[go: up one dir, main page]

    Release CalendarTop 250 MoviesMost Popular MoviesBrowse Movies by GenreTop Box OfficeShowtimes & TicketsMovie NewsIndia Movie Spotlight
    What's on TV & StreamingTop 250 TV ShowsMost Popular TV ShowsBrowse TV Shows by GenreTV News
    What to WatchLatest TrailersIMDb OriginalsIMDb PicksIMDb SpotlightFamily Entertainment GuideIMDb Podcasts
    OscarsPride MonthAmerican Black Film FestivalSummer Watch GuideSTARmeter AwardsAwards CentralFestival CentralAll Events
    Born TodayMost Popular CelebsCelebrity News
    Help CenterContributor ZonePolls
For Industry Professionals
  • Language
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Watchlist
Sign In
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Use app
Back
  • Cast & crew
  • User reviews
  • Trivia
  • FAQ
IMDbPro
Al Pacino and Kitty Winn in Panique à Needle Park (1971)

News

Panique à Needle Park

Image
Jerry Schatzberg Looks You in the Eyes
Image
Self-Portrait.“Maybe I should have a fall at the end of every film now!”I’m calling to check in with Jerry Schatzberg, who is fresh out of the hospital. Two days earlier, at the opening night of a Museum of Modern Art retrospective of his film career, he had shown his feature debut, Puzzle of a Downfall Child (1970), released when he was 43 years old. As he climbed the short flight of stairs to the stage for a Q&a, Schatzberg, now 97, lost his balance and tumbled backward. The whole room screamed. Ushers, museum staff, and his assistants came instantly to his side. He did not move. After five silent minutes, everyone was asked to leave. When he was carted out of the MoMA on a stretcher and loaded into an ambulance, the crowd that had lingered outside the theater cheered. He waved softly back. Over the phone, Jerry assures me he’s doing fine,...
See full article at MUBI
  • 4/16/2025
  • MUBI
The Criterion Channel’s April Lineup Includes Jacques Rivette, Chinese Crime Thrillers, Vietnam Cinema & More
Image
I’m old enough to remember when Jacques Rivette films were the domain of dark-web networks and substandard DVD rips, a conspiratorial network worthy of his cinema. It’s still a little strange seeing that April will feature a 10-film, one-short Criterion Channel program that combines of his canonized masterpieces with decidedly lesser-seens––plus Va Savoir, which I really hope is the recently unearthed four-hour cut for which there’s no substitute. Penélope Cruz is also subject of a retrospective in April, which––more than making me pine for a Rivette collab that never was––will include both Abre Los Ojos and Vanilla Sky, some Almodóvar, and another in the Channel’s ongoing let’s-add-a-Woody-Allen-movie campaign, Vicky Cristina Barcelona.

For themed series, J. Hoberman has curated a series on the dangers of ’60s and ’70s New York that runs from Michael Roemer’s recently restored The Plot Against Harry and...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 3/20/2025
  • by Nick Newman
  • The Film Stage
Gene Hackman's Favorite Movie Was 'Scarecrow'
Image
If you asked many actors to name a favorite movie from their own body of work, they’d probably dodge the question, saying their films are like children. You just can’t choose. Well, the bold ones made the choice and Gene Hackman was one of them. And if you, as a film lover, were asked to guess what his pick was, you’d name one of his hits.

Was it The French Connection, the neo-noir action thriller that earned him his first Oscar? Bonnie & Clyde would be a great guess too, since it marked the first time that Hackman ever got noticed by the good people at the Academy Awards (nomination for Best Supporting Actor). What about Unforgiven? That, too, was brilliant, and so were Superman and The Conversation.

Interestingly, none of these films were remembered fondly by the Hollywood legend. During a conversation with The Independent, the...
See full article at MovieWeb
  • 3/19/2025
  • by Philip Etemesi
  • MovieWeb
In ‘We Tell Ourselves Stories,’ Alissa Wilkinson Explores Joan Didion’s Time in Hollywood: ‘It’s a New Framework to Look at Her Work’
Image
In 2020, film critic Alissa Wilkinson started working on a book project about Joan Didion. She wanted to explore the iconic essayist, reporter, novelist and playwright through an angle that hadn’t been considered much before — Didion’s connection to the film industry. That became the book, “We Tell Ourselves Stories: Joan Didion and the American Dream Machine.”

Wilkinson, who has been a critic at The New York Times since 2023 and wrote for Vox before that, was not interested in delving into Didion’s “persona or her celebrity, as much as what ties all her work together.”

“I came up with this notion of writing about her through the lens of Hollywood, both because she worked in Hollywood and wrote movies that have been produced and that we still watch today, but also because she wrote about Hollywood,” Wilkinson told Variety in a recent phone interview.

“We Tell Ourselves Stories,” which was published Tuesday,...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 3/11/2025
  • by Abigail Lee
  • Variety Film + TV
Al Pacino
The 10 Best Al Pacino Performances, Ranked
Al Pacino
An indisputable icon of the celluloid, revered for his bravura performances and infectious charisma, Al Pacino’s identity has become an inextricable element in the canon of American cinema. In a career spanning more than half a century, Pacino has cultivated an enviable track record, working with greats like Francis Ford Coppola, Sidney Lumet, Martin Scorsese, and William Friedkin, to name a few of cinema’s wizards, and producing some of the most excellent performances ever put on screen.

Born Alfredo James Pacino, the South Bronx native started honing his acting chops in theatre before taking the leap into cinema with a small role in “Me, Natalie” (1969). He next surveyed the life of a person with a heroin addiction in “The Panic in Needle Park.” He would then go on to play one of the most popular characters in cinema in “The Godfather,” shooting him to superstardom – all at thirty-two,...
See full article at High on Films
  • 2/4/2025
  • by Adithya Prakash
  • High on Films
Every Al Pacino Movie That's Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, Ranked
Image
Al Pacino is one of Hollywood's greatest movie stars of all time. With 69 credits under his belt and seven new projects in the works, this actor is as relevant today as he was in the 1970s. Pacino is one of the classical method actors who trained under the famed Lee Strasberg in New York. Like many aspiring actors in the 1960s, he started in stage plays before he became a household name on the silver screen.

Pacino had his film debut in the 1969 drama Me, Natalie, in which he played a small supporting role. Pacino stated in his recently released memoir Sonny Boy that he felt his performance was “disastrous” and almost compelled him to give up acting. However, just two years later, Pacino would have his big break with his leading role in the 1971 film The Panic in Needle Park. Altogether, the beloved actor took part in many iconic films,...
See full article at CBR
  • 12/10/2024
  • by Silke Sorenson
  • CBR
The Only Major Actors Still Alive From Serpico
Image
Over 50 years ago, Sidney Lumet released "Serpico," a powerful indictment of NYPD police corruption that was based on a true story. Decades later, New York's "boys in blue" are still being consistently called out for corruption, but at the time of the film's release in 1973, "Serpico" felt like it might just cause a sea change in the way America — or at least Hollywood — saw its law enforcement systems. "Sidney Lumet's 'Serpico,' the first in what threatens to be an avalanche of movies about policemen, picks up the old cop film and brings it with lights flashing and sirens blaring into the middle of the Watergate era," Vincent Canby wrote in his original review for the New York Times.

"Serpico" may not have ended up changing the world, but the movie based on the book of the same name by Peter Maas was a box office and critical hit,...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 12/4/2024
  • by Valerie Ettenhofer
  • Slash Film
Didion & Babitz: How Two Of LA’s Finest Writers Handled Hollywood
Image
Eve Babitz, the “dowager groupie” who wrote Slow Days, Fast Company and was known for her relationships with the likes of The Doors’ frontman Jim Morrison and Steve Martin, and Joan Didion, the author of Play It As It Lays and The White Album, who wrote Barbara Streisand and Kris Kristofferson’s A Star Is Born, are unquestionably two of Los Angeles’ most-revered writers.

A new book – Didion & Babitz written by Lili Anolik – highlights the relationship between the pair, helped by the author unearthing scores of previously unseen letters.

The book, which published today by Simon & Schuster’s Scribner, also explores their contrasting relationship with Hollywood (the town) and Hollywood (the industry).

Didion wrote a slew of screenplays with her husband, John Gregory Dunne, including the aforementioned A Star Is Born, 1971’s The Panic In Needle Park, which starred Al Pacino, 1981’s True Confessions, which starred Robert De Niro and Robert Duvall,...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 11/12/2024
  • by Peter White
  • Deadline Film + TV
The Iconic Scene That Saved Al Pacino From Being Fired From The Godfather
Image
"The Godfather" is one of the greatest movies ever made, and the story about the making of the film has become the stuff of legend. The behind-the-scenes shenanigans that went into Francis Ford Coppola's American masterpiece have become so ingrained in the popular culture that someone even made an entire TV show about the making of the film ("The Offer," which premiered in 2022). If you're a film buff, you likely know the details: Coppola was still a young director at the time, and he had to fight hard to maintain his specific vision for the project. In the end, Coppola got his way, and "The Godfather" became a box office smash that took home several Oscars. But getting there was not easy.

One of the many clashes Coppola had with the studio, Paramount, involved casting of the film. The cast members of "The Godfather" are so pitch-perfect that it's...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 11/12/2024
  • by Chris Evangelista
  • Slash Film
Al Pacino ‘Didn’t Have a Pulse’ During Near-Death Covid Experience
Image
Al Pacino nearly died of Covid in 2020, the iconic actor says, recalling his harrowing experience in a recent episode of The New York Times’ “The Interview” podcast.

At the height of the pandemic, the Oscar, Emmy and Tony award-winning actor contracted a life-threatening Covid infection. Pacino said that he wasn’t feeling well, “unusually not good.” When the 84-year-old actor broke into a fever, a nurse was called in to cure his dehydration. That’s when the situation became dire.

“I was sitting there in my house, and I was gone. Like that. I didn’t have a pulse,” Pacino told the Times.

In “minutes” an ambulance arrived at his house. Pacino said there were about six paramedics and two doctors in his house dressed in outfits that “looked like they were from outer space or something.” When he opened his eyes, Pacino recalled the medical professionals saying, “He’s back.
See full article at The Wrap
  • 10/7/2024
  • by Kayla Cobb
  • The Wrap
‘Monsters’ Stars Defend Show’s Use of Incest: ‘Part of a Dramatization, Not a Documentary’
Image
Much has been made of the incestuous portrayal of the Menendez brothers in “Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story.” But the actors behind the widely discussed Netflix original want viewers to know this element of the series isn’t necessarily based on fact.

“To be honest with you, I don’t remember reading any of that in my research. So if he did suggest that, it was a suggestion as it is at this dinner party where he talks for 20 pages,” Nathan Lane told TheWrap of Vanity Fair reporter Dominick Dunne.

During the dinner party in question, Dunne (Lane) entertains his guests with an onslaught of questions and theories about the case, questioning why the brothers didn’t bring up their alleged abuse sooner.

“Then he suggests maybe this is a possible scenario, and they cut away to Kitty walking in on them in the shower,” Lane explained. “That...
See full article at The Wrap
  • 9/27/2024
  • by Kayla Cobb
  • The Wrap
Anamaria Vartolomei Talks ‘Being Maria,’ Fighting for Change Within the Entertainment Industry at Cannes
Image
Anamaria Vartolomei, the breakout star of Audrey Diwan’s Venice prizewinning “Happening,” is under the spotlight at this year’s Cannes Film Festival playing strong women in a pair of movies, “Being Maria” and “The Count Monte Cristo.” Both movies are supported by Chanel for which Vartolomei is an ambassador.

Vartolomei says since starring in Diwan’s drama “Happening,” which was set in the 1960s and centered around the then-illegal act of abortion, she has continued being lured to demanding roles with political and social themes.

“I think movies are the expressions of my engagements as a woman, and as such I often star in films that are engaged because when you’re an actress you contribute to change and we must continue to wage this battle that other women have led before,” says Vartolomei, who was wearing a glamorous dark khaki and black silk jacquard muslin dress by Chanel.
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 5/24/2024
  • by Selena Kuznikov and Elsa Keslassy
  • Variety Film + TV
Al Pacinos First Lead Role Was a Precursor to The Godfather & Scarface'
Image
Jerry Schatzberg's The Panic In Needle Park is a 1971 drama film co-written by Joan Didion and John Gregory Dunne, based on the 1966 novel of the same name by James Mills. What the film is arguably most remembered for is being Al Pacino's first starring role as Bobby, a small-time hustler and addict. The film is a gritty and harrowing tale of love and addiction in New York City, following the relationship of Bobby and his addict-to-be lover Helen (Kitty Winn), who falls deep into the NYC heroin scene, tarnishing their relationship and leading to a series of heart-breaking betrayals. Pacino's charismatic portrayal of Bobby is endearing and inviting, a beautiful trainwreck of a character whose spell is so effectively cast upon Helen. His cock-sure attitude and enigmatic personality are tragically undercut by the savagery of his addiction, which spreads like a disease into Helen, subsuming her morality in a heart-breaking corruption arc.
See full article at Collider.com
  • 5/6/2024
  • by Jordan Todoruk
  • Collider.com
How Street Smart Launched Morgan Freeman's Career
Image
Street Smart was the breakout role for Morgan Freeman, challenging him in a new way. Despite a poor box office performance, the film received critical acclaim and award nominations. Street Smart is worth watching for Freeman's standout performance and a well-written drama.

It has become undeniable that actor Morgan Freeman has become one of the most recognizable names in Hollywood. If not for his roles in such films as Se7en, Unforgiven, Gone Baby Gone, The Shawshank Redemption, and The Dark Knight, one could point to his extensive voice-acting roles in acclaimed documentaries like March of the Penguins or voicing characters such as Vitruvius in The Lego Movie. His career is extremely expansive, with over 140 credits to his name.

There is one film that stands out as a starting point for Morgan Freeman, even though, at the age of 49 with many credits before its release, it put him center stage for the first time,...
See full article at MovieWeb
  • 4/11/2024
  • by Adam Symchuk
  • MovieWeb
Yasujirô Ozu in Fleurs d'équinoxe (1958)
The Criterion Channel’s December Lineup Features Holiday Noir, Hitchcock, Ozu, Sembène, Parker Posey & More
Yasujirô Ozu in Fleurs d'équinoxe (1958)
The Criterion Channel is closing the year out with a bang––they’ve announced their December lineup. Among the highlights are retrospectives on Yasujiro Ozu (featuring nearly 40 films!), Ousmane Sembène, Alfred Hitchcock (along with Kent Jones’ Hitchcock/Truffaut), and Parker Posey. Well-timed for the season is a holiday noir series that includes They Live By Night, Blast of Silence, Lady in the Lake, and more.

Other highlights are the recent restoration of Abel Gance’s La roue, an MGM Musicals series with introduction by Michael Koresky, Helena Wittmann’s riveting second feature Human Flowers of Flesh, the recent Sundance highlight The Mountains Are a Dream That Call To Me, the new restoration of The Cassandra Cat, Lynne Ramsay’s Morvern Callar, Wong Kar Wai’s The Grandmaster, and more.

See the lineup below and learn more here.

The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, Terry Gilliam, 1988

An American in Paris, Vincente Minnelli,...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 11/13/2023
  • by Jordan Raup
  • The Film Stage
‘Woman of the Hour’ Review: Anna Kendrick Gets Edgy in Her True Crime-Influenced Directorial Debut
Image
Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival. “Woman of the Hour” premieres on Netflix Friday, October 18.

Almost every woman has a story: A stranger who followed her through a parking garage. A cab driver who asked uncomfortably personal questions. A date who became frighteningly obsessive. A friend who wouldn’t take no for an answer. The frightening banality of these events is the engine that drives “Woman of the Hour,” the directorial debut from actress Anna Kendrick.

Based on the true story of serial killer Rodney Alcala — who was convicted in 1980 for the murders of seven women and girls, but is suspected of killing more than 100 — “Woman of the Hour” is a more mainstream study of the tension between heterosexual desire and implied violence also evoked in Jane Campion’s “In the Cut.” Unlike that film, however, “Woman of the Hour” leaves the...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 9/10/2023
  • by Katie Rife
  • Indiewire
The Classic Gangster Movie Jack Nicholson Turned Down (It Would Have Rewritten Hollywood History)
Image
Jack Nicholson turned down the role of Michael Corleone in The Godfather because he believed that Italians should play Italians and Indians should play Indians. Nicholson felt that Al Pacino was the ideal choice for the role of Michael Corleone and acknowledged that Pacino became the face of the gangster genre because of his performance. If Nicholson had accepted the role, the gangster genre and his own career would have been significantly different, potentially affecting iconic roles such as The Shining and Batman.

In hindsight, it seems impossible that any actor would have turned down a role in the iconic gangster film, The Godfather, and yet one of Hollywood's biggest stars, Jack Nicholson, absolutely did do that, and with an interesting reason attached. In the early 1970s, Nicholson and The Godfather were both on the cusp of becoming not just successful, but quintessential. Nicholson was riding high on his early...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 8/30/2023
  • by Megan Hemenway
  • ScreenRant
Humphrey Bogart
The Best Free Movie Streaming Sites, From Crackle to YouTube
Humphrey Bogart
There’s a plethora of free streaming sites and apps out there, but which ones are offer the widest selection? And most legit? We’ve rounded up the best streaming sites for anyone who wants to watch their favorite movies without having to pay for a subscription.

The trade-off: Sitting through commercials. Free-ad-supported TV (Fast) can be a mixed experience, depending on the platform: Ads might cut in at odd moments or the same ad might might run three times in a row, but hey, it’s free, right?

As the major streamers add their own ad-supported sites, such as Amazon’s Freevee, the options for free streaming should continue to grow. (Movie availability on each platform are subject to change.)

Crackle

You can currently stream classic movies such as the 1949 Humphrey Bogart movie “Tokyo Joe” or the ’80s comedy “Just One of the Guys” on this free ad-supported site.
See full article at The Wrap
  • 8/14/2023
  • by Sharon Knolle
  • The Wrap
What Happened to Al Pacino?
Image
Al Pacino says he doesn’t remember much of the 1970s. So, The Godfather, Serpico, Scarecrow, Dog Day Afternoon, …And Justice For All are some of the greatest movies ever, let alone of the 1970s: all a blur. But unfortunately, he remembers Gigli and 88 Minutes, Revolution, Righteous Kill, and too many more all too well. He is a guy that always goes over the top, and sometimes it results in brilliance and other times, it causes Mr. Pacino to become a parody of himself. But is his legacy strong enough, and is Al in the middle of another comeback?

It’s a diverse career of ups and downs and whatever he was thinking with Jack and Jill. And so let’s find out: Wtf Happened to… Al Pacino?

But to truly understand what happened to Al Pacino, we go back to the beginning. And the beginning began when he was born on April 25th,...
See full article at JoBlo.com
  • 6/23/2023
  • by Steve Seigh
  • JoBlo.com
4 Ways First Blood Would've Been Different If Al Pacino Was Rambo
Image
Al Pacino was one of several actors considered for the part of John J. Rambo in the 1982 action-thriller First Blood, and his version would have been very different. The film adaptation of David Morrell’s 1972 novel of the same name, the leading Rambo role eventually went to Sylvester Stallone, who rewrote the screenplay to make the character more sympathetic. Had Al Pacino played John Rambo, however, the action hero would have differed greatly from Sylvester Stallone’s interpretation in a number of ways that are more faithful to David Morrell's original novel.

The development of a feature film based on David Morrell's novel began in the same year the book was published, but First Blood had a long, arduous path to the big screen as the adaptation bounced around Hollywood for several years with many different producers, directors, and lead actors attached at various times. At one point in the movie's development,...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 6/3/2023
  • by Nathan Miranda
  • ScreenRant
Al Pacino's First Big Movie Before The Godfather Is a Classic
Image
By the end of the 1960s, Hollywood was at a crossroads. The new generations were not as appealed by the major blockbusters of the prior decades, and felt a deep need for the movies that played in theaters to be closer to their lives. Young actors within Hollywood felt that it was their time to bring upon a fresher take on what studios could do, and thanks to names such as Warren Beatty and Peter Fonda, a new way of making films in America began.

The success of films such as Easy Rider and Bonnie and Clyde led to major studios financing smaller films instead of the traditional big-scale productions of prior decades. The early 1970s marked the beginning of the New Hollywood Movement which revitalized the mainstream and set a new standard for what major award-contender films could be and the possibilities for original auteurism in Hollywood for the coming decade.
See full article at MovieWeb
  • 5/21/2023
  • by Gabriel Mauri
  • MovieWeb
Al Pacino Is The Best Actor Ever
Image
There are two types of Al Pacino performances. The first is the kind that announced him as an acting virtuoso in the 1970s. They're fully inhabited, imbued with a coiled intensity, and forever on the verge of crescendoing to rage or, on rare occasions (most movingly in Jerry Schatzberg's "Scarecrow"), joy. This is Pacino at his very best: restless, yet modulated. When he blows his top in "Dog Day Afternoon," screaming "Attica" at the cops posted outside the bank he's attempting to rob, the moment is earned. He's given us keen insight into the mental machinery that drives Sonny, and has us cheering along with the crowd, even though we're still not sure why he's been driven to such dead-end desperation.

The second type is the grotesque self-parody that's been grist for impressionists — none better than Bill Hader — and soundboard prank callers since he stole Denzel Washington's Oscar...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 3/31/2023
  • by Jeremy Smith
  • Slash Film
The End Of TCM Underground Is A Huge Loss
Image
If there's a basic, no-frills definition for movies, it's that they're made to be seen. Cinema is a populist medium, attempting to reach as wide an audience as possible for as long as possible.

Perhaps that's why the feeling of "discovering" a movie can be so powerfully enjoyable. It gives you the sense, however false, that you're stumbling upon a secret piece of entertainment made just for you. If you happen to discover such a movie in the wee hours of the morning, so much the better — the surreal setting only serves to make what you're watching seem that much more unreal, richer, and special.

It's that sensation that the programming block on Turner Classic Movies known as "TCM Underground" sought to capture every Friday night-turned-Saturday morning. Begun by Eric Weber in 2006 and continued by programmer Millie De Chirico starting in 2007, TCM Underground made it its business to curate some of the most obscure,...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 2/24/2023
  • by Bill Bria
  • Slash Film
Robert Duvall Knew The Godfather Was Special Before Filming Had Even Wrapped
Image
Francis Ford Coppola's adaptation of Mario Puzo's novel, "The Godfather," is one of the most acclaimed films of all time. Whether or not you've seen the film, you'll likely recognize some of the iconic lines such as, "I'm gonna make him an offer he can't refuse," or "Leave the gun. Take the cannoli," or the all-star ensemble cast that Coppola assembled which included the likes of Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, Diane Keaton, and many more.

Robert Duvall, who had previously worked with Coppola on "The Rain People" before "The Godfather," played Tom Hagen, the informally adopted son of Brando's Vito Corleone and consigliere and lawyer for the Corleone family. This wouldn't be the final collaboration between the two, as Duvall would go on to appear in a number of Coppola's future films including "Apocalypse Now"; "The Conversation"; and, of course, "The Godfather Part II."

Despite a number of collaborations,...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 9/12/2022
  • by Andrew Korpan
  • Slash Film
The 15 Best Al Pacino Movies, Ranked
Image
Alfredo James Pacino, or Al Pacino as he's more widely known, is one of Hollywood's most iconic actors, known for his intense and riveting performances across a varied but often gritty portfolio of films. Whether playing a mob boss, a cop, a coke-addled drug lord, or even the Devil himself, the nine-time Oscar nominee and Academy Award winner has brought his signature vigor and smoldering intensity to each and every role.

Not only has the octogenarian delivered outstanding performances throughout his more than 50-year career, but many of the films he's starred in are considered all-time classics. That's a real win-win for all of us, if you ask me. How do you rank a filmography as great and iconic as his? It's not going to be easy, but we're about to try. Join us as we dive into Al Pacino's impressive roster of movies and rank the 15 best.

If you...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 8/31/2022
  • by Layla Halfhill
  • Slash Film
Image
In Memoriam: Actor Paul Sorvino of ‘Goodfellas’ Dies at 83
Image
Chicago – In one of my trips to New York City, I saw him in the distance on the street (this actually happens often in NYC. Pay attention!). Actor Paul Sorvino, Paulie Cicero of ‘Goodfellas’ legend, as well as many other films/stage/TV/opera work, was unmistakably walking right towards me. “Hey Paulie,” I instinctively said. “Hey,” he said back. Fast forward several years later, Mr. Sorvino was honored by the Chicago Film Critics Awards in 2013, I was a newly minted Chicago Film Critic, and I met him again (see below). Paul Sorvino died on July 25th, 2022, in Jacksonville, Florida. He was 83.

Paul Anthony Sorvino was born in Brooklyn, and studied at the American Musical and Dramatic Academy. After a stint in advertising, he made his Broadway debut in 1964 in the musical “Bajour.” Six years later, his was in his first film, Carl Reiner’s “Where’s Poppa” (1970), and one...
See full article at HollywoodChicago.com
  • 7/28/2022
  • by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
  • HollywoodChicago.com
Al Pacino and Kitty Winn in Panique à Needle Park (1971)
Spike Lee's Malcolm X Was Decades In The Making
Al Pacino and Kitty Winn in Panique à Needle Park (1971)
The 1997 book "Monster: Living Off the Big Screen" by John Gregory Dunne was required reading in film school for the better part of a decade. Dunne is the screenwriter behind "The Panic in Needle Park," the 1976 version of "A Star is Born," and the largely forgotten 1996 romance "Up Close & Personal," about which "Monster" was written. The book details the soulless process of how a screenplay gets turned into a movie over the course of many, many years, often shedding every piece of artistic daring for comfortably commercial reasons. "Up Close" took eight years to write, and the finished film has very, very...

The post Spike Lee's Malcolm X Was Decades In The Making appeared first on /Film.
See full article at Slash Film
  • 3/22/2022
  • by Witney Seibold
  • Slash Film
California Native Joan Didion Understood Hollywood Better than Anyone
Image
Many Netflix watchers are catching up with actor-director Griffin Dunne’s documentary about his aunt, “Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold,” following the news that the prolific writer died December 23 at age 87 from Parkinson’s. When President Barack Obama gave Didion the National Humanities Medal in 2012, he called her “one of our sharpest and most respected observers of American politics and culture.”

Didion not only chronicled the literati scene of New York in the 1950s and early ’60s but astutely dissected her home state of California. After graduating from Uc Berkeley, she landed a job at Vogue in New York, where she penned movie reviews — until her pan of “The Sound of Music.” After marrying Time staffer John Gregory Dunne in 1964, the couple moved to Los Angeles and wound up becoming the ultimate Hollywood insiders. When Didion and Dunne later moved to New York City in 1988, they had lived in Los Angeles for 24 years.
See full article at Indiewire
  • 12/24/2021
  • by Anne Thompson
  • Indiewire
California Native Joan Didion Understood Hollywood Better than Anyone
Image
Many Netflix watchers are catching up with actor-director Griffin Dunne’s documentary about his aunt, “Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold,” following the news that the prolific writer died December 23 at age 87 from Parkinson’s. When President Barack Obama gave Didion the National Humanities Medal in 2012, he called her “one of our sharpest and most respected observers of American politics and culture.”

Didion not only chronicled the literati scene of New York in the 1950s and early ’60s but astutely dissected her home state of California. After graduating from Uc Berkeley, she landed a job at Vogue in New York, where she penned movie reviews — until her pan of “The Sound of Music.” After marrying Time staffer John Gregory Dunne in 1964, the couple moved to Los Angeles and wound up becoming the ultimate Hollywood insiders. When Didion and Dunne later moved to New York City in 1988, they had lived in Los Angeles for 24 years.
See full article at Thompson on Hollywood
  • 12/24/2021
  • by Anne Thompson
  • Thompson on Hollywood
Joan Didion Dies: Journalist, Novelist, and Screenwriter Was 87
Image
Joan Didion, the journalist, novelist, and screenwriter of such films as the 1976 “A Star Is Born” died Thursday at her home in Manhattan at the age of 87. The New York Times reported that the cause was Parkinson’s disease.

Didion was born in Sacramento in 1934. The fifth-generation Californian found some of her most important material for her earliest writing in the culture and chaos of her home state. Her career began after she won a pair of writing contests put on by magazines during her time at Uc Berkeley. One of those wins led her to begin writing at Vogue.

She worked her way up to features editor at the fashion magazine. In 1963 she published her first novel, “Run River,” about the unraveling of a marriage that also serves as a commentary on the history of California.

Around that time and while living in New York she struck up a friendship,...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 12/23/2021
  • by Chris Lindahl
  • Indiewire
Image
Joan Didion Says ‘Goodbye to All That’: Literary Icon Dead at 87
Image
Joan Didion, the storied author and New Journalism icon best known for books like Play It as It Lays, The White Album, and The Year of Magical Thinking, died Thursday, The New York Times reports. She was 87.

Didion died at her home in Manhattan after a battle with Parkinson’s disease, a spokesperson for her publisher, Knopf, confirmed. “Didion was one of the country’s most trenchant writers and astute observers,” the statement read. “Her best-selling works of fiction, commentary, and memoir have received numerous honors and are considered modern classics.
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 12/23/2021
  • by Jon Blistein
  • Rollingstone.com
Joan Didion, Beloved Author and Screenwriter, Dies at 87
Image
Joan Didion, the author revered for her coolly dispassionate essays and novels such as “Play It as It Lays,” has died, her publisher confirmed to The New York Times on Wednesday. She was 87. Along with her late husband John Gregory Dunne, Didion co-wrote screenplays for the films “True Confessions,” “A Star Is Born,” “The Panic in Needle Park” and “Up Close and Personal.”

It was the 1968 essay collection “Slouching Towards Bethlehem” and 1970 novel “Play It as It Lays,” which she also adapted for a 1972 film, that secured her reputation as a sharp-eyed observer of the culture and people of California and beyond.

Another essay collection, 1979’s “The White Album,” assembled from her pieces in Esquire and other magazines, took on subjects that defined the era such as Charles Manson and the Doors, further cementing her place as one of the foremost chroniclers of the tumultuous ’60s and ’70s.

With lines...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 12/23/2021
  • by Carmel Dagan
  • Variety Film + TV
Jerry Schatzberg Recalls Al Pacino’s ‘Ego Trip’ After ‘The Panic in Needle Park’
Image
Move over, Clint Eastwood — the 91-year-old “Cry Macho” director isn’t the only nonagenarian American director intent on staying busy. At the age of 94, filmmaker Jerry Schatzberg hasn’t directed a movie since 2000’s “The Day the Ponies Come Back,” but still feels like he could make his swan song. “I’ve recently decided I’d really like to do one more film,” the New York-based director said in a phone interview with IndieWire last week, sounding a bit raspy but energized nonetheless. “I don’t know what it is yet.”

He added that he recently heard an interview on Wnyc with author Atticus Lish about his novel “The War for Gloria.” Curious, Schatzberg sought out the book and has been thinking about it adapting it. “Most of my friends can’t believe I’m the age I am because I don’t act it,” Schatzberg said. “I don’t really think about it.
See full article at Indiewire
  • 10/11/2021
  • by Eric Kohn
  • Indiewire
Jerry Schatzberg on Battling Studios, Working with Actors, and Finding the Realism in The Panic in Needle Park
Image
Jerry Schatzberg is among the great American filmmakers who changed the landscape in the 1970s, but his name is one that has taken some time to get the recognition it deserves. While he may not have landed with the same initial impact as a Francis Ford Coppola or Martin Scorsese, the years have been kind to films like The Panic in Needle Park and Scarecrow, invigorating a passion that ranks them as some of the decade’s very best.

A renowned photographer with work in magazines such as Vogue and Esquire, Schatzberg is also responsible for the iconic cover of Bob Dylan’s Blonde on Blonde. This was all done before he made his feature debut with 1970’s Puzzle of a Downfall Child, starring then-fiancée Faye Dunaway. That would begin a career working with some of the best actors the world has ever seen, from Al Pacino and Gene Hackman...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 10/8/2021
  • by Mitchell Beaupre
  • The Film Stage
The Criterion Channel’s September 2021 Lineup Includes Jia Zhangke, Margaret, Center Stage & More
Next month’s Criterion Channel selection is here, and as 2021 winds down further cements their status as our single greatest streaming service. Off the top I took note of their eight-film Jia Zhangke retro as well as the streaming premieres of Center Stage and Malni. And, yes, Margaret has been on HBO Max for a while, but we can hope Criterion Channel’s addition—as part of the 63(!)-film “New York Stories”—opens doors to a more deserving home-video treatment.

Aki Kaurismäki’s Finland Trilogy, Bruno Dumont’s Joan of Arc duology, and Criterion’s editions of Irma Vep and Flowers of Shanghai also mark major inclusions—just a few years ago the thought of Hou’s masterpiece streaming in HD was absurd.

I could implore you not to sleep on The Hottest August and Point Blank and Variety and In the Cut or, look, so many Ernst Lubitsch movies,...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 8/25/2021
  • by Leonard Pearce
  • The Film Stage
Image
‘Cherry’: Tom Holland Feels Stranded in the Russo Brothers’ ‘Great American Movie’
Image
Joe and Anthony Russo’s Cherry has its moments. But the film, an adaptation of Nico Walker’s hit 2018 novel of the same name, is, for the most part, a misfire and a missed opportunity. The Russo brothers, best known of late for helming a spate of Avengers epics — most recently 2019’s Endgame — bought the rights to Walker’s autobiographical bestseller within months of its release, for reasons anyone who’s familiar with the novel or its backstory can easily guess.

Cherry — Walker’s novel — is a topically wide-ranging, tonally flexible,...
See full article at Rollingstone.com
  • 3/12/2021
  • by K. Austin Collins
  • Rollingstone.com
Al Pacino
The Evolution of Al Pacino: From ‘The Godfather’ to ‘Glengarry Glen Ross’ and ‘Hunters’ (Photos)
Al Pacino
From portraying a mob don and an AIDS-stricken attorney to a comic strip villain and a Nazi hunter, Al Pacino has done it all. In honor of his long and distinguished career (and his 80th birthday), we offer up this retrospect that showcases his expansive diversity.

N.Y.P.D (1968) • A then 28-year-old Pacino made his TV debut on this ABC police procedural plan the victim of a shooting.

Me, Natalie (1971) • Pacino had a small role in this film starring Patty Duke about a girl who struggles with her appearance.

The Panic in Needle Park (1971) • Pacino played a small-town crook leading a woman down a path of heroin addiction. His work in this film caught the eye of director Francis Ford Coppola

The Godfather (1971) • And then came “The Godfather” and his first Academy Award nomination. Need we say more?

Serpico (1973) • Pacino earned his second Oscar nomination playing New York City policeman Frank Serpico,...
See full article at The Wrap
  • 4/25/2020
  • by Rosemary Rossi
  • The Wrap
Adam Sandler, Mesfin Lamengo, Sun Zhi Hua-Hilton, and LaKeith Stanfield in Uncut Gems (2019)
Nbr Awards: Adam Sandler’s Wild Season Keeps Going, and Everyone Is Nuts About ‘Uncut Gems’
Adam Sandler, Mesfin Lamengo, Sun Zhi Hua-Hilton, and LaKeith Stanfield in Uncut Gems (2019)
It took some time for the good-natured ribbing to begin at Wednesday evening’s National Board of Review Awards, held in Manhattan at Cipriani’s Midtown location, an impressive high-ceilinged former bank well-suited to hosting dozens of stars. But it was clear early on that the jittery charms of Josh and Benny Safdies’ “Uncut Gems” were poised to dominate the evening, thanks to an energetic introduction from actor Timothée Chalamet.

Though the filmmaking brothers, along with co-writer Ronald Bronstein, accepted the Best Original Screenplay award from the bonafide Safdie enthusiast in the first half of the evening, it wasn’t until their star Adam Sandler made his way to the stage that the real fun began.

Sandler, comedian king and star of such dramatic-leaning gems as “Punch-Drunk Love” and “The Meyerowitz Stories,” has appeared to relish this year’s packed awards season, thanks to a film that’s earned him...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 1/9/2020
  • by Kate Erbland
  • Indiewire
Al Pacino Reflects on His Life and His Four Most Memorable Roles
Listening to Hollywood legends reflect on their careers is a treat that provides a perspective wholly other from what we, the audience, have come to know. Today, in anticipation of The Irishman’s Netflix debut, GQ has posted a conversation with Al Pacino, where the star discusses what many consider his four most indelible roles. The 79-year-old actor talks Serpico, Dog Day Afternoon, Scarface, and The Godfather. He reminisces about growing up with a difficult mother and …...
See full article at Collider.com
  • 11/21/2019
  • by Brendan Michael
  • Collider.com
Al Pacino's 10 Best Movies, According To Rotten Tomatoes
Ever since his humble beginnings in the intimate drug-based drama The Panic in Needle Park followed by his mainstream breakthrough in Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather, Al Pacino has been regarded as one of the greatest actors who ever lived.

Related: Al Pacino’s 10 Most Iconic Roles, Ranked

In recent years, he’s been occasionally letting moviegoers down with disappointing turns in the likes of Jack and Jill, but at least he hasn’t sold out quite as much as his fellow screen legend Robert De Niro. Pacino’s filmography is still occupied by a majority of great work. So, here are Al Pacino’s 10 Best Movies, According To Rotten Tomatoes.
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 9/21/2019
  • ScreenRant
Catch-22 (2019)
What’s Coming to Hulu in July 2019
Catch-22 (2019)
If you’ve already binged your way through the latest season of “Handmaid’s Tale” and all of “Catch-22,” worry not because Hulu is here to cure your mid-vacation content slump with a whole new slate of titles coming to the streamer this July.

Watch Kristen Bell reprise her role as the titular character in Season 4 of “Veronica Mars,” dropping July 1. Or if you aren’t in the mood to return to the seaside town of Neptune as Mars investigates a mysterious string of bombings and murders, you can relax with Ice-Cube’s hilarious one-liners in Steve Carr’s family comedy “Are We Done Yet?” and his spin-off series “Are We There Yet?”

Alongside classic favorites — all five “Rocky” movies, “King Kong,” and “The Polar Express” are among some notable additions — the streaming service also came through with both brand-new and returning original shows. Watch the series premiere of “Four Weddings and a Funeral,...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 6/27/2019
  • by Anna Tingley
  • Variety Film + TV
Hulu in July: Here’s Everything Coming and Going
Hulu is out with its list of new content coming in July, and highlights include the “Veronica Mars” revival and the series premiere of the new “Four Weddings and a Funeral.” We also have the list of everything that’s being removed from the streaming service at the end of July.

Season 1-3 of the original “Veronica Mars” series will be available starting July 1, so you can brush up on all the background knowledge you’ll need to fully enjoy Season 4 when it drops July 26, with Kristen Bell returning the starring role as the title character after almost 15 years. Here’s everything we know about the revival so far.

The new Mindy Kaling-produced “Four Weddings and a Funeral” series comes July 31, with “Game of Thrones” star Nathalie Emanuel in the lead role. Original star Andie MacDowell will return as a guest star.

Also Read: Summer TV Premiere Dates: Here's...
See full article at The Wrap
  • 6/17/2019
  • by Margeaux Sippell
  • The Wrap
Rushes: Scott Walker, Rediscovering Lois Weber, "Alien: The Play"
Get in touch to send in cinephile news and discoveries. For daily updates follow us @NotebookMUBI.NEWSWanuri Kahiu on the set of RafikiRafiki director Wanuri Kahiu has announced her latest project, an adaptation of Octavia Butler's 1980 Wild Seed, produced by Viola Davis and written by novelist Nnedi Okorafor. Butler's novel follows two immortal African beings whose tumultuous rivalry takes them across pre-colonial West Africa to a plantation in the American South. Recommended VIEWINGFrom March 20–April 2, Vdrome is screening Adam Khalil and Zack Khalil's documentary Inaate/Se/ [it shines a certain way. to a certain place/it flies. falls./]. The film "imagines new indigenous futures, looking simultaneously backward and forward." The new trailer for Hong Sang-soo's Grass is at once simple and cryptic, conveying one of many mysteries encountered by a young writer observing intimate interactions in a bustling cafe. The dreamy, video game-inspired images of Caroline Poggi and Jonathan Vinel's Jessica Forever come to life in a new trailer.
See full article at MUBI
  • 3/27/2019
  • MUBI
Martin Bregman at an event for Scarface (1983)
Martin Bregman, Producer of ‘Serpico’ and ‘Scarface,’ Dies at 92
Martin Bregman at an event for Scarface (1983)
Martin Bregman, a talent manager and film producer whose credits include classic like “Scarface,” “Serpico,” and “Dog Day Afternoon”, died Saturday of a cerebral hemorrhage. He was 92. NBC 4 first reported the news.

Born in New York City in 1926, Bregman entered the entertainment industry first as a nightclub agent before moving into personal management. As a manager, his clients would eventually include at various times luminaries like Alan Alda, Woody Allen, and Barbra Streisand among others.

Bregman’s greatest impact on Hollywood was the result of his relationship with Al Pacino. Bregman discovered Pacino performing in an Off Broadway play in the 1960s, and became his manager. He helped Pacino land his first starring film role in the 1971 drama “The Panic in Needle Park.” It was that role which brought Pacino to the attention of Francis Ford Coppola, leading to Pacino’s breakthrough as Michael Corleone in “The Godfather.”

Also...
See full article at The Wrap
  • 6/17/2018
  • by Ross A. Lincoln
  • The Wrap
Movie Poster of the Week: Al Pacino in Posters
Above: Spanish poster for Serpico (Sidney Lumet, USA, 1973). Artist: Jano.Al Pacino, who is currently being fêted by the Quad Cinema in a 33 film retrospective, came of age in the 1970s, a golden age of American poster design. The one sheet for his first major film, The Panic in Needle Park, though it doesn’t give you a good look at Pacino, is a classic of its time: an arresting black and white photo (taken, I would hope, by director Jerry Schatzberg who was an accomplished photographer before he was a filmmaker), a stop-you-in-your-tracks tagline (overwhleming the film’s title) and that very ’70s white border. He doesn’t appear on the posters for his second major film, The Godfather, but after that, throughout the 70s and into the early 80s his face (and especially those soulful eyes) and name became ubiquitous. And of course, the poster for Scarface has...
See full article at MUBI
  • 3/16/2018
  • MUBI
Meryl Streep
Meryl Streep in ‘Kramer vs. Kramer’: A look back at her first Oscar win and the competition
Meryl Streep
This article marks Part 2 of the 21-part Gold Derby series analyzing Meryl Streep at the Oscars. Join us as we look back at Meryl Streep’s nominations, the performances that competed with her, the results of each race and the overall rankings of the contenders.

In 1978, Meryl Streep, already renowned for her work on the New York stage, grabbed the attention of moviegoers across the country with her Oscar-nominated turn in the Best Picture champ “The Deer Hunter.” That year, however, would seem minor in comparison to what was on the horizon in 1979.

Streep was about to work with three of the decade’s hottest directors – Woody Allen, at his most in-demand after “Annie Hall” (1977) and “Interiors” (1978); Robert Benton, whose “The Late Show” (1977) was a big hit; and Jerry Schatzberg, who won critical acclaim with “The Panic in Needle Park” (1971) and “Scarecrow” (1973).

The resulting trio of Allen’s “Manhattan,” Benton’s “Kramer vs.
See full article at Gold Derby
  • 1/30/2018
  • by Andrew Carden
  • Gold Derby
Daniel Giménez Cacho in Zama (2017)
New York Film Festival: 13 Films We Can’t Wait to See This Year, From ‘Lady Bird’ to ‘Last Flag Flying’
Daniel Giménez Cacho in Zama (2017)
The New York Film Festival kicks off later this week, sending us straight into the second half of a very busy fall festival season. In preparation for the festival, we’ve pinpointed its most exciting offerings, from never-before-seen narratives to insightful new documentaries, and plenty of previously-screened features looking to capitalize on strong word of mouth coming out of fellow tests like Venice, Telluride, and Toronto. In short, there’s plenty to experience in the coming weeks, so consider this your roadmap to the best of the fest.

Read More:Bryan Cranston Enters Oscar Race with New York Film Festival Opener ‘Last Flag Flying’

Ahead, 13 essential titles — from buzzy world premieres to highlights from the 2017 circuit— that we can’t wait to see at this year’s New York Film Festival.

“Arthur Miller: Writer”

Documentaries about family members are always a dubious proposition. Some can also come across as overindulgent exercises,...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 9/27/2017
  • by Kate Erbland, Eric Kohn, Anne Thompson, David Ehrlich, Chris O'Falt, Jude Dry, Michael Nordine and Steve Greene
  • Indiewire
The Current Debate: Race in "Good Time"
In the first scene of Good Time, the latest from directors Josh and Benny Safdie, Connie Nikas (Robert Pattinson) barges into an office where a social worker is interviewing his brother Nick (Benny Safdie), who has a mental disability and impaired hearing. From there, the two brothers are off to the races, as Benjamin Mercer writes at Reverse Shot:Almost immediately after, Connie is hauling Nick along with him on an ill-conceived robbery of a bank branch in Flushing, Queens. “Do you think I could have done that without you standing next to me, being strong?” Connie reassures Nick right after the job—and just before a paint bomb goes off in their bag of stolen cash, filling the cab they’re in with red vapor and sending it off the road. The accident, an eye-poppingly entropic moment staged by the Safdies and captured as if on the fly by cinematographer Sean Price Williams,...
See full article at MUBI
  • 8/24/2017
  • MUBI
Chasing Coral (2017)
Netflix Will Release Nyff Documentaries on Joan Didion and Gay Talese
Chasing Coral (2017)
Netflix is adding two new documentaries to its crowded 2017 roster: “Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold.” and “Voyeur,” both of which will premiere at the 55th New York Film Festival and launch globally on Netflix later this year.

Read More:Documentary, Now: Three Rock Stars Who Run The Fast-Changing Nonfiction World

Author Joan Didion’s nephew, actor-director-producer Griffin Dunne, has been laboring on this portrait of his aunt for years. The film spans more than 50 years of essays, novels, screenplays, and criticism, as Didion chronicled America’s cultural and political tides, from the literati scene of New York in the 1950s and early ’60s to her home state of California, where she wrote “Slouching Toward Bethlehem” and “The White Album” and such film scripts as “The Panic in Needle Park.”

Dunne unearths a trove of archival footage and interviews his aunt at length about the many people she met and...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 8/23/2017
  • by Anne Thompson
  • Indiewire
Chasing Coral (2017)
Netflix Will Release Nyff Documentaries on Joan Didion and Gay Talese
Chasing Coral (2017)
Netflix is adding two new documentaries to its crowded 2017 roster: “Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold.” and “Voyeur,” both of which will premiere at the 55th New York Film Festival and launch globally on Netflix later this year.

Read More:Documentary, Now: Three Rock Stars Who Run The Fast-Changing Nonfiction World

Author Joan Didion’s nephew, actor-director-producer Griffin Dunne, has been laboring on this portrait of his aunt for years. The film spans more than 50 years of essays, novels, screenplays, and criticism, as Didion chronicled America’s cultural and political tides, from the literati scene of New York in the 1950s and early ’60s to her home state of California, where she wrote “Slouching Toward Bethlehem” and “The White Album” and such film scripts as “The Panic in Needle Park.”

Dunne unearths a trove of archival footage and interviews his aunt at length about the many people she met and...
See full article at Thompson on Hollywood
  • 8/23/2017
  • by Anne Thompson
  • Thompson on Hollywood
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.

More from this title

More to explore

Recently viewed

Please enable browser cookies to use this feature. Learn more.
Get the IMDb app
Sign in for more accessSign in for more access
Follow IMDb on social
Get the IMDb app
For Android and iOS
Get the IMDb app
  • Help
  • Site Index
  • IMDbPro
  • Box Office Mojo
  • License IMDb Data
  • Press Room
  • Advertising
  • Jobs
  • Conditions of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Your Ads Privacy Choices
IMDb, an Amazon company

© 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.