Kirk Douglas didn’t want son to become actor

Washington, May 27 (ANI): Veteran actor Kirk Douglas had stopped son Michael to pursue a career in acting because he didn’t want him to experience the “rejection” of Hollywood.

The 92-year-old actor said that he was shocked when Michael decided to try out drama as a youngster, because he always wanted to be a lawyer.

When Michael took on his first play, Kirk decided to criticise his performance to divert his attention to law.

“He attended college in Santa Barbara with the intention of being a lawyer. I was very happy. I didn’t want him to deal with the rejection in my field. In his sophomore year he suddenly said to me, ‘Dad, I’m going to be in a play,’” Contactmusic quoted Kirk as writing on his official website.

“I was startled. He never showed any interest in being an actor and I was glad. But I went to see the play at the college. It was a Shakespeare play and he had a very small part. After the play he said, ‘Dad, how was I?’ I answered, ‘Michael, you were terrible.’

“And I thought that would squash any desire he had to become an actor. Which just shows you how wrong I can be,” he added. (ANI)

William Shatner now exploring the world of cartoons

Washington, May 20 (ANI): Canadian actor William Shatner, who played Star Trek’s aptain Kirk, has now decided to explore another frontier-the world of cartoons.

Shatner, 78, is directing his new YouTube cartoon, ‘The Gavones’, and is also doing the oiceover of Don Salmonella Gavone, who is struggling to pick an heir from his four misfit sons.

The pilot episode has just been posted, with the next instalment due out within a month.

Shatner says that the Gavone family is somewhere along the lines of the-Sopranos-meets-ollywood.

“It’s the mafia in Hollywood trying to make a hit – and half the family think it’s murder and the ther half thinks it’s a movie,” People magazine quoted him as saying.

“It’s a comedic Soprano family,” he said.

In the pilot, Shatner used friends and family to voice the characters, and he has revealed that artoon characters with Robert DeNiro, Joe Pesci and Martin Scorsese’s faces are likely to ppear in the future.

“We can get anybody we want with the flick [of a pen],” he stated.

Shatner, who most recently starred in Boston Legal, has revealed that the reason he turned his and to animation was because of the fun.

“I decided a cartoon on YouTube would be really fun,” he said.

“All those media forms like Facebook and Twitter, we don’t know where they’re going to take s; certainly YouTube is unique in its form. So it seemed like a good idea to investigate how to o entertainment on it,” he added.

Priceline is sponsoring the series, which will comprise 6-7 episodes and run twice a month. ANI)

Kirk Douglas recovering from broken foot

London, May 1 (ANI): Legendary actor Kirk Douglas has injured his foot after he took a tumble at his California mansion.

Recently, the 92-year-old star fell in his Beverly Hills home, but refused to see a doctor until the next day.owever, after consulting medics, he was diagnosed with a broken bone in his foot.

And now, Kirk-Michael Douglas’ father-has been fitted with a plaster cast and been advised to rest for four weeks.

But writing on his MySpace.com blog, the veteran actor insists the accident wasn’t as serious as it sounds.

“I must be clumsy. I was sitting on a chair dictating to my assistant Grace, I got up out of the chair, stumbled and fell against the wall. My foot was painful but I thought it would go away,” The Daily Star quoted him as saying.

He added: “The next day it got worse and my wife made me see a doctor. I was surprised to learn that I broke a bone in my foot and now I have to wear a heavy boot for a month!” (ANI)

Michael Douglas feels dwarfed in front of techno-savvy dad

Washington, Apr 30 (ANI): Hollywood star Michael Douglas is embarrassed how ignorant he is when it comes to technology, while his 92-year-old father Kirk has a blog to his credit.

Douglas has said that he is proud of the Spartacus star’s status as “the oldest blogger on MySpace.”

However, the 64-year-old actor has admitted that doesn’t even know how to use email.

“He (Kirk) prides himself on his spot on MySpace; he’s 92 years old and he’s got a blog on MySpace. He’s got 4,000 followers. I wouldn’t even know how (to read his blog),” Contactmusic quoted him as saying.

He added: “About three years ago I had an email address, the email would go to my office and my secretary would fax me the email!” (ANI)

Eric Bana had ‘fun’ playing baddie in new ‘Star Trek’ movie

p
London, Apr 27 (ANI): It looks like Aussie actor Eric Bana loved his baddie role in the new ‘Star Trek’ movie./pp
Bana, 40, who is comfortable with tattoos, has jagged intergalactic designs covering his face like armour as he plays the part of villain Nero in the new Star Trek./pp
Hopefully I won’t spark a trend, the Telegraph quoted him as saying./pp
Turning the tousle-haired actor into his character Nero, the bald Romulan leader with large pointy ears and a warped, gravelly voice, was no easy task and the transformation took hours of make-up. /pp
It was so much fun, Bana said. /pp
There you are in the make-up chair, freaking out. By the end of the first week it’s very normal, and when the other Romulans took their make-up off, I didn’t know how to take them, he added./pp
This Star Trek prequel, directed by JJ Abrams centres on the early years of Captain James T Kirk (played by Chris Pine), Spock (Zachary Quinto) and his crew, when the alien Romulan race attacks their Federation starship. /pp
‘Star Trek’ is out on May 8. (ANI)/p

William Shatner slams reports of feud with new ‘Star Trek’ cast

p
Washington, Apr 27 (ANI): Legendary ‘Star Trek’ actor William Shatner has slammed reports of an alleged feud with the cast of the latest movie in the franchise, insisting there’s no bad blood./pp
The ex Captain Kirk was reportedly upset when director J.J. Abrams didn’t cast him in the new ‘Star Trek’ movie, and instead chose to recast the roles made famous by Shatner, Leonard Nimoy and DeForest Kelley./pp
However, Shatner has claimed that reports of any such tension was a joke, and wished his successor as Kirk – actor Chris Pine – the best of luck. /pp
I wish them all the best. I certainly hope it’s a great success, Contactmusic quoted the actor as telling U.S. TV show Extra./pp
He even gave a special message for Pine: Chris, good luck… and hold your breath. It’s going to be a whirlwind. /pp
However, Shatner has said that he hasn’t ruled out returning to the franchise one day./pp
If the movie is successful and they make another one, never say never as James Bond… I loved ‘Star Trek’ in all its many phases. I dearly would love to be a part of it, he said. (ANI)/p

US slaps tariffs on Canadian lumber

Washington – The United States on Tuesday slapped import duties on Canadian lumber, the latest twist in a long-running trade dispute between the two neighbours.

US trade representative Ron Kirk said that the US would impose a 10-per-cent customs duty on one of Canada’s key exports until the United States has collected 54.8 million dollars it is owed under the terms of a 2006 trade deal.

The United States claims that Canada improperly calculated export taxes for lumber from four of its provinces at the start of 2007. An arbitration court in London sided with the United States in February, ruling that Canada owed 54.8 million dollars.

A Canadian offer of 36.66 million dollars to settle the dispute was rejected last month by the US.

“We regret that Canada has chosen not to meet its commitments and has made this action necessary,” Kirk said in a statement. dpa

Virtual maps provide bird’s-eye view of Titan’s Earth-like landscapes

Washington, March 25 (ANI): Scientists have made new virtual topographic maps of Saturn’s moon Titan, which provide a bird’s-eye view its Earth-like landscapes.

Cassini radar team member Randy Kirk with the Astrogeology Science Center at the U.S. Geological Survey in Flagstaff, Arizona, created the maps.

He used some of the 20 or so areas where two or more overlapping radar measurements were obtained during 19 Titan flybys.

These stereo overlaps cover close to two percent of Titan’s surface.

The process of making topographic maps from them is just beginning, but the results already reveal some of the diversity of Titan’s geologic features.

The new flyover maps show, for the first time, the 3-D topography and height of the 1,200-meter (4,000-foot) mountain tops, the north polar lake country, the vast dunes more than 100 meters (300 feet) high that crisscross the moon, and the thick flows that may have oozed from possible ice volcanoes.

“These flyovers let you take in the bird’s-eye sweeping views of Titan, the next best thing to being there,” said Kirk.

“We’ve mapped many kinds of features, and some of them remind me of Earth. Big seas, small lakes, rivers, dry river channels, mountains and sand dunes with hills poking out of them, lava flows,” he added.

The maps show some features that may be volcanic flows. These flows meander across a shallow basin in the mountains.

One area suspected to be an ice volcano, Ganesa Macula, does not appear to be a volcanic dome. It may still have originated as a volcano, but it’s too soon to know for sure.

“It could be a volcanic feature, a crater, or something else that has just been heavily eroded,” said Kirk.

The stereo coverage includes a large portion of Titan’s north polar lakes of liquid ethane and methane. Based on these topographical models, scientists are better able to determine the depth of lakes.

The highest areas surrounding the lakes are some 1,200 meters (about 4,000 feet) above the shoreline.

By comparing terrain around Earth to the Titan lakes, scientists estimate their depth is likely about 100 meters (300 feet) or less.

More 3-D mapping of these lakes will help refine these depth estimates and determine the volume of liquid hydrocarbons that exist on Titan.

This information is important because these liquids evaporate and create Titan’s atmosphere. Understanding this methane cycle can provide clues to Titan’s weather and climate. (ANI)

Video of Total Recall: 10 Best Live-Action Disney Movies Videos

Which of the Mouse House’s family-friendly romps comes out on top?

We tend to think of Walt Disney Pictures as chiefly an animation studio — and with good reason — but the house Uncle Walt built has been churning out quality (and often highly profitable) live-action entertainment since the 1950s, something we were reminded of when we noticed that the latest chapter in the Witch Mountain franchise (and the Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson’s latest bid for the undisputed heavyweight champion of kid-friendly cinema), Race to Witch Mountain, was landing in theaters this Friday. What better time, then, for your pals here at Rotten Tomatoes to devote a Total Recall list to the 10 best-reviewed live-action entries in the Disney canon?

Of course, not all of Disney’s live-action efforts have been critical winners — we’re guessing Condorman is discussed as infrequently as possible at the Mouse House — but not everything that missed the list was a dud: You’ll find plenty of the classics you remember (yes, Old Yeller is present and accounted for), but you’re bound to take umbrage with a few omissions. Some movies missed the cut on technicalities — we limited our scope to films without animation (so long, Bedknobs and Broomsticks) and crossed any co-productions off the list, too (thus sparing Operation Dumbo Drop the embarrassment of being disqualified on critical grounds). Others, however, simply didn’t have the reviews — something we think says a lot about the strength of the competition. So let’s see what we ended up with, shall we? The live-action world of Disney awaits!

10. Escape to Witch Mountain

Well, well, well. How’s this for perfect? Not only did it provide a starting point for this week’s Total Recall honoree, 1975′s Escape to Witch Mountain wound up making the list itself. While not the best-remembered of Disney’s 1970s properties, this adaptation of the Alexander Key novel helped kickstart a mini-franchise that eventually extended to 1978′s Return from Witch Mountain, a 1982 TV movie and 1995 made-for-TV remake, and, of course, 2009′s Race to Witch Mountain. Placing extraordinary kids in situations of nail-biting, grown-up peril is something Disney has always done well, and Escape is no exception; psychic alien twins Tony and Tia are literally running for their lives from creepy millionaire Aristotle Bolt (Ray Milland). Though not all critics were susceptible to its charm — Vincent Canby of the New York Times called it “a Walt Disney production for children who will watch absolutely anything that moves” — most scribes took its popcorn-flavored blend of action, sci-fi, and family drama at face value, including Roger Ebert, who called it “a sci-fi thriller that’s fun, that’s cheerfully implausible, that’s scary but not too scary, and it works.”

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bse3C30tlok[/youtube]

9. The Absent-Minded Professor

No list of the Disney live-action oeuvre would be complete without a mention of Fred MacMurray’s work for the studio. Although he’d been a major film star for decades before making his Disney debut with 1960′s The Shaggy Dog, it’s MacMurray’s late-period string of pipe-puffing father types that he’s arguably best remembered for, particularly among younger film fans. The most critically successful of these movies, 1961′s The Absent-Minded Professor, casts MacMurray in the title role as Ned Brainard, the accidental inventor of an incredible energy-producing substance known as Flubber. Over the course of the film, Brainerd uses Flubber to make himself look like a talented dancer and helps an entire basketball team cheat during the big game, but thanks to MacMurray’s Everyman charm, you still believe he’s the good guy. It’s goofy, and light as a feather, but Disney has always known how to make the most of those two ingredients; as TV Guide put it, “This is a zanily inventive piece of work, with delightful special effects, which set the style for a long series of live-action Disney films.”

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ECyHkpXrXvw[/youtube]

8. Swiss Family Robinson

Even in the context of the other classic films in the Disney vaults, 1960′s Swiss Family Robinson was a huge success — its $40 million gross is equivalent to $367 million in today’s money, placing it proudly among the ranks of the most successful G-rated films of all time. Johann David Wyss’ 1812 novel has been adapted on numerous occasions, for film and television, but Disney’s Ken Annakin-directed treatment is the most well-known; although it doesn’t skimp on the cheesy dialogue and cornpone wholesomeness that came prepackaged with many of the studio’s live-action efforts, Lowell S. Hawley’s screenplay does a fine job of drawing enough swashbuckling action and tropical derring-do out of the source material to guarantee a good time for viewers of all (okay, most) ages. Channel 4 Film’s Alistair Harkness spoke for many of his peers when he wrote, “It’s no Pirates Of The Caribbean, but the spirit of adventure, and Disney’s high production values, means that there’s still some fun to be had watching this wholesome family adapt to island life.”

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tYxx-NsH6UA[/youtube]

7. Pollyanna

Hayley Mills, like Tommy Kirk before her (and countless fresh-faced Disney teen starlets after her), became a household name thanks to a string of starring roles in Disney live-action films. Mills’ six-movie run got off to a pretty good start with 1960′s Pollyanna; although its box office performance was initially something of a disappointment for the studio, Mills won a special Academy Award for her performance. For many, the film is now considered one of Disney’s earliest live-action classics; though Disney was far from the first to adapt Eleanor Porter’s novel, it’s Mills that people usually think of when they hear the name “Pollyanna” — and for good reason, as even critics who overdosed on the movie’s relentless optimism, like the Time critic who called it “a Niagara of drivel and a masterpiece of smarm,” were often swayed by her performance. Variety, for instance, said her presence “more than compensates for the film’s lack of tautness and, at certain points, what seems to be an uncertain sense of direction.”

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TJqUbfgaG6Q[/youtube]

6. The Rookie

By 2002, the “inspirational sports movie” genre was seen as well past its prime — and so was Dennis Quaid: one of the more bankable matinee idols of the 1980s, Quaid was suffering through a dry spell when he signed on for Disney’s John Lee Hancock-directed dramatization of the brief-yet-noteworthy Major League Baseball career of high school teacher-turned-Tampa Bay Devil Ray pitcher Jimmy Morris. Like Morris himself, The Rookie was initially written off by many as an amiable relic of a bygone era — but try as they might, most critics were too charmed by its true-life inspirational story, and Quaid’s refreshingly low-key performance, to be cynical about the film. The Rookie earned a healthy return on Disney’s $22 million investment, kick-started a new chapter in Quaid’s career, and earned a surprising number of endorsements from critics like Looking Closer’s Jeffrey Overstreet, who called it “one of those rare, wonderful ‘formula’ films that … favors understatement over exaggeration, subtlety over sentimentality.”

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aceWXcvFOvI[/youtube]

5. The Parent Trap

For a relatively lightweight rom-com, The Parent Trap has enjoyed an incredibly long life; not only was the original film re-released to theaters seven years after its theatrical debut, but Hayley Mills ended up reprising her dual roles for a trio of made-for-TV sequels more than 20 years later — and the career-boosting power of the story of matchmaking twins who play Cupid for their divorced parents proved every bit as potent in 1998, when Lindsay Lohan starred in a remake. Part of Trap’s appeal no doubt came from its pioneering use of the trick photography that made it appear as though Mills was actually her own twin — a technique later used to notable effect on The Patty Duke Show two years later — but even without special effects, The Parent Trap is a solid, albeit proudly corny, film that benefits from a strong performance by its winsome star. Mills’ charms were even sufficient to win over more “serious” publications, such as Time, whose reviewer wrote, “Surprisingly, the film is delightful — mostly because of 15-year-old Hayley Mills, the blonde button nose who played the endearing delinquent in Tiger Bay.”

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vlr4mwtjEKY[/youtube]

4. 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea

Whether you attribute it to beginner’s luck or the steady hand of one of Hollywood’s most quality-conscious studios, it’s worth noting that Richard Fleischer’s adaptation of Jules Verne’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea is both one of Disney’s most highly regarded live-action efforts and its first foray into science fiction. Proving he had an eye for giant squid battles to match his knack for animating adorable fauna, Walt Disney personally produced 20,000 Leagues, helping Fleischer blend an attentive eye to period detail with a rip-roaring action yarn that just happened to have strong Cold War parallels (right down to the mushroom cloud witnessed after the climactic battle). Enlisting the talents of A-list stars like Kirk Douglas, James Mason, and Peter Lorre certainly didn’t hurt Leagues’ box-office prospects — nor did glowingly positive reviews from the likes of the New York Times’ Bosley Crowther, who called it “as fabulous and fantastic as anything [Disney] has ever done in cartoons.”

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xhyuey4xU3Q[/youtube]

3. That Darn Cat!

Younger filmgoers may be more familiar with the 1997 remake, starring Christina Ricci and Doug E. Doug — which, as illustrated by that film’s woeful seven percent Tomatometer rating, is a shame. The 1965 original, starring Hayley Mills as the owner of a robbery-foiling feline (and the immortal Frank Gorshin as the robber), was a perfect example of the sort of goofy, animal-assisted middlebrow flick that Disney’s live-action arm became known for in the 1960s — but if it’s silly stuff, it’s at least eminently well-crafted, thanks to the steady hand of director Robert Stevenson and charming performances from a cast that included Disney vets Mills and Dean Jones. Critics were kind, if not exactly effusive (Rob Thomas of Madison’s Capital Times waved it off as “lightweight, forgettable family fun”) — but it was the titular cat that earned some of the movie’s highest warmest praise, including high marks from the New York Times’ Bosley Crowther, who said, “The feline that plays the informant, as the F.B.I. puts it, is superb. Clark Gable at the peak of his performing never played a tom cat more winningly.”

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggKG9uJxwdM[/youtube]

2. Old Yeller

A movie so successful that it spawned a sequel, Tommy Kirk’s career, and the heartbreaking on-screen deaths of dozens of beloved critters, Old Yeller is mostly remembered today for its tearjerking final act and cornpone dialogue — and although this Robert Stevenson-directed adaptation of Fred Gipson’s popular novel certainly doesn’t skimp on the familiar plot points and gooey nostalgia so often identified with the Disney films of the era, it also tries to impart some useful lessons about the tough choices that come with growing up. Those lessons were imparted to a huge audience, too — watching Old Yeller was a rite of passage for multiple generations of filmgoers, among them DVDTalk’s Scott Weinberg, who called it “every bit the warm, comfortable, and tragically bittersweet classic that had you sobbing like a infant the first time you saw it.”

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=emn0hHY3wkg[/youtube]

1. Never Cry Wolf

The best-reviewed of Disney’s late 1970s/early 1980s string of family-friendly live-action flicks, Never Cry Wolf offers a surprisingly mature, unflinching adaptation of Farley Mowat’s memoir detailing the years he spent studying the hunting habits of wolves in the Canadian wilderness. One year later, Disney would spin off Touchstone, an imprint which would eventually be responsible for some fairly racy fare, but in 1983, Wolf director Carroll Ballard’s decision to afford audiences a glimpse of Charles Martin Smith’s bare buttocks was a major step for the Mouse House. Though the film wasn’t a giant hit, it did manage an impressive 27-week theatrical run — all the more notable considering its small cast, exceedingly minimal dialogue, and deliberate pace. Critics were suitably impressed, sending Never Cry Wolf all the way to a 100 percent Tomatometer rating on the strength of reviews from scribes like Time’s Richard Schickel, who raved, “Ballard and his masterly crew of film makers have reimagined a corner of the natural world…They leave us awed.”

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Izb0ScZSBpk[/youtube]

Captain Kirk wants to become Canada’s PM

London, February 20 (ANI): Star Trek actor William Shatner would accept a post no less than a Prime Minister when it comes to leading his native country Canada.

The 77-year-old, known for his famous portrayal of the character Kirk in the hit series, spoke of his political ambitions in a recent letter to a fan after being offered to think about the Governor General role.

“My intention is to be Prime Minister of Canada, not Governor General, which is mainly a ceremonial position,” the Daily Express quoted him as saying.

“As Prime Minister I can lead Canada into even greater exploits,” he added. (ANI)

Obama likely to get the support of five Republicansfor his policies

Washington, Jan.21 (ANI): Though President Barack Obama’s outreach to Republicans may be generating goodwill on the other side of the aisle, his honeymoon with the GOP is likely to be short-lived.

However, there are some Republicans who have a less adversarial relationship with the new administration. According to Politico, there are at least five GOP leaders who are expected to work closely with the White House.

Here is Politico’s list of the five Republicans most likely to embrace Obama:

1.Senator John McCain (Arizona)

As curious as it sounds, Obama’s rival for the presidency could end up being a key ally.

On issue after issue, from campaign finance to HMO regulation to immigration reform, McCain has shown a willingness to reach across the aisle – a habit that hasn’t endeared him to his own party.

Indeed, former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.) said he believes that McCain is prepared to launch a national rehabilitation campaign that will lead him to a strong alliance with Obama.

“I believe Obama has an ace in the hole among Senate Republicans. This unlikely ace can deliver not only the GOP moderates needed to break a filibuster but also the stamp of bipartisanship: the 2008 GOP standard-bearer, John McCain,” Santorum recently wrote in The Philadelphia Inquirer.

2. Senator Richard `Dick’ Lugar (Indiana)

Few Republicans can claim a closer personal relationship with Obama than the senior senator from Indiana. Upon arriving in the Senate, Obama sought out Lugar as a mentor when both men served on the Foreign Relations Committee.

To prove his bipartisan bona fides on the campaign trail, Obama regularly cited his work on Lugar’s signature Nunn-Lugar nuclear nonproliferation bill.

As part of their campaign to pass nuclear nonproliferation legislation, the two traveled together to Russia and Ukraine in 2005 to examine those countries’ stockpiles of conventional weapons.

Lugar, rumored to be a potential secretary of state in the Obama administration, was even named as an honorary co-chairman of the inaugural committee. “When you’ve got a president who’s trying to send a signal that he’s trying to achieve bipartisan solutions, it makes sense that Lugar’s going to play a very significant role in that,” said Indiana political analyst Brian Howey.

3. Representative Mark Kirk (Illinois)

As he mulls a run for Obama’s old Senate seat in 2010, Kirk knows he won’t get an endorsement from the president-elect. Still, whether he runs for reelection to the House or for the Senate, political imperatives demand that he work productively with the Obama administration.

Kirk’s House district delivered 61 percent of the vote to Obama, giving him a strong incentive to play nice with the new president.

One of the leading centrists in the House – and one who has repeatedly won reelection in a Democratic-leaning district by emphasizing his independence from his national party – Kirk is already inclined to work across the aisle.

4. Senator George Voinovich (Ohio)

Despite calling Obama a “socialist” in the final weeks of the presidential campaign, Voinovich may find himself agreeing with the president-elect more often than not during his final two years in the Senate.

The Ohio senator, who announced he would retire in 2010, has often been a thorn in the GOP’s side, for opposing Republican-backed tax cuts and for his high-profile opposition to John Bolton’s nomination as ambassador to the United Nations.

Now that Voinovich is in the final stage of a political career that spans more than 40 years, he will be completely liberated from pressures to conform to his party’s line.

Since his Jan. 12 retirement announcement, Voinovich has already voted with Obama on releasing the second round of bailout money, joining only five other Senate Republicans in support of the legislation. Despite his reputation as a fiscal hawk, Voinovich has said he is open to supporting Obama’s proposed stimulus package.

5. Senator Susan Collins (Maine)

Fresh off an election victory in which she touted her record of working across party lines, Collins has a chance to prove it.

She is one of the two most liberal Republican senators, according to 2007 National Journal ratings – the other is her Maine colleague, Sen. Olympia Snowe. And with Democrats just shy of the 60 seats necessary to block GOP filibusters, Collins will be one of the first Republicans Obama will look toward to break logjams.

She has already indicated that she’s eager to work with the new president on climate change and health care reform, and has chatted with Obama’s congressional budget adviser, Peter Orszag, about her legislative priorities. (ANI)

Will Smith voted Top Money-Making Movie Star of 2008

London, Jan 4 (ANI): Will Smith, star of “Hancock” and “Seven Pounds”, has been voted the top money-making movie star of 2008 in an annual poll of movie theater owners and film buyers.

Smith is only the second African-American actor after Sidney Poitier to top the Quigley poll, which has been running for 76 years.

Robert Downey Jr came second, Christian Bale third and Shia LaBeouf fourth in the list.

Anne Hathaway was named a star of tomorrow as was Chris Pine, who will play Captain Kirk in 2009”s Star Trek movie, reports the BBC.

Tom Cruise did not make the Top Ten for 2008 despite being voted Number One seven times since 1983.

Depp, the “Pirates of the Caribbean” star who was placed first in 2007, also did not make the 2008 list.

The Quigley Poll has been conducted every year since 1932 by the publishers of the International Motion Picture Almanac.

It asks movie theater owners and film buyers to vote for the 10 stars they believe generated the most box office revenue for their theaters during the year.

The Quigley Poll has been conducted since 1932 by the publishers of the International Motion Picture Almanac. (ANI)