Sylvester Stallone as Dwight “The General” Manfredi of the Paramount+ original series Tulsa King. Photo Cr: Walter Thomson/Paramount+. © 2022 Viacom International Inc. All Rights Reserved. Get ready for more mob mayhem in the heartland! Paramount+ has announced that production is underway on the highly anticipated second season of the hit series Tulsa King, starring Sylvester Stallone. The comedy, executive produced by Taylor Sheridan and directed by Craig Zisk, will film in Oklahoma and Atlanta. Terence Winter returns as writer and executive producer. The first season was a massive success, ranking second only to Sheridan’s 1923 in terms of viewership and setting a record for subscriber growth on Paramount+. It will make its broadcast debut on CBS this summer before the second season premieres this fall.
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The series follows Dwight “The General” Manfredi, a New York mafia capo exiled to Tulsa,...
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The series follows Dwight “The General” Manfredi, a New York mafia capo exiled to Tulsa,...
- 4/2/2024
- by Hollywood Outbreak
- HollywoodOutbreak.com
Sylvester Stallone as Dwight “The General” Manfredi of the Paramount+ original series Tulsa King. Photo Cr: Walter Thomson/Paramount+. © 2022 Viacom International Inc. All Rights Reserved. In “old Hollywood,” there was a line between television and movies. Once you’d crossed over the line from TV to the big screen, you’d “made it,” and you would never go back. But in “new Hollywood,” the rules have changed — the quality of shows being made in what’s being called “the new Golden Age of television” has attracted A-list movie stars to participate in small-screen productions. Sylvester Stallone is one of the latest to make that move, starring in the new Paramount+ series Tulsa King, about an old mafia boss who tries to restart his business after he’s released from prison. For Stallone, whose television acting credits up until now had mostly consisted of guest starring roles on old TV dramas,...
- 12/16/2022
- by Hollywood Outbreak
- HollywoodOutbreak.com
Zachary Quinto, Penn Badgley, Margin Call Meryl Streep Record-Breaking Best Actress Winner: New York Critics 2011 Awards J. C. Chandor's Margin Call, featuring an all-star cast that includes Zachary Quinto, Jeremy Irons, Penn Badgley, Demi Moore, Stanley Tucci, and Kevin Spacey, was the Best First Film. Werner Herzog's Cave of Forgotten Dreams, bypassed by the Academy last year, was the Best Documentary. The Best Screenplay Award went to Steven Zaillian and Aaron Sorkin for Moneyball. (Last year, Sorkin won just about every award out there for The Social Network; the New York critics, however, went for The Kids Are All Right's Lisa Cholodenko and Stuart Blumberg.) And finally, Emmanuel Lubezki predictably won the Best Cinematography Award for The Tree of Life, while filmmaker Raoul Ruiz, who died last August at the age of 70, was named the recipient of a posthumous Special Award. Curiously, no Best Animated Feature winner was announced this year.
- 11/29/2011
- by Andre Soares
- Alt Film Guide
From Stripper to Wrestler: Former exotic dancer turned actor Channing Tatum is "in talks" to join Steve Carell in Foxcatcher, to be directed by Bennet Miller (Moneyball). Carell will play John du Pont, heir to the family fortune who killed an Olympic wrestler; Tatum would play the wrestler. (Los Angeles Times) (Photo by Walter Thomson; Tatum, center, showing off his wrestling moves, with Shia Labeouf in A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints.) Standing Up for Artists: A group of prominent Iranians are taking a stand against the country's growing repression of filmmakers and actors. The group, including Academy Award-nominated actress Shohreh Aghdashlou (House of Sand and Fog) "have called on countries worldwide to boycott official Iranian film and...
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- 10/19/2011
- by Peter Martin
- Movies.com
This story is at best second hand and it was told to me by a television director almost forty years ago. Although the director is long gone, I will not use his real name and I will call him Bruce. Is all of this stuff that I tell true? Probably not, yet I love the story as it reflects the vulnerability and stupidity of corporations and individuals. I am in fact a specialist in this in that I have done more than one "stupid" in my career. It was in the late forties or early fifties when the senior people at the "gigantic" advertising agency J. Walter Thomson decided that television was going to be very important to them. They decided that they had no television creative credibility so they set out to acquire some. A committee was formed and a...
- 8/9/2010
- by Norman Horowitz
- Huffington Post
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