Josh Flitter is Ace Ventura: Pet Detective

 Josh Flitter

Last Summer we warned you that Morgan Creek was developing a third Ace Ventura: Pet Detective film. And now moviehole has gotten word on Jim Carrey’s replacement. Drumroll please. The new Ace Ventura is…. Josh Flitter! Wait, who? That was my response. Josh has been a side character in a bunch of recent movies. He was Robin William’s young minister helper in License to Wed. He was Nancy Drew’s young friend Corky. He was also in The Greatest Game Ever Played and Big Momma’s House 2. Not a very good track record. You would probably remember him as the short kinda chubby loudmouth kid.

So you’re probably asking yourself “how could this fat kid replace Jim Carrey?” Well, the new movie is tentatively titled Ace Ventura Jr., and will center on the “eccentric detective’s son, who steps into his father’s shoes to take over the family business.” Sounds like a bad idea to me. David Mickey Evans (The Sandlot, The Final Season) is directing. We’ll try to forget this ever happened.

Lauren Holly Biography

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A ravishingly beautiful, blue-eyed actress who has appeared as both a blonde and a redhead, Lauren Holly made her feature debut (with first husband Danny Quinn) in Paul Michael Glaser’s “Band of the Hand” (1986). Her initial TV appearance that year in an episode of “Spenser: For Hire” (ABC) preceded her tenure as the sweet, virginal Julie Chandler on the ABC soap “All My Children”, for which she earned a Daytime Emmy nomination as Outstanding Ingenue in a Drama Series for the 1987-88 season. Holly had a recurring part on “My Two Dads” (NBC) and then co-starred as a hard-nosed prosecutor in the short-lived “The Antagonists” (CBS, 1991) before striking primetime series pay dirt portraying the sensitive but steely Deputy Maxine ‘Max’ Stewart in the critically acclaimed “Picket Fences” (CBS, 1992-96). At about the same time, she landed her first leading role in a feature opposite Jason Scott Lee in the surprisingly romantic biopic “Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story” (1993), turning in a credible and affecting performance as the tough and resourceful Linda Lee, the Swedish-American wife of the tormented Chinese actor/martial artist.

Not wanting to create a scheduling nightmare for “Picket Fences”, Holly turned down the Courteney Cox role in “Ace Ventura, Pet Detective” (1994), but she did not pass on another chance to work with rising star (and future husband) Jim Carrey, enjoying her biggest hit as the female lead in the aptly titled comedy “Dumb and Dumber” (1994), which also starred Jeff Daniels. In the 1995 remake of “Sabrina”, Holly was the fiancee of playboy Greg Kinnear, with whom she would reteam for the pallid comedy “A Smile Like Yours” (1997). One of Ted Demme’s “Beautiful Girls” in the 1996 drama of that title, she also co-starred that year with fellow TV alumnus Kelsey Grammer in the comedy “Down Periscope”. The roller-coaster ride of Carrey’s celebrity complicated the couple’s lives and led to a divorce, although the two have remained friends and enjoyed an on-again-off-again relationship. Meanwhile, Holly is still looking for that break-out feature hit that will truly establish her as something more than fabulous window-dressing (and Carrey’s ex). Perhaps her best work to date came in Edward Burns’ “No Looking Back” (1998), which enabled her to draw from her experience as a waitress in her hometown and play against her sexy, starlet stereotype.

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Courteney Cox Arquette Biography

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A whisper-thin, raven-haired beauty of TV and film, Courteney Cox first registered with audiences when she was plucked from the crowd by Bruce Springsteen in the Brian De Palma-directed video for The Boss’ hit 1984 single “Dancing in the Dark”. Work for the prestigious Ford Modeling Agency and appearances in Noxzema and Maybelline commercials (among others) and a bit part on the CBS soap “As the World Turns” preceded the video, after which she snagged a regular role in the short-lived primetime series “Misfits of Science” (NBC, 1985-86). Cox then joined the cast of the hit NBC sitcom “Family Ties” for the final two seasons (1987-89) as the brainy girlfriend of Alex P Keaton (Michael J Fox). She made the leap to the big screen, appearing in the little-seen caper film “Down Twisted” and the children’s sci-fi epic “Masters of the Universe” (both 1987), and “Cocoon: The Return” (1988), none of which registered much with critics or audiences.

For the rest of the 80s and into the early 90s, Cox alternated between TV and feature films, often trading on her girl-next-door qualities. While she landed the female lead opposite Jim Carrey in the smash hit “Ace Ventura: Pet Detective” (1994), she was overshadowed by the flashy antics of her co-star. Cox finally achieved small screen stardom as the neurotic aspiring chef Monica Geller, serving as the anchor of the ensemble, in the hit sitcom “Friends” (NBC, 1994-2004)–initially viewed as the star of the show, she easily settled into the emerging ensemble and, after a few seasons of playing Monica relatively straight, she showed her comedic chops as the character’s quirks–such as her hyper-cleanliness–emerged. She displayed her dramatic prowess as a blind rape victim in the made-for-cable movie “Sketch Artist II: Hands that See” (Showtime, 1995) before becoming the first of the “Friends” to score a big screen hit with Wes Craven’s “Scream” (1996). Cast against type as savvy, ambitious TV newscaster Gale Weathers, Cox delivered a strong performance and she reprised the part in the inevitable sequels “Scream 2″ (1997) and “Scream 3″ (2000). Unfortunately, “Commandments” (both 1997), in which she portrayed the unhappy wife of Anthony LaPaglia, embarking on an affair with her brother-in-law (Aidan Quinn), failed to mine the versatility she displayed in the Craven movies. After a string of roles in unimpressive films–”3000 Miles to Graceland,” “The Shrink Is In” and “Get Well Soon” (all 2001), Cox focused primarily on her series and her marriage to her “Scream” co-star David Arquette, whom she married in 1999 (the actress also added the Arquette name to her professional credits). As the final season of “Friends” wound down in 2004, Cox Arquette, had her share of options, motherhood was looming, she’d signed to appear in a slate of feature films, and she ahd her husband had already served as executive producers and design consultants on the home improvement reality series “Mix It Up” (2003-2004) on the cable network WE: Women’s Entertainment, a series that focused on helping couples blend their disparate design senisbilities when they move in together.

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Jim Carrey: Don’t Google My Girlfriend

Jim Carrey: Don't Google My Girlfriend | Jenny McCarthy, Jim Carrey You can ogle Jenny McCarthy – just don’t Google her, says her protective boyfriend, Jim Carrey.

The funnyman, 45, effectively played it for laughs Thursday at a fundraiser, held at a private home in Pacific Palisades, Calif., for a UCLA program specializing in early autism intervention.

McCarthy, 34, is a highly vocal advocate working with her 5-year-old son, Evan, in his struggle with autism.

In his formal remarks at the fundraiser, Dr. David Feinberg, chief executive officer of the UCLA Hospital System, referred to the actress as “my hero” and cited her efforts to raise awareness of the condition.

So impressed was Feinberg with McCarthy’s efforts, he said, that his son used her as a subject for a school paper on heroes. In researching his essay, the youngster was instructed by his father “to Google” McCarthy, whose resumé includes being a Playboy Playmate.

This got a laugh from the audience and a rise out of Carrey – who leapt to his feet, shot an Ace Ventura glower around the room and then fixed his eyes on Feinberg.

“What’s your son doing Googling my girlfriend?” Carrey demanded to know.

In a more serious moment, Carrey – whom McCarthy has described as a remarkably helping hand with her son – was called an “autism healer” by Feinberg. Carrey is also one of the sponsors of the treatment center.

Later, McCarthy spoke at the podium about Carrey’s daughter, Jane, 20. “For so long I have had psychics say they see me with a daughter,” she said. “I now know what they are talking about.”

Jane Carrey then took to the stage with her eponymous new Jane Carrey Band, displaying a soulful voice that caused her father to beam with pride.