Mia Farrow's pregnancy isn't the only news on the maternal front in Hollywood.
Sean Penn, frequently in hot water over his public scuffles, found himself on the right side of the law Saturday, signing autographs at a celebrity match for the Los Angeles Police Memorial Foundation.
Detroit's grimy back alleys were on the screen, but the hometown audience was glittering as "Beverly Hills Cop II," Paramount Pictures' sequel to the 1985 Eddie Murphy hit, opened Tuesday night in the Motor City.
Brothers Andrei Konchalovsky and Nikita Mikhalkov, Soviet-born directors, said in Cannes on Thursday that they hope for a more liberal attitude in the Soviet film industry under Soviet leader Mikhail S.
Principal photography was completed on Steven Spielberg's "Empire of the Sun" on Thursday in Trebujena, Spain, five days ahead of schedule.
Whoopi Goldberg put the first brass star in cement Monday for the San Francisco Studios' new "Walk of Fame," a knockoff of Hollywood's more famous sidewalk of the stars.
Michael Franklin, 63, will step down as national executive director of the Directors Guild of America at the end of the year, the union announced late Friday.
With the holidays upon us, the question "Aren't there movies for families anymore?"
Sunday is not only a day of rest for the body, but one for the mind as well.
Oliver Stone, having made what many consider the compleat Vietnam movie with "Platoon," will take on Wall Street next.
"Platoon" continued to be the hottest movie on per-theater basis in America.
Walt Disney Productions and Filmation Associates settled a copyright-infringement suit over Filmation's plans to produce and distribute "The New Adventures of Pinocchio," several lawyers reported.
"Top Gun" star Tom Cruise was the top box-office draw of 1986, according to a poll of U.S. motion picture exhibitors.
Ireland's film censor banned "Personal Services," a film about the exploits of Cynthia Payne, a London woman nicknamed "Madame Cyn" who was acquitted last month of controlling prostitutes.
Clint Eastwood, a gun-toting cop on screen, is a gun-toting mayor when he's off.
Jury selection in a $30-million lawsuit starring Eddie Murphy and entertainment manager King Broder was under way Thursday in Mineola, N.Y.
The makers of "Platoon" are planning a sequel focusing on the painful homecoming of a Vietnam War survivor.
The Screen Actors Guild has become the first entertainment union to issue $1 billion in residual payments.
Unbeknownst to any but a handful of Canadian film honchos, Columbia's $40-million-plus mega-comedy "Ishtar" was screened at a Toronto theater Sunday night, according to Daily Variety and Canadian newspapers.
A Tennessee boot company has filed a lawsuit against the producers of Sylvester Stallone's "Over the Top," saying the film makers failed to include Laredo Boot products in the movie as promised in a contract.