Everything you need to know about all nine of Mel Gibson's children including who their mothers are, what they do for work and if they've worked on films with their father.
Actor Mel Gibson thrust himself into the political spotlight with a provocative commentary during a Fox News "Hannity" interview, describing President
Despite the turbulence, Mel Gibson’s “Flight Risk” managed to open No. 1 at the box office with a modest $12 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.
Actor Mel Gibson told Fox News host Hannity the reason he decided to reside in California while several Hollywood celebrities made the decision to leave.
Elsewhere, "Mufasa" holds strong at second, "Presence" makes its box office debut, and "The Brutalist" expands to maintain its footing in the top 10.
Critics lambasted it and audiences didn’t grade it much better. But despite the turbulence, Mel Gibson’s “Flight Risk” managed to open No. 1 at the box office with a modest $12 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.
The premise is simple: Michelle Dockery plays U.S. Marshal Madolyn, tasked with transporting wiseass accountant Winston (Topher Grace) on a prop plane from Alaska to Seattle. Daryl (Mark Wahlberg), their shady pilot, is secretly working for the bad guys and tasked with killing Winston before he can testify. That’s it. That’s the setup.
Mark Wahlberg stars in the action-thriller, which marks Gibson's first directorial effort in nearly a decade. Elsewhere, Steven Soderbergh's artsy haunted house thriller 'Presence' opened in 1,750 cinemas.
Kelsey Grammer observes a shift towards conservatism in Hollywood, suggesting a gradual softening of the industrys traditionally liberal views. He notes some entertainers are reconsidering their stance and finds conservatism appealing for its values of reason and fairness.
Stephen Colbert opened Monday’s (January 27) episode of The Late Show by recapping the past week, which he said “felt like ten years,” and came to realize many of the biggest MAGA supporters appear to have “daddy” issues.
During the around-the-clock news coverage of the historic fire disaster that befell us, I saw actor Mel Gibson interviewed after learning his multi-million-dollar house was now a pile of ash. He shrugged it off like one of his tough guy movie characters, suggesting the house and everything in it were only “things.”