USA
Annabelle Creation premiere arrivals
Photos By: Alfonso De Elías
The fear and hopelessness in “47 Meters Down”
By GTVW Staff
Photos by: 47 meters down entertainment studios motion pictures
From director Johannes Roberts, 47 METERS DOWN is a terrifying tale of survival set in the domain of the ocean’s fiercest creatures and Lisa (Mandy Moore) is ready for adventure while on vacation in Mexico. Read more
Cars 3 premiere arrivals
Photos By: Alfonso de Elias
The wildest farm in “LA GRANJA”
By GTVW Staff
Photos By: Courtesy
From Angel Manuel Soto, this Puerto Rican drama La Granja (The Farm) “La Granja” begins in the small sector of a Macondo-like island forgotten by the catastrophic effects of an economic depression and drug addiction; lives are pushed to the limit. A promising young boxer, a barren midwife, and a fat kid with a bike: three intersecting stories focus around the pursuit of happiness and its unanticipated consequences during the economic collapse of the island of Puerto Rico. Each actor in this modern day tragedy will ultimately discover how the pursuit of hope can dehumanize and expose underlying animal instincts. Read more
Los Angeles Dodgers Foundation had their 3rd annual Blue Diamond Gala Featured Concerts with Maroon 5 and Earth, Wind & Fire
By GTVW Staff
Photo: Courtesy
The third annual Blue Diamond Gala was chaired by Mary Hart and Burt Sugarman, Sharon and Joe Hernandez, and Cathi and John Bendheim.
Attendees included Los Angeles Dodgers owners Mark Walter and Todd Boehly; manager Dave Roberts; coaches Josh Bard, Bob Geren, Rick Honeycutt, Tim Hyers, George Lombard and Steve Yeager; players Luis Avilan, Austin Barnes, Cody Bellinger, Grant Dayton, Brett Eibner, Josh Fields, Logan Forsythe, Adrian Gonzalez, Yasmani Grandal, Frankin Gutierrez, Chris Hatcher, Enrique Hernandez, Rich Hill, Clayton Kershaw, Kenta Maeda, Brandon Morrow, Joc Pederson, Yasiel Puig, Sergio Romo, Hyun-Jin Ryu, Corey Seager, Ross Stripling, Chris Taylor, Justin Turner, Chase Utley, and Alex Wood; Dodgers alumni Ron Cey, Steve Garvey, Eric Karros and Manny Mota,; Dodgers broadcasters Ned Colletti , Joe Davis, Nomar Garciaparra, John Hartung, Orel Hershiser, Jerry Hairston Jr., John Hartung, Jorge Jarrin, Rick Monday, Alanna Rizzo, Charley Steiner, Kelli Tennant, Fernando Valenzuela and Pepe Yniguez; Blue Diamond Gala host Kevin Frazer; and LADF Executive Director Nichol Whiteman.
Celebrity guests included: Parker Bates, Lonnie Chavis, Loretta Devine, Vanessa Grimaldi and Nick Viall, Mia Hamm, Mackenzie Hancsicsak, Prince Jackson, Larry King, Taylor Lautner, Mario Lopez, Heather Morris, Haley Joel Osment, Alfonso Ribeiro, Jennifer Rojas, Eric Stonestreet and Ariel Winter.
Definitely, the most popular event in terms of charity. Its primary focus is to support cornerstone programs in Sports, Recreation, Education, Literacy and Health, Wellness benefitting children and families in need throughout the greater Los Angeles region.
Wonder Woman premiere arrivals
Photo By: Alfonso De Elias
Universal Celebrates "The Mummy Day" with 75-Foot Sarcophagus Takeover at Hollywood & Highland
Photos by: Alfonso De Elias
Let the voters to share their democracy in “The Commune”
By GTVW staff
Photo Magnolia Pictures.
From the award-winning filmmaker Thomas Vinterberg’s (THE HUNT, Oscar® and Golden Globe Nominee for Best Foreign Language Film; THE CELEBRATION, Golden Globe Nominee for Best Foreign Language Film) loving, sharply observed new drama with The Commune.
When Erik’s (Ulrich Thomsen) father passes away, his wife, Anna (Trine Dyrholm), sick of Erik’s dour outlook and longing for something new, sees his now-empty family home as an opportunity to experiment with the trendy concept of communal living. Energized by the relaxed taboos of 1970s Copenhagen, Anne and Erik assemble a diverse, motley crew of cohabitants and embark on their new adventure – though they soon take very different paths. While Anna is anxious to stay home and experience life with her new extended family, Erik finds a more traditional way of reinvigorating himself: an affair with one of his students.
This film reflects a disintegrating marriage and lives with The Commune where dominance, control, order, even in an unconventional environment makes a strong group of human beings. Madness make the most interesting part of the film with particular humorous examination of the fallout from the social upheavals of the 1970s, and how values can quickly come into conflict with old habits and affiliations. Definitely might be worst but in all the cases its consequences are meaningful, dramatic and clever of pure love in the 70’s.
Alien: Covenant is full of suspense
By GTVW
Photo by 20th Century Fox
Ridley Scott returns to the universe he created, with Alien: Covenant, a new chapter in his groundbreaking Alien franchise. The crew of the colony ship Covenant, bound for a remote planet on the far side of the galaxy, discovers what they think is an uncharted paradise, but is actually a dark, dangerous world. When they uncover a threat beyond their imagination, they must attempt a harrowing escape. It’s a film full of energy to keep you engaged in its mystery combined with mythology. During 122 minutes you will enjoy the best disturbing and chilling sequences of the worst creation of the human beings. Despite the plot has sense for significant suspension, particularly with bravery of women in this film.