Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. So when tasked with playing Count Alexander Ilyich Rostov in Showtime’s eight-episode adaptation of “A Gentleman in Moscow,” I ...
The Hotel Metropol, wherein Count Alexander Illych Rostov is “exiled” during “A Gentleman in Moscow,” is like a handblown Fabergé snow globe balanced on the mustache of Joseph Stalin. It is a ...
Based on the bestselling novel of the same name by Amor Towles, “A Gentleman in Moscow” follows Rostov through the doors of the Metropol and stays there through decades of Russian history, from the ...
Injecting traces of whimsy into a historical tragedy is a precarious thing. If you do it well, you get Anthony Doerr’s All the Light We Cannot See, but if you do it poorly, you get Netflix’s All the ...
It’s hard to believe, but Ewan McGregor’s breakout role in Trainspotting was 28 years ago. In that time he’s played everyone from a Scottish heroin addict to Obi-Wan Kenobi. He seems to fit well in ...
Spanning decades of Russian history from the confines of a luxury hotel, “A Gentleman in Moscow” provides another strong TV showcase for Ewan McGregor, this time playing opposite his wife, Mary ...
Maggie Lovitt is the Deputy News Editor at Collider. In addition to reporting on the latest entertainment news, she is also an actor and member of the Screen Actors Guild based out of the Mid-Atlantic ...
A four-star hotel isn’t bad as Purgatories go, especially if you’re living there while the country surrounding it is beginning decades of tumult, paranoia, and violence. Adapted by Ben Vanstone, who ...
LOS ANGELES, March 25 (UPI) --A Gentleman in Moscow, premiering Friday on Paramount+ with Showtime, turns Russian history into a juicy TV drama. The adaptation of Amor Towles' novel makes distant ...
“A Gentleman in Moscow” is a unique story of survival, set in a luxurious hotel. Adapted from the 2016 novel of the same name by Amor Towles, the series follows Count Alexander Rostov (Ewan McGregor) ...
Ben Vanstone's adaptation of Amor Towles' beloved novel — about an exiled Russian aristocrat living out his days in a decadent hotel — isn't all that interested in commentary, but finds its way ...
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