Click Wallpapers
Click Wallpapers for your desktop, free to download
Click Wallpapers for your desktop, free to download
In Columbia Pictures/Revolution Studios' comedy "Click," Adam Sandler portrays Michael Newman, a family man whose busy career as an architect doesn't leave much time for his wife, Donna (Kate Beckinsale), and two kids. Unable to figure out which of his many remotes turns on the television, he goes shopping for a universal remote and finds the perfect device through Morty (Christopher Walken), who gives him a one-of-a-kind remote with magical powers. With each click, Michael is able to control his career and personal life. But complications arise when the remote starts to overrule his choices.
"Click" also stars David Hasselhoff as Michael's boss, Henry Winkler and Julie Kavner as his parents and Sean Astin.

NEW YORK -- Talking with commissioner Roger Goodell, while he was getting his makeup wiped off in our NBC Football Night in America studio Sunday night after his Eagles-Bears halftime appearance ...

The 40th International Film Festival of India opens Monday in Goa with Chinese historical epic “Wheat” by director He Ping and closes December 3 with Pedro Almodovar's dark love story “Broken Embraces."

The board of the International Academy of Television Arts & Sciences has re-elected president & CEO Bruce Paisner for a fourth term, starting Jan. 1.

Berlin-based Senator Entertainment is changing its mother tongue, announcing plans Monday to open a Cologne-based operation to produce English-language features.


Warner Bros. Pictures India announced its next Bollywood project, “Athithi Tum Kab Jaoge?” ("Guest, When Will You Leave?"), a comedy caper co-produced with Wide Frame Films and slated for release on February 26, 2010.

Concerns about the mechanics of producer offset tax incentive system were tempered by inspirational insights from Mad Men creator Matt Weiner and some solid results from local films this year, expressed at the annual Screen Producers Association of Australia confab which closed here Friday. 


What would happen if solar panels were free? What if it were possible to know everything about the world--not the Internet, but the living, physical world--in real time? What if doctors could forecast a disease years before it strikes? This is the promise of the World Changing Idea: a vision so simple yet so ambitious that its full impact is impossible to predict. Scientific American’s editorial and advisory boards have chosen projects in five general categories--Energy, Transportation, Environment, Electronics and Robotics, and Health and Medicine--that highlight the power of science and technology to improve the world. Some are in use now; others are emerging from the lab. But all of them show that innovation is the most promising elixir for what ails us. --The Editors The No-Money-Down Solar Plan

Oscilloscope is pulling a Columbia House. The quirky indie film label founded by Beastie Boy Adam Yauch and ThinkFilm veteran David Fenkel is starting a direct-mail DVD club.

Sir Ben Kingsley's SBK Pictures has announced its historical epic “Taj” will begin filming in mid to late 2010, with Kingsley in the lead role as Mughal emperor Shah Jahan.

LOS ANGELES(AP) More than two decades ago, after Larry Bird made a shot from behind the backboard that didn't count in a preseason game, the NBA changed the rule on plays like that. Kobe Bryant was glad they did.