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2 votes
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When Jimmy Stewart played the villain
4 votes -
Here's why movie dialogue has gotten more difficult to understand (and three ways to fix it)
17 votes -
Alec Baldwin fatally shoots crew member with prop firearm on film set, authorities say
34 votes -
Guns, ammo, accountability: Hollywood munitions experts grapple with ‘Rust’ tragedy
6 votes -
Hollywood crews vote to authorize a strike for better pay and working conditions
33 votes -
Bob Iger’s long goodbye
1 vote -
Hollywood battle lines emerge in simmering vaccine war
6 votes -
Disney and Scarlett Johansson resolve bitter ‘Black Widow’ profits lawsuit
7 votes -
Hollywood reaps the rewards of becoming more diverse: Films with a diverse cast tend to outperform the rest
9 votes -
How David Fincher’s ‘Dragon Tattoo’ marked the end of the big-budget adult drama
7 votes -
Amazon is acquiring MGM for $8.45 billion
15 votes -
Amazon said to make $9 billion offer for MGM
6 votes -
A rising actor, fake HBO deals and one of Hollywood’s most audacious Ponzi schemes
5 votes -
Los Angeles Department of Public Health urges film industry vigilance to help contain COVID-19
7 votes -
Hollywood's smartest teen movies
7 votes -
Tom Cruise plots movie to shoot in space with Elon Musk’s SpaceX
8 votes -
Harvey Weinstein guilty of rape, sexual assault, but acquitted of predatory sexual assault
16 votes -
How Star Wars was saved in the edit
12 votes -
Alan Smithee - the director who doesn't exist
I just found out about this and it's something I guess I should have known about before. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Smithee Alan Smithee (also Allen Smithee) is an official pseudonym used...
I just found out about this and it's something I guess I should have known about before.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Smithee
Alan Smithee (also Allen Smithee) is an official pseudonym used by film directors who wish to disown a project. Coined in 1968 and used until it was formally discontinued in 2000,[1] it was the sole pseudonym used by members of the Directors Guild of America (DGA) when a director, dissatisfied with the final product, proved to the satisfaction of a guild panel that he or she had not been able to exercise creative control over a film. The director was also required by guild rules not to discuss the circumstances leading to the movie or even to acknowledge being the project's director.
12 votes -
Why is there cardboard in Dracula?
5 votes -
Les Moonves, Kevin Tsujihara and the art of Hollywood self-sabotage
2 votes -
Hollywood went to the moon first!
4 votes -
The slow death of Hollywood
11 votes -
How will the movies (as we know them) survive the next ten years? Twenty-four major Hollywood figures peer into the future
7 votes -
The end of erotica? How Hollywood fell out of love with sex
15 votes -
Hollywood studios bankrolled politicians behind abortion bans in Georgia and Louisiana
6 votes -
“Billionaires, bombers, and bellydancers”: How the first Arab American movie star foretold a century of Muslim misrepresentation
6 votes -
Uh, who decided to let Mel Gibson star in a movie called ‘Rothchild’?
7 votes -
Who stole Dorothy’s ruby slippers from Judy Garland’s hometown? The inside story of the epic, thirteen-year quest to find them.
5 votes -
An interesting essay about Lois Weber, once the highest-paid director in Hollywood, her works now all but forgotten
9 votes -
"As you wish..." Willam Goldman passed away at 87
5 votes -
The crazy high stakes facing Hollywood rom-com Crazy Rich Asians
7 votes -
Why 'Some Like It Hot' is the greatest comedy ever made
4 votes -
‘I see this as a major Hollywood film’: Studios consider making Thai cave rescue a movie
12 votes -
How did some of cinema's greatest films end up in an Iowa shed?
14 votes -
Future "A Star Wars Story" spinoffs on hold at Lucasfilm
11 votes -
Harvey Weinstein charged with felony sex crimes
13 votes