Updates from August, 2011

  • admin 10:26 am on August 26, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    Watch “A Very Harold and Kumar 3D Christmas” Movie 

    Top athletes know it. Leading politicians know it. And with the opening of “A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas,” stoners will know it too: No matter how good you are at what you do, there’s always someone younger and hungrier coming up, threatening to take your crown.
    The film begins, Harold and Kumar are estranged, having each found new best friends. Harold is living a straight-laced married-guy life; Kumar is being Kumar. But a mysterious package brings them together again. The plot, though it hardly matters, involves the search for a new Christmas tree. The film’s director, Todd Strauss-Schulson, takes aggressive advantage of the 3-D format, sending all sorts of things shooting out at the audience: syrup, snow, streamers, a hat and lots of wacky-weed smoke.Those who left the previous film in the series, “Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay,” during the closing credits may think they won’t be seeing Neil Patrick Harris in this one, since he seemed to have been pretty thoroughly shot to death in “Guantanamo.” (A scene after the closing credits showed him shaking off the gunshot wounds.) “N.P.H,” as he’s often called in these films, does indeed return, singing and dancing.

     
  • admin 10:56 am on August 25, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    Who is Richard Tiffany Gere? 

    He is an American actor. He began acting in the 1970s, playing a supporting role in Looking for Mr. Goodbar, and a starring role in Days of Heaven. He came to prominence in 1980 for his role in the film American Gigolo, which established him as a leading man and a sex symbol. He went on to star in several hit films including An Officer and a Gentleman, Pretty Woman, Primal Fear, and Chicago, for which he won a Golden Globe Award as Best Actor, as well as a Screen Actors Guild Award as part of the Best Cast.
    Gere first worked professionally at the Provincetown Playhouse on Cape Cod in 1971 where he starred in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead. His first major acting role was in the original London stage version of Grease in 1973. He began appearing in Hollywood films in the mid 1970s, co-starring in the thriller Looking for Mr. Goodbar (1977) and playing the leading role in director Terrence Malick’s well-reviewed 1978 film, Days of Heaven. In 1980, Gere appeared in the Broadway production of Bent. He became a major star that year with the filmAmerican Gigolo, followed by the romantic drama An Officer and a Gentleman, which grossed almost $130 million in 1982
    However, after 1982, Gere’s career was dogged by several box office failures. His career was somewhat resurrected after the release of both Internal Affairs and Pretty Woman in 1990. Gere’s status as a leading man was again solidified, and he went on to star in several successful films throughout the 1990s, including Sommersby (1993), Primal Fear (1996), and Runaway Bride (1999) which reunited him with his Pretty Woman co-star Julia Roberts. Richard also took a leading role in the 1997 action movie The Jackal, playing Declan Mulqueen.

     
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