'Wild Things' would've included a sex scene between Matt Dillon and Kevin Bacon if one of them didn't refuse to film it, the director says
"Wild Things" director John McNaughton revealed that Matt Dillon and Kevin Bacon's characters were supposed to "go at it" in the 1998 cult classic.
news.yahoo.comConstitutional Carry Lunacy
By John Johnson IIOnly in America does the lunacy of white supremacists permeate society as well as the Florida Legislature. The screen writers knew if an open gun carry policy existed, it’s likely for every weekly episode they would’ve needed to cast a new Sheriff. Is there research concluding that it’s likely only democrats will be harmed by this “Constitutional Carry Law.” If this law passes democrats choosing to move to Florida would be just as insane as Rep. Brannan’s pending law? Again, doing any of the above-mentioned things in “Free and Pending Constitutional Carry Florida could get you jailed or killed. Voters must remain aware of the true intent of this cynical plot of Constitutional Carry lunacy.
thewestsidegazette.comBlanchett on Venice, virus and why lessons weren't learned
VENICE Australian actress Cate Blanchett said Wednesday she is baffled that other countries didnt learn from Italys pain to be better prepared to fight the coronavirus outbreak when it spread. Blanchett, who is heading the jury at the virus-restricted Venice Film Festival, arrived on the Lido wearing a surgical mask and skipped the typical water taxi photo op that stars have long used. At an opening-day press conference, Blanchett was asked whether she feared coming to Italy, the first country in the West to be slammed by COVID-19. Hospitals, cemeteries and morgues were overflowing in nearby Lombardy, which became the epicenter of the outbreak in Europe. They will award the coveted Golden Lion and other awards to winners of the 18 in-competition films when the festival wraps up Sept. 12.
Matt Dillon shines spotlight on Myanmar's Rohingya Muslims
Matt Dillon shines spotlight on Myanmar's Rohingya Muslims Actor Matt Dillon visited a camp in Myanmar for displaced Rohingya Muslims, a long-persecuted minority in the Southeast Asian country. Thousands of Rohingya have tried to flee the country by boat, but some have ended up as captives of human traffickers.
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