Adam Lambert is raising the beats per minute on his new song “Wet Dream,” which just might be his raunchiest release to date.
It’s been a while since the 42-year-old “Whataya Want From Me” crooner has unleashed original material as he’s been focusing on covers and touring with Queen.
In his time away, he’s reinvented his sound, and he’s back with a sexy dance track with a dizzying production and some sexy lyrics. By the sound of it, he’s got even more to come, too!
head inside to listen to Adam Lambert’s new song…
“I can’t sleep ’til we’re down in deep / All I need is your body heat,” he sings on the euphoria-inducing anthem, which was produced by Zhone and written with Sarah Hudson, Ferras and JHart. “I dive into your love like a wet dream.”
“Now you know how a homo take it home,...
It’s been a while since the 42-year-old “Whataya Want From Me” crooner has unleashed original material as he’s been focusing on covers and touring with Queen.
In his time away, he’s reinvented his sound, and he’s back with a sexy dance track with a dizzying production and some sexy lyrics. By the sound of it, he’s got even more to come, too!
head inside to listen to Adam Lambert’s new song…
“I can’t sleep ’til we’re down in deep / All I need is your body heat,” he sings on the euphoria-inducing anthem, which was produced by Zhone and written with Sarah Hudson, Ferras and JHart. “I dive into your love like a wet dream.”
“Now you know how a homo take it home,...
- 3/10/2024
- by Just Jared
- Just Jared
Pathé feature “Driving Madeleine” has been acquired by Parkland Entertainment for a U.K. and Ireland theatrical release, Variety can confirm.
The French-language film, which played in the official selection at TIFF last year, stars Line Renaud and Dany Boon (“Welcome to the Sticks”).
In “Driving Madeleine” Boon plays Charles, a Parisian taxi driver struggling with the stress of mounting debt and a collapsing marriage. But when he picks up 92-year-old Madeleine (Renaud), his life turns around. The nonagenarian is about to be moved into a care home but, before that, she wants to enjoy one last drive through the French capital to re-visit some of her most poignant memories. Initially, grumpy Charles doesn’t want to take the job but as he spends the day with Madeleine he is soon charmed by her warmth and joie de vivre – and shocked as she slowly reveals the incredible story of her life.
The French-language film, which played in the official selection at TIFF last year, stars Line Renaud and Dany Boon (“Welcome to the Sticks”).
In “Driving Madeleine” Boon plays Charles, a Parisian taxi driver struggling with the stress of mounting debt and a collapsing marriage. But when he picks up 92-year-old Madeleine (Renaud), his life turns around. The nonagenarian is about to be moved into a care home but, before that, she wants to enjoy one last drive through the French capital to re-visit some of her most poignant memories. Initially, grumpy Charles doesn’t want to take the job but as he spends the day with Madeleine he is soon charmed by her warmth and joie de vivre – and shocked as she slowly reveals the incredible story of her life.
- 8/10/2023
- by K.J. Yossman
- Variety Film + TV
Since her 1988 debut Chocolat, Claire Denis has established herself as one of France's most respected film directors, with a wide-ranging body of work and a taste for danger. Her latest film, White Material, which stars Isabelle Huppert, draws again upon her colonial African childhood, and its violence has sparked
controversy in the French press. Not that she cares…
One of the lingering charms of the Left Bank of Paris in the 21st century is that, although much of the area has long since surrendered to chain stores and fast-food joints, the streets between Boulevard Saint-Michel and rue Mouffetard are still dotted with fleapit cinemas with names such as L'Accattone, Studio Galande and Le Champo. On any given afternoon – to take a random sample from the programmes on offer in these places last week – you can take in Battleship Potemkin, a Buñuel retrospective, a lesser-known Fellini, or Nicholas Ray's Johnny Guitar...
controversy in the French press. Not that she cares…
One of the lingering charms of the Left Bank of Paris in the 21st century is that, although much of the area has long since surrendered to chain stores and fast-food joints, the streets between Boulevard Saint-Michel and rue Mouffetard are still dotted with fleapit cinemas with names such as L'Accattone, Studio Galande and Le Champo. On any given afternoon – to take a random sample from the programmes on offer in these places last week – you can take in Battleship Potemkin, a Buñuel retrospective, a lesser-known Fellini, or Nicholas Ray's Johnny Guitar...
- 7/3/2010
- by Andrew Hussey
- The Guardian - Film News
Last year it was Isabelle Huppert, the coffee plantation owner without a safety net in Claire Denis' drama White Material who was the head of the Cannes Jury, this year it is Denis who finds herself at the head of jury duty but in the parallel Un Certain Regard section, the same category where she once showed J'ai pas sommeil, back in 1994. - Last year it was Isabelle Huppert, the coffee plantation owner without a safety net in Claire Denis' drama White Material who was the head of the Cannes Jury, this year it is Denis who finds herself at the head of jury duty but in the parallel Un Certain Regard section, the same category where she once showed J'ai pas sommeil, back in 1994. I'm almost guaranteed to share a row seat with Denis, as last year I couldn't stop bumping into head...
- 4/7/2010
- IONCINEMA.com
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