Ad
related to: movie about prince and hairdresser
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Royal Treatment is a 2022 American romance film directed by Rick Jacobson and written by Holly Hester. It stars Laura Marano as Manhattan hairdresser Izzy, who is given an opportunity to work at the wedding of Prince Thomas, played by Mena Massoud.
We’ve come a long way in terms of fairy tales centered on a handsome prince from a far-off land rescuing a beautiful, distressed damsel from a life of destitution. It’s widely welcomed that ...
The Hairdresser's Husband (French: Le Mari de la coiffeuse), a 1990 French comedy-drama film written by Patrice Leconte and Claude Klotz, and directed by Leconte. Jean Rochefort stars as the title character. The film received the Prix Louis Delluc. In 1991 it was nominated for "Best Foreign-Language Film" in the British Academy Film Awards.
[9] Bob Colacello of Interview said that Shampoo is "the best movie to come out of New Hollywood yet." [5] Commercially, Shampoo was a great success. Produced on a budget of $4 million, [2] the film grossed $49,407,734 domestically [10] and $60 million at the worldwide box office. [3]
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street is a 2007 gothic musical slasher film [7] directed by Tim Burton from a screenplay by John Logan, based on the stage musical of the same name by Stephen Sondheim and Hugh Wheeler, which in turn is based on the 1970 play Sweeney Todd by Christopher Bond.
Charles and Diana: Unhappily Ever After is a dramatic television movie of 1992 telling the real-life story of the failed marriage of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales.
Blow Dry is a 2001 American-British-German romantic comedy film directed by Paddy Breathnach and based on the screenplay Never Better by Simon Beaufoy. [1] [2] [3] The film stars Alan Rickman, Natasha Richardson, Rachel Griffiths, Rachael Leigh Cook, Josh Hartnett, Bill Nighy, Rosemary Harris, and Heidi Klum.
The film was met with critical acclaim and was a financial success, breaking the record for the highest-grossing opening weekend for a movie musical, [5] which the film held until July 2008 when it was surpassed by Mamma Mia!