LAW + ORDER: SVU star ADAM BEACH is leaving the hit TV show.
The actor - who plays Detective Chester Lake in the show - decided not to exercise the second-year option on ...
Adam Beach, Law & Order: SVU " align="left" hspace="5" />The pickings are getting a little slim over at the Special Victims Unit.
Just days after the pending departure of longtime castmember Diane Neal was announced, relative newcomer Adam Beach confirmed...
LOS ANGELES — He wasn't nominated for an Oscar for his role as a Native American Marine in "Flags of Our Fathers," but Adam Beach still feels like a winner.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - He wasn't nominated for an Oscar for his role as a Native American Marine in ''Flags of Our Fathers,'' but Adam Beach still feels like a winner.[...] Read more!
In the powerful star-studded season finale of NBC's Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, episode "Screwed" (Tuesday, May 22, 10 PM ET/PT), actor/rapper Chris 'Ludacris' Bridges returns. Also guest starring are Star Jones Reynolds, Steven Weber, Nancy Grace, LisaGay Hamilton, Ernest Waddell, Vincent Spano, Judith Light, Michael Weston. In addition, Adam Beach makes his debut as new Special Victims Unit Detective 'Chester Lake.'[...] Read more!
Actors Adam Beach and Kal Penn guest star on NBC's Law & Order: Special Victims Unit episode "Outsider" premiering on Tuesday, Jan. 16, at 10 PM ET/PT. In this episode, Det. Odafin "Fin" Tutuola is asked by his son a resident adviser at college, to look into a rape case of a coed at his school. As the case deepens, Fin is joined by an SVU detective from Brooklyn named Chester Lake who is working a similar case and believes there is a connection.[...] Read more!
Palm Springs sure makes everyone look stunning. The British (C)Kates along with Sienna Miller all looked amazing. As usual, Jessica Biel was all class showing off her sick and well rested body. She was there to receive the Rising Star Award. Another big winner of the night was Babel who took best ensemble performance and Director of the Year. Cate Blanchett won Career Achievement of the Year for her work in the film as well as Notes on a Scandal and The Good German. Brad may not have won an award on his own but Cate made sure to throw some attention his way. Here's more:
Blanchett on stage joked that she could barely speak English, prompting Pitt to play interpreter and feign sign language. He also lead the crowd of 1,800 (which included Morgan Freeman, Laurence Fishburne, Alan Arkin and Sissy Spacek) in singing Happy Birthday to their Japanese Babel co-star, Rinko Kikuchi. In honor of Kikuchi's 26th birthday, Blanchett playfully said she was pulling a Britney Spears — "not wearing any underwear this evening."
Tiffany was an event sponsor, and stars were greeted on the red carpet by a 5-foot version of the jeweler's signature blue gift box, wrapped in white ribbon. Kate Winslet (honored for acting achievement for her role in Little Children) Winslet said her "childlike brain" was hoping to see "a person leap out of the box and perform some fabulous tap dance." The gift box sparked "extreme excitement" from presenter Sienna Miller. "I'd like to be in that box with whatever else is in there," she said.
Sounds like a great night. Love the fact that Cate Blanchett is totally up to speed on Britney's missing underwear! Goes to show that A-List celebs don't take themselves too seriously. For a list of the winners and more pics of this stunning looking group as well as Abigail Breslin, Adam Beach, and more just
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit starts off the new year with all original episodes, boasting a star studded January filled with guest star appearances by Brian Dennehy, Paget Brewster, Michael Michele, Blair Underwood, Kal Penn and Adam Beach; as well as an "SVU" directorial debut for actor Eriq LaSalle, reuniting him with some of his former ER cast mates. [...] Read more!
The Prestige pulled off the biggest trick of the weekend, materializing in first place at the weekend box office.
The thriller, about a feud between 19th-century magicians, conjured up an estimated $14.8 million from Friday to Sunday to finish ahead of a couple of Oscar-buzzing films: Martin Scorsese's still-strong The Departed, which banked $13.6 million in its third week, and Clint Eastwood's World War II saga, Flags of Our Fathers, which unfurled in third place with $10.2 million.
Pulling up lame was Flicka, the updated tale of the bond between a kid and a wild horse, which reined in just $7.7 million in fifth place. Opening in far fewer theaters, the weekend's other major newcomer, Marie Antoinette, managed to hold its head high, raking up $5.3 million in eighth place.
"It looks like the older movie audience is back," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations. He noted that earlier this fall, when the political drama All the King's Men tanked and the youth-targeted Jackass: Number Two hit big, it looked like films catering to adults were going to be a tough sell. But the success of the top three movies this weekend suggests the outlook for serious-minded movies with grown-up stories to tell is quite good.
The other good news is that overall business was up for a fourth straight weekend over this time last year, with the combined gross for the top 12 movies estimated at $88.8 million. While down 10 percent from last weekend's total, that was up a solid 27 percent gain over last year.
The Prestige, spun on to the screen by director Christopher Nolan, stars Hugh Jackman and Christian Bale as illusionist pals turned rivals, with support from Michael Caine, Scarlett Johansson and David Bowie. The PG-13 Disney release debuted at 2,281 locations, where it averaged $6,496 per screen.
Dergarabedian felt that a "great trailer" combined with the star cast and Nolan's impeccable track record (Memento, Batman Begins) made for a must-see film. Of the top three films, it had the youngest skewing audience, with roughly 70 percent under 35.
With fawning critics already talking up its Academy Award chances, Clint Eastwood's Flags of Our Fathers, in which Ryan Phillippe, Jesse Bradford and Adam Beach play the survivors of the iconic flag-raising at Iwo Jima, averaged $5,437 at 1,876 sites. Ticket buyers for the R-rated Paramount release were 80 percent over 30.
Aiming for a younger audience but instead drawing empty seats was Flicka, in which Alison Lohman plays the rebellious girl (a boy in the original story) who wants to tame a mustang, with Maria Bello and Tim McGraw as her parents. The PG release from Fox opened at 2,877 locations and only averaged $2,676.
Pulling a much better per theater average was Sofia Coppola's Marie Antoinette, which uses the hedonism of pre-French Revolution times to skewer today's celeb culture. The PG-13 release, starring Kirsten Dunst as the pretty, doomed monarch, opened in just 859 locations, where it averaged an attractive $6,170 per screen.
In more limited release, Disney's 3-D update of the 1993 curiosity Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas got a good jump on the spooky season, averaging an excellent $19,536 at 168 locations for $3.2 million.
Sony's R-rated Running with Scissors, a true-life odd-family drama about a youth sent to live with his mother's shrink, with a cast that includes Annette Bening, Alec Baldwin, Brian Cox, Joseph Cross and Gwyneth Paltrow, and directed by Nip/Tuck creator Ryan Murphy, unspooled in eight locations and averaged a sharp $28,125 for a three-day total of $225,000.
At just six sites, Roadside Attractions' R-rated Sleeping Dogs Lie, a relationship drama about the perils of revealing past sexual history, averaged a somnolent $1,800 for a tally of $10,800.
Holdover films had mixed success with Scorsese's The Departed performing extremely well. The R-rated Warner Bros. release dipped just 28 percent as its three-week haul climbed to $77.1 million.
Sony also saw solid retention for Open Season. In its fourth week, the PG critter 'toon also only dropped 28 percent to stay in fourth place with $8 million. The family-friendly flick has grossed $69.6 million.
However, not doing nearly as well were last weekend's openers, which tumbled sharply: The Grudge 2 fell 63 percent, down from the top slot to sixth with $7.7 million; Man of the Year dropped 43 percent, from third to seventh with $7 million; and The Marine retreated 48 percent from sixth to tenth with $3.7 million.
Here's a rundown of the top-grossing films based on studio estimates compiled by Exhibitor Relations; final figures are due Monday.
1. The Prestige, $14.8 million 2. The Departed, $13.6 million 3. Flags of Our Fathers, $10.2 million 4. Open Season, $8 million 5. Flicka, $7.7 million 6. The Grudge 2, $7.7 million 7. Man of the Year, $7 million 8. Marie Antoinette, $5.3 million 9. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning, $3.8 million 10. The Marine, $3.7 million