How's vampire "life" treating Bella? How's the Volturi treating the Cullens? Oh, like you haven't already read the book. The only thing you don't know is how hard it's going to be to watch the last scene of the last Twilight.
Bad Anne Hathaway! Final Christopher Nolan chapter! Exploding football field! Two words: Can't. Wait.
Mirror Mirror, the other upcoming Snow White movie, has Julia Roberts, and that's swell, but this Snow White movie (and Kristen Stewart vehicle) has Charlize Theron, and she looks plain bad—in a very good way.
We've been expecting this one for a while, actually. But with Peter Jackson heading up another Middle-earth epic, the wait is worth it, right?
Some will buy tickets for the hair. Some, for the promise of the literally amped-up Tom Cruise. And others? For the "We Built This City"/"We're Not Gonna Take It" mashup, of course.
If there's one man who can save the pricey, but dicey format, it's James Cameron. (And if the Titanic 3-D rerelease doesn't do the trick, then maybe the Phantom Menace one will. Or the Beauty and the Beast one. Or the...)
Dystopian is the new black—and just maybe the new Twilight book-to-film crossover blockbuster.
Think of this installment, the fourth in the action-spy series, as being less about Matt Damon moving on, and more about the always-great Jeremy Renner coming into his own.
All the talk. All the publicity stills. All those Samuel L. Jackson cameos. They weren't part of an elaborate dream sequence. This is real. It's happening. Now, go geek out.
Think of this all-star comedy (Jennifer Lopez! Cameron Diaz! Matthew Morrison! Many, many more!) as The Avengers for the bottles-and-diapers demo.
Will one of the 20th century's great American novels finally get the great big-screen movie it deserves? Give director Baz Luhrmann and Leonardo DiCaprio, who both did right by William Shakespeare, credit for being game enough to try—and in 3-D, no less.
Will Smith doing Will Smith. Josh Brolin doing Tommy Lee Jones. The sci-fi/comedy franchise doing X-Men: First Class and/or Mad Men. Interesting times three.
Hugh Jackman vs. Russell Crowe—in a sing-off! The cameras start rolling on this Broadway musical classic-turned-big-screen epic in March.
Should the world survive the Mayans' drop-dead date of Dec. 21, 2012, Brad Pitt will arrive in theaters on that very day with his own brand of apocalyptic fun. And also, yes, zombies.
You normally wouldn't expect much from a TV-to-movie transfer. But you normally wouldn't expect Johnny Depp to be on hand, either—and the proud alumnus very much is, along with Jonah Hill and Channing Tatum.
Come May, it'll be five long years since the webslinger's last big-screen adventure. Good thing Andrew Garfield's swinging back into action come July.
NEXT GALLERY: Top 10 Movies of 2011