Sinking Passing Of Natalie Wood


Pleased Friday! Also in the present variation of The Broadsheet: Steven Soderbergh guides from U.N.C.L.E.… Angelina Jolie joined to the newest film Ridley Scott will never make… I, Frankenstein molds its major lady… The $775 thousand starting week… and more.

The Los Angeles Region Sheriff’s Department. declared Exclusive that it will reopen its research into the 1981 sinking passing of Natalie Wood. “Recently Sheriff’s hard researchers were called by individuals who reported they had details about the Natalie Wood Wagner sinking,” the workplace believed in a report. “Due to the details, Sheriff’s hard business has determined to take another look at the situation.” Wood’s man John Wagner, meanwhile, embraces another look but wants “that it comes from a legitimate supply or resources other than those merely trying to revenue from the 30-year wedding loved-one's birthday of her terrible passing.” Or the Fiftieth wedding loved-one's birthday of Western Area Tale.

All that speculative yakking and saber-rattling about Steven Soderbergh’s big-screen The Man From U.N.C.L.E. has yielded this typically rewarding Hollywood payoff: Soderbergh is off the project, reportedly unhappy with the mid-level budget proposed by Warner Bros.

Angelina Jolie is attached to play the title role in Gertrude Bell, a planned biopic about the Englishwoman who was instrumental in the reshaping of the Middle East in the early 20th century. Ridley Scott would produce and may direct.

Aussie writer/director Stuart Beattie has selected compatriot Yvonne Strahovski as the female lead in I, Frankenstein; she’ll star opposite Aaron Eckhart in the adaptation of Kevin Grevioux’s graphic novel.

Are you laying down? Because otherwise your jaw might fall right the hell off: “Activision’s latest Call of Duty title has shattered all previous entertainment records, grossing more than $775 million in its first five days of sales.”

What’s shakin’ in North Korea? Oh, not much, just getting closer to testing out its brand-new light water reactor, which will finally enable the nation to embark on its coveted uranium-enrichment efforts.

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