Ellen Burstyn
- EntertainmentYahoo Movies
'The Exorcist: Believer' filmmakers reveal how they lured Ellen Burstyn and Linda Blair back to franchise 50 years later (spoilers)
Writer-director David Gordon Green and producer Jason Blum spill on horror sequel's big surprises.
5 min read - EntertainmentYahoo Movies
'The Exorcist': The real-life horror stories behind the making of William Friedkin's 1973 horror classic
Friedkin and Ellen Burstyn addressed one of the movie's most controversial scenes in 2018.
8 min read - EntertainmentYahoo Movies
How the makers of the demonic new sequel tried to avoid the notorious 'Exorcist' curse
"The Exorcist: Believer" writer-director David Gordon Green and producer Jason Blum say they attempted “to protect ourselves as best we could.”
5 min read - EntertainmentYahoo Movies
Here's how the 2020 Toronto International Film Festival will make you love movies again
This year’s TIFF is poised to shake off the doldrums of a movie-less summer with films that should reignite interest in the art and magic of cinematic storytelling. Here's our curated guide to the titles that demand your attention.
10 min read - EntertainmentYahoo Movies
MVPs of Horror: Ellen Burstyn and William Friedkin reveal the most painful scene in 'The Exorcist'
The star and the director of the classic horror film take us inside the moment she suffered an injury during a key sequence, and why that would not fly today.
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Ellen Burstyn's hopes for the future of the #MeToo movement, predictions for the final season of 'House of Cards'
Oscar winner Ellen Burstyn talks about her new movie, "The House of Tomorrow," why it's taken so long for the #TimesUp movement to come, and why she is the female director she's most eager to work with.
- NewsKen Tucker
'House of Cards' review: Frank Underwood Fights For His Political Life
In this sense, the new season of House of Cards, which begins streaming on Netflix Friday, plunges us back into a world that now seems far away and, in a sense, almost foreign. To be sure, we’re mostly still in Washington, DC, mostly in the White House with President Frank Underwood (Kevin Spacey) and First Lady Claire Underwood (Robin Wright). Because of this, and because the previous season of Cards led itself down blind alleys of narrative that now require some escape, the new episodes—six