The Savages

The Week in DVR: Please Watch Chuck, Martin Rocks 30 Rock, Primary Colors

The Week in DVR: Please Watch Chuck, Martin Rocks 30 Rock, Primary Colors

Monday: Chuck
With so many television shows getting toe tagged or suffering on life support, it's probably time to remind everyone that Chuck is one of the most charming, romantic, smart and consistently fun hours of television we watch every week. NBC has already ordered a full second season, but if the ratings continue to slack, we can't imagine a third being in the cards. Do us a favor and watch this gem while you can. Pretty please? [NBC, 8 p.m.]

Tuesday: The Savages
When making the rounds last year for The Savages, Tamara Jenkins' first film since 1998's Slums of Beverly Hills, the writer-director joked that she was on the "Terrence Malick schedule, without the masterpieces.  read more »

Manhattan Weekend Box Office: Yes, Juno, It's True! New York City Loves You (and Atonement)

Manhattan Weekend Box Office: Yes, Juno, It's True! New York City Loves You (and Atonement)
Getty Images

While The Golden Compass (No. 1) will be stealing headlines this morning for its lackluster performance—$26 million nationally ($420,000 of that from Manhattan) to offset its reportedly $180 million budget—this weekend’s box office receipts portended the rise of two Academy Award contenders: Jason Reitman’s Juno (No. 2) and Joe Wright’s adaptation of the Ian McEwan novel, Atonement (No. 5).

The comedy starring Ellen Page and Michael Cera averaged an astronomical $63,000 on three screens, beating out Atonement—currently, according to buzz and conventional wisdom, the Oscar forerunner for best picture—which had an impressive $55,000 average on two screens and The Golden Compass, which managed a rather respectable $42,000 average on 10 screens. So, to recap, in a town where neither Atonement, nor The Golden Compass faltered, Juno shined brightest. A Reitman hasn’t been this popular in this city, since the first Ghost Busters in 1984.  read more »

Laura Linney Works Like a Brit! But Without the TV Mystery and Costume Drama Parts

Laura Linney with costar Philip Seymour Hoffman.
Getty Images
Laura Linney with costar Philip Seymour Hoffman.


Laura Linney--whom we think of as a certain kind of actress--says she’s the happiest she’s ever been. (Definitely a good thing; see: The Nanny Diaries, The Squid and the Whale, The Truman Show, et cetera ad infinitum.) The 43-year-old actress' new movie The Savages, directed by Tamara Jenkins and costarring Philip Seymour Hoffman, opens tomorrow. In the film, the esteemed actors do turns playing siblings who are faced with putting their father, played by Philip Bosco, in a nursing home. Ms. Linney’s character, Wendy, a down-and-out playwright fast approaching her 40th birthday, lives in the shadow of her more successful brother, a fellow writer. "For me, things are nothing but good," she said in an interview with Reuters. "For Wendy, she's living like she's 28 [years old] or even 11. She just hasn't had the opportunity to move forward."

Ms. Linney has heaped seven films on her professional plate over the last two years. "I just really enjoy it,” she said. “I find it constantly challenging. It's taken me to parts of the world I never thought I'd see and I've worked with people whom I admire and learned from. It's pretty damn good."