| Behind the Music, This Time for Laughs |
“Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story” has a good beat and you can dance to it, though mostly you’ll probably just tap your foot. Source: NYT |
| Behind the Music, This Time for Laughs |
“Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story” has a good beat and you can dance to it, though mostly you’ll probably just tap your foot. Source: NYT |
| Behind the Music, This Time for Laughs |
“Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story” has a good beat and you can dance to it, though mostly you’ll probably just tap your foot. Source: NYT |
| Being Caribou |
Following the migration of a huge herd of caribou across the arctic tundra, the efforts of Leanne Allison and Karsten Heuer to draw attention to threats facing the northern caribou are the focus of this documentary. The two spent five months travelling and living among the caribou. Source: Apollo Movie Guide |
| Being Julia |
In 1930s London, England, a group of actors find themselves entangled in messy relationships, heartache, and vengeance. Annette Bening heads the cast, along with Michael Gambon and Jeremy Irons. Directed by Istvan Szabo (Sunshine). Source: Apollo Movie Guide |
| Being Rachel Zoe |
She turned her own look into a tabloid-headline-grabbing, million-dollar-sales-generating, Hollywood-star-making style machine. What will she fashion next? Source: NYT |
| Being Rachel Zoe |
She turned her own look into a tabloid-headline-grabbing, million-dollar-sales-generating, Hollywood-star-making style machine. What will she fashion next? Source: NYT |
| Being Rachel Zoe |
She turned her own look into a tabloid-headline-grabbing, million-dollar-sales-generating, Hollywood-star-making style machine. What will she fashion next? Source: NYT |
| Being Rachel Zoe |
She turned her own look into a tabloid-headline-grabbing, million-dollar-sales-generating, Hollywood-star-making style machine. What will she fashion next? Source: NYT |
| Being Rachel Zoe |
She turned her own look into a tabloid-headline-grabbing, million-dollar-sales-generating, Hollywood-star-making style machine. What will she fashion next? Source: NYT |
| Being Rachel Zoe |
She turned her own look into a tabloid-headline-grabbing, million-dollar-sales-generating, Hollywood-star-making style machine. What will she fashion next? Source: NYT |
| Being Rachel Zoe |
She turned her own look into a tabloid-headline-grabbing, million-dollar-sales-generating, Hollywood-star-making style machine. What will she fashion next? Source: NYT |
| Believe in Me |
IBelieve in MeI offers a paint-by-numbers story that follows a the new basketball coach in a small Oklahoma town in the 1960s who is assigned to the girls team. Despite the storylines familiarity, the film side steps the common inspiration sports movie pitfall of being over-wrought with sentiment. And that goes a long way in making the film as watchable as a lazy Saturday-afternoon matinee, allowing us to get caught up in the melodrama as you watch the dependable story play out just as youd expect it to. Source: Cinema Blend |
| Believe In Me |
Set in Oklahoma in the mid-60's, "Believe in Me" is the story of a young man whose dreams of coaching boys high school basketball are derailed when the school board assigns him to the girls' basketball team instead. Source: Rotten Tomatoes |
| Bella |
( Release: Oct. 26, 2007 Rated: PG-13 - for thematic elements and brief disturbing images Avg. Score: 1.5/5
Details | Trailers | Photos | Reviews
) The Gist
The melodrama is laughable. Source: Movies.com |
| Bella |
IN THEATRES OCTOBER 26, 2007 (Limited) Eduardo Verastegui (CHASING PAPI) stars as a former pro soccer player whose decision to work in his brother's restaurant in New York City has more implications than he could have imagined. Source: Rotten Tomatoes |
| Bella |
Anything can happen in a New York minute, as director Alejandro Gomez Monteverder makes clear with his Big Apple-set dramedy about two wounded souls in need of some serious healing. But it takes just a couple of seconds to realize that Bella is as earnest as it is implausible and unconvincing. Source: Hollywood.com |
| Bella / *** (PG-13) |
"Bella" (PG-13, 91 minutes). The story of two people who fall in love because of an unborn child. Winner of the Audience Award at Toronto 2006, it is a heart-tugger with the confidence not to tug too hard. Starring charismatic newcomer Eduardo Verastegui, who is the chef of his brother's Mexican restaurant in New York, until his life changes one day when his brother fires a waitress named Nina (Tammy Blanchard) for being late. He discovers she is pregnant, and has good reasons for wanting her to have the child, in a movie sweet, warm and funny. Rating: three stars. Source: RogerEbert Headlines |
| Belle de Jour / **** (Not rated) |
Luis Bunuel's 1967 film, the story of a respectable young wife (Catherine Deneuve) who secretly works in a brothel one or two afternoons a week, is possibly the best-known erotic film of modern times, perhaps the best. Source: RogerEbert Headlines |
| Belle Toujours |
Source: Rotten Tomatoes |