Paramount Pictures has released the first two official photos from Jack Ryan starring Chris Pine and Kevin Costner.


Jack Ryan is directed by Kenneth Branagh and features Branagh and Keira Knightley.
Paramount Pictures has released the first two official photos from Jack Ryan starring Chris Pine and Kevin Costner.


Jack Ryan is directed by Kenneth Branagh and features Branagh and Keira Knightley.

Watch the trailer:
The Plot:
After his father’s death in the late 1940s, 24-year-old aspiring writer Sal Paradise meets 20-year-old ex-jailbird Dan Moriarty and his beautiful wife Marylou in New York. Dan is extremely charming and has a flexible moral code, and is as fascinated by Sal’s obsession with writing as Sal is by the unfettered freedom of his lifestyle. The two men spend intense nights of drinking, dreaming of another world, and forming a friendship that will take them on a trip across America. After staying at Bull Lees place in Louisiana, Sal, Dean, and Marylou continue traveling – naked and utterly enjoying themselves.
Taylor Swift channels Katy Perry for this music video for “We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together.” Why is the band in animal costumes? Why is Swift so cheery and bubbly in a breakup song? Your guess is as good as mine. The song’s catchy, however, the video’s just not really all that special. Sorry, but this one misses the target.
Watch the video and see what you think of Swift’s new pop song:

Watch the clip:
The Plot:
Seeking a fresh start, newly divorced Sarah and her daughter Elissa find the house of their dreams in a small, upscale, rural town. But when startling and unexplainable events begin to happen, Sarah and Elissa learn the town is in the shadows of a chilling secret…
Years earlier, in the house next door, a daughter killed her parents in their beds, and disappeared – leaving only a brother, Ryan, as the sole survivor. Against Sarah’s wishes, Elissa begins a relationship with the reclusive Ryan – and the closer they get, the deeper they’re all pulled into a mystery more dangerous than they ever imagined.
“Let go of what you know … Let go of what you fear … Hold on to what you need”
I actually had to look this one up and make sure it wasn’t inspired by a Nicholas Sparks book. Love and Honor is set in the ’60s and follows two soldiers who fly back to the States on what’s supposed to be a week-long leave from Vietnam. There, one (Austin Stowell) reunites with his girlfriend (Aimee Teegarden) while the other (The Hunger Games‘ Liam Hemsworth) finds love at first sight with (Teresa Palmer). But love is a distraction and amid protests and claims of desertion, the soldiers need to figure out what they really want to do with their lives and what they’re willing to sacrifice.
Love and Honor, formerly titled AWOL, is expected to be released sometime later this year.
Watch the trailer:
—Posted by Rebecca Murray
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Is possible that season two of American Horror Story will actually be freakier than season one? Judging by the latest batch of videos released by FX – including one that finally features the cast – the answer is yes.
American Horror Story: Asylum is set in the 1960s at an insane asylum run by Sister Jude (Jessica Lange playing a completely different character from season one). Joining Lange for season two scares are Evan Peters, Zachary Quinto, Joseph Fiennes, James Cromwell, Adam Levine, Chloe Sevigny, Sarah Paulson, Lily Rabe, and Chris Zylka.
Season two kicks off on October 17, 2012.
“Glass Prison”
“Taste”
“Bandages”
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“Fork”
Second Promo:
Okay, not really. Visiting The Late Show, Bruce Willis said he snuck a scene from Die Hard 5 out, just to show off to David Letterman’s audience. But who would have guessed that Bruce Willis is such a Twilight fan? Not I. However, his John McClane character isn’t even able to say his catch-phrase because he’s so emotionally devastated over the break-up of Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart.
Watch the clip:
The real Die Hard 5 (A Good Day to Die Hard) – not Twi-Hard: With a Vengeance – is heading to theaters minus this scene on February 14, 2013.
—Posted by Rebecca Murray
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“I do not talk to the box. I talk to my friend, she lives in the box,” says Em (Natasha Calis) to her father, Clyde (Jeffrey Dean Morgan), who’s noticed a drastic change in his daughter’s behavior ever since she opened an antique box they bought at a yard sale in the horror film The Possession.
It’s been a hard year for the Brenek family, what with Em’s mom Stephanie (Kyra Sedgwick) moving forward with the divorce from Clyde and spending practically all her free time with her new boyfriend. This hits Em especially hard since she was deeply hoping her parents would get back together. So when she likes an antique box at a yard sale, Clyde buys it for her, hoping to cheer her up. Inspecting the box later at his home, Clyde notices that it’s been sealed – whoever created it didn’t want it opened. Later that night, Em finds a way to open the box and discovers little personal trinkets and possessions but nothing of any real monetary value.
It’s not long after opening the box that Em’s personality begins to change. She becomes more and more obsessed with the box, not wanting anyone to touch it, and talking to it…or, as she tells Clyde, to her friend who lives in the box. She becomes withdrawn from her big sister, Hannah (Madison Davenport), whom she’s always been very close to, and acts out with violence towards classmates and even her own father, stabbing his hand with a fork one morning at breakfast.
There are also a few strange incidents in Em’s bedroom at Clyde’s home, including one night when her room is infested with flying giant moths while Em just sits on her bed staring at the box.
Realizing this isn’t just his daughter acting out over the separation/pending divorce and noticing some writing on the antique box, Clyde decides to take the box to a professor at the school where he’s employed as a basketball coach to see if he can make out what’s written on the box. When Professor McMannis (Jay Brazeau) tells Clyde that the writing is in Hebrew and says the box was built to keep trapped a demon, Clyde becomes convinced that Em is possessed by the entity she unknowingly freed. This sends a horrified Clyde to the Jewish religious community looking for a holy man to help him drive the evil spirit out of his daughter and back into the box from where it came.
The Bottom Line:
Based on a true story, The Possession is a painfully slow film with no scares whatsoever. This is a ridiculous, unoriginal movie with silly dialogue, unimpressive special effects, and an unimpressive script.
Kyra Sedgwick delivers one of the worst performances of her career as Em’s mom, Stephanie. She overacts in the second half of the film when her character realizes her daughter is either going insane or is possessed by an evil entity. It’s a laughably bad performance.
Jeffrey Dean Morgan does an adequate job as Clyde, the forgetful, loving father who becomes determined to save his little girl no matter what the cost to himself or his soul. The best performance in the film is by Madison Davenport as the older sister Hannah who goes from being supportive and trying to look out for her little sister when she seems depressed and not herself, to being scared to death and terrified for Em and her fight with the demon. It’s the only good thing about the film.
The writing in The Possession is deplorable, with dumb and unbelievable dialogue and characters who behave ludicrously. A perfect example of this is when Clyde and Stephanie, both fully convinced Em is possessed by a demon who is known as the taker of children, without a thought or concern have their other older daughter, Hannah, help during the Exorcism! HELLLLLOOOOOOOO….maybe she should spend the night at a friend’s and away from the DEMON WHO TARGETS CHILDREN!
Boring, absurd, and not in the least bit scary, The Possession is a frightless flick that should have all moviegoers exercising their rights to skip this exorcism film.
GRADE: D-
The Possession hits theaters on August 31, 2012, and is rated PG-13 mature thematic material involving violence and disturbing sequences.

Coming to theaters on October 12, 2012 the R-rated comedy finds Farrell playing a screenwriter who gets caught up with a gangster when the dog he and his friends kidnap turns out to be the mob boss’ beloved Shih Tzu.
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Lifetime has released three new photos of Lindsay Lohan and Grant Bowler as screen legends Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton in their original made-for-TV-movie Liz & Dick. The biopic chronicles the tumultuous on-again/off-again relationship of the famous pair. From the official press release announcing the start of production:
For nearly a quarter of a century, Taylor and Burton were Hollywood royalty and their fiery romance — often called ‘the marriage of the century’ — was the most notorious, publicized and celebrated love affair of its day. Swarmed by paparazzi, Taylor and Burton’s love affair was played out entirely in front of the global press from the time they met on the set of the major motion picture Cleopatra, left their respective spouses, married and divorced, only to remarry and divorce once again. Despite their roller coaster romance for the public eye to see, Taylor and Burton shared an undeniable love greater than most people could have ever dreamed.”


