Jimmy Eat World's new album crosses so many genres that will earn the band new fans from other formats.
The funny thing about long-delayed sequels is that it's generally pretty easy for them to top the opening weekends of their predecessors purely due to inflation.
Take it from someone who has hosted over fifty hours of TV for major cable networks: Many of the most touching "wild moments" we see in nature documentaries are anything but wild.
What makes Adrian Grenier's Teenage Paparazzo unique is that it is presented through the eyes a teen and his family. We see, from their point of view, the compelling attractions and insidious risks of celebrity culture.
The late Deborah Kerr was the kind of star and personality we rarely see anymore: a lady first and foremost, who, even playing women of dubious virtue, projected an innate sense of class, dignity, even nobility.
With movie critics split on the film, here's a look at what Wall Street's real bankers -- and those who cover them -- had to say about the movie, its 1987 original, and the larger-than-life Gordon Gekko.
If the educational system is so entirely asleep at the wheel, then what is the political solution Davis Guggenheim seeks? His film only shows the impending doom.
In my experience doing a 12-year sentence, I witnessed hundreds of drug addicted people cycle in and out of prison. Like Lohan, many were given "skid bids," slang for a short sentence.
For those who enjoyed the Planet Earth series, Lemire's The Last Continent offers a sumptuous visual treat. Its stunning views of the Antarctic landscape, coupled with great underwater photography, place it at the top of the list of great travelogues and nature films.
Need some new tunes to listen to while you exercise? Here are some suggestions.
Davis Guggenheim's Waiting for 'Superman,' is a provocative documentary that shows in both broad strokes and frightening detail how our schools continue to fail our children.
Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps was a missed opportunity to shed light on the worst financial crisis since the 1930s. The crash of 2008 deserves a defining film. This isn't it.
This week we feature music by Jeff Bridges, Des Roar, Beast, Fletcher Henderson, Robert Randolph and the Family Band, and more.
Cowell certainly seemed to set the standard for reality judges on American TV competitions, as each show scrambled to get its own mean British judge.
The self-professed "Mama Grizzly" isn't showing me the fight for her cubs, nor has she set much of an example of motherly presence for Bristol.
Part of the allure of making this film was the possibility of traveling the country, meeting different folks, investigating different situations. The film may be called Gerrymandering, but our real subject was America.
With each major-key shuffle and slow-slurring island vibe, Franti gets a step closer to cementing himself as the goodwill ambassador for "no worries" globalism.
Josh Bernstein, 2010.09.27
Michael Kaiser, 2010.09.27
Marshall Fine, 2010.09.27