There’s a darkness to the story of the late Canadian actor and comedian John Candy that this documentary teases but never quite shines a light on.
Bill Murray once quipped that we don’t cherish artists until they’re gone. With Keaton’s death, the line lands differently — ...
Before shooting Splash ’s infamous racquetball scene, Hanks says he loved improvising with Candy because it felt “additive and inclusive” to his own acting chops. But on that particular day, the Uncle ...
“That’s the problem when you talk about John: People don’t really have a lot of negative things to say about him,” Bill Murray says in the opening scene of “John Candy: I Like Me,” the new documentary ...
John Candy believed he was living "on borrowed time." On March 4, 1994, the comedic star was found dead of a heart attack while filming "Wagons East!" in Durango, Mexico. He was 43. The late actor is ...
The Canadian Press on MSN
Ryan Reynolds, Colin Hanks say their John Candy doc offers lesson in grief
The Prime Video project includes interviews with many of Candy’s famous friends, including Bill Murray, Catherine O’Hara, Tom Hanks, Dan Aykroyd, Martin Short, Macaulay Culkin and Eugene Levy, who ...
The discovery that the German Egyptologist believed was exceptional beyond words was the iconic limestone and stucco bust of ...
The entertainers featured in the documentary include Steve Martin, Macaulay Culkin, Bill Murray — and many of ... he was," remembered Culkin. Colin Hanks got the same impression when he was a child.
Bill Murray, Catherine O’Hara and other stars line up to praise the man they say was as big-hearted as he was funny.
The actor found magic in his new portrait of the late comedian who starred in ‘Uncle Buck,’ ‘Splash,’ and ‘Planes, Trains and ...
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