“Valentine’s Day” Teaser Trailer
Here’s the first trailer for New Line’s upcoming movie “Valentine’s Day.”
The romantic comedy is directed by Garry Marshall (”Pretty Woman,” “The Other Sister,” “Exit to Eden,” “Runaway Bride,” “The Princess Diaries“) from the script written by Abby Kohn and Marc Silverstein.
The Ghosts Of Girlfriends Past International Poster
New international (French) poster for romantic comedy “The Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” (premiered on May 1, 2009) has been released.
The movie which stars Matthew McConaughey, Jennifer Garner, Michael Douglas, Anne Archer, Lacey Chabert, Emma Stone, Christina Milian, Noureen DeWulf, Amanda Walsh and Robert Forster is directed by Mark Waters and scripted by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore.
McConaughey stars as a freewheeling libertine who’s haunted by the spirits of girlfriends of the present, past, and beyond at his brother’s wedding, awakening long-lost feelings for his first love.
For movie trailer, clips, poster and photos go to “The Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” FF Movie Page
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The Ghosts of Girlfriends Past Photos And 3 TV Spots
Three TV spots for new rom/comedy “The Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” which stars Matthew McConaughey and Jennifer Garner hit the web.
McConaughey stars as a freewheeling libertine who’s haunted by the spirits of girlfriends of the present, past, and beyond at his brother’s wedding, awakening long-lost feelings for his first love.
Michael Douglas, Anne Archer, Lacey Chabert, Emma Stone, Christina Milian, Noureen DeWulf, Amanda Walsh and Robert Forster co-star in this feature directed by Mark Waters and scripted by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore.
“The Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” will hit the theaters on May 1, 2009.
Take a look at the trailer and poster HERE
The Ghosts of Girlfriends Past First Poster
The first poster for new rom/comedy “The Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” which stars Matthew McConaughey, Jennifer Garner, Michael Douglas, Lacey Chabert, Emma Stone, Christina Milian, Noureen DeWulf and Amanda Walsh has been released.
The movie directed by Mark Waters from a script by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore will hit the theaters on May 1, 2009.
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Jennifer Garner’s The Ghosts of Girlfriends Past Trailer
A trailer for “The Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” directed by Mark Waters from a script by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore has been released.
Connor Mead (McConaughey) is celebrity photographer who loves freedom, fun and women…in that order. A committed bachelor who thinks nothing of breaking up with multiple women on a conference call, Connor’s mockery of romance proves a real buzz-kill for his kid brother, Paul, and a houseful of well wishers on the eve of Paul’s wedding. Just when it looks like Connor may single-handedly ruin the wedding, he is visited by the ghosts of his former jilted girlfriends, who take him on a revealing and hilarious odyssey through his failed relationships – past, present and future. Together they attempt to find out what turned Connor into such an insensitive jerk and whether there is still hope for him to find true love…or if he really is the lost cause everyone thinks he is.
“The Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” which stars Matthew McConaughey, Jennifer Garner, Michael Douglas, Lacey Chabert, Emma Stone, Christina Milian, Noureen DeWulf and Amanda Walsh will hit the theaters on May 1, 2009.
Juno: Movie Review
From a first impression, it would seem that all the ingredients are in place for “Juno” – the story of a high school junior who finds herself pregnant – to become the breakout indie hit of 2007. The new-on-the-scene screenwriter with an ear for ultra-snappy, ironic dialogue (Diablo Cody, already garnering comparisons to Tarantino), the super-hip, obligatory-since-“Garden State” indie soundtrack (courtesy of Matt Messina, The Moldy Peaches and Kimya Dawson) and a bevy of quirkily dysfunctional characters. Of course, we’ve seen those parts not amount to a satisfying whole before (oh Wes Anderson, we hardly knew ye). But in this case, it turns out those first impressions are dead-on. “Juno” is all that and more – a wonderful film with heart, humor and, yes, a great soundtrack.
Directed with a welcome ease by Jason Reitman, who with “Juno” emerges fully from dad Ivan’s shadow, the film opens with the titular 16-year-old administering several home pregnancy tests, all with the same outcome: positive. The father? None other than the king (or is it court jester) of awkward comedy Michael Cera, who plays Juno’s partner in sexual awakening Bleeker (don’t ask about the character’s names – Juno’s little sister is called Liberty Bell). Juno and Bleeker handle the news with a real, understated grace. They’re kids; they think they can handle anything. After a brief flirtation with abortion, Juno opts for the other A-word and finds what she considers to be perfect adoptive parents (played to yuppie perfection by Jason Bateman and Jennifer Garner) in the local Pennysaver. All this before she even informs her parents. When she finally does, it’s done almost as a business meeting – Juno wouldn’t want a big show of tears. Her family isn’t unloving, nor is it smothering. It’s just … normal. Father Mac (J.K. Simmons, given a fine, meaty role), is an air conditioner repairman who loves his daughter as best he can. Step-mom and dog-lover Bren (Allison Janney, always a pleasure) steers happily clear of the evil stepmother role in none-to-subtle ways.
As Juno, Ellen Page proves that her fine work in the borderline-exploitative pedophile-torturefest “Hard Candy” was no fluke. At a mere 20, this young actress can carry a film with uncommon, unaffected sincerity, even when the script calls for her to be impossibly, unbelievably, at-times annoyingly precocious (Juno is fluent in all things pop culture – from the Stooges to Dario Argento). Ms. Cody’s zippy script has a parlance all its own (characters are prone to terms like “wizard” and “honest to blog”) which Ms. Page wears like an old shoe. The script is also uncommonly generous to its cast; there’s not a bad role (or performance) in the bunch.
















