David Alan Basche

  • 21 December 2010

Occupation

Actor

Video - The Cast Of 'Girls' Pose Together At The Season 4 Premiere - Part 2

The cast of 'Girls' led by Lena Dunham posed alongside each other on the proverbial red carpet at the show's fourth season premiere held at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. Among the stars were Allison Williams, Zosia Mamet and Jemima Kirke.

Continue: Video - The Cast Of 'Girls' Pose Together At The Season 4 Premiere - Part 2

David Alan Basche - L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center's 42nd Anniversary Vanguard Awards Gala At Westin Bonaventure Hotel - Los Angeles, California, United States - Saturday 9th November 2013

Video - Annie Leibovitz And Kevin McKidd On The Red Carpet For Macallan NY Launch

Arrivals at the Annie Leibovitz/Macallen event in New York included the portrait photographer herself (Annie) alongside 'Grey's Anatomy' star Kevin McKidd, former WWE wrestler Stacy Keibler, Gym Class Heroes rapper Travie McCoy, 'Mad Men' stars and offscreen couple Vincent Kartheiser and Alexis Bledel, TV and Off Broadway actress Alysia Reiner with her actor husband David Alan Basche and TV pastry chef Johnny Iuzzini.

Continue: Video - Annie Leibovitz And Kevin McKidd On The Red Carpet For Macallan NY Launch

Real Steel Trailer

Charlie Kenton is a former boxer who finds he's given a huge opportunity to make something of his life when he and his estranged son team up to build a robot to fight in a new extreme sport called robot boxing, a hi-tech sport that's become one of the most profitable forms of entertainment in the world.

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War Of The Worlds Review

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Steven Spielberg's huge-budget update of "The Warof the Worlds," H.G. Wells' seminal alien-invasion novel from 1898,is a problematic blockbuster with one essential saving grace: It's profoundlyfrightening in a way that few directors have the talent to capture. I'm not talking about masked-psycho-with-a-chainsaw scary.That's kids' stuff. This is a slow, relentless, meticulous fear. It's thefear of uncertainty, the fear of grand-scale devastation that humanityis powerless to stop. It's a fear that fills the air like a storm and creepsup your spine in a way that's hard to shake. It is a fear not unlike whatevery American felt on September 11, 2001 -- but divorced from fact andrealigned as entertainment through the subconsciously reassuring comfortof a movie theater seat and a tub of popcorn.

It's visceral, it's psychological, and it comes more fromthe terrified performances of Tom Cruise and the remarkable Dakota Fanning(the angelic 10-year-old from "Hide& Seek" and "Manon Fire") -- as a dock-worker deadbeatdad and his daughter on the run from 100-foot alien killing machines --than from the film's hyper-realistic special effects and monsters (whicharen't that different from the ones in the shamelessly corny "Warof the Worlds" rip-off "Independence Day").

The film is worth seeing just to experience this fear,which is a testament to the power of cinema.

Continue reading: War Of The Worlds Review