Top 10 movies based on TV shows

serenityJoBlo, a website that respects Fight Club as much as I do, has a great list of the Top 10 movies based on television shows. For the most part, I agree with it. Except there is one major oversight: What about The Muppets? The Muppet Movie didn’t make the list and, quite frankly, I’m baffled. I think it should totally replace The Naked Gun, which weighs in at #4. What-ever. The rest of the list looks good, however. It includes everything from last year’s Serenity to Wayne’s World to The Untouchables.

I’m going to list his Top 10 after the jump, but I highly recommend you go on over and read it and then come back and tell me if you think they forgot something. If you say Dukes of Hazzard or Starsky & Hutch… so help me… I’ll reach through your computer and slap you!

10. Serenity (Firefly)
9. Twilight Zone: The Movie
8. Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan
7. Wayne’s World
6. South Park: Bigger, Longer, & Uncut
5. Mission: Impossible
4. The Naked Gun (Police Squad)
3. The Blues Brothers
2. The Fugitive
1. The Untouchables

Casting Star Trek: Jennifer Morrison and Chris Hemsworth

Jennifer Morrison as Dr. Carol Marcus

Last night we posted a huge Star Trek casting news update (if you haven’t read it, check that out first). A spy image outside the set of JJ Abrams’ Star Trek revealed a woman who looked a lot like House star Jennifer Morrison. Many speculated that Morrison is playing Janice Rand in the film, but we’ve been waiting for a confirmation. IESB just got word from Morrison’s management that she has been cast in the film, but Robert Sanchez now believes that Morrison is playing the role of Dr. Carol Marcus, a young civilian biologist and the future mother of Kirk’s son. Apparently that character is featured in the script.

Chris HemsworthDr. Carol Marcus was one of the leading molecular biologists in the Federation. After giving birth to Kirk’s son, the couple split up because she felt that they had no basis for a lasting relationship, with Kirk traveling around the universe while she worked in a lab. Portrayed by Bibi Besch, the character played a major role in the film Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.

IESB is also reporting that young Australian actor Chris Hemsworth has been cast as Kirk’s father, George Samuel Kirk Sr. According to the Star Trek novels, George Samuel was a Commander on the Enterprise twenty-five years before Kirk assumed command. George Samuel Kirk, Sr. died under mysterious circumstances in 2248.

Kirstie Alley Biography

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Sultry and deep voiced, with a wealth of wavy dark hair, Alley has made a name for herself as both a wacky comic and an impressive dramatic actor primarily on the small screen. First known as the beautiful Vulcan Lt. Saavik in “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan” (1982), Alley struggled through a series of unrewarding roles in the early 1980s. In features, she followed “Star Trek” (she lost the role of Saavik in the third feature after reportedly asking for a salary on par with original franchise stars William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy) with “Champions” (1983), “Blind Date” and “Runaway” (both 1984) and the teen comedy “Summer School” (1987). On TV, she played a trucker in the NBC pilot “Highway Honeys” (1983), a spy in the short-lived “Masquerade” (ABC, 1983) and turned up in such TV-movies as “Prince of Bel-Air” (ABC, 1985) and “Infidelity” (ABC, 1987).

None of these projects knew how to use Alley’s quirky gifts, though she gained a bit of prestige as Gloria Steinem in “A Bunny’s Tale” (ABC, 1985) and in the successful miniseries “North and South” (ABC, 1985) and its 1986 sequel. Her big break came when she became the female lead (after Shelley Long departed) in the long-running hit NBC sitcom “Cheers” in 1987. Alley was cast as neurotic overachiever Rebecca Howe, who despite an attraction to bar owner Sam Malone (Ted Danson), tended to become involved with wealthy powerful men who might improve her status in life. Her small screen success led to movie stardom as a flustered single mom in the surprise 1989 hit, “Look Who’s Talking” and its the less successful sequels “Look Who’s Talking Too” (1990) and “Look Who’s Talking Now” (1993).

Projecting intelligence, vulnerability, and a Lucille Ball-like comedic talent, Alley has carved a niche in TV and films. She finally gained respect as a dramatic actress with her brilliant Emmy-winning performance as “David’s Mother” (CBS, 1994), a slovenly woman raising a mentally-challenged son. Besides appearing on numerous awards and tribute specials, Alley was a voice-over on “Peter and the Wolf” (ABC, 1995), and played another put-upon mother in “Radiant City” (ABC, 1996). She made her bow as executive producer with the ABC drama “Suddenly” (1996), in which she also starred.

Alley’s film career has been rockier. While filming “Cheers”, she moonlighted in such poorly-received features as “Loverboy” (1989), “Madhouse” and “Sibling Rivalry” (both 1990). After the sitcom ended in 1993, Alley returned to features in John Carpenter’s unnecessary remake of “Village of the Damned” (1994) and co-starred with Steve Guttenberg and the Olsen twins in the romantic comedy “It Takes Two” (1995). She has continued to appear in a variety of projects ranging from the revisionist Western “Nevada”, about a town seemingly populated only by women, to Woody Allen’s “Deconstructing Harry” (both 1997), as the title character’s ex-wife. That same year, she co-starred with Tim Allen as a married couple on the run from the IRS who hide out among the Amish in “For Richer or Poorer”. She rounded out the year by returning to series TV as the star of the NBC sitcom “Veronica’s Closet”, a less than stellar effort that nevertheless managed to run for three years. Alley continued to appear in the occasional feature, such as playing a controlling mother of an aspiring beauty queen in the pageant comedy “Drop Dead Gorgeous” (1999) and frequently headlined high profile telepics and miniseries including “The Last Don” (1998), the Marilyn Monroe mini “Blonde” (2001), “Salem Witch Trials” (2002) and the particularly well-acted “Profoundly Normal” (2003), opposite Delroy Lindo, about the true-life romance between a mentally challenged couple.

The actress also remained in the public eye as the pitchwoman in a series of commercials for the home furnishing company Pier 1 from 2001-2003, although media attention began to focus on how the former sex symbol’s once jaw-dropping figure had begun to expand in middle age–she later revealed she weighed as much as 219 lbs. Always an outspoken actress with a button-pushing sense of humor, Alley played off the tabloid obsession with her weight by agreeing to star in the Showtime series “Fat Actress” (2005 - ), playing a comedic interpretation of herself as a once-successful actress struggling in Hollywood after packing on extra pounds. As a result, Alley–who revealed that her weight was strictly moniored during her sit-com days, and brashly confronted talk show host Jay Leno for his fat jokes at her expense–also became a spokeswoman for the weight loss system Jenny Craig and began dramatically shedding her excess weight.

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