years, 193 days
3. Janet Gaynor, 7th Heaven, Street Angel, and Sunrise (1927/28): 22 years, 222 days
4. Joan Fontaine, Suspicion (1941): 24 years, 127 days
5. Audrey Hepburn, Roman Holiday (1953): 24 years, 325 days
6. Jennifer Jones, The Song of Bernadette (1943): 25 years, 0 days
7. Grace Kelly, The Country Girl (1954): 25 years, 138 days
8. Hilary Swank,...
- 03/03/2025
- par Joyce Eng
- Gold Derby

Earning his second Best Actor Oscar 22 years after his first, Adrien Brody entered the history books as the first leading actor to win two statuettes on his first two attempts on Sunday.
He won for his role as an ingenious, haunted architect in Brady Corbet’s epic, following his win in 2003 for Roman Polanski’s biographical World War II drama “The Pianist.”
And by wining Best Actor on Sunday, Brody not only made history but also preserved his place among Oscar milestones. Had 29-year-old Timothée Chalamet won in the category for “A Complete Unknown,” he would have become the youngest Best Actor victor ever, beating Brody’s own record from 2003.
Brody is the 11th leading actor to win twice in the top category.
“Acting is a very fragile profession,” Brody opened his acceptance speech. “It looks very glamorous, and certain moments it is, but the one thing that I’ve...
He won for his role as an ingenious, haunted architect in Brady Corbet’s epic, following his win in 2003 for Roman Polanski’s biographical World War II drama “The Pianist.”
And by wining Best Actor on Sunday, Brody not only made history but also preserved his place among Oscar milestones. Had 29-year-old Timothée Chalamet won in the category for “A Complete Unknown,” he would have become the youngest Best Actor victor ever, beating Brody’s own record from 2003.
Brody is the 11th leading actor to win twice in the top category.
“Acting is a very fragile profession,” Brody opened his acceptance speech. “It looks very glamorous, and certain moments it is, but the one thing that I’ve...
- 03/03/2025
- par Joe McGovern
- The Wrap


Adrien Brody took home his second Oscar on Sunday — Best Actor for The Brutalist — putting him in rarefied air: He is the eighth performer to boast a perfect 2-for-2 record at the Oscars.
The first seven to achieve this are:
1. Luise Rainer: Best Actress for The Great Ziegfeld (1936) and The Good Earth (1937)
2. Vivien Leigh: Best Actress for Gone with the Wind (1939) and A Streetcar Named Desire (1951)
3. Helen Hayes: Best Actress for The Sin of Madelon Claudet (1932) and Best Supporting Actress for Airport (1970)
4. Kevin Spacey: Best Supporting Actor for The Usual Suspects (1995) and Best Actor for American Beauty (1999)
5. Hilary Swank: Best Actress for Boys Don’t Cry (1999) and Million Dollar Baby (2004)
6. Christoph Waltz: Best Supporting Actor for Inglourious Basterds (2009) and Django Unchained (2012)
7. Mahershala Ali: Best Supporting Actor for Moonlight (2016) and Green Book (2018)
See The complete list of Oscar winners
Brody nabbed his first Best Actor Oscar for...
The first seven to achieve this are:
1. Luise Rainer: Best Actress for The Great Ziegfeld (1936) and The Good Earth (1937)
2. Vivien Leigh: Best Actress for Gone with the Wind (1939) and A Streetcar Named Desire (1951)
3. Helen Hayes: Best Actress for The Sin of Madelon Claudet (1932) and Best Supporting Actress for Airport (1970)
4. Kevin Spacey: Best Supporting Actor for The Usual Suspects (1995) and Best Actor for American Beauty (1999)
5. Hilary Swank: Best Actress for Boys Don’t Cry (1999) and Million Dollar Baby (2004)
6. Christoph Waltz: Best Supporting Actor for Inglourious Basterds (2009) and Django Unchained (2012)
7. Mahershala Ali: Best Supporting Actor for Moonlight (2016) and Green Book (2018)
See The complete list of Oscar winners
Brody nabbed his first Best Actor Oscar for...
- 03/03/2025
- par Joyce Eng
- Gold Derby


Cynthia Erivo looks incredible while hitting the red carpet at the 2025 Academy Awards on Sunday (March 2) at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood.
The 38-year-old Wicked actress is nominated for Best Actress in a Leading Role for her work as Elphaba, and her outfit on the carpet gives a nod to the character.
“We wanted a nod to Oz, we wanted a nod to green, we wanted a nod to Old Hollywood,” she said of her look on E! Live From the Red Carpet.
Her look for the Oscars this year was also in homage to Hattie McDaniel, who was the first ever Black actress to win an Oscar, for her role as Mammy in the 1939 film Gone with the Wind.
“Tonight is for Hattie McDaniel [...] Hope this Dress Makes You Proud!! Love Jason & Cynthia,” her stylist, Jason Bolden, wrote on his Instagram story.
Cynthia‘s partner Lena Waithe was also seen on the carpet,...
The 38-year-old Wicked actress is nominated for Best Actress in a Leading Role for her work as Elphaba, and her outfit on the carpet gives a nod to the character.
“We wanted a nod to Oz, we wanted a nod to green, we wanted a nod to Old Hollywood,” she said of her look on E! Live From the Red Carpet.
Her look for the Oscars this year was also in homage to Hattie McDaniel, who was the first ever Black actress to win an Oscar, for her role as Mammy in the 1939 film Gone with the Wind.
“Tonight is for Hattie McDaniel [...] Hope this Dress Makes You Proud!! Love Jason & Cynthia,” her stylist, Jason Bolden, wrote on his Instagram story.
Cynthia‘s partner Lena Waithe was also seen on the carpet,...
- 02/03/2025
- par Just Jared
- Just Jared


The 2025 Oscar nominations were announced on Jan. 23, with Emilia Pérez leading the way with 13 total bids. Next in line were The Brutalist (10), Wicked (10), A Complete Unknown (eight), Conclave (eight), Anora (six), Dune: Part Two (five), The Substance (five), and Nosferatu (four).
In the lead-up to the 97th Academy Awards ceremony on Sunday, March 2, thousands of Gold Derby users will be making and updating their predictions in all 23 categories, from picture and acting, to the three short film contests, and everything in between.
The following Oscar odds are derived from the combined forecasts of four unique groups: experts we’ve polled from major media outlets, editors who cover awards year-round for this website, top 24 users who had the best accuracy scores last year, and the mass of users who make up our biggest predictions bloc.
AMPAS members will vote for the winners between Feb. 11 and Feb. 18, and the results will then...
In the lead-up to the 97th Academy Awards ceremony on Sunday, March 2, thousands of Gold Derby users will be making and updating their predictions in all 23 categories, from picture and acting, to the three short film contests, and everything in between.
The following Oscar odds are derived from the combined forecasts of four unique groups: experts we’ve polled from major media outlets, editors who cover awards year-round for this website, top 24 users who had the best accuracy scores last year, and the mass of users who make up our biggest predictions bloc.
AMPAS members will vote for the winners between Feb. 11 and Feb. 18, and the results will then...
- 02/03/2025
- par Marcus James Dixon and Denton Davidson
- Gold Derby

It’s time to review the 2025 Oscar nominations! That’s because tonight is the 97th Academy Awards (learn how to watch here), and, my, have things in the Oscar race changed since this full list of noms was unveiled January 23. See the complete list of nominees for the 2025 Oscars below, and see our full list of Oscar predictions here.
“Emilia Pérez” seemed like the definitive Best Picture frontrunner at that time, cleaning up with 13 nominations. Now, following the implosion of Best Actress nominee Karla Sofía Gascón, and the growing outcry against the film in Mexico, its Oscar chances seem pretty much dead, except for likely Best Supporting Actress winner Zoe Saldaña and maybe Best International Feature. In her own final Oscar picks, Anne Thompson also has “El Mal” from the Jacques Audiard movie winning Best Original Song.
Mind you, “Emilia Pérez,” in scoring 13 noms, tied with multiple other films such as “Gone with the Wind,...
“Emilia Pérez” seemed like the definitive Best Picture frontrunner at that time, cleaning up with 13 nominations. Now, following the implosion of Best Actress nominee Karla Sofía Gascón, and the growing outcry against the film in Mexico, its Oscar chances seem pretty much dead, except for likely Best Supporting Actress winner Zoe Saldaña and maybe Best International Feature. In her own final Oscar picks, Anne Thompson also has “El Mal” from the Jacques Audiard movie winning Best Original Song.
Mind you, “Emilia Pérez,” in scoring 13 noms, tied with multiple other films such as “Gone with the Wind,...
- 02/03/2025
- par Christian Blauvelt
- Indiewire

Films With the Most Oscar Wins (Photo Credit – Instagram)
Oscars 2025: The 97th Academy Awards will be held in a few hours, and we are waiting with bated breath to see this year’s winners. We have already made our picks for the six main categories, but we will know the rest once the event occurs. But this article will reveal the movies with the most Oscars. Titanic and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King are among the top films, while Oppenheimer took home seven significant awards last year, but some movies have won more than that. Scroll below for more.
This year, Emilia Perez is leading with the most nominations, followed by The Brutalist and Wicked. Zoe Saldana’s movie has 13 nods, while the other two movies are tied with 10 nominations. This year, the list has a diverse mix of genres, with fresh talent meeting established actors,...
Oscars 2025: The 97th Academy Awards will be held in a few hours, and we are waiting with bated breath to see this year’s winners. We have already made our picks for the six main categories, but we will know the rest once the event occurs. But this article will reveal the movies with the most Oscars. Titanic and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King are among the top films, while Oppenheimer took home seven significant awards last year, but some movies have won more than that. Scroll below for more.
This year, Emilia Perez is leading with the most nominations, followed by The Brutalist and Wicked. Zoe Saldana’s movie has 13 nods, while the other two movies are tied with 10 nominations. This year, the list has a diverse mix of genres, with fresh talent meeting established actors,...
- 02/03/2025
- par Esita Mallik
- KoiMoi

Quick LinksVal Lewton Revolutionized Low-Budget Horror MoviemakingThe Curse of the Cat People Is One of Cinema's Best Films About Childhood ImaginationGenerational Trauma Is a Key Theme in The Curse of the Cat People
Directed by Gunther von Fritsch and Robert Wise, The Curse of the Cat People is an underrated 1944 psychological supernatural horror thriller that deserves to rank alongside the greatest sequels in cinema history. The Curse of the Cat People was one of eleven legendary B movies Val Lewton produced for Rko Pictures between 1942 and 1946. Lewton's historic run as a producer began in 1942 with Cat People, a low-budget B horror movie that became a surprise box office hit. Looking to capitalize on Cat People's commercial success, Rko Pictures commissioned Lewton to produce a sequel. While many sequels fall victim to being an inferior, copy-and-paste version of their predecessor, Lewton ensured that The Curse of the Cat People was...
Directed by Gunther von Fritsch and Robert Wise, The Curse of the Cat People is an underrated 1944 psychological supernatural horror thriller that deserves to rank alongside the greatest sequels in cinema history. The Curse of the Cat People was one of eleven legendary B movies Val Lewton produced for Rko Pictures between 1942 and 1946. Lewton's historic run as a producer began in 1942 with Cat People, a low-budget B horror movie that became a surprise box office hit. Looking to capitalize on Cat People's commercial success, Rko Pictures commissioned Lewton to produce a sequel. While many sequels fall victim to being an inferior, copy-and-paste version of their predecessor, Lewton ensured that The Curse of the Cat People was...
- 28/02/2025
- par Vincent LoVerde
- CBR

Segregation, scrutiny, and decades of erasure – Hollywood was everything but kind to Hattie McDaniel in the years following her 1940 Academy win, the first for a Black performer. Sympathizers for the Academy’s cause would, perhaps, feel that the industry was designed like that then, much like the world around it, and they weren’t doing anything different. If that weren’t enough, the Oscar she so rightfully earned mysteriously vanished from Howard University in the late 1960s.
What happened to this historic award? How could something so significant simply disappear? This is the story of a win, a lost award, and a mystery that remains to be solved.
Hattie McDaniel as Mammy in Gone With the Wind | Credits: MGM Hattie McDaniel made history as Mammy
Hattie McDaniel’s Mammy in Gone with the Wind won her the Golden Statue. It is hard to succinctly express the weight of the moment.
What happened to this historic award? How could something so significant simply disappear? This is the story of a win, a lost award, and a mystery that remains to be solved.
Hattie McDaniel as Mammy in Gone With the Wind | Credits: MGM Hattie McDaniel made history as Mammy
Hattie McDaniel’s Mammy in Gone with the Wind won her the Golden Statue. It is hard to succinctly express the weight of the moment.
- 27/02/2025
- par Jayant Chhabra
- FandomWire

The Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay honors those works that adapt previously published material into works of cinematic art. There's something truly daunting about taking something that already worked in another medium and trying to translate it into live-action. Throughout the Academy's near-100-year history, notable past winners have included classics like Gone with the Wind, The Godfather, The Silence of the Lambs, and The Social Network.
- 26/02/2025
- par David Caballero
- Collider.com


Stars: Adrien Brody, Guy Pearce, Felicity Jones, Joe Alwyn, Raffey Cassidy, Stacy Martin, Isaach De Bankolé, Alessandro Nivola | Written by Brady Corbet, Mona Fastvold | Directed by Brady Corbet
Dark screens are broken by the reading of a letter, and a scramble of people across the screen, all of them fighting to see their new world of freedom. The land of dreams: America. The crashing brass of an overture fills the room, and you sit up, realising this is something very different. When movies were in their golden age and films felt like an event, an overture would often ring out before any images were seen, or over the opening titles. Think of films such as Lawrence of Arabia, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Ben Hur, Gone with the Wind, and many more. Grand films that feel made for the big screen, that seem to invoke the very voice of cinema. If...
Dark screens are broken by the reading of a letter, and a scramble of people across the screen, all of them fighting to see their new world of freedom. The land of dreams: America. The crashing brass of an overture fills the room, and you sit up, realising this is something very different. When movies were in their golden age and films felt like an event, an overture would often ring out before any images were seen, or over the opening titles. Think of films such as Lawrence of Arabia, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Ben Hur, Gone with the Wind, and many more. Grand films that feel made for the big screen, that seem to invoke the very voice of cinema. If...
- 24/02/2025
- par Alex Ginnelly
- Nerdly

Iconic SAG Awards Speeches ( Photo Credit – Instagram )
The SAG Awards 2025 was held in Los Angeles and was live-streamed on Netflix. The award ceremony is significant for kickstarting with the attendees sharing their origin to become an actor. The trend started with Angela Lansbury’s opening monologue at the 1995 event, and soon, every artist started ending their speech with the ‘I’m an actor’ tagline. Here’s looking at some of the most endearing ‘I’m An Actor’ speeches of the creme-de-la-creme of Hollywood at the SAG Awards.
Anne Hathaway
Anne Hathaway recalled how she was inspired by her mother playing the role of Evita. At the 2006 Saf Awards, Anne said, “My first memory of wanting to be an actor came when I saw my mother play the title role in Evita. I watched her die on stage and come back to life in time for the applause and I thought,...
The SAG Awards 2025 was held in Los Angeles and was live-streamed on Netflix. The award ceremony is significant for kickstarting with the attendees sharing their origin to become an actor. The trend started with Angela Lansbury’s opening monologue at the 1995 event, and soon, every artist started ending their speech with the ‘I’m an actor’ tagline. Here’s looking at some of the most endearing ‘I’m An Actor’ speeches of the creme-de-la-creme of Hollywood at the SAG Awards.
Anne Hathaway
Anne Hathaway recalled how she was inspired by her mother playing the role of Evita. At the 2006 Saf Awards, Anne said, “My first memory of wanting to be an actor came when I saw my mother play the title role in Evita. I watched her die on stage and come back to life in time for the applause and I thought,...
- 24/02/2025
- par Shreshtha Chaudhury
- KoiMoi

Snakes on Plane gave audiences exactly what they came for, it's all spoiled in the title. It also helped that A-list actor Samuel L. Jackson led the ensemble.
Snakes on a Plane streams on Peacock starting Mar. 1. This 2006 action-thriller was much-anticipated leading to release, thanks to viral marketing and media coverage. Interest peaked when Samuel L. Jackson jumped into the project; New Line Cinema initially doubted he was onboard and even confirmed with his agent. Jackson also proved pivotal to development; the film was titled Pacific Air Flight 121 at one point, but the actor insisted they keep Snakes on Plane as the official title, which is the only reason he joined the ensemble.
Related10 Best Samuel L. Jackson Characters, Ranked
Samuel L. Jackson is one of the greatest actors of all time, and he's played some of cinema's best characters.
"The title was what got my attention," Jackson told USA Today.
Snakes on a Plane streams on Peacock starting Mar. 1. This 2006 action-thriller was much-anticipated leading to release, thanks to viral marketing and media coverage. Interest peaked when Samuel L. Jackson jumped into the project; New Line Cinema initially doubted he was onboard and even confirmed with his agent. Jackson also proved pivotal to development; the film was titled Pacific Air Flight 121 at one point, but the actor insisted they keep Snakes on Plane as the official title, which is the only reason he joined the ensemble.
Related10 Best Samuel L. Jackson Characters, Ranked
Samuel L. Jackson is one of the greatest actors of all time, and he's played some of cinema's best characters.
"The title was what got my attention," Jackson told USA Today.
- 22/02/2025
- par Manuel Demegillo
- CBR

When it comes to The Oscars, it's fair to say that it's one of the most anticipated celebrations in the film industry. For many filmmakers, winning an Oscar is the finest achievement possible, mostly because it's tied with a lot of recognition. Thus, movies like Gone with The Wind and Parasite remain with the audience because they have such a coveted position in the film business.
However, certain critics turn their noses up at animated movies. Although these films secure awards in their own right, they're typically undervalued because they are mostly associated with children. In turn, a lot of film buffs are missing out on the best Oscar-winning films of a generation.
A Little Girl Must Complete Forced Labor to Save Her Parents Spirited Away
Chihiro and her family are excited to start again in their new home. During their journey to the house, her parents stop off at an abandoned amusement park.
However, certain critics turn their noses up at animated movies. Although these films secure awards in their own right, they're typically undervalued because they are mostly associated with children. In turn, a lot of film buffs are missing out on the best Oscar-winning films of a generation.
A Little Girl Must Complete Forced Labor to Save Her Parents Spirited Away
Chihiro and her family are excited to start again in their new home. During their journey to the house, her parents stop off at an abandoned amusement park.
- 19/02/2025
- par Melody Day
- CBR


Never in recent memory has a movie bungled its Best Picture chances quite like Emilia Pérez. Some have lost their steam through the months-long awards season, but only Emilia Pérez’s slip has fallen on one person: its star, Karla Sofía Gascón, whose resurfaced tweets that were rightly deemed full of bigotry and hate came back to haunt not only her, but the film itself. Now, Netflix is finally commenting on the backlash and where the movie stands ahead of next month’s Oscars.
Appearing on The Town podcast (via The Hollywood Reporter), Netflix’s Cco Bela Bejaria said, “I think it’s really a bummer for the 100 incredibly talented people who made an amazing movie. And if you look at the nominations, and all of this awards love that it’s received, I think it’s such a bummer that it distracted from that. It really has kind of...
Appearing on The Town podcast (via The Hollywood Reporter), Netflix’s Cco Bela Bejaria said, “I think it’s really a bummer for the 100 incredibly talented people who made an amazing movie. And if you look at the nominations, and all of this awards love that it’s received, I think it’s such a bummer that it distracted from that. It really has kind of...
- 15/02/2025
- par Mathew Plale
- JoBlo.com

Alex Garland's latest feature film, Civil War, has captivated audiences nationwide on its way to setting numerous box office records for A24. Civil War became A24's highest-grossing Thursday night preview release and the company's highest-grossing opening weekend release. The movie also became A24's first film to finish a weekend at the top spot of the domestic box office list.
A civil war is any armed conflict between organized groups within the same state or country. Many in the United States are familiar with films about the American Civil War, such as Gone with the Wind, Glory, and Gettysburg. However, other civil wars such as the Irish Civil War and the Sengoku period in Japanese history have been brilliantly depicted in cinema through movies such as The Wind That Shakes the Barley and Ugetsu. Civil war films account for some of the greatest war movies ever made.
Updated...
A civil war is any armed conflict between organized groups within the same state or country. Many in the United States are familiar with films about the American Civil War, such as Gone with the Wind, Glory, and Gettysburg. However, other civil wars such as the Irish Civil War and the Sengoku period in Japanese history have been brilliantly depicted in cinema through movies such as The Wind That Shakes the Barley and Ugetsu. Civil war films account for some of the greatest war movies ever made.
Updated...
- 11/02/2025
- par Vincent LoVerde, Jordan Iacobucci, Christopher Raley
- CBR

Trying to crown one year as the best in cinematic history is fun but also a bit futile. It’s possible to select contenders, but the reality is that every year in the history of the medium has something good to offer. Without picking a single year, 1939 is iconic, as is 1994, but more recently – or at least as far as the 21st century is concerned – 2019 was kind of an all-time good year for movies.
- 08/02/2025
- par Jeremy Urquhart
- Collider.com

On January 23, Emilia Pérez entered film history. The Spanish-language, French musical crime film received 13 Oscar nominations, tied for second-most of all time, placing it alongside Gone With The Wind and Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?. Those watching along online had one collective response: What?
Emilia Pérez has since become...
Emilia Pérez has since become...
- 05/02/2025
- par Leila Jordan
- avclub.com

For years, when it comes to entertainment, Hollywood has been the epicenter of storytelling. Over the years, there have been countless tales told and stories made for the audience, from death-defying scenes to heart-warming ones that melt your heart out.
While each project or scene has a charm of its own, that is quite incomparable, there are a handful few who have etched into the collectible memory of moviegoers.
Hollywood is full of unforgettable and mesmerizing moments | Credit: Image by Thomas Wolf, licensed under Cca- Share Alike 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons
Such moments have sparked debates, inspired countless, and turned their respective films into cultural touchstones. While we cannot possibly compile a list of all such moments, here are 20 unforgettable Hollywood movie moments that continue to captivate and resonate with audiences around the world.
20. “Here’s looking at you, kid” – Casablanca (1942) Casablanca | Credit: Warner Bros.
A romantic drama film directed by Michael Curtiz,...
While each project or scene has a charm of its own, that is quite incomparable, there are a handful few who have etched into the collectible memory of moviegoers.
Hollywood is full of unforgettable and mesmerizing moments | Credit: Image by Thomas Wolf, licensed under Cca- Share Alike 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons
Such moments have sparked debates, inspired countless, and turned their respective films into cultural touchstones. While we cannot possibly compile a list of all such moments, here are 20 unforgettable Hollywood movie moments that continue to captivate and resonate with audiences around the world.
20. “Here’s looking at you, kid” – Casablanca (1942) Casablanca | Credit: Warner Bros.
A romantic drama film directed by Michael Curtiz,...
- 27/01/2025
- par Maria Sultan
- FandomWire


Clark Gable was the Oscar-winning matinee idol who starred in dozens of films before his untimely death in 1960. Let’s take a look back at 12 of Gable’s greatest movies, ranked worst to best.
After appearing in bit parts in a number of films, Gable shot to stardom with his performance in “A Free Soul” (1931) as a gangster who bewitches a young woman (Norma Shearer) whose attorney father (Lionel Barrymore) helped him beat a murder rap. From there forward, the actor’s persona as a raffish leading man who’s every guy’s best friend and every gal’s dream became cemented in a number of subsequent roles.
He won an Oscar just three years later for Frank Capra‘s screwball classic “It Happened One Night” (1934), in which he played a newspaper reporter traveling with a spoiled socialite (Claudette Colbert). The film became the first to sweep the five major Oscars,...
After appearing in bit parts in a number of films, Gable shot to stardom with his performance in “A Free Soul” (1931) as a gangster who bewitches a young woman (Norma Shearer) whose attorney father (Lionel Barrymore) helped him beat a murder rap. From there forward, the actor’s persona as a raffish leading man who’s every guy’s best friend and every gal’s dream became cemented in a number of subsequent roles.
He won an Oscar just three years later for Frank Capra‘s screwball classic “It Happened One Night” (1934), in which he played a newspaper reporter traveling with a spoiled socialite (Claudette Colbert). The film became the first to sweep the five major Oscars,...
- 26/01/2025
- par Zach Laws and Chris Beachum
- Gold Derby

In the genres of film, romance is one of the most sprawling; featuring movies that will make you bawl your eyes out, laugh until you have a six-pack (of abs or beer) and keep you on the edge of your seat until the credits roll. Movies like Casablanca, When Harry Met Sally, Gone with the Wind, and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind all have incredibly different vibes, with each one giving audiences a different experience. In the early aughts, an adaptation of a beloved Nicholas Sparks novel would unite romance lovers everywhere when The Notebook made its way into theaters. Considered to be one of the greatest genre titles of not just the last 20 years but also of all time, the Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams film is now streaming on Hulu. Unfortunately for subscribers who were hoping to celebrate Valentine’s Day with the production, it won’t...
- 26/01/2025
- par Britta DeVore
- Collider.com

Before “Emilia Pérez” made history with 13 nominations at the 2025 Oscars — tying with “Gone with the Wind,” “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” and “Oppenheimer” for the second-most nods of all time — the film’s producers have backed a slew of indie hits.
Now, the filmography from producers Pascal Caucheteux and Grégoire Sorlat and their banner Why Not Productions is getting its due on the big screen. IndieWire can announce that with support from Netflix, the top Why Not Productions features will return to theaters. That includes Gregg Araki’s iconic 1995 Nc-17 crime film “The Doom Generation,” Claire Denis’ “White Material,” and Lynne Ramsay’s “You Were Never Really Here.”
Araki will appear for a Q&a with “The Doom Generation” at the Egyptian on Thursday, February 6 following the 7:30 p.m. show.
Additional directors featured in the program include Ken Loach, Arnaud Desplechin, and Cristian Mungiu. The program also will have...
Now, the filmography from producers Pascal Caucheteux and Grégoire Sorlat and their banner Why Not Productions is getting its due on the big screen. IndieWire can announce that with support from Netflix, the top Why Not Productions features will return to theaters. That includes Gregg Araki’s iconic 1995 Nc-17 crime film “The Doom Generation,” Claire Denis’ “White Material,” and Lynne Ramsay’s “You Were Never Really Here.”
Araki will appear for a Q&a with “The Doom Generation” at the Egyptian on Thursday, February 6 following the 7:30 p.m. show.
Additional directors featured in the program include Ken Loach, Arnaud Desplechin, and Cristian Mungiu. The program also will have...
- 24/01/2025
- par Samantha Bergeson
- Indiewire

The polarizing albeit somehow industry favorite "Emilia Pérez" has nabbed 13 Oscar nominations, setting the record for most nominations by an international film. The Spanish-language French musical crime film, written and directed by Jacques Audiard, is also tied with "Gone With the Wind," "The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring," "Forrest Gump," and "Oppenheimer" for the second-most Oscars nominations, ever. /Film's Jeremy Mathai called the film "a swing and a miss," and with a 32% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes, he's certainly not alone in thinking the movie was a huge whiff.
Suppose you are someone who loved the film. In that case, I'm not here to tell anyone how to feel about a piece of art. But considering the legitimate criticisms that have been lobbied against the film regarding both its trans representation and its depiction of Mexican culture, it's wildly disappointing to realize just how many Academy...
Suppose you are someone who loved the film. In that case, I'm not here to tell anyone how to feel about a piece of art. But considering the legitimate criticisms that have been lobbied against the film regarding both its trans representation and its depiction of Mexican culture, it's wildly disappointing to realize just how many Academy...
- 23/01/2025
- par BJ Colangelo
- Slash Film

The Academy Awards have an unfair reputation among the public for being out of touch with the public's interest in movies. When you look back at its nearly 100-year history, most of its winners for Best Picture were solid financial hits that connected with a mainstream audience. In some cases, like Gone With the Wind, The Godfather, Titanic, and recently Oppenheimer, Best Picture winners were already cultural sensations before earning the coveted award. If anything, Academy voters are perhaps too keen on the zeitgeist, as many of their winners in the last 30 years have aged as poorly as expired milk. Between Dances With Wolves and American Beauty, many Best Picture winners of the 1990s were profound at the moment but have quickly fallen out of fashion. With Forrest Gump, the crime is not just that this maudlin and simplistic 1994 drama won Best Picture, but it also defeated one of the...
- 23/01/2025
- par Thomas Butt
- Collider.com


For a race that seemed as unpredictable as any in recent history, the 2025 Oscar nominations came and went without many huge surprises. All the expected acting contenders — including frontrunners like Demi Moore, Adrien Brody, Timothée Chalamet, Zoe Saldaña, and Kieran Culkin — were bestowed with nominations on Thursday, as were several films long predicted to score Best Picture recognition. But while the 97th Oscars were perhaps shorter than usual on snubs and surprises, the list of nominees did clarify which films Academy voters truly loved and what might ultimately win Best Picture in March. Ahead are the key takeaways from the 2025 Oscar nominations.
Emilia Pérez is the front-runner to beat
With 13 Oscar nominations on Thursday, including Best Picture, Best International Feature, Best Director, and acting nominations for Karla Sofia Gascón and Zoe Saldaña, Emilia Pérez is not just the year’s top Oscar contender but one of the most decorated nominees in history.
Emilia Pérez is the front-runner to beat
With 13 Oscar nominations on Thursday, including Best Picture, Best International Feature, Best Director, and acting nominations for Karla Sofia Gascón and Zoe Saldaña, Emilia Pérez is not just the year’s top Oscar contender but one of the most decorated nominees in history.
- 23/01/2025
- par Christopher Rosen
- Gold Derby


As we wrap an epic day of coverage of the Oscar nominations, here are some final observations:
—It’s ironic that there will be no Best Song performances at this year’s 97th Academy Awards, because music-driven movies have rarely, if ever, made such an impact. This is the first time that three music-oriented/musical films have been nominated for Best Picture in the same year: Emilia Pérez (with its chart-topping 13 nominations), Wicked (with its 10), and the Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown (with eight). The last times that even two musicals faced off for Oscar’s biggest prize was in 1964 with My Fair Lady and Mary Poppins and in 1968 with winner Oliver! and Funny Girl.
—Emilia Pérez snared more noms than any foreign language film ever with 13, to lead all comers Thursday. It joins an impressive list of other 13-time Oscar nominees that includes The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,...
—It’s ironic that there will be no Best Song performances at this year’s 97th Academy Awards, because music-driven movies have rarely, if ever, made such an impact. This is the first time that three music-oriented/musical films have been nominated for Best Picture in the same year: Emilia Pérez (with its chart-topping 13 nominations), Wicked (with its 10), and the Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown (with eight). The last times that even two musicals faced off for Oscar’s biggest prize was in 1964 with My Fair Lady and Mary Poppins and in 1968 with winner Oliver! and Funny Girl.
—Emilia Pérez snared more noms than any foreign language film ever with 13, to lead all comers Thursday. It joins an impressive list of other 13-time Oscar nominees that includes The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,...
- 23/01/2025
- par Ray Richmond
- Gold Derby

Reading Time: 4 minutes
The nominees for the 97th Academy Awards were announced today.
And as usual, the list contained some major surprises.
Some big names were snubbed, while other major talents received their very first nominations.
But the biggest shocker of all might have been the absolute dominance of Emilia Perez.
Selena Gomez, Zoe Saldana, Karla SofÃa Gascón and Adriana Paz attend the “Emilia Perez” Photocall at the 77th annual Cannes Film Festival at Palais des Festivals on May 19, 2024 in Cannes, France. (Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images) Emilia Perez Is Set to Win Big at the Oscars
The French-produced Netflix film scored a whopping 13 nominations, making it tied for the second-most nods of all time.
(It’s a several-way tie that includes such cinematic heavy-hitters as Gone With the Wind, Forrest Gump, and Oppenheimer.)
The film also received more noms than any other 2024 film by a considerable margin.
The nominees for the 97th Academy Awards were announced today.
And as usual, the list contained some major surprises.
Some big names were snubbed, while other major talents received their very first nominations.
But the biggest shocker of all might have been the absolute dominance of Emilia Perez.
Selena Gomez, Zoe Saldana, Karla SofÃa Gascón and Adriana Paz attend the “Emilia Perez” Photocall at the 77th annual Cannes Film Festival at Palais des Festivals on May 19, 2024 in Cannes, France. (Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images) Emilia Perez Is Set to Win Big at the Oscars
The French-produced Netflix film scored a whopping 13 nominations, making it tied for the second-most nods of all time.
(It’s a several-way tie that includes such cinematic heavy-hitters as Gone With the Wind, Forrest Gump, and Oppenheimer.)
The film also received more noms than any other 2024 film by a considerable margin.
- 23/01/2025
- par Tyler Johnson
- The Hollywood Gossip


In case anyone needed a reminder that “Film Twitter” and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences are not populated by the same people, Emilia Pérez, the polarizing French-directed, Spanish-language musical about a trans Mexican gangster, landed a field-leading 13 Oscar nominations on Thursday morning. That tally — encompassing noms for best picture, director, actress, supporting actress, adapted screenplay, international feature, cinematography, film editing, makeup/hairstyling, original score, sound and two for original song — smashed the record for a non-English-language film (previously held by Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and Roma, which had 10 each) and is just one shy of the all-time record for any film (All About Eve, Titanic and La La Land each landed 14).
Is Jacques Audiard’s Netflix film unbeatable? Of course not. Plenty of people have issues with the film, including many members of the Mexican and trans communities, who find it offensive, and critics and general audiences,...
Is Jacques Audiard’s Netflix film unbeatable? Of course not. Plenty of people have issues with the film, including many members of the Mexican and trans communities, who find it offensive, and critics and general audiences,...
- 23/01/2025
- par Scott Feinberg
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News


For the first time in 47 years, all five Best Actress Oscar nominees hail from Best Picture nominees.
The Best Actress lineup was the top five in the odds: Cynthia Erivo (Wicked), Karla Sofía Gascón (Emilia Pérez), Mikey Madison (Anora), Demi Moore (The Substance), and Fernanda Torres (I’m Still Here). Four of those films were widely predicted to score Best Picture nominations except for I’m Still Here, which was in 13th place in the odds; but in the biggest surprise of the day, the Brazilian feature made the cut on Thursday. The other Best Picture nominees are The Brutalist, A Complete Unknown, Conclave, Dune: Part Two, and Nickel Boys.
The last time the Best Actress and Best Picture lineups aligned was during the 1977-78 season when Diane Keaton (Annie Hall) won Best Actress over Jane Fonda (Julia), Marsha Mason (The Goodbye Girl), and The Turning Point stars Anne Bancroft and Shirley MacLaine.
The Best Actress lineup was the top five in the odds: Cynthia Erivo (Wicked), Karla Sofía Gascón (Emilia Pérez), Mikey Madison (Anora), Demi Moore (The Substance), and Fernanda Torres (I’m Still Here). Four of those films were widely predicted to score Best Picture nominations except for I’m Still Here, which was in 13th place in the odds; but in the biggest surprise of the day, the Brazilian feature made the cut on Thursday. The other Best Picture nominees are The Brutalist, A Complete Unknown, Conclave, Dune: Part Two, and Nickel Boys.
The last time the Best Actress and Best Picture lineups aligned was during the 1977-78 season when Diane Keaton (Annie Hall) won Best Actress over Jane Fonda (Julia), Marsha Mason (The Goodbye Girl), and The Turning Point stars Anne Bancroft and Shirley MacLaine.
- 23/01/2025
- par Joyce Eng
- Gold Derby

Charlie Sheen might have suffered more than a few career setbacks and caused innumerable controversies, but that does not deny the fact that he is a prolific actor. Apart from his work in Two and a Half Men, the actor has given audiences some of the best blockbusters in his career.
Charlie Sheen in Two and a Half Men | Credit: CBS
One of these is a tongue-in-cheek parody film of Tom Cruise’s Top Gun, called Hot Shots! that ended up becoming a cultural phenomenon in its own right. Furthermore, the film also scored remarkably well at the box office, allowing Sheen to create a career record.
Top Gun parody that helped Charlie Sheen show his box office might Hot Shots! (1991) | Credit: 20th Century Studios
Charlie Sheen, in his remarkable career, has appeared in several movies and TV shows. However, his 1991 Top Gun parody film, Hot Shots! took Hollywood by storm.
Charlie Sheen in Two and a Half Men | Credit: CBS
One of these is a tongue-in-cheek parody film of Tom Cruise’s Top Gun, called Hot Shots! that ended up becoming a cultural phenomenon in its own right. Furthermore, the film also scored remarkably well at the box office, allowing Sheen to create a career record.
Top Gun parody that helped Charlie Sheen show his box office might Hot Shots! (1991) | Credit: 20th Century Studios
Charlie Sheen, in his remarkable career, has appeared in several movies and TV shows. However, his 1991 Top Gun parody film, Hot Shots! took Hollywood by storm.
- 23/01/2025
- par Maria Sultan
- FandomWire

A few fun facts about Oscar statuettes:
The award is 13-and-a-half inches tall, and the award, overall, weighs about eight-and-a-half pounds. The statues are made of solid bronze and are plated in real gold. During metal shortages during World War II, the Oscars were made out of painted plaster, although winners were permitted to swap them for bronze ones once the materials were plentiful again.
It's been said that handing an Oscar too much can make the gold tarnish, so Oscar winners have to be careful with them. The statuettes are made by an art foundry in Chicago called Polich Tallix, the same firm that handled the work of Roy Lichtenstein, and the Korean War Memorial in Washington, D.C.
The statuettes also, technically, don't belong to the voters or to the people who win them. Indeed, starting in 1951, the Motion Picture Academy introduced a new rule forbidding recipients from...
The award is 13-and-a-half inches tall, and the award, overall, weighs about eight-and-a-half pounds. The statues are made of solid bronze and are plated in real gold. During metal shortages during World War II, the Oscars were made out of painted plaster, although winners were permitted to swap them for bronze ones once the materials were plentiful again.
It's been said that handing an Oscar too much can make the gold tarnish, so Oscar winners have to be careful with them. The statuettes are made by an art foundry in Chicago called Polich Tallix, the same firm that handled the work of Roy Lichtenstein, and the Korean War Memorial in Washington, D.C.
The statuettes also, technically, don't belong to the voters or to the people who win them. Indeed, starting in 1951, the Motion Picture Academy introduced a new rule forbidding recipients from...
- 20/01/2025
- par Witney Seibold
- Slash Film
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