SOUTH CAROLINA, USA — It's been an eventful year for North Texas native and Hollywood actor Jonathan Majors, who signed on to star in his first movie in years, an action movie being produced by The ...
Jonathan Majors’ fall through a window during the shoot of The Daily Wire action movie is making headlines. The working title of the movie is Knuckle. On April 10, Deadline shared footage of Majors ...
The film is currently wrapped up in a production strike as the crew protests unsafe working conditions. Jonathan Majors reportedly had an on-set incident while filming a movie for The Daily Wire.
Jonathan Majors and his co-star fell through a window while filming their new action movie — leading crew members to walk off set. The actor and JC Kilcoyne were shooting a scene in which their ...
The actor and his costar reportedly fell six feet, marking one of several alleged on-set incidents that have raised safety concerns Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Jonathan Majors and costar JC Kilcoyne fell ...
Jonathan Majors‘ new action movie, backed by Ben Shapiro’s The Daily Wire and Dallas Sonnier‘s Bonfire Legend, is facing scrutiny following an on-set accident and a crew strike. On Friday, Deadline ...
Here's what's happening. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. Video footage was passed along to Deadline showing Jonathan Majors and ...
Teri Polo and Dylan Walsh star in Lifetime’s “The Man in the Window.” The movie follows Sarah and her new across the street neighbor-turned boyfriend, Jack. The relationship is convenient, exciting, ...
Dylan Walsh in 'The Man in the Window.' Photo Courtesy of Lifetime. Dylan Walsh in 'The Man in the Window.' Photo Courtesy of Lifetime. Veteran actor Dylan Walsh (“Nip/Tuck” and “Heated Rivalry”) ...
Mr. Rothman is the chief executive and chairman of Sony Pictures’ film studio. See more of our coverage in your search results.Encuentra más de nuestra cobertura en los resultados de búsqueda. Add The ...
The theatrical window is the most discussed metaphorical aperture in all of moviedom these days—take that, Overton!—as theater owners, streaming services, and the studios stuck between them continue ...