Sign in. The star of Netflix thriller Secret Obsession talks about moving on from Disney shows and what she's watching right now. Watch now. A sweet-natured, small-town guy inherits a controlling stake in a media conglomerate and begins to do business his way. A workaholic architect finds a universal remote that allows him to fast-forward and rewind to different parts of his life.
Jessica Biel's 15 Hottest Movie Roles | TheRichest
Jessica Biel is an actress who has somehow slipped into the collective male consciousness, so that today her name is uttered in the same breath as A-listers like Scarlett Johansson or Rachel McAdams. Therefore, while preparing to interview her for her latest film, it was surprising to discover how unfamiliar I was with much of her previous work. Though smart and sassy as Larita Whittaker in last year's Easy Virtue, audiences stayed away in droves, leaving her in the odd position of being a movie star with no real hits. Biel is doubtless a talented girl although her relationship with Justin Timberlake has created far more column inches than her actual film achievements. It's an utterly curious phenomenon; an actress whose career appears to be largely buoyed by a few well-placed, scantily clad men's magazine covers. Clearly, it's been a clever ploy and, having made her name on TV playing the virtuous daughter of a preacher in hit series 7th Heaven, it's understandable why she would seek to re-invent herself. Posing topless in for men's magazine Gear, wearing nothing more than a smile and a pair of scanty flesh-coloured shorts, arms placed strategically over her naked breasts, she announced herself as something more than just another cast player on a popular TV show.
A farcical (but tame) take on friends with benefits
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The city won't let James just make his two kids his beneficiaries. This sounds like the kind of American travesty Michael Moore could use for his next movie. He could even recycle an old title: "Sicko. Broad and badly made but sporadically inspired, "Chuck and Larry" is still an amazing improvement over "License to Wed," this month's other wedding comedy. But the movie seems tame, when it really could have subversively brought the house down.