While promoting Ricky Stanicky's upcoming release, Zac Efron admitted to the biggest lie he ever told involving a lot of monkey...waste.
After recent news that Gal Gadot was considered for the lead role of Barbie, I am so glad Margot Robbie took the role.
After Dwayne Johnson posted about eating at In-N-Out for the first time, the Internet seems to have caught him in a lie.
Andrew Garfield has revealed that he only ever trusted three people with his Spider-Man: No Way Home secret.
Jada Pinkett Smith reveals an incident involving ecstasy on the set of The Nutty Professor.
From Benedict Cumberbatch fibbing about Doctor Strange to... um, Benedict Cumberbatch denying playing Khan, sometimes stars have to lie to our faces.
The man who brought Harvey Dent and his twisted alter ego to life reflects on whether Harvey would have supported Batman's controversial decision at the end of The Dark Knight.
The actress stars in one of Blumhouse's original horror films streaming on Amazon Prime.
From Blumhouse, an amnesiac accesses his lost memories and a family lies to save their troubled daughter.
A few months ago, we reported Amazon Prime Video and Blumhouse were going to release eight genre movies that focus on diverse casts, female voices, and emerging filmmakers under the “Welcome to Blumhouse” banner. With the first of these films, Veena Sud’s The Lie, now streaming on the platform, I recently spoke to Peter Sarsgaard about being part of the project. If you haven’t seen the trailers, The Lie follows a divorced couple (Sarsgaard and Mireille Enos) as they try to protect their daughter (Joey King) after she confesses to a horrible crime. As the couple deals with …
Veena Sud's thriller The Lie premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival two years ago, and the movie is now being released as part of a four-film package coming to Amazon called Welcome to the Blumhouse. Peter Sarsgaard and Mireille Enos play a desperate couple whose teenage daughter (Joey King) confesses to impulsively killing her best friend, forcing them to cover up the horrific crime. Naturally, this decision only leads them further into a complicated web of lies and deception. Sud wrote and directed The Lie, which reunites her with Enos, the star of her TV series The …
Yesterday, Blumhouse and Amazon Prime Video announced that eight new genre films will be heading to the streaming service under the "Welcome to Blumhouse" banner. Putting the focus on diverse casts, female voices and emerging filmmakers, the first slate of four films (the second half will arrive in 2021) kicks off with The Lie, written and directed by The Killing creator Veena Sud, which launches on October 6 alongside Emmanuel Osei-Kuffour Jr.'s Black Box. Starring Joey King, Peter Sarsgaard, and Mireille Enos, the film follows a family torn to pieces after their teenage daughter (King) confessed to a …
One of the best ideas to come out of the “outside-the-box” interview format over the last few years is surely Vanity Fair’s Lie Detector Test, and in the latest installment they’ve put Amy Poehler and Rashida Jones under the gun. The two are ostensibly promoting Poehler’s animated FOX series Duncanville, but in practice this is an incredibly funny and endearing conversation between two co-stars who actually are BFFs in real life. If you’ve never watched one of these, it goes like this: Poehler takes a lie detector test with Jones asking questions, then …
Lucifer star Tom Ellis explains why he lied about his role in the Arrowverse's Crisis On Infinite Earths after he was spotted by photographers.
Martin Scorsese's The Irishman is streaming on Netflix, but it's "true story" of Frank Sheeran and the Teamsters union isn't fully accurate.
HBO's Watchmen series reveals the origin story behind the 7th Kavalry white supremacist group, but can the explanation actually be trusted?
Now that The Bachelorette's Tyler Cameron and Gigi Hadid are officially over, she is being open about how she feels about him through fashion.
Ready Or Not's marketing showcases a shotgun-toting Samara Weaving but, in the film itself, this ends up being a clever subversion of expectations.