13 Naked Truths About The Full Monty
Twenty years ago, the world learned what "The Full Monty" really meant.
For nearly 10 years, TV viewers got to experience a journey aboard a cruise ship nearly every Saturday night as The Love Boat brought the misadventures and romantic escapades of the luxury liner life right into their living rooms.
In the 1950s, '60s, and '70s, the BBC was so intent on erasing its original programming that employees could wipe a show with just three words on a generic form: "no further interest."
Theater is meant to be a visceral experience. Sometimes it's a little too visceral.
Jon Snow might know something soon.
It took 16 tries in the director's chair for Clint Eastwood to finally get some Oscar love for this western, which was released 25 years ago.
'Roseanne,' which was praised for its portrayal of blue-collar America, also broke new ground in terms of its envelope-pushing (for the time) storylines.
When the 704-page 'A Game of Thrones' hit shelves on August 1, 1996, it received positive notices and respectable sales, but there was little hint of the hysteria that would follow.
The twisty thriller was released on August 6, 1999—which just happened to be director M. Night Shyamalan's 29th birthday.
"I've still got the same attitude I had when I started," the iconic tough guy—who was born 100 years ago today—once said, "I haven't changed anything but my underwear."
3. Eddie Murphy did all of his own boxing.
The idea came from a fan design.
From 'Full House' to 'Perfect Strangers,' if you turned on a TV set in the 1990s, it was impossible to escape ABC's Friday night "TGIF" lineup.
You'd better start practicing those crane kicks again! More than 30 years after Daniel LaRusso and Johnny Lawrence faced off in one of cinema's most iconic showdowns, The Karate Kid has officially made a comeback.
He refuses to book a performance anywhere near his house.
Want to buy the first issue of 'Wonder Woman'? Now's the time.
A new theory explains how one easy-to-miss moment in the latest episode might point to the downfall of Westeros’s sneakiest royal whisperer.
The studio was so optimistic about their adaptation of the Mattel toy line that they started pre-production on a sequel. Then the movie came out ...
He used to have a few drinks before getting behind the Wheel.