Friday, August 27, 2010

Movies show less smoking - Omaha World-Herald (Howrah BOLLYWOOD MOVIES)

Movies show less smoking - Omaha World-Herald
NEW YORK (AP) — A new study shows that there’s less smoking depicted in movies in recent years. Tobacco use on the silver screen peaked in 2005 and has been on the decline ever since. Movies released last year showed
Source: www.omaha.com

New movies this week - Detroit Free Press
"Avatar: Special Edition": Director James Cameron's sci-fi epic returns with 8 minutes of new footage. Rated PG-13 for intense battle sequences, sensuality and language. "Cairo Time": A fashion magazine editor
Source: www.freep.com

Greg Grunberg: I starred in JJ Abrams’ home movies - San Mateo Daily Journal
NEW YORK — “Heroes” actor Greg Grunberg says his acting bug started when he starred in the home movies of his childhood friend, director J.J. Abrams. Grunberg has known Abrams since they were 4. He says Abrams
Source: smdailyjournal.com

Family Film Guide: A heads up on what parents can expect at the movies - Erie Times-News
What it's about: A charlatan exorcist struggles to help a girl who turns out to have real satanic issues. The kid-attractor factor: A horror movie without an R-rating is a rare thing for the 16-and-under horror fan. What
Source: www.goerie.com

Netflix Adds IPhone, IPod Touch Application to Stream TV Programs, Movies - Bloomberg
Netflix Inc. , the online movie- rental service, introduced an application on Apple Inc.’s iPhone and iPod Touch for subscribers to watch streaming movies and television shows. The application is free to
Source: www.bloomberg.com

Movies in Theaters Fall 2010: Top 10 - Associated Content
These ten must-see movies for 2010, in theaters this fall, are listed below in chronological order by release date. There are many genres to choose from including classic sci-fi, true stories, romance, drama
Source: www.associatedcontent.com

Study: Smoking scenes declining in top movies - Hattiesburg American
NEW YORK — There's a lot less smoking in the movies these days, a new report shows. Tobacco use on the silver screen peaked in 2005 and has been on the decline since, according to research that looked at the
Source: www.hattiesburgamerican.com

No comments:

Post a Comment