Joe Mantegna

  • 18 February 2005

Occupation

Actor

Joe Mantegna, A.J. Cook and Shemar Moore - CW, CBS and Showtime's 2013 Summer TCA Party - Arrivals - Los Angeles, California, United States - Monday 29th July 2013

Paul Reiser, Joe Mantegna, Ed Begley and Jr - The late Peter Falk is honoured with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame - Hollywood, California, United States - Thursday 25th July 2013

Kirsten Vangsness, A.J. Cook, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Joe Mantegna, Matthew Gray Gubler and Beverly Hilton Hotel - Kirsten Vangsness, Matthew Gray Gubler, Joe Mantegna, Jeanne Tripplehorn, A. J. Cook Sunday 29th July 2012 CBS Showtime's CW Summer 2012 Press Tour at the Beverly Hilton Hotel - Arrivals

Shemar Moore, A.J. Cook, Joe Mantegna, Kirsten Vangsness and Rachel Nichols - Shemar Moore, Kirsten Vangsness, Joe Mantegna, A.J. Cook and Rachel Nichols Friday 29th April 2011 at Star On The Hollywood Walk Of Fame Los Angeles, California

Cars 2 Trailer

Lightning McQueen knows he's the best and fastest race car in the world and when he hears about the first-ever World Grand Prix he decides he must enter. Along with his best friend Mater the tow truck they start their journey overseas.

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Cougar Club Review

By Christopher Null

Weak

What movie do Faye Dunaway, Carrie Fisher, and Joe Mantegna have in common? That's right: Cougar Club!

Yes, the "MILF" craze has gotten so popular that even big stars (or at least people that used to be big stars) will show up for a MILF-oriented sex comedy.

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Persons Unknown Review

By Christopher Null

Weak

While I futilely try to figure out the ending of Persons Unknown means, I'm left to wonder why this film saw no real theatrical release, and why it took 11 years to make it to DVD. Maybe the fact that it's fairly ludicrous or nonsensical? The circuitous plot gives us a kind of cool beginning, with a security pro (Joe Mantegna) being hustled by a girl (Kelly Lynch) who's heading up a big heist. Eventually he tracks her down, figures out what's going on, runs off with their loot, and watches bodies pile up in the mountains. The last half of the film is alternately filled with typical shoot 'em up/run 'em down scenes and kind of silly plot twists. The top shelf cast is uniformly wasted, including Naomi Watts in an early role.

Liberty Heights Review

By Rob Blackwelder

OK

A comical and retrospective memoir of segregation and discrimination in America's golden age of denial, "Liberty Heights" is director Barry Levinson's fourth movie built around his memories of Baltimore in the 1950s and '60s.

Told from the perspective of Ben Kurtzman (Ben Foster), the younger of two brothers living in an almost exclusively Jewish enclave of the city, the foundation for Levinson's story is the brothers' experimentation with the era's cultural polarization.

Ben's school has just been desegregated and he befriends a pretty new black student named Sylvia (Rebekah Johnson), something that doesn't sit well with either kid's folks.

Continue reading: Liberty Heights Review