Unfortunately, recent Hollywood history is full of stars who were everywhere but subsequently largely disappeared from popular consciousness, revealing just how ephemeral success can be in entertainment and how nothing is ever really guaranteed.
Despite the pandemic, there have been plenty of movies, shows, and music to celebrate in 2020. Here's our list of some of the year's best, spanning those categories.
There is so much television, and would that you could watch it all. But you just can’t. The ability to stream shows does help, and with many people at home, now is the perfect time to delve in.
For 39 years, John J.B. Wilson's Golden Raspberries, better known as the "Razzies," have been a mock award that "celebrates" the worst in film. Now as we know, bad is as subjective as good, but sometimes bad isn't that bad at all.
John Malkovich joined the legendary Steppenwolf Theatre Company in Chicago in 1976 but didn’t break into films until 1984's "Places in the Heart." Of course, he promptly got an Oscar nomination, won an Emmy for "Death of a Salesman" and didn’t look back.
Hollywood and the military have always had a unique and sometimes complicated relationship. While numerous films depict feats of heroism on the battlefield, few films truly capture the difficulties in transitioning from combat to civilian life.
This Friday, Disney will premiere "A Wrinkle In Time," the Ava DuVernay adaptation of the 1962 novel written by Madeleine L'Engle about a time- and space-traveling girl in search of her father.
From its humble beginnings in founder John J.B. Wilson's living room to its now 38th year, the Golden Raspberries are a mock award that "celebrates" the worst in film.