Heath Ledger's chilling portrayal of the Joker in Batman blockbuster "The Dark Knight" easily surpassed rivals to be named the summer's best movie villain in a poll released.
Face Addict is a self-regarding documentary in which its director, Swiss fashion photographer Edo Bertoglio returns to New York after an absence of 15 years to revisit fellow artists from the preening, self-indulgent crowd that surrounded Andy Warhol.
With his adaptation of a little-known 1957 literary melodrama by English writer Elizabeth Taylor, French director Francois Ozon joins an illustrious yet small band of his compatriots who have made films in Britain.
Terrence Howard gave a hint of his musical skills when he played an aspiring rapper in the 2005 film "Hustle & Flow."
Burn After Reading is a tightly wound spy comedy that couldn't be a bigger contrast to the Coen brothers' last film, the bloodsoaked and brooding No Country for Old Men.
College Road Trip.
The title is something of a misnomer. "Disaster Movie," from the people who helped to concoct "Scary Movie," "Date Movie" and "Meet the Spartans," sounds as if it is going to send up such opuses as "The Poseidon Adventure" and "Earthquake."
It's a slight, gentle, sweet-natured comedy shot in black and white, and blessed with a lovely performance from Meadows' great find, Thomas Turgoose (pictured left), the teenage star of his previous film This Is England.
Mel Brooks' ancient 1960s TV show Get Smart was a spy spoof, starring a dopey special agent whose shoe was a walkie-talkie - notable for being not particularly funny.
As Hollywood’s summer movie season draws to a close — only two weekends to go — box office watchers are expecting slightly more than $4 billion in total revenue largely because of superhero blockbusters “The Dark Knight,” “Iron Man” and “Hancock”
Big-screen Iron Man Robert Downey Jr. scored his second No. 1 movie of the summer on Sunday as Hollywood spoof "Tropic Thunder" ended the month-long reign of "The Dark Knight" atop the North American box office.
By Hollywood profit standards, the cast and producers of the sequel to "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants" admit they were surprised another film based on the hit book series was even made.