'Rollers', 'five-oh', 'pigs', 'the heat', and the 'Po-Po' are just a few of the many references used to call police. In a couple weeks, the creators of the movie Shaun of the Dead are making the name ...
In order to make his peers appear less inadequate, London’s resident super-cop is relegated to the quietest village in all of England in this week’s caper, “Hot Fuzz.” Sgt. Nicholas Angel (Simon Pegg) ...
When Britain's Nick Frost and Simon Pegg brought zombie sendup Shaun of the Dead to America, the actors and pals were as unknown as the worms wriggling from their creatures' corpses. But Shaun ...
(Matt Singer, of IFC News, interviews audience members in-between films at the Fuzztival, but still has to time to mug for my camera. Singer and the IFC crew have been following the ‘Hot Fuzz’ trio on ...
Slapping an R-rating on a film can denote a few things to the audience. For a comedy, that usually means exhaustive swearing, nudity, and maybe a gross-out slapstick violence sequence. Generally ...
All right. Let's take a break now from the news and get our weekly hit of pop culture from Mark Jordan Legan. Mark sorts through the new movie reviews and brings us this digest, courtesy of Slate.com.
The phrase “instant classic” is bandied about often, but the criteria seem to be incredibly nebulous. An instant classic is something so groundbreaking, so masterfully pulled off, that it’s ...
He’s the new supercop in a placid English village. But the local detectives warn Sgt. Nicholas Angel that Sandford is an arsenal waiting to explode. Detective Andy Wainwright: You do know there are ...
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