Details on Taser victim emerge Pasadena Star-News - He also transcribed song lyrics for a karaoke company, but had been without steady employment for some time...
Pete Goering Is it my imagination, or is Topeka experiencing more car-police chases than ever? OK, probably not ever , but the recent rash of accidents several of which resulted in fatalities are making headlines about as often as those frustrating city...
: Damn, all of you who hate Larry please, cry me a river. He may not make everyone laugh, but he does bring some... : Maybe it's the voice, but I expected Rick Astley to look like Michael McDonald, not Anthony Michael Hall...
SANTA MONICA - Charles Lane, the prolific character actor whose name was little known, but whose gaunt, bespectacled face, crotchety persona and roles in hundreds of films made him instantly recognizable to generations of moviegoers, has died, his son sa...
HOBART, Australia A squid as long as a bus and weighing 550 pounds washed up on an Australian beach, officials said Wednesday. "It is a whopper," said Genefor Walker-Smith, a zoologist who studies invertebrates at the Tasmanian Museum...
Are there movie giggles to be found in allegations of child abuse? If so, "Georgia Rule" is way ahead of the curve.
This well-acted, sometimes amusing but flat-out tone-deaf laugher is about a granny who is supposed to straighten out a problem grandchild over the course of a long Idaho summer. It is the oddest R-rated Mother's Day present ever. Filmmaker Garry Marshall, who once made millions of women identify with a high-priced hooker ("Pretty Woman") who meets her (paying) Prince Charming, takes another wild stab at the cutting edge with this one, a movie that will leave you in slack-jawed amazement as it lurches between farce and melodrama.
Lindsay Lohan is Rachel, an out-of-control teen who storms out of her mother's car on their way from San Francisco to Hull, Idaho. Rachel is such a vile wild child that her rich, indulgent, tuned-out mother (Felicity Huffman) has decided that a summer with the mother she grew up hating (Jane Fonda) is the only hope for the kid. Rachel has the self-confidence of the sexy and sexually predatory.
She bullies her way into a passing car driven by the town vet (Dermot Mulroney). She brazenly comes on to him (and every man she meets) and tactlessly and profanely confronts him, her rules-obsessed Granny and pretty much everybody else in the quiet, friendly town in the heart of Idaho Mormon country. Lohan plays the rude girl to a T.