Marvel’s new movie Doctor Strange may have changed the Ancient One from a Tibetan man to a Celtic white woman to appease China.
It’s finally here—the trailer to “Doctor Strange” that is.
The cuteness of penguins arrived on the world stage in 2005, when Morgan Freeman voiced the documentary “March of the Penguins.” A year later, we had cute tap-dancing penguins in “Happy Feet.” (Penguins had become hot). Then, the “Madagascar” cartoon series needed to have some penguins too.
Next on the Big Screen in November 2014...
A disparate set of mismatched components stitched together to form a coherent whole. That’s either a description of the machine at the heart of this worthy biopic or a loose critique of Headhunters director Morten Tyldum’s examination of one of history’s most overlooked heroes. It is in fact both.
The London Film Festival rolls into the capital with 248 films shown at 17 venues over 12 days, bringing with it delights from all over the world.
J.J. Abrams takes the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise on a journey Into Darkness, following 2009’s fantastic alt-verse voyage, Star Trek.
Marvel’s new movie Doctor Strange may have changed the Ancient One from a Tibetan man to a Celtic white woman to appease China.
It’s finally here—the trailer to “Doctor Strange” that is.
The cuteness of penguins arrived on the world stage in 2005, when Morgan Freeman voiced the documentary “March of the Penguins.” A year later, we had cute tap-dancing penguins in “Happy Feet.” (Penguins had become hot). Then, the “Madagascar” cartoon series needed to have some penguins too.
Next on the Big Screen in November 2014...
A disparate set of mismatched components stitched together to form a coherent whole. That’s either a description of the machine at the heart of this worthy biopic or a loose critique of Headhunters director Morten Tyldum’s examination of one of history’s most overlooked heroes. It is in fact both.
The London Film Festival rolls into the capital with 248 films shown at 17 venues over 12 days, bringing with it delights from all over the world.
J.J. Abrams takes the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise on a journey Into Darkness, following 2009’s fantastic alt-verse voyage, Star Trek.