Production on David Fincher's Gone Girl, the adaptation of Gillian Flynn's smash hit novel, has officially started in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, and the local papers love it.
Metal Gear Solid's iconic red exclamation point, appearing above the heads of suspicious guards when alerted to the player's presence, almost fell foul of series creator Hideo Kojima's push for realism in the upcoming Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain.
New Girl is finally back and season 3 has begun! "All In" picks up at the end of the last episode, giving us a quick recap of where we were with regards to Nick and Jess, and what happened on the drive home. Well, they did get back to the loft - to the door at least - before realising that behind that big brown door lies all their problems, issues, everything that could conceivably come between them. In an effort to avoid this they get back in the car, drive around a little more, during whch Nick is slowly lulled to sleep. When he awakes, he discovers that Jess has driven them to Mexico.
In a story that is incredibly difficult to write a satisfactorily humourous headline about, the director of World War Z - Marc Forster - recently addressed the issue surrounding the change from the film's original ending. What change? Well, as envisioned in the original screenplay, a massive set piece was to take place in St. Petersburg, which was rewritten as quite a low-key ending in a laboratory in Wales. It was certainly brave to enforce such a change of pace so late in a big-budget movie, but were their intentions honourable? Does it really matter?
We may have been covering the trials that the team behind The Dark Tower have been forced to endure since 2010, but the process has been going on for much longer.
The excitement that met the announcement of Breaking Bad spinoff Better Call Saul has sent AMC into a frenzy of spinofflust, like some kind of undead creature feasting on still warm prey.
With Breaking Bad slowly winding down in a calm, collected, and in no way heart attack-inducing way, you're probably wondering in what easily digestible format you'll be able to consume your weekly portion of Aaron Paul.
Deadline has announced that, with flagrant disregard for what made the original source material so great, FX has put a sequel TV series to American Psycho in development.
Proving that he has the financial chutzpah to portray famed Colombian drug magnate Pablo Escobar, John Leguizamo went to great lengths to prove himself to the creative team behind the upcoming King of Cocaine, on
Horns, Alexandre Aja's adaptation of Joe Hill's novel of the same name, premiered at this year's Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) to mixed reviews. The machinations of the crazy world of movies, where a film can premiere before a trailer or poster is even released, means that we are now getting the first footage of the film (via Collider), after we've offered you our review. Stupid, right?