Actor William Baldwin and his singer wife Chynna Phillips have been hit with demands from U.S. tax officials after allegedly running up debts more than $180,000. The couple, who married in 1995, owe both state and federal taxes, according to public records obtained by The Detroit News.
A tax lien for $39,561 was filed by the state of California against the couple on March 19, 2009 in Los Angeles, while the Internal Revenue Service is seeking $148,401 from the pair.
Profesionally, William Baldwin started his career by becoming a fashion model. He then made his acting debut when he starred opposite Cindy Crawford in 1995 film "Fair Game." Some movies in which he has starred include "American Fork", "Adrift in Manhattan", "A Plumm Summer" and "Forgetting Sarah Marshall".
A tax lien for $39,561 was filed by the state of California against the couple on March 19, 2009 in Los Angeles, while the Internal Revenue Service is seeking $148,401 from the pair.
Profesionally, William Baldwin started his career by becoming a fashion model. He then made his acting debut when he starred opposite Cindy Crawford in 1995 film "Fair Game." Some movies in which he has starred include "American Fork", "Adrift in Manhattan", "A Plumm Summer" and "Forgetting Sarah Marshall".
- 1/8/2010
- by AceShowbiz.com
- Aceshowbiz
If you are looking for a family film that should please all ages, look no farther than A Plumm Summer. Set in 1968 and based on a true story, this film explores all manner of emotional attachments, while investigating the story of a missing local television star, a puppet named Froggy Doo. The scenery alone should make you watch this film. Beautiful outdoor vistas of mountains and rivers and fields with crops and grasses brighten the screen and invoke that summer vacation feeling as the audience watches the characters move through the scene. Mostly children, and kids of the age and time when The Hardy Boys or Trixie Belden mysteries were everyone.s favorite summertime reading, the cast is believable...
- 5/26/2009
- by June L.
- Monsters and Critics
12.00 Normal 0 false false false En-us X-none X-none MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 Humdrum Plumm Summer. Hum dee dum dum Plumm.
This was basically my main feeling about the family movie. A real thumb-twiddler. The movie that basically lacks any real association with any genre--it's neither drama, nor comedy, nor action film, etc.--had a sporadic theater stint and is now finding its way to DVD stands.
If this release was during wintertime, this movie wouldn't stand a chance. Not just because it has "summer" in its title, but because of the significant thumb-twiddler quality. Summertime for youngsters is prime for relaxation. It's a movie that doesn't need to keep you on the edge of your seat, because it's objective is to keep you slumped far into the back of your chair. Not just any chair. No. A Plumm Summer wants you deep into a thick-cushioned, plush recliner; drinks for the armrest cooler, sold separately.
This was basically my main feeling about the family movie. A real thumb-twiddler. The movie that basically lacks any real association with any genre--it's neither drama, nor comedy, nor action film, etc.--had a sporadic theater stint and is now finding its way to DVD stands.
If this release was during wintertime, this movie wouldn't stand a chance. Not just because it has "summer" in its title, but because of the significant thumb-twiddler quality. Summertime for youngsters is prime for relaxation. It's a movie that doesn't need to keep you on the edge of your seat, because it's objective is to keep you slumped far into the back of your chair. Not just any chair. No. A Plumm Summer wants you deep into a thick-cushioned, plush recliner; drinks for the armrest cooler, sold separately.
- 5/3/2009
- by Erin Burris
- JustPressPlay.net
Baby Mama delivered a No. 1 opening for Universal this weekend, bouncing into the domestic boxoffice with an estimated $18.3 million.
That bested the $14.6 million bow by New Line/Warner Bros.' runner-up Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay. Fox's Ewan McGregor starrer Deception debuted in 10th place with just $2.2 million.
The previous frame's No. 1 film, The Forbidden Kingdom -- from Lionsgate, the Weinstein Co., Casey Silver Prods. and Relativity Media -- slipped 48% to ring up $11.2 million in third place with a $38.3 million cume. Universal's R-rated comedy Forgetting Sarah Marshall was still on the minds of enough moviegoers to register $11 million in fourth place, as a modest weekend-over-weekend drop of 38% shaped a 10-day cume of $35.1 million.
Sony's Al Pacino starrer 88 Minutes fell 48% in its second session to $3.6 million in eighth place with a $12.6 million cume. Meanwhile, Rocky Mountain's documentary "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" tumbled from the top 10 on a 54% decline in sophomore grosses to $1.4 million, with a $5.3 million cume.
Industrywide, the final weekend of the spring boxoffice notched a second consecutive three-day uptick, as $91 million in collective grosses marked a 17% improvement over the same frame last year, according to Nielsen EDI.
Yet overall, seasonal tallies have declined 18% from spring 2007, at $830 million. And 2008's $2.55 billion in year-to-date grosses represents a 2% dip from tallies over the same portion of last year.
In a limited bow this weekend, MGM's Burt Reynolds starrer Deal grossed $31,000 from 51 playdates. That was just $620 per engagement, boding a quick detour to DVD.
Newstyle Releasing's family adventure film A Plumm Summer debuted in 58 theaters in four markets and rung up $60,668, or a thin $1,046 per venue.
That bested the $14.6 million bow by New Line/Warner Bros.' runner-up Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay. Fox's Ewan McGregor starrer Deception debuted in 10th place with just $2.2 million.
The previous frame's No. 1 film, The Forbidden Kingdom -- from Lionsgate, the Weinstein Co., Casey Silver Prods. and Relativity Media -- slipped 48% to ring up $11.2 million in third place with a $38.3 million cume. Universal's R-rated comedy Forgetting Sarah Marshall was still on the minds of enough moviegoers to register $11 million in fourth place, as a modest weekend-over-weekend drop of 38% shaped a 10-day cume of $35.1 million.
Sony's Al Pacino starrer 88 Minutes fell 48% in its second session to $3.6 million in eighth place with a $12.6 million cume. Meanwhile, Rocky Mountain's documentary "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" tumbled from the top 10 on a 54% decline in sophomore grosses to $1.4 million, with a $5.3 million cume.
Industrywide, the final weekend of the spring boxoffice notched a second consecutive three-day uptick, as $91 million in collective grosses marked a 17% improvement over the same frame last year, according to Nielsen EDI.
Yet overall, seasonal tallies have declined 18% from spring 2007, at $830 million. And 2008's $2.55 billion in year-to-date grosses represents a 2% dip from tallies over the same portion of last year.
In a limited bow this weekend, MGM's Burt Reynolds starrer Deal grossed $31,000 from 51 playdates. That was just $620 per engagement, boding a quick detour to DVD.
Newstyle Releasing's family adventure film A Plumm Summer debuted in 58 theaters in four markets and rung up $60,668, or a thin $1,046 per venue.
- 4/27/2008
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Two post industry talents, colorist Bryan McMahan and Denis LaConte, have joined Post Logic Studios.
LaConte was one of the members of the team that this year earned Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' SciTech Awards for the development of the Rosetta process for creating digital YCM archival masters for digital film restoration. He starts at Post Logic midmonth as vp software engineering, arriving from Pacific Title and Art Studio, where he was vp and head of software development.
McMahan has returned to Post Logic after some 18 months at Technicolor. He brings more than two decades of experience in film mastering and telecine-based color correction and has done extensive work on digital intermediate projects.
McMahan's credits include DI color timing for A Plumm Summer and Walking Tall; feature mastering for The Prestige, The Devil Wears Prada and Bug; and remastering of Paramount library titles including Island in the Sky, The High and the Mighty and Sunset Blvd.
"This represents how important the talent in the room and the talent behind the curtain are," Post Logic CEO Larry Birstock said.
LaConte was one of the members of the team that this year earned Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' SciTech Awards for the development of the Rosetta process for creating digital YCM archival masters for digital film restoration. He starts at Post Logic midmonth as vp software engineering, arriving from Pacific Title and Art Studio, where he was vp and head of software development.
McMahan has returned to Post Logic after some 18 months at Technicolor. He brings more than two decades of experience in film mastering and telecine-based color correction and has done extensive work on digital intermediate projects.
McMahan's credits include DI color timing for A Plumm Summer and Walking Tall; feature mastering for The Prestige, The Devil Wears Prada and Bug; and remastering of Paramount library titles including Island in the Sky, The High and the Mighty and Sunset Blvd.
"This represents how important the talent in the room and the talent behind the curtain are," Post Logic CEO Larry Birstock said.
X-Men star Hugh Jackman is taking time out of his busy schedule to appear in the indie family adventure A Plumm Summer for first-time filmmaker Caroline Zelder. According to Variety, the actor joins William Baldwin, Henry Winkler and Lisa Guerrero in the film about two brothers in Montana who take on the FBI in a kidnapping case involving a puppet from a children's TV show. Jackman is also set to produce and star in The Tourist opposite Ewan McGregor and he recently signed on to topline Fox's musical remake, Carousel.
- 9/28/2006
- IMDbPro News
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