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Family dynasties are a grand tradition in Hollywood. Below are a list of clans of famous actors, directors, writers, and producers who were related to each other. The criteria for this list is how much talent the combined members of the family had and how many generations the dynasty spanned. 10. The Reitman Dynasty Members: Ivan, [...]
Posted by Orrin Konheim on Monday, January 9, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged Academy Award, Alan Jr., Alan Ladd, Alan Ladd Jr, Alan Ladd Sr., All About Eve, Amanda Ladd, America, American film directors, Anjelica, Arturo Toscanini, assistant, Barrymore family, ben, boxer, Bridget, Britain, budding actress, Carmine, Catherine, cavalry officer, character actor, Chelsea Ladd, Christopher Guest, Clark Gable, clint eastwood, commander, Constant Gardener, counter-culture spokeswoman, D.W. Griffith, Danny Huston, Diana, director, Douglas Fairbanks, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Douglas Jr., drew barrymore, Easy Rider, Ethel, ex son-in-law, first Oscar, Frances, Francis, George Lucas, Georgie Drew, ghostbusters, gifted and athletic actor, great actor, head of creative affairs and eventually president, Henry Fonda, Herbert Blythe, Herman Mankiewicz, Hollywood, iconic actor, Inferno, Ivan Reitman, Jamie Lee, jamie lee curtis, Jamie Lee’s assistant, Jane, Janet Leigh, Jason Reitman, Jason Schwartzman, joan crawford, John Barrymore, John Drew, John Drew Barrymore, Joseph Mankiewicz, Kelliann, Kelly Curtis, Kennedy administration, Lincoln, Lionel, Lost in Translation, Lynn, Mary Pickford, Maurice Drew, Meatballs, Mexican Army, Michael Redgrave, Movie Release, movie White Hunter, Natasha Richardson, navy, NBC Symphony Orchestra, Nicholas Kim Coppola, Nicolas Cage, Norma Shearer, officer, orson welles, Oscar, oscars, painter, Peter Fonda, principal flutist, producer, Roman Coppola, Ron Howard, sailor, screenwriter, Sierra Madre, silent comedian, Sinbad, Sofia, son-in-law, Spike Jonze, Steven Spielberg, Talia Shire, The Addams Family, The Godfather, the Oscars, The Towering Inferno, Tom, Tony Curtis, Tony Richardson, top-tier screenwriter, Vanessa, Walter Huston, writer, writer /director of poignant comic films, writer and director, X-Men Origins, Young Mr. Lincoln
After winning an Oscar, an actor’s career is usually marked by the question: Did they live up to the award or not? Here are 10 Oscar-winning actors who have gone in completely different directions. 10. Donna Reed-Riding the Highs and Lows of Television Best Supporting Actress for From Here to Eternity (1953) Reed’s career after [...]
Posted by Orrin Konheim on Monday, July 25, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies, People · Tagged 10 Oscar, Academy Award, Academy Award for Best Actor, Academy Award for Best Actress, academy awards, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Actor, Actor for Ray, actress, Alan Arkin, Alexander Payne, American Idol, Antony's College, artist, Artistic Director, Barbara del Gettes, Beyond the Sea, Bobby Darin, California, Cannes, character actor, Cinema of the United States, classical pianist, Conservative Party, crooner, Dallas, Donna Reed-Riding, Entertainment_Culture, film, Foxx, France, Gene Wilder, George C. Scott, Glenda Jackson, goop.com, Grace Kelly, Grace Kelly-Princess, Greater London, Gwyneth Paltrow, Gwyneth Paltrow-Lifestyle Blogger, high profile actress, Human Interest, Jackson, Jamie Foxx-Multitalented Singer, Jennifer Young, Junior Transportation Minister, Kevin Spacey, Kevin Spacey-Real, London, Luise Rainer, Luise Rainer-Pioneer, Margaret Thatcher, mayor, media icon, Member Research Advisory, Monaco, original actress, Oscar, Oxford, player, Poseidon, Prime Minister, prince, Princess, queen, Rainier, Ray Charles, replacement actress, replacement judge, Richard Dreyfuss, Right, Shakespeare in Love, Sideways screenwriter, Singer, singer /songwriter, Soapdish, St. Antony's College, Star Trek: The Next Generation, suicidal poet, Supporting Actor, supporting actress, Texas, the Cannes Film Festival, The color Purple, The Country Girl, The Donna Reed Show, The Great Ziegfeld, the Oscar, the Oscars, The Player, tortured mathematician, transportation, United Kingdom, United States, Whoopi Goldberg, Women in Love
Only 83 films have won Best Picture to date and the general sentiment is that winning the big prize ensures that your film will have a place among the classics. Here are 10 films that won the grand prize that are not considered classics today: 10. The Broadway Melody, 1929 Since sound was introduced into [...]
Posted by Orrin Konheim on Monday, June 27, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged Academy Award for Best Director, Actor, America, American cinema, American film directors, Around the World In 80 Days, arsenic, arsenic and old lace, assistant, Atlantic City, Cannes film festival, Carol Reed, Cecille B. DeMille, Cesar Romero, Charles Coburn, Charles Dickens, china, Dances with Wolves, Dennis Schwartz, director, eccentric free-spirited professor, Elizabeth Taylor, Entertainment_Culture, film historian, films, Forrest Gump, Frank Capra, Frank Sinatra, Funny Girl, George Kaufman, India, Irene Dunne, It's a Wonderful Life, John Ford, John Huston, King, Louis B. Mayer, Marlene Dietrich, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, MGM head, Mike Todd, Moss Hart, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Mrs. Miniver, National Society of Film Critics, Oklahoma, On Golden Pond, Orrin Konheim, Oscar, Pakistan, producer, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Reds, restless newspaper editor, Richard Dix, Roger Ebert, Sound film, Spielberg, Steven Spielberg, studio head, Susan Stark, Thailand, the 1924 Olympics, The Broadway Melody, The English Patient, The Golden Globes, The Greatest Show on Earth, the Lifetime Achievement Award, the Oscars, the Pulitzer-prize, The Third Man, third Oscar, Tim Dirks, United Kingdom, United States, Washington, winston churchill, Wonderful Life, You Can't Take It With You
Of the top ten exclusive, rare and most sought after foods a few come to mind while others come as a bit of a surprise. Often these foods are quite expensive due to the rarity of the product, astronomically expensive in some cases, appearing only at the tables of the rich and famous. Of those [...]
Posted by Natalie Jaro on Thursday, March 31, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Food · Tagged Agriculture, almas caviar, animal product, bank, beluga caviar, Biology, birds nest soup, Botany, Caspian Sea, china, Chocopologie by Knipschildt, Christmas, Croatia, Cucurbitaceae, denmark, Edible fungi, food, Fritz Knipchildt, GBP, Hokkaido, hospitality_Recreation, Iran, Islamic Republic of Iran, Italy, Japan, Japanese cuisine, King, kobe, Kobe beef, Kobe,Hyogo Prefecture,Japan, Korea, London, London,Greater London,United Kingdom, Matsutake Mushroom, Melons, Natalie Jaro, Oscar, precious metal, Roe, Saffron, Sapporo, Sapporo,Hokkaido,Japan, The Dansuke Watermelon, the Oscars, Truffle, United States, US Federal Reserve, USD, Watermelon, White Truffle, Yubari Melon
At the beginning of every year, the entertainment industry, the connoisseurs of the seventh art and film lovers from all over the world turn their attention to the Oscars. The American Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences honors and recognizes outstanding cinema achievements since 1929. The greatest motion picture artists and professionals determine the [...]
Posted by Timeea on Monday, February 21, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, Movies · Tagged 11 Academy Awards, 11 Oscars, 45th Academy Awards, 81st Academy Awards, Academy Award, academy awards, Academy Awards ceremony, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Actor, actress, Alfred Uhry, America, American Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, American film directors, Anjelica, Anjelica Huston, Anthony Hopkins, art director, BAFTA Award, Ben-Hur, Best Actress Academy, Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Best Music, Buddy, California Suite, Carmine Coppola, Cedric Gibbons, Charles 'Buddy' Rogers, Cinema of the United States, Clara Bow, Color and Best Cinematography, David Cecil Low, Denzel Washington, Diana Barrie, director, Driving Miss Daisy, Entertainment_Culture, Eva Lovelace, film, Film director, first Academy Award, first librarian, Flowers and Trees, Francis Ford Coppola, George Scott, George Stanley, Golden Globe, gone with the wind, Halle Berry, Harold John Russell, Hattie McDaniel, Herbert Ross, Hollywood columnist, Human Interest, James Cameron, Jessica Tandy, Jobyna Ralston, Joe David Brown, John Huston, John Russell, Katharine Hepburn, King, Kristy McNichol, Legendary actress, Louis Gosset Jr., Lucien Hubbard, Maggie Smith, Margaret Herrick, Marlon Brando, Mexico, morgan freeman, Morning Glory, orchestra leader, Oscar, Oscar Pierce, Oscar Speech, Oscar Winners, oscars, Paper Moon, Peter Jackson, Prizzi's Honor, prominent political cartoonist, Richard Arlen, Sacheen Littlefeather, Scots-Irish Americans, screenwriter and actor, Sidney Poitier, Sidney Skolsky, Sierra Madre, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Sofia Coppola, Supporting Actor, tatum oneal, the 45th Academy Awards ceremony, the 83rd Academy Awards, the Academy Award, The Academy’s Award, the Academy’s Awards, The Bad News Bears, The Devil and Daniel Webster, The Godfather, the Oscar, the Oscars, The Return of the King, The Walt Disney Company, USD, walt disney, Walter Elias Disney, Walter Matthau, Walter Thomas Huston, Whoopi Goldberg, William A. Wellman, Wings, WWI
As any film aficionado will tell you, the world of film noir is a vast expanse that can be intimidating to dive into. There are so many films that are considered “classics” that it can be difficult to decide where to begin exploring the genre. Some films have been cemented in time as quintessential examples [...]
Posted by Nathanael Hood on Monday, September 27, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged Academy Award, Alex Sebastian, alfred hitchcock, Alicia Huberman, American Film Institute, Anton Karas, Asphalt Jungle, Austria, Billy Wilder, Blaming Fabian, brazil, British Film Institute, car accident, Carol Reed, cary grant, casablanca, Charles Laughton, Charlie Allnut, Charlton Heston, Citizen Kane, convicted Nazi spy, Cora, DeVille, director, drifter, Entertainment_Culture, Europe, film, film noir, Film theory, Frank Chambers, Gloria Swanson, good preacher, Grand Casablanca, Greater London, greenhorn screenwriter, Hank Quinlan, hard boiled screenwriter, Harry Fabian, Harry Lime, Harry Powell, head, head of the group, Holly Martins, Humphrey Bogart, hunter, In a Lonely Place, infamous pulp novelist, Ingrid Bergman, James M Cain, joan crawford, Joe Gillis, John Huston, Jules Dassin, Kristo, Lana Turner, Laurel Grey, legendary Greco-Roman wrestler, legendary silent actress, legendary silent film actress, Lillian Gish, local sheriff, London, Mexico, michael curtiz, Mike Vargas, Mildred Pierce, morocco, Music, Nathanael Hood, Nicholas Ray, Nick Smith, Night and the City, Norma Desmond, Notorious, Official, orson welles, Oscar, queen, Rachel Cooper, Rick Blaine, Robert Mitchum, Sam Spade, Sunset Boulevard, The African Queen, The Asphalt Jungle, The Magnificent Ambersons, The Maltese Falcon, The Night of the Hunter, the Oscars, The Postman Always Rings Twice, The Third Man, Touch of Evil, United Kingdom, United States, USD, Vienna, waitress, writer