Merie Weismiller Wallace
Steve Carell and Paul Rudd star in "Dinner for Schmucks."
Barry (no relation) is an auto-taxi -- short for autodidact taxidermist -- which has nothing to do with motor vehicles. It means he taught himself how to stuff dead animals. (Yesterday)
Photography by: Merie Weismiller
Director/producer Jay Roach, left, confers with Paul Rudd and Steve Carell on the set of "Dinner for Schmucks."
True romance will never die. But bromance? Well, that's a different story. (Yesterday)
Here's a look at bromance movies -- in their widely varied forms -- over the decades: "The Defiant Ones" (1958): Often cited as the first bromance, this drama stars Tony Curtis and Sidney Poitier as escaped convicts who loathe each other but are literally chained together. (Yesterday)
Diyah Pera
Zac Efron -- a flimsy protagonist in "Charlie St. Cloud."
What a world it'd be if a heartthrob staring into the distance were the same as a serious actor actually expressing emotion. But even Zac Efron, with those boyish blue eyes, can't pull it off. (Yesterday)
Knut Koivisto
Noomi Rapace in "The Girl Who Played With Fire."
It's like a private party for the millions of the Stieg Larsson fan club, this Swedish film version of his second best-selling book, "The Girl Who Played With Fire." (Yesterday)