A Soviet-made documentary about the Chernobyl nuclear accident was not shown as scheduled Friday at the Berlin Film Festival because the film failed to arrive at the theater on time, organizers said.
Actress Elizabeth Taylor teamed up with Ryoichi Sasakawa, one of Japan's wealthiest ultraconservative tycoons, on Thursday to bring her anti-AIDS crusade to Japan.
Actor Warren Beatty donated 20 acres and television mogul Dick Clark provided 54 acres to help the Santa Monica Mountain Conservancy extend a network of hiking trails in Southern California, officials announced Thursday.
A La Costa, Calif., mother who says Ewoks are too violent for children wants to pull a book titled "Ewoks Join the Fight" from library shelves featuring the fuzzy little creatures created by George Lucas.
Orson Welles' ashes were entombed in Ronda, Spain, Thursday at a country house of retired bullfighter Antonio Ordonez where the American film maker once spent his vacations.
The Cannes Film Festival opens today in the south of France, and numerous celebrities who stayed away from last year's festival because of terrorism in Europe are expected this year, among them Academy Award-winner Paul Newman (bringing his version of Tennessee Williams' "The Glass Menagerie"), Diane Keaton (who will show...
A bitter dispute between a leading still photographer of Hollywood's Golden Age and his daughter over 7,000 pictures of celebrities has ended with the return of the collection to the artist.
"Repentance"--a film about tyranny with oblique references to the dictatorship of the late Joseph Stalin--won the first prize at the Soviet film festival in Tbilisi, the Soviet news agency Tass reported Sunday.
Two-year-old Junior Merced upstaged a movie shoot in Chicago on Friday when he fell from a second story window while trying to get a better view of the action.
"Pure coincidence" is how West Germany's national television network called the broadcasting of "Law and Order," a 1953 Western starring Ronald Reagan, on the day after the President's appearance in that country.
In Brothers-in-Law (ABC on Sunday at 8 p.m.), the first of two made-for-TV movies airing back to
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Eddie Murphy's $30-million breach of contract trial continued in Mineola, N.Y., Tuesday with theatrical agent King Broder conceding that his business certification had been revoked by the American Federation of Musicians and the American Guild of Variety Artists.
His Honor Clint Eastwood on Wednesday marks his first anniversary as mayor of Carmel.
Actor Helmut Berger was acquitted by an Italian appeals court in Florence Tuesday on drug charges for which a lower court sentenced him to 20 months in prison, Reuters reported.
A treasure of 250 silent films discovered in a barn in Temperance, Mich., include a full version of Thomas Ince's "The Italian" and a comedy featuring Oliver Hardy as a villain, according to workers at the Library of Congress film restoration laboratory in Dayton, Ohio.
In the new American Film magazine, editor Peter Biskind traces some of the gossip about the approaching (yes, still approaching) Warren Beatty-Dustin Hoffman-Elaine May comedy "Ishtar," which may well be the most expensive comedy ever made.
"Beverly Hills Cop II" busted box-office records right and left as grosses swelled close to $41 million in only six days of release.
The ashes of film maker Orson Welles, packed in an old blue suitcase, arrived in Madrid Monday on their way for burial at the ranch of retired bullfighter Antonio Ordonez.