Tom Hanks

Colin Hanks: Wakeful In West Village

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Colin Hanks, son of Tinseltown bigwig Tom, moved here from L.A. last year. In Sunday’s Page Six Magazine, the 30-year-old actor answers a few New York-centric questions, shedding light on a few of his favorite things.

Mr. Hanks, who lives in a “small but quaint” West Village apartment, has to endure lots of late-night noise from the bar downstairs. Sleeping through the drunken din is apparently no Biggie for the Orange County actor, but snoozing with the smell of bacon wafting in from a neighboring deli is another story.  read more »

Koch Remembers Charlie Wilson

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Ed Koch just sent out his review of Charlie Wilson’s War, the new film featuring Tom Hanks and Julia Roberts. Koch, served in congress with Wilson before being elected mayor, offers this interesting anecdote that, unfortunately, is not in the film:

We were on a junket in Israel where he was inspecting the Israeli Navy. He became involved with a female Israeli Naval officer assigned to our party. The Israeli Navy did not approve and reassigned her. Charlie was beside himself with anger. I went to a government official and said, "You are dealing with Israel’s most important non-Jewish friend in the Congress. If you make him angry, that could change. I urge you to return that naval officer to our party." And they did.  read more »

Manhattan Weekend Box Office, Christmas Edition: Nichols Captures City's Minds, But Not Country's Hearts

Courtesy of Buena Vista, Universal, DreamWorks

This weekend, across the country, discerning film-going audiences were able to choose between two types of history: the real kind and the fake. Guess which one won?! National Treasure: Book of Secrets (no. 3), which follows the Indiana Jones-like Ben Gates as he tries to clear his family’s name in connection to the Lincoln assassination, raked in over $45 million and easily earned the top spot in the country. But here in the city, it lost out to Mike Nichols’ Charlie Wilson’s War (no. 2), about an obscure congressman and his even more obscure fight to help the Afghans defeat the Soviets during the Cold War, which outearned the Nicholas Cage actioner by $5,000, while playing on one less screen. Cue Cindy Adams: Only in New York, kids!  read more »

Collect 'Em All! Our Guide to Celebrities Pressing Flesh in New York This Week

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Because cases of mistaken celebrity identity can be really annoying, here follows a list of some stars—most of whom are out-of-towners—in New York over the next seven days. So if you happen to find yourself at, say, Da Silvano on Wednesday night and could swear that Tom Hanks is sitting at the next table over, you’ll know that it’s probably him. (Mr. Hanks comes to town today to promote his new film, Charlie Wilson’s War.)

After the jump, some other stars in town to push a little flesh this week.  read more »

Pinkville, Angels & Demons Shelved Due to Strike

Ron Howard's Da Vinci Code sequel, Angels & Demons, and Oliver Stone's Pinkville were shelved during the weekend because scribes can't finish writing the scripts during the strike, according to Variety.  read more »

Dancing With Children of the Stars: Celeb Spawn Swarm My Social Orbit

Cate Edwards, with parents John and Elizabeth, has toiled at <i>Vanity Fair</i>.
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Cate Edwards, with parents John and Elizabeth, has toiled at Vanity Fair.

Not complaining—they can be quite charming! But it doesn’t seem quite fair that offspring of the rich and famous are sucking up all the glam media jobs.  read more »

Brace Yourselves! Holy Grail Is...

What’s wrong with The Da Vinci Code can be summed up in one word: everything!Catholics scream “H  read more »

Brace Yourselves! Holy Grail Is...

Audrey Tautou and Tom Hanks in <i>The Da Vinci Code</i>.
Simon Mein
Audrey Tautou and Tom Hanks in The Da Vinci Code.

What’s wrong with The Da Vinci Code can be summed up in one word: everything!  read more »

Da Vinci Hoo-Ha Opens Door on Opus Dei

Paul Bettany and Audrey Tautou in <i>The Da Vinci Code</i>.
Strand Releasing
Paul Bettany and Audrey Tautou in The Da Vinci Code.

Good-sport superstar Tom Hanks has done his best to detoxify the religious controversies swirling ar  read more »

The Da Vinci Code: What's That on Her Neck?

I saw The DaVinci Code last night with a friend, a lapsed Catholic, after two other friends, also lapsed Catholics, raved about it. Even a lapsed Jew like me knows that this movie will be poison at the confession box. It's like the idea I discovered in college, that I didn't have to marry a Jew—an idea that did a number on my natal faith.

Again, I'd quarrel with anyone who says this film is antireligious. It's pro-religious. Tom Hanks and Audrey Tautou (What's that on her neck?) both seek spiritual knowledge. They want to know who and where the Holy Grail is, and they find out in the transcendent ending. Hanks is a lapsed Catholic but he believes in God. So does Audrey Tautou. It's just that their God is the one that Joan Osborne sang about in the anti-Catholic hit of 8 years back or so: "What if God was one of us?" God is in all of us, we just have to figure out where he/she/it is. The movie's over when Hanks understands that his belief is in This-thing-that-is-larger-than-him-but-also-in-him that he prayed to when he was trying to survive as a little boy in the well, and when Audrey Tautou accepts the blasphemous idea that she's a descendant of Jesus.  read more »

First-Class Fairy Tale

I won't say Tom Hanks can do no wrong, but for a man who lives and works in Hollywood, his track rec  read more »

A Poignant Italian Mystery: Facing Windows' New Neorealism

Ferzan Ozpetek's Facing Windows ( La Finestra di Fronte ), from a screenplay by Gianni Romoli and Mr  read more »

Haunting Perdition

Intelligence, craft and poignancy are in such short supply at the movies that it's a real thrill to  read more »

Where Are the Men of My Dreams?

Most women I know think Johnny Depp has about as much sex appeal as a China doll or a Siamese cat-to  read more »

Soderbergh, on Border Patrol, Dissects the Drug Economy

Steven Soderbergh's Traffic , from a screenplay by Stephen Gaghan, was inspired by a British Channel  read more »

Soderbergh, on Border Patrol, Dissects the Drug Economy

Steven Soderbergh's Traffic , from a screenplay by Stephen Gaghan, was inspired by a British Channel  read more »

Cast Away for Christmas! … Poetry from a Cuban Prison

Cast Away for Christmas! Ready or not, here they come: The Christmas movies are upon  read more »

The Saint of Death Row … Douglas Reunited With Bacall

The Saint of Death RowThe movies take another bite out of Stephen King (or is it the other way aroun  read more »

Curse of the Fat Necks: Hanks, Travolta, Baldwin Brothers

The ActressForget satire. The erotic monologue is what closes on Saturday night.  read more »

Let's Overthrow Don Imus And Mort Zuckerman, Too

Sixteenth century: Copernicus formulates the solar system; 17th century: Sir Isaac Newton formulates  read more »

Who Is Spielberg to Claim His Is the Real War?

Prodigiously produced and researched, ambitiously acted, and grandiloquently scored by the eternal J  read more »

Top Five! Shakespeare, Tom Hanks Are Millennium's Best Entertainers

With the year 2000 fast approaching, it is the season of millennial lists.  read more »