logo
#

Latest news with #Unforgiven

TOM BRADY, JIM GRAY AND JEFFREY SOFFER UNVEIL HALL OF EXCELLENCE AT FONTAINEBLEAU LAS VEGAS
TOM BRADY, JIM GRAY AND JEFFREY SOFFER UNVEIL HALL OF EXCELLENCE AT FONTAINEBLEAU LAS VEGAS

Malaysian Reserve

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Malaysian Reserve

TOM BRADY, JIM GRAY AND JEFFREY SOFFER UNVEIL HALL OF EXCELLENCE AT FONTAINEBLEAU LAS VEGAS

The first-of-its kind museum officially opens to the public on Friday, June 20 Press conference images and b-roll courtesy of Getty Images for Fontainebleau Las Vegas HERE LAS VEGAS, June 18, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Today, seven-time Super Bowl champion Tom Brady alongside sportscasting legend Jim Gray and Fontainebleau Development Chairman and CEO Jeffrey Soffer proudly unveiled Fontainebleau Las Vegas' Hall of Excellence. The one-of-a-kind museum honors the greatest moments in the history of sports and entertainment. Hall of Excellence officially opens to the public on Friday, June 20. 'Everybody in the [Hall of Excellence] has people that inspired them, that supported them, that held them up,' Brady said at a morning news conference celebrating the museum's opening. 'Nobody can do it alone, we all need each other, we need to support one another, we need to build people up.' 'There's no greater destination in the world for this 'Smithsonian' of sports artifacts. In fact, I don't think the Smithsonian can handle what we put together!' Among those in attendance for the Hall of Excellence debut were: Frann Vettor-Gray, Tom Brady's parents Galynn Patricia Brady and Tom Brady Sr., Kobe Bryant's sister Shaya Bryant-Tabb, author Stedman Graham, former American sportscaster and Hall of Excellence personality Marv Albert, Executive Vice President and CFO at Koch, Inc. Richard Dinkel, Fontainebleau Development President and Partner Brett Mufson, and Fontainebleau Las Vegas President Maurice Wooden. 'The Hall of Excellence is more than a museum, it is a movement,' Gray told the assembled crowd. 'They're living reminders of what it means to sacrifice, to strive, to overcome. May this hall remind us of where we've been, challenge us on where we're going, and always call on us to live, to strive, to commit to excellence.' 'It's come together in such a way, it's beyond what I ever thought it would be,' said Soffer. 'The ability to take you through and relive these milestones, it takes you back to your childhood.' Hall of Excellence features cherished artifacts celebrating the moments, milestones, people, and plays that have inspired generations. Among the pieces on display: all seven of Brady's Super Bowl rings; the bat used by Jackie Robinson to break baseball's color barrier (1947); Muhammad Ali's worn gloves from his iconic fight versus George Chuvalo (1966); Dream Team jersey and opening ceremony uniform (1992); Clint Eastwood's Academy Award for 'Unforgiven' (1993); Kobe Bryant's first nationally televised game jersey (1996); golf ball used by Tiger Woods during his first Masters victory (1997); Billie Jean King's iconic tennis dress (1974); Oprah Winfrey's Presidential Medal of Freedom (2013) and Tony Award for 'The Color Purple' (2016); Las Vegas Aces WNBA Championship rings (2022, 2023); a Vegas Golden Knights Stanley Cup Championship ring (2023), and golf balls and baseballs signed by U.S. Presidents dating back to Woodrow Wilson. Featuring a self-guided audio tour narrated by Academy Award-winning actor Morgan Freeman, Hall of Excellence allows guests to customize their visit with handheld devices that identify each exhibit, with stories, statistics, and detailed descriptions narrated by icons like Oprah Winfrey, Marv Albert, Jim Nantz, Bob Costas, Mike Emrick, Mary Carillo, Andres Cantor, Tom Brady, Jim Gray, and more. The museum also features an iconic trophy room that includes the Vince Lombardi Trophy, the Heisman Trophy, the Claret Jug, the MLB Commissioners Trophy, Larry O'Brien Championship Trophy (NBA Finals), Wimbledon, U.S. Open Golf and U.S. Open Tennis Trophies, the Pete Rozelle Super Bowl MVP Trophy, Olympic Gold medals, Emmy®, GRAMMY®, Tony® and ACADEMY AWARDS® and many others. Located on the resort's second floor adjacent to Promenade, Hall of Excellence will be open daily from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. starting Friday, June 20. Admission starts at $35 per person and $20 for guests ages five to 15 years old; with discounted tickets available for seniors, Nevada residents, and military members starting at $30 per person. Tickets can be purchased here. Guests are encouraged to take advantage of Fontainebleau Las Vegas' valet-validation program – allowing visitors dining at the resort's world-class restaurant and bar collection, spending within retail spaces, including the Hall of Excellence, or enjoying a treatment at Lapis Spa & Wellness and IGK Salon to validate their valet. More information about Fontainebleau Las Vegas dining, events, entertainment, rooms and suites can be found at About Fontainebleau Las Vegas Fontainebleau Las Vegas is a 67-story, vertically integrated luxury resort that brings a legacy of timeless elegance and unparalleled service to the Strip. Certified by the Green Building Initiative with three Green Globes, the resort's thoughtful design allows guests to move effortlessly among 3,644 luxury hotel rooms and suites, 550,000 square feet of customizable meeting and convention space, 150,000 square feet of gaming space, a collection of world-class restaurants and shops, exquisite pools, vibrant nightlife, and vitality-enhancing spa and wellness offerings. Located at 2777 S. Las Vegas Blvd., adjacent to the acclaimed Las Vegas Convention Center West Hall expansion, Fontainebleau Las Vegas is created by Fontainebleau Development in partnership with Koch Real Estate Investments.

Keanu Reeves Reflects on a Decade of ‘John Wick' With ‘Wick Is Pain' Doc, Insisting 'I Don't Do Stunts, I Do Action'
Keanu Reeves Reflects on a Decade of ‘John Wick' With ‘Wick Is Pain' Doc, Insisting 'I Don't Do Stunts, I Do Action'

Yahoo

time05-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Keanu Reeves Reflects on a Decade of ‘John Wick' With ‘Wick Is Pain' Doc, Insisting 'I Don't Do Stunts, I Do Action'

Wick Is Pain, a new documentary from director Jeffrey Doe, offers an inside look at the early struggles of making the first John Wick, tracking star Keanu Reeves and filmmaker Chad Stahelski for a decade as it goes from being an indie film to becoming a billion dollar franchise. At a special screening of the doc in Santa Monica on Thursday, Reeves and Stahelski joined Doe, producer Erica Lee, writer Derek Kolstad and producer Josh Oreck for a Q&A about the highs and lows depicted the doc. More from The Hollywood Reporter Harrison Ford Is Open to Continuing in 'Yellowstone' Universe After '1923' 'Gilmore Girls' Alum Yanic Truesdale on Why His French 'Étoile' Character Doesn't Have an Accent Sebastian Stan Channeled Clint Eastwood in 'Unforgiven' For 'Thunderbolts*': "The Older Guy That's Been There, Done That" Stahelski noted of the film's title and mentality that goes along with it, 'I think anything hard is supposed to hurt a little bit… anything great takes effort, sometimes effort hurts a little bit.' Reeves echoed that when it came to the months and months of fight training he would go through for each film, when the directed pushed him in workouts he was ready to 'do some more because Wick is pain and we fucking love it.' The star also pointed out that he trains with the film's stunt performers, so 'when we get into the level of choreography and stuff, everyone's been used to being thrown by me. If I do 100 throws, there's fucking six guys who are getting fucking thrown and doing it. So I'm not in that alone, and then just the cinema part of it is that all of the operators are in it with us to capture everything.' Several of the franchise's stuntmen were in the audience at the screening, and as Reeves reflected on his love of working with directors 'who wanted to explore character in action' in Matrix, Point Break and Speed before the John Wick films, he gave much of the credit to those stunt performers. 'I really love being able to do as much as I can, but I don't do stunts. Stunt people do stunts,' he said. 'They're like, 'Look at all those stunts you did' and I'm like, 'Fuck that, [stunt double] Jackson [Spidell] just got hit by a car twice.' And [Stahelski] is like, 'Hmm, maybe we can hit him with two cars,'' as the director joked that was just because they couldn't afford three. 'Anyway yeah I don't do stunts, I do action,' Reeves insisted. During the conversation he also teased Ballerina, the upcoming John Wick spinoff starring Ana de Armas in which he appears. 'It was really cool to have a chance to put the suit on. I've worked with Ana a couple of times and she's a wonderful artist, and she committed to the action,' the star told the crowd. 'I just had like eight days on it, but it was fun to play the role again and I'm excited for people to see the film. It's in the spirit of John Wick and has new characters and opens up some stuff, so hopefully people like it.' Looking back on his decade of playing the hitman, Reeves noted that it was 'a special thing to have something you love chronicled in such a way' with the documentary. 'It's kind of like a picture book. I mean it's like 10 years of our lives and it changed our lives for the better, personally and creatively.' And as for his takeaway from the franchise, after getting initial pushback over the storyline of the first film, Stahelski teased, 'Always kill the dog.' Wick Is Pain is now available on digital. Best of The Hollywood Reporter 'The Goonies' Cast, Then and Now "A Nutless Monkey Could Do Your Job": From Abusive to Angst-Ridden, 16 Memorable Studio Exec Portrayals in Film and TV The 10 Best Baseball Movies of All Time, Ranked

Clint Eastwood Explains Why He's Not Done Directing Movies at 95 — GeekTyrant
Clint Eastwood Explains Why He's Not Done Directing Movies at 95 — GeekTyrant

Geek Tyrant

time04-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Geek Tyrant

Clint Eastwood Explains Why He's Not Done Directing Movies at 95 — GeekTyrant

Clint Eastwood may be 95, but retirement? That's not in the script. After the release of Juror #2 in 2024, many assumed the legal thriller would mark Eastwood's final bow as a director. The film performed well with both audiences and critics, and whispers swirled about it being his swan song. But, Eastwood recently put those rumors to rest in an interview with Austrian newspaper Kurier (via Reuters), sharing why he plans to keep calling the shots behind the camera. 'There's no reason why a man can't get better with age. And I have much more experience today. Sure, there are directors who lose their touch at a certain age, but I'm not one of them.' Since the 1950s, when he first appeared on the small screen in Rawhide , Eastwood has never stopped evolving, first as a Western icon, a great actor, then as a bold, thoughtful filmmaker. His directorial debut Play Misty for Me in 1971 kicked off a career filled with character-driven dramas, moral complexity, and a refusal to play it safe. From Unforgiven to Mystic River to American Sniper , Eastwood has proven he love being a filmmaker and telling stories. Even now, Eastwood's approach hasn't changed. When asked about the current wave of franchise fatigue and reboots, he responded: 'We live in an era of remakes and franchises. I've shot sequels three times, but I haven't been interested in that for a long while. My philosophy is: do something new or stay at home.' Eastwood, meanwhile, remains focused on telling fresh stories with something to say. His most recent effort, Juror #2 , is another reminder that he's still chasing creative challenges rather than coasting on past glories. What's next? According to Kurier, Eastwood is in solid physical health and already in pre-production on his next project. The man simply doesn't slow down. And, and I guess, why should he? If anything, Eastwood is showing us what a lifetime of storytelling experience looks like and he refuses to stop and I love that about him. He's not just defying expectations about age, he's outworking most people half his age.

Clint Eastwood critiques remakes, sequels, and adaptations: "Do something new or stay at home..."
Clint Eastwood critiques remakes, sequels, and adaptations: "Do something new or stay at home..."

Time of India

time03-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

Clint Eastwood critiques remakes, sequels, and adaptations: "Do something new or stay at home..."

Clint Eastwood , the 95-year-old veteran actor, seeks more work and firmly stated that his fans don't have to worry about his retirement after a long time. In addition, Eastwood reminisced about the golden days when people were writing new ideas instead of remakes and sequels. "I'm not one of them" In an Austrian newspaper, Kurier, the 'Unforgiven' actor, who is currently working on the pre-production of his upcoming film, stated that fans won't need to worry about his retirement this soon. 'There's no reason why a man can't get better with age. And I have much more experience today. Sure, there are directors who lose their touch at a certain age, but I'm not one of them,' he added. Clint Eastwood critiques the remakes and the sequels When asked what he thinks about the current state of the film industry , Eastwood states that he misses the olden days when the theatres weren't booked with remakes, sequels and adaptations. 'I long for the good old days when screenwriters wrote movies like 'Casablanca' in small bungalows on the studio lot. When everyone had a new idea,' the 95-year-old expressed. 'We live in an era of remakes and franchises. I've shot sequels three times, but I haven't been interested in that for a long while. My philosophy is: do something new or stay at home,' he added. Clint Eastwood evolved as an artist... The actor further stated that his upbringing in the olden days has made him stay alert and look for something new, making him evolve as an artist. 'As an actor, I was still under contract with a studio, was in the old system, and thus forced to learn something new every year. And that's why I'll work as long as I can still learn something, or until I'm truly senile,' he further explained. Check out our list of the latest Hindi , English , Tamil , Telugu , Malayalam , and Kannada movies . Don't miss our picks for the best Hindi movies , best Tamil movies, and best Telugu films .

Clint Eastwood at 95 on film-making: do something new, or stay home
Clint Eastwood at 95 on film-making: do something new, or stay home

Khaleej Times

time01-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Khaleej Times

Clint Eastwood at 95 on film-making: do something new, or stay home

Hollywood star Clint Eastwood urged fellow filmmakers to come up with new ideas, observing in a newspaper interview that the movie business is now full of remakes and franchises. Oscar-winning director Eastwood told Austrian newspaper Kurier he planned to keep working, saying that he was still in good physical shape and hopeful that no one would have to worry about him in that regard "for a long time yet". Eastwood's most recent film, legal drama Juror#2, came out in the United States last year and the newspaper said he was currently in the pre-production phase for another movie. When asked for his view on the current state of the film industry, the star of movies such as The Good, The Bad and The Ugly and Dirty Harry, and director of dozens of films including Unforgiven and Million Dollar Baby, said: "I long for the good old days when screenwriters wrote movies like Casablanca in small bungalows on the studio lot. When everyone had a new idea," according to the German text of the interview. "We live in an era of remakes and franchises. I've shot sequels three times, but I haven't been interested in that for a long while. My philosophy is: do something new or stay at home," added Eastwood, who will turn 95 on Saturday. Asked where he got his energy from, Eastwood said: "There's no reason why a man can't get better with age. And I have much more experience today. Sure, there are directors who lose their touch at a certain age, but I'm not one of them." Eastwood, who made World War II thriller Where Eagles Dare in Austria with Welsh actor Richard Burton in the late 1960s, told the paper the secret to his success was that he had always tried something new as a director and an actor. "As an actor, I was still under contract with a studio, was in the old system, and thus forced to learn something new every year," he said. "And that's why I'll work as long as I can still learn something, or until I'm truly senile."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store