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Filmmakers Colin Hanks and Ryan Reynolds, plus John Candy's children, explore the life of the Canadian comedy icon in new documentary "I Like Me."
More or less a standard-issue celebrity documentary, the movie lets us enjoy archival footage that might otherwise not be seen.
John Candy was one of the most beloved comedic actors of his time, with starring roles in Planes, Trains and Automobiles and Uncle Buck. His life and work are celebrated in a new Amazon Prime documentary by Colin Hanks,
John Candy, one of the great comedic talents of my youth, is finally getting his due with the new Prime Video documentary “John Candy: I Like Me.” Producer Ryan Reynolds and director Colin Hanks have created a film where those who loved Candy and those who worked with him profess their love and admiration for the late actor.
The beloved actor, who would have turned 75 this month, is the focus of an eponymous book biography and "John Candy: I Like Me," a Prime Video documentary.
John Gurdon, considered the godfather of cloning and who shared the Nobel Prize in physiology and medicine in 2012, has died at the age of 92.
The chances of Trump winning the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize have surged after Israel and Hamas agreed to a Gaza peace plan.
Democrats have demanded Thune agree to extend Affordable Care Act health insurance subsidies that are set to expire at the end of the year in exchange for their votes. Thune made clear before the shutdown began that he was willing to discuss extending the subsidies, but not as part of government funding talks.
Sen. John Fetterman congratulated President Donald Trump on the Israel-Hamas peace plan noting that he and Trump share an "ironclad commitment to Israel and its people."
His work in the manipulation of cells laid the foundation for stem cell biology and regenerative medicine and led to the first cloned large mammal, a sheep named Dolly.
I Like Me” opened the 50th Toronto International Film Festival this year. I attended the sold out screening and, while I was moved by the end of Colin Hanks’ documentary, I admitted in my TIFF dispatch that I was on the fence about it.