11 Future Stars Who Appeared in Disney Channel Original Movies
From Zac Efron to Oscar winners like Brie Larson, plenty of Hollywood stars got their starts on the Disney Channel, and you can uncover some of the most famous here.
From Zac Efron to Oscar winners like Brie Larson, plenty of Hollywood stars got their starts on the Disney Channel, and you can uncover some of the most famous here.
Here are some wacky variations on the classic snack.
The 'Lawrence of Arabia' of hayseed movies.
The New York City nightclub is the stuff hedonistic legends are made of.
Soon you'll be to ready to vasterat with Khaleesi, Khal Moro, and the rest of the horselord gang.
In comics, time travel is as commonplace as the superhero team-up.
Director Blake Edwards came up with an idea for a heist movie in which a jewel thief is having an affair with the wife of the detective who’s pursuing him. Then he cast Peter Sellers as the detective, and everything changed.
Henry Petroski's new book, 'The Road Taken,' is a jaunty tour of America's transportation infrastructure.
Irroborate your vernacular with this batch of inkhorns.
The Emmy-winning HBO series returns tonight. At least one Supreme Court Justice will be watching.
There's a plethora of great pulp fiction in the Sunshine State.
At one point, Milton Bradley's image graced all the denominations.
The world lit up in purple and the cast of ‘Hamilton’ went crazy in honor of Prince.
How much pizza, ice cream, or chocolate could you eat in your life? These lucky people got to find out.
A beautifully decorated home is something to appreciate, but a luxuriously appointed Royal Palace is something else entirely.
TV on the cheap never looked so good.
6. Walt's own daughter protested the death of Bambi's mother.
No one likes to get bamboozled, but the words for getting duped are creative and vivid.
Imagine a world where ‘Predator’ was actually ‘Rocky V.’
Winners at the oldest stadium in baseball include the Harlem Globetrotters. Losers include pigeons.
They're carrying on an ancient tradition.
In the tightly corseted Victorian era, parlor games helped relax strict rules of courtship.
Ed Wood’s infamous sci-fi flick has been both condemned and celebrated as “the worst movie ever made.”