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Warren Buffett is in the new trailer for the 'Entourage' movie

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Warner Brothers just released a new trailer for the cinematic adaptation of the hit HBO series "Entourage." In what looks like an extremely fun, extended episode of the show, Ari Gold (Jeremy Piven) and the boys continue to navigate the choppy waters of Hollywood as Vincent Chase (Adrien Grenier) declares he wants to become a director.

But enough about the plot! The trailer features plenty of bikini-clad ladies, super-cars and yachts -- all of which will undoubtedly lure the show's faithful fanbase into theaters.

The movie also promises myriad celebrity cameos. Some standouts include Warren Buffett and Ronda Rousey, but there are literally too many to name here. Maybe this gif will help:

ENTOURAGE CELEB GIF

"Entourage" opens on June 5th.

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Tony Robbins reveals the real story behind his unforgettable 'Shallow Hal' cameo

The essential numbers in HBO’s bombshell Scientology doc

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Church of Scientology

Documentarian Alex Gibney’s Scientology exposé “Going Clear,” which debuted on HBO Sunday, revealed astonishing aspects of the church’s finances. Here’s a look at some of them.

$1.5 Billion

Journalist Tony Ortega unearthed some of the Church of Scientology’s 2011 tax documents. Those filings covered just three of “20 or 30” entities owned by the church, according to Ortega, but still showed $1.5 billion in assets.

The $1 Billion Bill

In the early 1990s, the Internal Revenue Service sent Scientology a bill for more than $1 billion of back taxes the organization owed after decades of nonpayment. This led to what the current leader of the church, David Miscavige, called “the war to end all wars” between the church and the IRS.

2,400 Lawsuits

Former church officials say that in response to the bill, Scientologists filed thousands of lawsuits targeting not only the IRS, but individual employees of the agency. At the time, the church’s assets were estimated at less than $500 million, so fighting the IRS was a “life and death” situation. Ultimately, the IRS caved, granting the church tax-exempt status as a religious entity and dropping the old bill.

2,209 Body Thetans

Hubbard told church members that 2,209 alien spirits called Body Thetans are attached to the human body. The church charges members hundreds of thousands of dollars for programs designed to expel the thetans. It is estimated that achieving Operating Thetan Level VIII–the highest level in Scientology–costs about $400,000.

Six to 40 Cents an Hour

Scientology experts say the church pays members who work in its “Sea Org” – intensive Scientology training facilities around the world – about 40 cents an hour. One former member described the schedule for Sea Org members as “30 hours on, three hours off.”

SEE ALSO: 21 famous Church of Scientology members

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NOW WATCH: This Sports Illustrated swimsuit rookie could become the next Kate Upton

They've made a documentary about Jon Huntsman's time in China

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When former Utah governor Jon Huntsman was appointed United States Ambassador to China, the charming career politician arrived at his new post with his entire family—including his adopted Chinese daughter, Gracie. In "All Eyes and Ears" Huntsman's diplomatic struggles and triumphs are explored in the broader context of China’s relationship with the rest of the world, and intersected with Gracie's personal experience living in China as a Chinese-American.

Video courtesy of Double Hope Films

"All Eyes and Ears" will debut on April 20 in New York City as part of the Tribeca Film Festival. For more information about the film visit alleyesandears.org.

 

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Watch the original Luke Skywalker, R2-D2 and Princess Leia take the stage at the 'Star Wars' Celebration event

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Leading up to the release of the trailer for "Star Wars: The Force Awakens," a cavalcade of vintage "Star Wars" superstars gathered on stage at the "Star Wars Celebration" event in Anaheim. The group featured actors Mark Hamill (Luke Skywalker), Carrie Fisher (Princess Leia), Peter Mayhew (Chewbacca) and Anthony Daniels (C-3PO).

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'Furious 7' earns $1 billion worldwide in 17 days

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After a prolonged slump to begin 2015, the box office got a desperately-needed shot in the arm when Universal released Furious 7 on April 3. Taking advantage of a weak crop of “competitors,” the action sequel broke the month’s opening weekend record by making an impressive $147.1 million during its first three days. Not too long after that, the film became the highest-grossing installment in the series – after just 10 days of release.

It was long expected Furious 7 would be one of the year’s top earners when 2015 was in the history books, but few could have predicted that it would become one of the biggest movies of all-time. Indeed, that’s exactly what’s happening as Furious 7‘s commercial hot streak has continued. After only 17 days in theaters, the film has crossed the $1 billion milestone, becoming just the 20th film in Hollywood history to do so.furious 7 box office gross

That accomplishment gets even more noteworthy when you throw in the fact that Furious 7 became a member of the $1 billion club faster than anyone else. The previous record was 19 days in a three-way tie between The Avengers, Avatar, and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2. When you factor in that those three projects all benefited from 3D surcharges (when Furious 7 did not), it makes this unprecedented run all the more extraordinary.

In a press release, Universal announced that Furious 7 is the first film of theirs to cross $1 billion in its initial theatrical release. Jurassic Park was technically the first product from the studio to gross that much, but that’s when you also include the amount of money it grossed during its 2013 3D release ($45.3 million in the States). When it’s all said and done, Furious 7 should be the highest-grossing film Universal has ever distributed (it already is in 26 territories), making it easy to see why their executives are interested in continuing the series with Fast & Furious 8 down the line.furious 7 clips paul walker

As we’ve said before, there are numerous reasons why the film is having this much success at the box office. Chief among them is the fact that this marks the final career performance of Paul Walker, who lost his life while the movie was still in production. Everyone ranging from die-hard fans to casual moviegoers were interested to see how the “tribute” portion of the film was handled, making the “one last ride” of Furious 7 more of an event than other installments.

The other way Furious 7 has made so much in so little time is because it was released during a vacant time at the marketplace. Universal arguably was smart to avoid the glut of summer blockbusters this year by putting their film out in the beginning of spring. It was a strategy Marvel Studios employed last year when Captain America: The Winter Soldier enjoyed a similar run, dominating the box office for a solid month until similar films started hitting the multiplex. Audiences were getting desperate for some popcorn entertainment, and Furious 7 delivered it in spades.Fast and the Furious Movie Box Office

The only real drama left is how far up the all-time charts Furious 7 can go. It’s currently at 20th and more than likely will clear some of the smash hits ahead of it (including, among others, The Dark Knight) by the time it ends its theatrical run. But any other records it breaks is gravy at this point as far as Universal’s concerned. Back in 2001, they took a chance at a niche film about underground street racing culture and ended up turning it into one of the most profitable tentpoles in the industry. No matter how you feel about these movies, that’s quite an accomplishment.

Furious 7 is now playing in theaters.

Source: Universal Pictures

Follow Chris Agar on Twitter @ChrisAgar90

SEE ALSO: Here are the car brands that appear the most in 'Furious 7’

SEE ALSO: This is the sports car villain Jason Statham is driving in 'Furious 7'

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NOW WATCH: HBO's 'Game of Thrones' got the Iron Throne all wrong

70 people were injured while filming this movie with 100 untamed lions

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Warning: This video contains blood and gore. 

Noel Marshall, Tippi Hedren, and their family lived with 140 untrained animals, including 100 untamed lions, in what is called "the most dangerous movie ever made". The idea for "Roar" was conceived after the couple toured several safari wildlife preserves and was struck by the scene of an abandoned plantation house overrun by lions.

The entire Marshall family moved along with their pride of 100 lions to a ranch property 40 miles north of Los Angeles and began shooting.  They were forced to film documentary style after they realized that they could rarely get through a scene without the lions attacking.

The cast suffered serious injuries over the 11 years the movie was filmed. Tippi Hedren endured a fractured leg and deep scalp wounds. Noel Marshall was gored so many times that he was eventually hospitalized with gangrene. And their daughter, Melanie Griffith, was mauled by a lion, resulting in over 100 stitches and reconstructive surgery. Her real-life mauling is on display in the final cut of the film.

The film was originally released in 1981 and will have a limited theatrical release this spring. It will be available on Blu-ray, DVD, and On Demand platforms later this summer.

Video courtesy of Drafthouse Films

Visit drafthousefilms.com for more information on the film.

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Here’s why everyone loves Star Wars

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darth sykwalker

“No. I am your father.”

The shocking words of Darth Vader to Luke Skywalker, as Luke clings for life at the end of The Empire Strikes Back (1980), made an enduring impression on more than one generation of fans.

That same Star Wars effect, remarkably, continues 35 years on, albeit with some dispute over the franchise’s legacy. These high emotions come to the surface when new teasers are released to whet audience expectations about the release of new features.

Now it is the turn of The Force Awakens, which is due for release at the end of this year. A second teaser was released last week to much excitement. The film is seventh in the Star Wars series, which began in 1977 with Star Wars: A New Hope, followed by The Empire Strikes Back in 1980 and Return of the Jedi in 1983.

Director George Lucas returned to the franchise in 1999 with The Phantom Menace, a prequel to the original films, followed by Attack of the Clones (2002) and Revenge of the Sith (2005).

Those recent additions to the Star Wars canon received mixed responses and expectations are high for a return to form with The Force Awakens, now under the ownership of Disney.

A new mythology for a new age

I was born after Darth Vader broke the bad news to Luke but was captivated with the films from a young age. It is interesting to see this same captivation seize the imaginations of children today and re-live the entry into a world that I had lived with such excitement and wonder.

The lightsabers and guns, the heroes and villains, the Empire and Rebellion, the light and the dark, the adventures and adversities, all make for a rich, imaginative world of which one can become part.

When Star Wars was released in 1977, all those factors, as well as the powerful special effects, cinematography, soundtrack and production, provided the foundations of a new mythology in the premiere medium of the day, cinema.

George Lucas’ stated aim was to create a mythology that could provide moral guidance within the context of renewed sense of spirituality and transcendence.

Lucas was concerned this mythology was lacking both in cinema (following the decline of the Western) and in a post-60s social context. In a 1999 interview with Time magazine, he reflected on these mythic qualities:

I see Star Wars as taking all the issues that religion represents and trying to distill them down into a more modern and easily accessible construct […] I put the Force into the movie in order to try to awaken a certain kind of spirituality in young people – more a belief in God than a belief in any particular religious system. I wanted to make it so that young people would begin to ask questions about the mystery.

This, in large part, helps to explain the enduring quality of Star Wars: it sought to take us deep into the mystery of life and existence through an imaginative and engaging story.

Star Wars purposefully engaged with the full potential of storytelling in film to address a social and cinematic gap. As the enduring popularity of science fiction and fantasy films shows, there is a yearning and need for big stories to be told that deal with universal themes – good, evil, love, friendships, violence and the transcendent.

This trend stands in contrast to the relativist and postmodern tendencies of the age.

The story goes deeper

Star Wars has powerful themes, within a well-constructed galaxy and adventure narrative that appeals to the times.

The story centres on the battle between the evil Empire and virtuous Rebellion, which appeals for its action as well as the injustice that is being fought. But the narrative moves beyond a conventional political and military fight to deeper considerations of character, friendship, technology, transcendence and redemption.

A viewer can enjoy the story on two levels, then: as an action-adventure of good versus evil, or as a reflection on the deepest human themes. Literary-critic and philosopher René Girard argues that the most enduring stories function on these two levels by simultaneously appealing to different audiences, with the deeper level effectively subverting and deepening the most superficial level over time.

In his book The Gospel According to Star Wars (2007), John McDowell argues that over the course of the films, Star Wars problematises and/ or deepens some of its seemingly more simplistic starting points, such as the power of redemptive violence and the binary of good and evil.

The fall and redemption of the ‘Chosen One’

This movement is shown in the primary story-line of Star Wars – the fall and redemption of Darth Vader/ Anakin Skywalker. Vader began as the archetype of the evil villain, following Star Wars: A New Hope.

Yet, as the series progressed, it became clearer that Vader was a complex character. In fact, he is the “Chosen One” who is meant to provide balance to the Force.

Here we see clear allusions to a saviour figure, even to Jesus Christ.

But the story that unfurls is an inversion of the Christian Gospel: the Chosen One does not save others but falls into the depths of evil, power and anger by following a false model (The Emperor) who in a sense personifies evil (“Satan”). Vader thinks he can restore order to the galaxy – as he says to Luke after revealing his identity – but his evil is ultimately destructive of others and himself.

In a parallel way to humanity in the Christian story, Vader falls and cannot find his way out of the dark side – “You don’t know the power of the dark side! I must obey my Master”, he says to Luke. Yet, Vader is eventually redeemed, though not through his own power or by his manipulation of the Force, but through his son, Luke Skywalker. In the same moment, the Force is purified of evil.

 

For the Force, we can read “transcendence” in general - that which goes beyond the material world - and more specifically, “God”. (“May the Force be with you” parallels the Christian greeting of “May the Lord be with you”.) It will be interesting to see how the new film deals with this legacy. In the most recent three outings we were introduced to the genetic-sounding Midi-chlorians – intelligent microscopic life-forms that allow their hosts to detect the Force.

The Force itself is too abstract and impersonal to equate with the biblical God and is more readily identifiable with concepts in Eastern religions (Lucas came to describe himself as a “Buddhist Methodist” ).

Over the course of the films, the Force is purified away from violence, power, anger, fear, aggression and toward love, forgiveness and friendship.

This purification occurs because Luke has a personal faith in Vader’s “real self” – his goodness despite his evil persona – that provides the impetus for Vader’s conversion and redemption.

While Star Wars emphasizes moral responsibility by choosing between good and evil, Luke’s faith goes beyond categorising people by their choices to something deeper – something that can only be seen in the light of love and forgiveness.

Luke holds onto this madness and folly – as St Paul called Christian faith in the love of the Crucified Christ – even to the point of risking his life to spare Vader, and is eventually vindicated. It is Vader’s conversion prompted by Luke’s faith and impending death that leads to Vader’s rejection of evil (throwing the Emperor away to save Luke) and to the breakdown of the Empire’s efforts in battle.

Vader’s journey, then, moves beyond the good-evil binary – not by goodness violently suppressing evil, but a person realising his true self in converting from evil into goodness (which has a distinctively biblical resonance).

Similarly, Luke himself undergoes a conversion – away from the violent, swashbuckling hero to the monk-like Jedi Knight who gives up on violence and anger. At the climatic end of Return of the Jedi, Luke refuses his chance to kill Vader – and indeed tries to save him – aware that by using violence he risks becoming a half-human enslaved to a false master, who promises liberation through anger and hate.

Redemptive violence and heroism are set aside for a spiritual path of non-violent love (heavily influenced in Lucas’ thought by Buddhism and Christianity). Crucially, the story here turns from Luke becoming a violent victor to a loving victim who is willing to give his life rather than take another’s life. In suffering and confronting evil with love, evil can be transformed, resisted and overcome.

Heeding the call into mystery …

The important and enduring themes in Star Wars appeal to our deepest selves and sense of goodness and transcendence.

Beyond the action, it is the mystery of the spirit that endures, which is what makes Star Wars itself enduring. But the Star Wars story is just that: a story. It is not a complete picture of human life, but is a way of pointing us to contemplate and live life more authentically.

To become fixated on the story alone or to use it for a particular agenda – such as by trying to create a Jedi religion and have that included in census data or claim ownership of the franchise’s direction/ meaning – is to ignore the message of Star Wars itself.

And that is, to go beyond ourselves, and the binaries and limits of our own secular time and compromised identities, to contemplate the mystery of life and become our true selves in the loving fellowship and transcendence of the Force.


This article is part of The Conversation’s Religion + Mythology series.

The Conversation

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

SEE ALSO: How to get the new 'Star Wars' emojis

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NOW WATCH: Someone has already recreated the 'Star Wars' trailer with Legos — and it's awesome


Johnny Depp is transformed in this trailer for Whitey Bulger biopic 'Black Mass'

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Warner Bros. released the first trailer for the Whitey Bulger biopic "Black Mass," which stars Johnny Depp as the notorious Boston gangster, who is serving two consecutive life sentences in prison.

Depp looks eerily different in the trailer, thanks to contact lenses that make his eyes blue. The movie is directed by Scott Cooper, whose "Crazy Heart" earned Jeff Bridges an Academy Award for best actor in 2010.

We'll have to wait and see if the same outcome is in the cards for Depp. "Black Mass" hits theaters on September 18, 2015.

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I saw the 'most dangerous movie ever made' starring 100 untamed lions and it was insane

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roarAfter the absolute chaos of a film that sets loose over 150 safari animals on the poor cast and crew of “Roar,” one of the lead characters makes a bold claim: “Boy, are they friendly.”

“Roar” is a forgotten 1981 film that follows an enthusiastic zoologist in Africa who turns his land into a sort of safe haven for big cats, protecting them from poachers. Marketed today as a screwball passion project, Drafthouse Films is re-releasing the movie 34 years after it was a financial failure on its initial release.

“Roar” is a family affair with a cast led by director Noel Marshall as the zoologist, and starring his then-wife, "Birds" actress Tippi Hedren, as well as their children. Promotion for the film has been attention-grabbing, highlighting unbelievable behind-the-scenes stories from its tormented 11-year production. As the film’s tagline states: “No animals were harmed in the making of this film. 70 cast and crew members were.”

With so many reported grisly cast and crew injuriessome of which are visible in the movie, I was skeptical that the film could live up to its clever marketing.

To my surprise and satisfaction, it absolutely did.

Before the movie started I asked my friends joining me what they hoped to see in “Roar." I received responses like "blood,""people getting killed," and "people cuddling lions." Miraculously, "Roar" did not disappoint any of my friends, making its PG-rating feel inappropriate, even by today’s standards. 

Every character in “Roar” seems to be in a rush, and for good reason. Forget the script, the story takes a backseat, as these actors have more pressing matters at hand. Dialogue is spouted rapidly, and then abruptly cut off by pouncing lions. Bodies flinch in preparation for a sudden attack and steps are taken gingerly to avoid one. The big cats are difficult to read as they shift between being unsurprisingly aggressive and strangely affectionate (even cute).

Roar

Yes, the dialogue is laughable, and the story is goofy. The chase scenes between untamed animals and the cast are, however, filled with tension, as there is a real sense of terror in the eyes of the actors. In other movies, characters are choreographed to run for their lives. In “Roar” people are actually running for their lives.

After the unpredictable 103 minutes ended, I asked my friends for initial reactions and they agreed the movie surpassed their expectations. One of them summed up the movie as follows: “It was basically like they took the cast of ‘The Brady Brunch’, threw them in a house with a 100 lions and attempted to make a film out of it.”

“Roar” is a wholly unique viewing experience, complete with laughter and astonishment. For the amount of time and effort Director Noel Marshall and his family went through, I admire their resilience in bringing “Roar” into existence. It is surreal and oddly compelling to behold such intimate interactions between humans and some of the most feared predators on Earth.

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NOW WATCH: Amazing video captures how exotic animals drink water

I saw 'Lost,' the first ever virtual reality movie — and it absolutely blew me away (FB)

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"Lost"

Whether you love film, or video games – or both! – your favorite medium is on the precipice of enormous change.

That change is virtual reality.

It's headed to video games first, but that's just the tip of the iceberg for VR. Films are next, and the world's largest VR company is getting in on the ground floor. The company in question is Oculus, which you've likely heard of for a variety of reasons: Its precedent-setting "Rift" headset, or its "boy wonder" founder Palmer Luckey, or its acquisition by Facebook last year for $2 billion. Maybe all three.

Oculus has an entire division dedicated to transforming the future of film: It's called "Story Studio," and it's lead by Saschka Unseld, the director of Pixar short "The Blue Umbrella," which was shown to theater audiences before "Monsters University."

Here's a brief introduction video the studio created:

 

The team's first film, "Lost," debuted at Sundance Film Festival earlier this year. "Lost" got an encore this past week at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York as a "Director's Cut," which means it's now a two-person experience and the audio is directional. A bird flies past and you hear the sound of it coming from behind, as it flies over your head, and into the distance – that's called "spatial audio."

What stuck out the most about "Lost" wasn't the shared experience aspect, or the spatial audio, or even the cutesy, "Iron Giant"-esque robot in the film (seen below). No.

What stuck out was that Oculus' film doesn't feel anything like a film. "Lost" feels like a video game.

Oculus Story Studio concept art

Rather, it feels like some bizarre mash-up of both mediums.

When "Lost" starts, you're a firefly floating in darkness. A firefly flies up and looks you in the eyes, and you're able to (lightly) interact with it. If you thrust your head toward it, the firefly dodges you. In real life, to your side, another person wearing an Oculus Rift headset is represented as yet another firefly (that's three total, including "you"). The firefly interacting with you flies over to the other viewer and you can watch them interact.

This is the first clue that you're not just watching a film, but – ever-so-slightly – participating in one.

As the lights rise, you realize you're in a dense forest. Looking around, ferns stick out from the ground and trees rise into the hazy sky above. If you lay on the ground, you're on the ground. If you turn around, you face the other direction. You aren't watching a film. You're in a film. 

This point is driven home more directly by a handful of scenes that don't play out until you, the viewer, trigger them. "We allow the viewer to activate the story," Oculus Story Studio producer Ed Saatchi told me in an interview after the film demo. "You activated those credits starting; we actually gave you enough time to feel present in that environment. You activated the hand coming up; the hand wouldn't come up if you weren't looking at it."

Saatchi was referencing the credits that showed up not longer after the film began. I had looked in a direction which triggered the film's opening credits. A moment later, I heard an unfamiliar noise in the distance. My brain told me to look to the right, where my eyes saw a piece of an electronic hand moving around (like "Thing" from "The Addams Family").

The Thing from "The Addams Family"

If I hadn't looked, it wouldn't have moved forward.

The film's progression – its narrative arc – was dependent on my actions. Sounds an awful lot like a video game if you ask me. Story Studio creative director Saschka Unseld largely agrees.

"It's very blurring lines, it's true," he told me. "I see that as different levels of how much you lean in. And I see the way – at least we, right now – explore storytelling in VR is in the middle between film and linear games." 

"Lost" very much lives in this middle ground between games and film. It feels like the birth of a new medium, or the evolution of two long-established mediums.

Like so much of VR, it feels like the future.

SEE ALSO: Everything we know about the new "Star Wars" game coming this fall

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NOW WATCH: Watch Henry Blodget Freak Out When He Tries Oculus Rift And Looks Down From A Virtual Skyscraper

You'll never visit your grandparents again after watching the creepy trailer for 'The Visit'

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This might be one of the scariest movie trailers ever. "The Sixth Sense" and "Signs" director M. Night Shyamalan returns the genre that made him famous with "The Visit." The movie uses the popular "found footage" approach to tell the story of a couple of siblings whose trip to visit their grandparents quickly gets very scary.

Shyamalan took a break from thrillers to take a shot at the action and science-fiction genres with "The Last Airbender" and "After Earth."

Both of those movies bombed with critics, but did serviceable business at the international box office. Now, however, Shyamalan seems ready to get back to what he knows how to do best. For "The Visit," he teamed up with Blumhouse Productions — the red-hot production company behind such hits as "Paranormal Activity,""Insidious" and "The Purge."

If the trailer is any indication, it looks like Shyamalan will finally get back into the good graces of his biggest audience. "The Visit" is due in theaters on September 11, 2015.

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Trailer for Manny Pacquiao biopic 'Kid Kalufu' chronicles his early life in the Philippines

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Ahead of this Saturday's big fight between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao, there's a new movie chronicling the latter's origin story.

"Kid Kalufu" tells the story of Manny Pacquiao's early life as a poor kid living in the Philippines that would eventually become one of the greatest boxers of his generation.

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Amy Schumer gives a brutally honest interview about her sex life

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Comedian Amy Schumer gives an honest interview about the sexual double standards between men and women while promoting her upcoming film "Trainwreck."

Schumer stars the Judd Apatow-directed comedy alongside "Saturday Night Live" alum Bill Hader and NBA player LeBron James. "Trainwreck" will be released on July 17, 2015.

Produced by Jason Gaines. Video courtesy of Associated Press, Universal Pictures, and Comedy Central.

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Forget 'The Avengers' — everybody is just waiting for ‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’


8 of the best film noir movies you can watch on Netflix right now

Here's the first picture of David Brent starring in his own movie

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More than a decade after The Office wound up on BBC, Ricky Gervais has released the first pic of David Brent starring in his own feature film.

Gervais is bringing Brent back for “Life on the Road”, which has just been given a British summer 2016 release date.

It follows Brent and his last-ditch attempt to be a rock star with his band Foregone Conclusion:

david brent

“He thinks it’ll be like Scorsese doing the Rolling Stones, but we’ll show the full horror,” Gervais said, referring to the film’s mockumentary style.

“I’m so excited that the world will see what David Brent is up to now and where his future lies."

“This film delves much more into his private life than The Office ever did and we really get to peel back the layers of this extraordinary, ordinary man.”

Gervais has already released a couple of tracks recently online, Slough and Lady Gypsy, which he wrote for a 2013 tour with Foregone Conclusion.

Here’s the official announcement for the film:

“Twelve years ago, David Brent (Ricky Gervais) was a regional manager for a mid-level paper merchants. In Summer 2016, get ready to see him on the big screen as he chases fame and fortune in LIFE ON THE ROAD.

Now working as a rep selling cleaning (and ladies personal hygiene) products up and down the country, Brent hasn’t given up his dream of becoming a rock star – or more specifically, singer/songwriter for fledgling rock band ‘Foregone Conclusion’. As he assembles a group of mercenary session musicians, a talented sidekick for street cred and an overpriced yet underwhelmed tour manager, he embarks upon a self-financed UK tour coming to a venue near every major city near you.”

Gervais also just announced he’ll write and direct another new movie exclusively for Netflix, “Special Correspondents”, starring Australian actor Eric Bana.

Bana will star as an arrogant radio journalist who, with his job at stake, resorts to faking front-line war reports from a Manhattan apartment above a Spanish restaurant.

It will also be released in 2016.

SEE ALSO: Meet the actresses behind the 5 beautiful wives in 'Mad Max: Fury Road'

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NOW WATCH: George R.R. Martin's funny and insightful explanation of the role religion plays in 'Game of Thrones'

'Peppa Pig' is now a billion-dollar brand

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Peppa Pig graffiti

Entertainment One is making a killing from "Peppa Pig," the British-made children's television series about a family of pig.

The production and distribution company revealed in its full-year results on Tuesday that "Peppa Pig" related sales hit $1 billion (£640 million) worldwide last year.

Entertainment One called the small pink pig "the most loved pre-school property in the world."

That insane popularity of the animation helped Entertainment One more than double pre-tax profit to £44 million ($68.74 million), despite revenue dipping 5% to £785.8 million ($1.22 billion).

Profit margins at its TV business are higher than in film and Entertainment One, which distributes Peppa Pig, owns half the rights to series.

Entertainment One also owns all of the merchandising rights and Peppa Pig ended the year with over 600 licensing deals to its name.

While Peppa Pig was a big hit, the company said it had a poor year for film. Revenue at its movie distribution business fell by 13% o £581.4 million ($908.25 million).

Entertainment One said it was hoping for a turnaround this year, thanks to films its working on such as the new "Steve Jobs" biopic.

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NOW WATCH: Forget the Apple Watch — here's the new watch everyone on Wall Street wants

An 'Orange is the New Black' star is co-producing a new movie about a badass woman on Wall Street

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Alysia Reiner and Sarah Megan Thomas

There's a new Wall Street movie in the works – and it happens to be written, produced, directed, and starred in by women.

'Orange is the New Black' star Alysia Reiner and co-producer Sarah Megan Thomas are raising funds for their feature-length independent film, Equity, which is set to begin shooting in New York and Philadelphia later this spring under the direction of Meera Menon.

The film is about "a top female investment banker fighting to keep her Wall Street firm in the lead as she shepherds the IPO for an emerging tech company," according to Reiner and Thomas' company website.

The protagonist, Naomi Bishop, will struggle to "balance business and ethics in the post-financial crisis world where regulations are tight but aspirations remain high."

The lead role has not yet been announced, but Reiner and Thomas will both act in other roles.

The script, written by Amy Fox, is based on interviews the filmmakers held with male and female bankers across Wall Street, according to CNN Money.

Rainer and Thomas have spoken with some big names in dealmaking, including James B. Lee Jr., Barbara Byrne, Alexandra Lebenthal, and Elaine La Roche, Bloomberg reports.

Thomas, whose husband works on Wall Street, told Bloomberg the intention of the movie is not to "vilify" bankers, despite the sexism and other obstacle that the heroine will encounter.

We'll let you know when the trailer comes out.

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There are shoe police at the Cannes Film Festival — and they're drunk with power

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cannes shoes

The talk of the Cannes Film Festival is not the films, nor the cascading red carpet gowns, but the shoes.

At the premiere of "Carol," starring Cate Blanchett, women on the red carpet were turned away from the theater door because they were wearing flats instead of high heels.

Even more egregious, an amputee was rebuffed at Gus Van Sant's "Sea of Trees"screening.

Valerie Richter, a film producer who is missing part of her left foot, told BBC 5 that red-carpet officials looked at her flat shoes and said, "No, no, this won't work, you can't get in like this." She was later allowed in but said that many of her colleagues were not. 

"No, no, this won't work, you can't get in like this.

And then there's art dealer Larry Gagosian, who wore a tuxedo and "stylish" sneakers, also a no-fly footwear choice at Cannes. Lucky for Gagosian, a call to pal Harvey Weinstein, who produced the film Gagosian was there to see, cleared the way. 

Asif Kapadia, the director of the new Amy Winehouse documentary, had to flex his connections, too: His wife's shoes didn't make the initial cut but she was eventually let in. Kapadia was so perturbed that he took to Twitter to confirm that women in flats were, indeed, being shut out. 

The real question here is whether the high-heel (and sneaker) rule is actually a rule or just evidence that Cannes has some sort of rogue shoe-police brigade. Yesterday, Screen Daily wrote that, yes, the festival had confirmed that flats are a red-carpet dress-code violation. But today the website posted the following statement from the festival's press office. 

Regarding the dress code for the red carpet screenings, rules have not changed throughout the years (Tuxedo, formal dress for Gala screenings) and there is no specific mention about the height of the women’s heels as well as for men’s. Thus, in order to make sure that this rule is respected, the festival’s hosts and hostesses were reminded of it.

So it seems flats are allowed at Cannes. And with the festival culminating this Sunday, there's plenty of time for actresses and goers to abandon their stilletos and see where it gets them. 

SEE ALSO: Insanely glamorous photos from the Cannes Film Festival

SEE ALSO: Uber is offering helicopter rides to the Cannes Film Festival

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