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From the release of the film Honeysuckle in 1938, Libertad Lamarque was the most popular artist in Argentine cinema. [1] She had made her name on stage and radio as a tango singer and she was able to capitalize on that success by combining her singing and acting abilities in pictures that pulled their melodramatic plots straight from the tales told in popular tangos. [2]
The Twilight Saga: Eclipse ' s $30.1 million gross from midnight showings broke The Twilight Saga: New Moon ' s record ($26.3 million) for the highest midnight opening ever. It also broke Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen ' s records for the highest midnight gross in IMAX ($959,000) with $1 million and the highest Wednesday gross of all-time ...
Paramount Pictures / Nickelodeon Movies / Blinding Edge Pictures / The Kennedy/Marshall Company M. Night Shyamalan (director/screenplay); Noah Ringer , Dev Patel , Nicola Peltz , Jackson Rathbone , Shaun Toub , Aasif Mandvi , Cliff Curtis , Seychelle Gabriel , Katharine Houghton , Francis Guinan , Damon Gupton , Summer Bishil , Randall Duk Kim ...
In 2010, there was a dramatic increase and prominence in the use of 3D-technology in filmmaking after the success of Avatar in the format, with releases such as Alice in Wonderland, Clash of the Titans, My Name is Khan, Jackass 3D, and numerous other titles being released in 3D formats.
Unstoppable (2010) – disaster action thriller film loosely based on the CSX 8888 incident, which tells the story of a runaway train carrying hazardous material, which puts cities and people in danger [133] Veda (2010) – Turkish biographical film based on the memoirs of Salih Bozok, which traces the life of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk [134]
Alex Gibney has a thing for money-hungry rogues. The documentary film director first made a splash with 2005's Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room, adapted from a book of the same title by a pair ...
There's no movie around right now with a subject more pertinent. It'll hit you hard." [12] Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian gave the film 3 out of 5 stars and stated, "Please Give is an interesting and refreshing turn for the better. As an ensemble comedy, it has more bounce, more life and more comic oxygen." [13]
It was shot across London and Italy on a budget of ₹ 30 crore (US$3.5 million). The film marked the last screen appearance of Khan, who died three years after its release on 3 June 2013. The film was released worldwide on April 30, 2010, to mixed critical reviews, on over 750 screens in India. Nevertheless, it proved to be a commercial success.