The Young and the Restless spoilers for Thursday, March 28 reveal that Diane Jenkins-Abbott (Susan Walters) and Kyle Abbott (Michael Mealor) navigate their dynamic at Jabot.
Coming Up On The Young and The Restless
Sally Spectra (Courtney Hope) supports Adam Newman (Mark Grossman). Plus, Nikki Newman (Melody Thomas Scott) confides in Jack Abbott (Peter Bergman). Keep reading to find out what is coming up in the CBS soap opera.
Diane Jenkins-Abbott’s Navigation
Y&R spoilers for Thursday, March 28 reveal that Kyle doesn’t feel any better about his mother having the co-ceo spot. Kyle really thought that he was going to be Jack’s co-pilot again.
Kyle doesn’t really know which direction to go in right now. As time goes on and Kyle bottles up his feelings, he is becoming more resentful and angry.
In Thursday’s episode, Diane and Kyle will try to navigate their relationship at the office.
Coming Up On The Young and The Restless
Sally Spectra (Courtney Hope) supports Adam Newman (Mark Grossman). Plus, Nikki Newman (Melody Thomas Scott) confides in Jack Abbott (Peter Bergman). Keep reading to find out what is coming up in the CBS soap opera.
Diane Jenkins-Abbott’s Navigation
Y&R spoilers for Thursday, March 28 reveal that Kyle doesn’t feel any better about his mother having the co-ceo spot. Kyle really thought that he was going to be Jack’s co-pilot again.
Kyle doesn’t really know which direction to go in right now. As time goes on and Kyle bottles up his feelings, he is becoming more resentful and angry.
In Thursday’s episode, Diane and Kyle will try to navigate their relationship at the office.
- 3/27/2024
- by Taylor Hancen Rios
- Celebrating The Soaps
The Pet Shop Boys have always been a difficult band to categorise. They produce pop, but even their early work was imbued with political critique, perhaps drawing on singer Neil Tennant's background as a journalist, and provided comment on gay issues during the suffocating silent years of Clause 28/Section 2A. When it came to making a film, the only thing they really knew was that they didn't want to fit into one of the usual templates - no wacky international adventures or desperate quests to make it to the big gig. They gave director Jack Bond an almost free hand, and he created one of the oddest pop odysseys in cinematic history.
Not a great film but a fascinating cultural artefact, It Couldn't Happen Here has two very loose, intersecting narrative strands, one of which follows the adult Neil and Chris (Lowe), the other a version of their earlier,...
Not a great film but a fascinating cultural artefact, It Couldn't Happen Here has two very loose, intersecting narrative strands, one of which follows the adult Neil and Chris (Lowe), the other a version of their earlier,...
- 7/7/2020
- by Jennie Kermode
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Bill Murray in Nothing Lost Forever Long-unavailable Bill Murray science-fiction comedy Nothing Lost Forever will be among the films screening when Matchbox Cineclub's Weird Weekend cult film festival returns to Glasgow from August 31 to September 1.
The three-day showcase at he Centre for Contemporary Arts will also feature Tilda Swinton taking on a quadruple role in Teknolust, plus a 30th anniversary screening for the workprint cut of Joe Dante's The 'Burbs, with Dante joining the audience via Skype for a post-screening Q&a.
Other films in the line-up include, 2K restorations of I Was A Teenage Serial Killer and Mary Jane’s Not A Virgin Anymore, directed by Sarah Jacobson, along with Mike Paseornek's Vibrations and Ulrike Ottinger's Freak Orlando.
The festival will also screen the UK premiere of Agfa and Bleeding Skull’s The Neon Slime Mixtape. Plus there will be a big-screen outing for Anti-Clock, which directed...
The three-day showcase at he Centre for Contemporary Arts will also feature Tilda Swinton taking on a quadruple role in Teknolust, plus a 30th anniversary screening for the workprint cut of Joe Dante's The 'Burbs, with Dante joining the audience via Skype for a post-screening Q&a.
Other films in the line-up include, 2K restorations of I Was A Teenage Serial Killer and Mary Jane’s Not A Virgin Anymore, directed by Sarah Jacobson, along with Mike Paseornek's Vibrations and Ulrike Ottinger's Freak Orlando.
The festival will also screen the UK premiere of Agfa and Bleeding Skull’s The Neon Slime Mixtape. Plus there will be a big-screen outing for Anti-Clock, which directed...
- 7/10/2019
- by Amber Wilkinson
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
In an affecting documentary, veteran director Jack Bond sketches Chris Moon’s personal struggles – and his startling way of creating art
Over his eight decades, director Jack Bond has accumulated one of the most cultured and quietly cultish filmographies in British cinema, having signed off on 1979’s avant-garde sci-fi Anti-Clock (rediscovered on the BFI’s Flipside label), the ripe-for-revival Pet Shop Boys curio It Couldn’t Happen Here (1987) and Adam Ant study The Blueblack Hussar (2014).
This profile of punkish Essex-based painter Chris Moon opens with a coup de cinéma to rank alongside anything in those defining art movies La Belle Noiseuse or The Quince Tree Sun: 10 minutes in which Moon, fag in mouth, daubs a jet-black canvas with coloured streaks that get stripped back to reveal new shapes and shades.
Over his eight decades, director Jack Bond has accumulated one of the most cultured and quietly cultish filmographies in British cinema, having signed off on 1979’s avant-garde sci-fi Anti-Clock (rediscovered on the BFI’s Flipside label), the ripe-for-revival Pet Shop Boys curio It Couldn’t Happen Here (1987) and Adam Ant study The Blueblack Hussar (2014).
This profile of punkish Essex-based painter Chris Moon opens with a coup de cinéma to rank alongside anything in those defining art movies La Belle Noiseuse or The Quince Tree Sun: 10 minutes in which Moon, fag in mouth, daubs a jet-black canvas with coloured streaks that get stripped back to reveal new shapes and shades.
- 10/24/2018
- by Mike McCahill
- The Guardian - Film News
Innerspace
Written by Chip Proser and Jeffrey Boam
Directed by Joe Dante
USA, 1987
Science fiction is a genre in which anything is possible. Films in particular take advantage of this opportunity to transport its audience to new worlds and new ideas. In 1987, director Joe Dante and executive producer Steven Spielberg took us on a “big” adventure with the zany sci-fi comedy Innerspace. The film stars Martin Short, Dennis Quaid, and a young Meg Ryan, who all get involved with a scientific mission gone wrong. With an Oscar win for Best Visual Effects and a comic tone full of energy and fun, Innerspace is one ride from the 80s you might want to check out.
Lt. Tuck Pendleton (Quaid) is a brash Navy pilot who isn’t exactly looked upon as a military hero. He drinks, he fights, and he’s actually kind of a douche. His fellow pilots want nothing...
Written by Chip Proser and Jeffrey Boam
Directed by Joe Dante
USA, 1987
Science fiction is a genre in which anything is possible. Films in particular take advantage of this opportunity to transport its audience to new worlds and new ideas. In 1987, director Joe Dante and executive producer Steven Spielberg took us on a “big” adventure with the zany sci-fi comedy Innerspace. The film stars Martin Short, Dennis Quaid, and a young Meg Ryan, who all get involved with a scientific mission gone wrong. With an Oscar win for Best Visual Effects and a comic tone full of energy and fun, Innerspace is one ride from the 80s you might want to check out.
Lt. Tuck Pendleton (Quaid) is a brash Navy pilot who isn’t exactly looked upon as a military hero. He drinks, he fights, and he’s actually kind of a douche. His fellow pilots want nothing...
- 5/12/2014
- by Randall Unger
- SoundOnSight
Adam Ant has lost the warpaint but this intriguing documentary finds his dandyish, swashbuckling nature intact
"Don't tread on an ant/You'll end up black and blue," warned Adam and the Ants' manifesto-making hit Antmusic; 30-odd years later, Jack Bond's intriguingly unguarded fly-on-the-Ant-wall doc finds Adam himself a mite stomped-on by mental health issues and music-biz vagaries: down but not quite out in Paris and London, he's a neo-Napoleon, returning to punk in a bid to escape pop exile. Even the cringier moments – dollybird backing singers, dodgy new lyrics ("I want to f*** you in the ass"), Mark Ronson's Pepé Le Pew hair – prove somehow revealing, and Ant remains a singular character: puckish and potty-minded, yet secretly sensitive, and possessed of a fine Bryan Ferry impersonation. Those expecting Goody Two Shoes will leave disappointed, but – liberated from the need to please anybody but himself – the dandy of yore seems,...
"Don't tread on an ant/You'll end up black and blue," warned Adam and the Ants' manifesto-making hit Antmusic; 30-odd years later, Jack Bond's intriguingly unguarded fly-on-the-Ant-wall doc finds Adam himself a mite stomped-on by mental health issues and music-biz vagaries: down but not quite out in Paris and London, he's a neo-Napoleon, returning to punk in a bid to escape pop exile. Even the cringier moments – dollybird backing singers, dodgy new lyrics ("I want to f*** you in the ass"), Mark Ronson's Pepé Le Pew hair – prove somehow revealing, and Ant remains a singular character: puckish and potty-minded, yet secretly sensitive, and possessed of a fine Bryan Ferry impersonation. Those expecting Goody Two Shoes will leave disappointed, but – liberated from the need to please anybody but himself – the dandy of yore seems,...
- 9/12/2013
- by Mike McCahill
- The Guardian - Film News
I, Anna director Barnaby Southcombe and celebrated arthouse maverick Jack Bond will be among the guests at the sixth annual Scottish Mental Health Arts and Film Festival, which opens today. With screenings in both Glasgow and Edinburgh, the festival sets out to showcase great films that can change attitudes about mental health issues, and it's theme this year is 'walk in my shoes'.
The festival will provide an early opportunity for Scots to see I, Anna, starring Gabriel Byrne and Charlotte Rampling, which will also be shown at the upcoming London Film Festival. Other highlights include outré science fiction film Anti-Clock and Hugh Hudson's remarkable, very personal documentary Rupture: Living With My Broken Brain, a portrait of his former Bond girl wife Maryam D'Abo. There will be another chance to see homegrown favourite The Angels' Share and an opportunity to preview the Northern Lights Film Project's unique documentary work,...
The festival will provide an early opportunity for Scots to see I, Anna, starring Gabriel Byrne and Charlotte Rampling, which will also be shown at the upcoming London Film Festival. Other highlights include outré science fiction film Anti-Clock and Hugh Hudson's remarkable, very personal documentary Rupture: Living With My Broken Brain, a portrait of his former Bond girl wife Maryam D'Abo. There will be another chance to see homegrown favourite The Angels' Share and an opportunity to preview the Northern Lights Film Project's unique documentary work,...
- 10/7/2012
- by Jennie Kermode
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Last week saw a great handful of international releases make their way onto our shelves, with Shion Sono’s Himizu and David and Stéphane Foenkinos’ Delicacy topping the list. And this week brings us another excellent set of international films for our enjoyment, along with a handful of classics getting the HD treatment.
We’ve also been enjoying the special Blu-ray Steelbook releases from Play.com over the past few months, in tandem with Universal’s 100th Anniversary, and now Paramount are entering the fray with two titles of their own getting a Steelbook re-packaging, for their own Centenary celebrations.
My picks of the week:
Morten Tyldum’s Headhunters.
And the Blu-ray releases of Shion Sono’s Love Exposure & the Steven Spielberg-produced Falling Skies – Season 1.
Headhunters Iframe Embed for Youtube
DVD and Blu-ray
Acclaimed and best-selling Norweign writer Jo Nesbø has had a very successful year, with not one...
We’ve also been enjoying the special Blu-ray Steelbook releases from Play.com over the past few months, in tandem with Universal’s 100th Anniversary, and now Paramount are entering the fray with two titles of their own getting a Steelbook re-packaging, for their own Centenary celebrations.
My picks of the week:
Morten Tyldum’s Headhunters.
And the Blu-ray releases of Shion Sono’s Love Exposure & the Steven Spielberg-produced Falling Skies – Season 1.
Headhunters Iframe Embed for Youtube
DVD and Blu-ray
Acclaimed and best-selling Norweign writer Jo Nesbø has had a very successful year, with not one...
- 8/13/2012
- by Kenji Lloyd
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Revenge 1.21 Preview: Emily and Jack Bond Over a Loss
This week's Revenge was all flashbacks, all the time. The show opened with the real Amanda Clarke in 2002. While she seemed content to party with her newfound wealth, Nolan pushed her to read her father's journals and learn the truth.
With some prodding, Emily headed to the Hamptons and, while waitressing at the Grayson's New Year's Eve party, she met all of the conspirators who put her father away. These encounters convinced her that her father was innocent and all of these people deserved to be punished. Meanwhile, Nolan met up with the Porter family for the first time, which set him on a path of friendship with Jack, in particular. Although, that friendship was derailed by Jack's ridiculous girlfriend.
In next week's penultimate episode, "a painful loss forges a stronger bond between Emily and Jack, Victoria forms a new alliance that could seal Conrad's fate,...
This week's Revenge was all flashbacks, all the time. The show opened with the real Amanda Clarke in 2002. While she seemed content to party with her newfound wealth, Nolan pushed her to read her father's journals and learn the truth.
With some prodding, Emily headed to the Hamptons and, while waitressing at the Grayson's New Year's Eve party, she met all of the conspirators who put her father away. These encounters convinced her that her father was innocent and all of these people deserved to be punished. Meanwhile, Nolan met up with the Porter family for the first time, which set him on a path of friendship with Jack, in particular. Although, that friendship was derailed by Jack's ridiculous girlfriend.
In next week's penultimate episode, "a painful loss forges a stronger bond between Emily and Jack, Victoria forms a new alliance that could seal Conrad's fate,...
- 5/10/2012
- by Clarissa
- TVovermind.com
I really hope there are no major changes of management at the British Film Institute. Like, ever. It's not because I have a long-standing respect for that oft-august body (although I do, I really do). And it's not that I spend a sufficient amount of time in Britain to take advantage of the many services the body offers over there (although I would, if I were spending any particular stretch of time in that place). It's pretty much because I'm thoroughly nuts about the Institute's DVD arm as it's currently constituted, and would love for it to continue doing as it does for as long as I'm around to be thoroughly nuts about it.
It's true that some of the miraculous feats of said arm are due to be reproduced, to some extent, here in the States; the Criterion Collection is coming out with Blu-ray discs of Antonioni's Red Desert and Visconti's The Leopard,...
It's true that some of the miraculous feats of said arm are due to be reproduced, to some extent, here in the States; the Criterion Collection is coming out with Blu-ray discs of Antonioni's Red Desert and Visconti's The Leopard,...
- 5/25/2010
- MUBI
30 Rock is always hit or miss, although when it hits, it does so harder than any comedy on TV. The problem with recent episodes is that hits have been fewer and farther between.
"Argus" had plenty of funny quotes, just because the dialogue and one-liners delivered by these characters never cease to be funny, but the show has hit a real creative dry spell.
Let's sum it up bluntly. Having Jack bond with a peacock, drink with a peacock, confide in a peacock, believe the peacock to be the reincarnation of Don Geiss, etc., was not funny.
Maybe a little funny for a few minutes, eliciting a smile or two. But no real laughs, and fewer smiles the longer it went. There wasn't even a great conclusion, it just sort of ended.
Tremendous as Alec Baldwin has been over four seasons, the episodes during which Jack is particularly off the...
"Argus" had plenty of funny quotes, just because the dialogue and one-liners delivered by these characters never cease to be funny, but the show has hit a real creative dry spell.
Let's sum it up bluntly. Having Jack bond with a peacock, drink with a peacock, confide in a peacock, believe the peacock to be the reincarnation of Don Geiss, etc., was not funny.
Maybe a little funny for a few minutes, eliciting a smile or two. But no real laughs, and fewer smiles the longer it went. There wasn't even a great conclusion, it just sort of ended.
Tremendous as Alec Baldwin has been over four seasons, the episodes during which Jack is particularly off the...
- 4/30/2010
- by steve@iscribelimited.com (L.J. Gibbs)
- TVfanatic
Andy Warhol called this "great!" but until we got an email from one of our readers (thanks dude), I didn't even know it existed. He used words like non-linear, and said fans of Burroughs and Pkd would love this. Oddly, co-director Jane Arden committed suicide 3 years after the film and Jack Bond hasn't done much of anything since.
Anti-Clock, which was released in 1980, has just been restored from the original negative and reissued by the BFI (British Film Institute). I know nothing about this other then what little I can find including a short, grainy clip on youtube, so if you know anything about this, please elaborate. You can purchase the region 2 DVD here.
Sebastianne Saville stars as a young fellow who reacts to the modern, atom-dominated society by withdrawing from it. He 'makes peace' with the threat of nuclear holocaust by wandering aimlessly about, refusing to be bound by minutes,...
Anti-Clock, which was released in 1980, has just been restored from the original negative and reissued by the BFI (British Film Institute). I know nothing about this other then what little I can find including a short, grainy clip on youtube, so if you know anything about this, please elaborate. You can purchase the region 2 DVD here.
Sebastianne Saville stars as a young fellow who reacts to the modern, atom-dominated society by withdrawing from it. He 'makes peace' with the threat of nuclear holocaust by wandering aimlessly about, refusing to be bound by minutes,...
- 7/26/2009
- QuietEarth.us
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.