FEBRUARY STAR OF THE MONTH: VIOLA DAVIS 

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Valentine’s Weekend Movie Guide — February 13, 2026

Hollywood’s theaters serve up a rich and varied slate this weekend, from a boldly reimagined literary classic to animated family fun and star-studded crime thrillers. Whether you’re planning a Valentine’s outing, a solo night at the cinema, or a genre chase through horror and sci-fi, there’s plenty to choose from as new films arrive nationwide on Friday, Feb. 13.

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OBIT: Bud Cort: Harold of Hollywood and the Quiet Brilliance of a Singular Talent

Actor Bud Cort, whose tousled good looks and un-self-conscious style made him one of the most recognizable faces of 1970s films died on February 11, in Connecticut. He was seventy-seven. Cort died after a lengthy illness. His career showcased his talents on stage and screen, highlighting his career-long transformation from child actor to one of America's most interesting character actors.

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OBIT: James Van Der Beek, 1977–2026: A Teen-TV Icon Who Grew Into a Self-Aware, Restless Actor

James Van Der Beek, the actor who became a defining face of late-1990s television as Dawson Leery on Dawson’s Creek and later reinvented his public image through sharp, self-mocking comedy and steady character work, has died at 48 following a journey with colorectal cancer, according to an announcement by his wife, Kimberly. Born James David Van Der Beek on March 8, 1977, in Cheshire, Connecticut, he gravitated toward performance early, eventually landing the lead role in Dawson’s Creek—a breakthrough that helped define The WB’s era of teen drama and made him, almost overnight, a pop-cultural reference point for a generation.

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Oscar Micheaux: The Man Who Built Black Cinema from Nothing

Long before Hollywood acknowledged Black filmmakers as artists, Oscar Micheaux had already written, financed, produced, directed, and distributed more feature films than nearly any of his white contemporaries. Working outside the studio system—and often in open defiance of it—Micheaux became the most prolific and influential African American filmmaker of the early twentieth century, a fierce individualist whose work laid the foundation for what would later be called independent Black cinema.

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The Long Way Home of Margaret O’Brien’s Lost Oscar

Oscar. The Academy Award. By any name, it inspires the same hush of reverence. For those fortunate enough to receive one—deserved or not—it represents the brass ring of Hollywood achievement, the ultimate benediction bestowed by one’s peers. Such was the moment for Margaret O’Brien, an eight-year-old girl widely regarded then—and now—as one of the most gifted child performers in screen history.

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The Man Who Owned Hollywood’s Corner: Jacob Stern, Land Baron of Vine Street

Jacob Stern arrived in Southern California with the kind of ambition that didn’t bother to introduce itself—it simply started buying the future. Born on September 20, 1859, in Saxony, Germany, to Marcus and Rosetta (Goodman) Stern, he spent his early years in the workmanlike world of family labor, helping on the farm and learning young, that land was never just dirt. Land was leverage. In 1884 he crossed the Atlantic, landing first in New York before moving on to Cleveland, where he worked for a wholesale clothing firm—practical employment that taught him the rhythms of commerce, supply, demand, and the quiet power of being the person who could provide what other people needed.

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FILM: One Battle After Another: When the Critics Crown a Masterpiece—and the Crowd Stays Home

Few ironies exist in Hollywood culture like the experiences of prestige films that open weekend to discover that moviegoers have vastly misunderstood the product they are seeing. Paul Thomas Anderson's latest epic, One Battle After Another (2025), has experienced something few films achieve today: widespread critical acclaim — it's as richly ambitious and vital as any movie this year, angry, witty, and brimming with technical wizardry—while failing to find a wide audience who either didn't come out to see it, or weren't quite sure what it was they were coming to see.

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Savage Intruder / Hollywood Horror House: Miriam Hopkins and the Strange, Sad Afterlife of a Hollywood Comeback

By the late 1960s, Hollywood had become something of a self-devouring empire. The studio system was gone, the old-guard moguls were dead or retired, and their stars were being plundered—mercifully or sadistically, by cineastes—by a brash new generation weaned on television, exploitation films and irony. Born out of that awkward renaissance was Savage Intruder, aka Hollywood Horror House, a cheap independent feature that would provide legendary actress Miriam Hopkins with her last appearance in a feature film and became one of the oddest Hollywood endings ever.

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“Cursum Perficio”: The Fight to Save Marilyn Monroe’s Brentwood Home

At the end of a quiet cul-de-sac in Brentwood, on 12305 Fifth Helena Drive, sits a modest Spanish Colonial-style hacienda that has become the improbable epicenter of a bitter legal battle over heritage, ownership, and the culture of preservation in Los Angeles. Built in 1929, the 2,900-square-foot adobe-style home entered Hollywood lore when Marilyn Monroe bought it in February 1962 — the only residence the actress ever owned — a purchase she financed after her third marriage and where, six months later, she was discovered dead of a barbiturate overdose in her bedroom at age 36. Around the doorstep sits a tile reading “Cursum Perficio” — “The journey ends here” — a poignant message that has become eerily resonant through decades of debate over the house’s fate.

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Where the Stars Served the Soldiers—and What Came After: The Full Story of the Hollywood Canteen

In Hollywood's darkest days--the uncertain, telegram-filled years of World War II when movie scripts were rewritten to suit patriotic needs--there was one Hollywood hot spot where glamour took a back seat to thankfulness. Tucked away on a corner just south of Sunset at 1451 Cahuenga Boulevard, behind an unassuming facade that hinted at nothing grand inside, the Hollywood Canteen swung open its doors and redefined celebrity volunteerism. The Canteen wasn't exactly a nightclub, nor was it the invention of Hollywood studios, although at times it sure acted like one. For three years, from 1942 to 1945, it became a bastion of equality and mutual sacrifice as movie stars waited tables, scrubbed pots and danced with servicemen and women who were about to ship out to fight in World War II.

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Pick Your Poison: Comedy, Horror, Gothic Fantasy, and More at the Movies This Weekend

With awards season still echoing and Valentine’s Day looming, the February 6 weekend brings a refreshingly varied slate of new theatrical releases—ranging from comfort-food romantic comedy and franchise horror to daring arthouse drama and lavish gothic spectacle. Whether you’re looking for escapism, provocation, or old-fashioned big-screen atmosphere, this week’s openings offer plenty of reasons to leave the couch and head back to the movies. Here’s a quick guide to what’s arriving—and which films might best suit your mood.

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Hallelujah! (1929): King Vidor, MGM, and the High-Wire Birth of a Black Talking Picture

In the late summer of 1928, as Hollywood studios raced to wire their stages and retrain their stars for sound, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer authorized a project that ran counter to almost every instinct guiding the industry’s transition to talking pictures. The film was Hallelujah—a rural Southern drama with an all-Black cast, heavy musical content, extensive location shooting, and a director willing to gamble his own salary to get it made. In trade terms alone, it was a high-risk production at the worst possible moment to take one.

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This blog is dedicated to exploring the history, legacy, and continuing evolution of Hollywood—from its silent beginnings to its modern reinventions. Through essays, reviews, obituaries, and historical features, we preserve and examine the stories behind the people, places, and films that shaped the entertainment world. Our goal is to bridge past and present, connecting classic cinema and Hollywood history with contemporary film, television, and culture. Whether uncovering forgotten stars, reviewing new releases, or revisiting the landmarks of old Los Angeles, this space celebrates the art, memory, and mythology that define the film industry.