Pink Floyd worked for a hot-shot director in 1970. The collaboration fizzled, but an unused piece of music later became a ...
The movie only grossed $1 million against a $7 million budget, resulting in a significant financial loss for for ...
Before becoming major Hollywood names, several future movie stars passed through the halls of ER in roles many viewers barely ...
'You're not going to blockade a country into democracy,' says fmr. NSC official on Cuba-US tensions ...
Mr. Coe, who wrote “Take This Job and Shove It” and other hits, was a transgressive exponent of the outlaw country movement of the 1970s and ’80s. By Bill Friskics-Warren David Allan Coe, the country ...
The 1970s, when the post-WWII consensus finally fell apart in the U.S., are remembered as a decade of groundbreaking movies with breathtakingly disillusioned themes. The ideas were embodied in the ...
David Blaine was on a mission to conquer his next impossible feat, and it required ingesting kerosene. To train for the dangerous act, the world-famous magician first practiced with water — plus some ...
Lenny Abrahamson, the acclaimed Irish director who famously brought Sally Rooney’s bestselling novel “Normal People” to TV screens (igniting the careers of both Paul Mescal and Daisy Edgar-Jones in ...
He was renowned for his skill at capturing candid scenes of penguins, polar bears and other cold-weather creatures — and for his ability to tolerate extreme discomfort. Credit...Sue Flood Supported by ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. In 1970, Bernardo Bertolucci released a film that would go on to become one of the most respected works in the history of cinema.