• ‘Humpday’ and ‘GLOW’ director Lynn Shelton has died, aged 54

    ‘Humpday’ and ‘GLOW’ director Lynn Shelton has died, aged 54
    Director Lynn Shelton, who helmed movies Humpday and Your Sister’s Sister and episodes of shows including GLOW and Little Fires Everywhere, has died at the age of 54.
    Shelton died in Los Angeles on Friday (May 15) of a previously unidentified blood disorder.
    Marc Maron, her partner and creative collaborator, confirmed her death in a statement. “I have some awful news. Lynn passed away last night. She collapsed yesterday morning after having been ill for a week. There was a previously
  • ‘Anchorman’ and ‘Best In Show’ actor Fred Willard has died

    ‘Anchorman’ and ‘Best In Show’ actor Fred Willard has died
    Fred Willard, the comic actor who appeared in films including This Is Spinal Tap, Best In Show and A Mighty Wind, has died at the age of 86.
    The star’s death was confirmed by his representative Glenn Schwartz, who said Willard had died of natural causes.
    In a statement, Willard’s daughter Hope Mulbarger said: “My father passed away very peacefully last night at the fantastic age of 86 years old. He kept moving, working and making us happy until the very end. We loved him so ver
  • ‘Bill & Ted’ co-writer responds to fan’s claims sequel will be too “woke” because of new female characters

    ‘Bill & Ted’ co-writer responds to fan’s claims sequel will be too “woke” because of new female characters
    Bill & Ted co-writer Ed Solomon has responded to a fan’s claims the upcoming sequel will be too “woke” because of the inclusion of new female characters.
    Bill & Ted Face The Music will feature the titular duo’s daughters, played by Samara Weaving and Brigette Lundy-Paine.
    “We all know Bill And Ted Face The Music will be a woke piece of trash,” a Twitter user wrote to Solomon on the platform. The writer responded, asking: “What, in your opinion, w
  • Jerry Seinfeld pays tribute to Jerry Stiller: “He was so perfect”

    Jerry Seinfeld pays tribute to Jerry Stiller: “He was so perfect”
    Jerry Seinfeld has paid tribute to the late Jerry Stiller, calling him “so perfect”.
    Stiller died at the age of 92 from natural causes this week. He was best known for starring as George Costanza’s father Frank on Seinfeld.Read more: ‘Seinfeld’, the ultimate ’90s sitcom, is coming to Netflix. These 10 essential episodes will initiate you into the cultSpeaking to SiriusXM as part of the What A Joke With Papa & Fortune show in a new interview, Seinfeld
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  • ‘Westworld’ star Vincent Cassel says Marvel and DC movies are for “kids”

    ‘Westworld’ star Vincent Cassel says Marvel and DC movies are for “kids”
    Westworld star Vincent Cassel has branded Marvel and DC films as for “kids”.
    It follows a long-running saga last year over the studios’ movies, sparked by Martin Scorsese’s comments, when he likened Marvel films to a “theme park”.Read more: ‘Westworld’ season four: everything we know so farSpeaking with Inverse in a new interview, Cassel said: “Honestly, these are not movie movies I watch anymore. When they came up with the technology and the
  • Bruce Willis brings out his ‘Armageddon’ costume amidst coronavirus pandemic

    Bruce Willis brings out his ‘Armageddon’ costume amidst coronavirus pandemic
    Bruce Willis’ daughter, Rumer, has shared a picture of her father wearing the costume he donned in Armageddon.
    The film, which also starred Ben Affleck, Billy Bob Thornton, Liv Tyler, Owen Wilson, Michael Clarke Duncan and Steve Buscemi, saw Willis play Harry Stamper, a deep-sea oil driller who was hired by NASA to destroy an asteroid heading to earth.
    Rumer shared the picture of her father with the caption “He said this is ‘His saving the [world] outfit’ (Actua
  • A notorious banned Singaporean martial arts film is now on YouTube after 45 years

    A notorious banned Singaporean martial arts film is now on YouTube after 45 years
    Ring Of Fury, a Singaporean martial arts film that was banned for over 30 years, is now available on YouTube.
    Released in 1973, the film was rejected by censors in the country and not approved for public screenings due to its “portrayal of gangsterism and vigilantism at a time when Singapore was aggressively ‘cleaning up’ its national public image,” says the Asian Film Archive (AFA).
    The notorious film was eventually shown for the first time in 2005, at a local film festi