Tag Archives: Travolta

John Travolta, Jeremy Renner, Riley Keough and Nick Jonas Celebrate Mother’s Day: “The Greatest Gift” – Hollywood Reporter

  1. John Travolta, Jeremy Renner, Riley Keough and Nick Jonas Celebrate Mother’s Day: “The Greatest Gift” Hollywood Reporter
  2. John Travolta Remembers Late Wife Kelly Preston In Heartfelt Tribute Access Hollywood
  3. John Travolta Pays Tribute to Late Wife Kelly Preston with Throwback Video on Mother’s Day: Watch Yahoo Entertainment
  4. John Travolta honors late wife Kelly Preston on Mother’s Day with sweet throwback video Fox News
  5. John Travolta and his children send heartbreaking message alongside unseen family video featuring Kelly Preston HELLO!
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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John Travolta Goes Back to His Grease Roots for Super Bowl Ad with Zach Braff and Donald Faison – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. John Travolta Goes Back to His Grease Roots for Super Bowl Ad with Zach Braff and Donald Faison Yahoo Entertainment
  2. John Travolta performs iconic Grease song in T-Mobile Super Bowl ad Entertainment Weekly News
  3. T-Mobile Super Bowl Commercial Starring John Travolta, Zach Braff and Donald Faison Released ComicBook.com
  4. John Travolta Recreates ‘Grease’ Song With Zach Braff and Donald Faison for Super Bowl 2023 T-Mobile Commercial Us Weekly
  5. T-Mobile got John Travolta to sing about its 5G Home Internet network for the Super Bowl PhoneArena
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Bruce Willis Saluted By John Travolta, Haley Joel Osment – Deadline

From Moonlighting through The Fifth Element, Die Hard, Pulp Fiction, The Sixth Sense and 12 Monkeys, everyone has a favorite Bruce Willis moment. Today, as news broke about his aphasia condition, fans, friends and industryites took to the online world to salute his long career.

Some new reactions to the news of his retirement came today, including some costars in his most memorable films.

Producer Randall Emmett, who has worked with Willis on more than 20 films:

“Bruce and I have worked on over 20 films together. He is a terrific actor and legendary action star, an incredible father, and a close friend. I fully support Bruce and his family during this challenging time and admire him for his courage in battling this incredibly difficult medical condition. Bruce will always be part of our family.”



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Oscars 2022: Pulp Fiction’s John Travolta, Uma Thurman and Samuel L. Jackson reunite at Oscars

John Travolta and Uma Thurman recreated their famous twist contest scene from Pulp Fiction while presenting at the 94th Academy Awards alongside their former costar Samuel L. Jackson on Sunday evening. 

Before the trio called Will Smith up to the stage to accept the Best Actor Oscar at the 2022 Academy Awards for his role in King Richard, the performers earned applause for channeling the iconic scene for their 1994 Quentin Tarantino-directed film. 

As the duo showed off their dance moves, Jackson, 73, stood behind the podium and joked: ‘Some actors stay in character through any entire shoot… and some, well, they just never let it go.’ 

Two decades later: John Travolta and Uma Thurman recreated their famous twist contest scene in Pulp Fiction while presenting at the 94th Academy Awards alongside their former costar Samuel L. Jackson on Sunday

‘Maybe later we’ll have a $5 milkshake,’ Thurman, 51, says to Travolta, 68, while repeating one of her character Mia Wallace’s famous lines.

In response, Travolta repeated his character Vincent Vega’s line: ‘How about a royale with cheese?’ 

‘See what I mean?’ Jackson asks the audience. ‘Pulp Fiction was a masterpiece, but these two think it was all about a dance contest.’ 

Iconic: Before the trio called Will Smith up to the stage to accept the Best Actor Oscar at the 2022 Academy Awards for his role in King Richard, the performers earned a standing ovation as they channeled the famous scene fro their 1994 Quentin Tarantino-directed film (pictured)

Nailed it: Thurman wore a silk white blouse and a long black skirt, which bore resemblance to what she was wearing in the film

 Reunited! As the duo showed off their dance moves, Jackson, 73, stood behind the podium and joked: ‘Some actors stay in character through any entire shoot… and some, well, they just never let it go’

To which, Travolta interjects: ‘That’s not true, Sam,’ before they all turn their attention to a briefcase in front of them.

 ‘All of the murder and mayhem that occurred in two hours and 45 minutes was about what was in here. And at the end of the film, they stopped the reveal, and the audience was left to draw their own conclusions about the meaning,’ they teased.

As viewers almost got a peek of what was inside, all that was there was an announcement with the name of the winner of Best Actor in a Leading Role. 

‘Maybe later we’ll have a $5 milkshake,’ Thurman, 51, says to Travolta, 68, while repeating one of her character Mia Wallace’s famous lines

Too funny:  In response, Travolta repeated his character Vincent Vega’s line: ‘How about a royale with cheese?’

While Thurman chose to wear a silk white blouse and black bottoms, like in the original scene, the Saturday Night Fever star chose to wear a burgundy jacket. 

Despite deciding not to recreate their exact outfits from over two decades ago, their moves, including dancing the Batusi were pretty much exact.

This marks Travolta’s first time presenting at the Oscars since infamously mispronouncing Idina Menzel’s name eight years ago.

‘See what I mean?’ Jackson asks the audience. ‘Pulp Fiction was a masterpiece, but these two think it was all about a dance contest’

Still a mystery: As viewers almost got a peek of what was inside, all that was there was an announcement with the name of the winner of Best Actor in a Leading Role

The move came as a surprise to many – considering how he mistakenly introduced Idina, 50, as ‘Adele Dazeem’ at the 86th Academy Awards in 2014. 

Taking to the stage, the Grease star became a viral sensation when he said: ‘Please welcome the wickedly talented, one and only, Adele Dazeem.’ 

The bit was immediately buzzed about on social media, with viewers rewatching it on repeat in the days after, wondering just how he got her name so terribly wrong. 

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No hiding place: Travolta and Willis get an unwelcome dose of limelight in the Covid era | Film

In the forthcoming movie Anti-Life, Bruce Willis plays the leader of a roughneck crew of mechanics tasked with saving the remnants of humanity from the claws of a murderous shape-shifting alien. In another age – say, 25 years ago – there is a chance that Anti-Life would have wound up as the seventh or eighth biggest film of the year. However this is 2021, and Anti-Life looks destined to become yet another miserable, unloved video-on-demand (VOD) offering that primarily exists as a vehicle for Bruce Willis to sleepwalk to his paycheque.

Or at least that would be the case if the cinemas were open. But they’re not, so Anti-Life finds itself on an equal pegging with every other movie that comes out. Because now all movies, be they compromised blockbusters or terrible late-period Bruce Willis filler items, are VOD movies. Regardless of quality, they are destined to be flopped on to the same dreary streaming menu. At time of writing, the “top new releases” section on Rakuten includes Wonder Woman 1984, The New Mutants, an Anthony Mackie/Jamie Dornan double-header that could be about anything, a documentary positing the theory that we all live in a computer simulation, and a film called Jiu Jitsu, where Nicolas Cage beats up some aliens with a sword.

This is the new movie landscape, and it’s a level playing field. Now that we don’t have to sneak off work or hire babysitters to catch a movie at the cinema, all films will be judged on the same criteria. Sometimes that criteria is: “I’ve heard good things about this.” Other times it’s: “Screw it, there’s nothing else on and I want to watch Nicolas Cage wang a sword about to pay off his tax bill.”

What I’m trying to say is this: it isn’t completely implausible to assume that Anti-Life will be a hit. It will make as much money as Wonder Woman at the cinema, which is to say nothing at all, and the stuck-at-home population may well be so starved of entertainment that they want to see what Bruce Willis is up to, if only out of morbid curiosity.

Hair-raising … John Travolta in Eye for an Eye. Photograph: Brian Douglas/Signature Entertainment

In the spirit of public service, I should point out that this is a bad idea – because Anti-Life is cheap and dull, and Willis seems like he’s phonetically repeating all his lines into a void. But people might still watch it, just as they might watch Eye for an Eye, the forthcoming John Travolta detective movie that seems like the byproduct of an administrative snafu whereby the entire production budget was accidentally spent on wigs. Or Willy’s Wonderland, where (and I’d like to clarify that this is a real film that actually exists), Nicolas Cage has a bare-knuckle fistfight with a bloodthirsty beret-wearing crocodile mannequin in a haunted theme park.

When all of these films land on VOD services, they’ll land with precisely the same impact as a blockbuster. The only thing separating Willy’s Wonderland from, say, Godzilla vs Kong is the size of its publicity budget. And, arguably, even that doesn’t matter too much at the moment. Both films will be sharing a landing page on a streaming site. It’s a binary decision: King Kong punching a big crocodile or Cage punching a big crocodile.

Cage vs croc … Cage in Willy’s Wonderland. Photograph: Signature Entertainment

With that in mind, this could become a golden age for fading legacy stars forced to slum it on VOD. Now that that’s the only way to watch new releases, these unfashionable old-timey workhorses have suddenly found themselves back in the game. Maybe Boss Level, a “death-loop action thriller”, will prove to be Mel Gibson’s gateway back to the A-list. Maybe Original Gangster, a film about an orphan in gangland London, will provide the shot in the arm for Steve Guttenberg that has been absent for the last 20 years. Maybe Nemesis, potentially the most generic Billy Murray flick ever made, will drag Nick Moran’s career back to his 1990s heyday.

Sure, this might all be a fleeting phenomenon, either because the cinemas reopen or all blockbusters start being released straight to streaming. But now, even if this only lasts for another six weeks or so, this broken new landscape means that there’s a very good chance that Nicolas Cage could regain his crown as the biggest goddamn movie star in the world.

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