So many stars stepped out to attend the launch of Louis Vuitton‘s pop-up store on Wednesday night (January 3) in West Hollywood, Calif.
The shop celebrated the brand’s Men’s Spring-Summer 2024 collection, which is the first designed by new men’s creative director Pharrell Williams.
Barry Keoghan, Dylan Sprouse, Jaden Smith and Deacon Phillippe were just a few of the celebs on the guestlist.
With so many guests in attendance, we decided to pull together all of the photos so that you could get a better sense of who was there and what they were wearing.
Head inside to see all of the celebs on the guestlist…
Keep scrolling to see photos of every star who attended the launch of the Louis Vuitton pop-up shop…
Barry Keoghan
Deacon Phillippe
Drew Starkey
Dylan Sprouse
Jaden Smith
Levi Dylan
Miles Chamley-Watson
Milo Manheim
Barry Keoghan
Steven Yeun
Last summer so many...
The shop celebrated the brand’s Men’s Spring-Summer 2024 collection, which is the first designed by new men’s creative director Pharrell Williams.
Barry Keoghan, Dylan Sprouse, Jaden Smith and Deacon Phillippe were just a few of the celebs on the guestlist.
With so many guests in attendance, we decided to pull together all of the photos so that you could get a better sense of who was there and what they were wearing.
Head inside to see all of the celebs on the guestlist…
Keep scrolling to see photos of every star who attended the launch of the Louis Vuitton pop-up shop…
Barry Keoghan
Deacon Phillippe
Drew Starkey
Dylan Sprouse
Jaden Smith
Levi Dylan
Miles Chamley-Watson
Milo Manheim
Barry Keoghan
Steven Yeun
Last summer so many...
- 1/5/2024
- by Just Jared
- Just Jared
Inside Jaeger-LeCoultre’s Launch of Golden Ratio Musical Show in L.A. With Riley Keough, Tokio Myers
The time has come: Luxury Swiss watchmaker Jaeger-LeCoultre has brought its light and sound extravaganza, The Golden Ratio Musical Show at 1931 Cinema, to Los Angeles.
The inaugural activation, which debuted in Shanghai, posted up at the Westfield Century City on Thursday where it will be through the weekend and open to the public on a schedule that features additional programming designed to expand the cultural conversation around design and watchmaking. The show tells the story of the Golden Ratio, “the unique mathematical formula that defines aesthetic harmony,” per the brand. It’s also a tribute to the the iconic Reverso timepiece, created in 1931.
To bring the show to life, Jaeger-LeCoultre partnered with British musician Tokio Myers, who composed the soundtrack that plays against the backdrop of a digital show projected onto a giant screen of falling water. Thursday’s launch featured a private gala dinner during which Myers performed his symphony “Timeless” accompanied by L.
The inaugural activation, which debuted in Shanghai, posted up at the Westfield Century City on Thursday where it will be through the weekend and open to the public on a schedule that features additional programming designed to expand the cultural conversation around design and watchmaking. The show tells the story of the Golden Ratio, “the unique mathematical formula that defines aesthetic harmony,” per the brand. It’s also a tribute to the the iconic Reverso timepiece, created in 1931.
To bring the show to life, Jaeger-LeCoultre partnered with British musician Tokio Myers, who composed the soundtrack that plays against the backdrop of a digital show projected onto a giant screen of falling water. Thursday’s launch featured a private gala dinner during which Myers performed his symphony “Timeless” accompanied by L.
- 6/24/2023
- by Chris Gardner
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
We're smack dab in the middle of baseball season, but that doesn't mean we can't appreciate a good football movie.
Football has taken a hit in recent years. It's often plagued with news about assaults, drugs, and incessant politics that keep the focus places other than the field and gameplay.
Enter 12 Mighty Orphans, which reminds us how football can be used to unite and raise marginalized kids from obscurity into fine young men.
Family-friendly, inspirational films once proliferated movie theaters, but an obsession with crime and violence have culled dramatic efforts from most venues, but this Ty Roberts-directed film from a script he, Lane Garrison, and Kevin Meyer adapted from Larry Dent's novel bucks the trend.
Luke Wilson stars in 12 Might Orphans as Rusty Russell, a legendary Texas football coach who coached football for the Masonic Home and School orphanage from 1927-1941.
As we battle daily about whether...
Football has taken a hit in recent years. It's often plagued with news about assaults, drugs, and incessant politics that keep the focus places other than the field and gameplay.
Enter 12 Mighty Orphans, which reminds us how football can be used to unite and raise marginalized kids from obscurity into fine young men.
Family-friendly, inspirational films once proliferated movie theaters, but an obsession with crime and violence have culled dramatic efforts from most venues, but this Ty Roberts-directed film from a script he, Lane Garrison, and Kevin Meyer adapted from Larry Dent's novel bucks the trend.
Luke Wilson stars in 12 Might Orphans as Rusty Russell, a legendary Texas football coach who coached football for the Masonic Home and School orphanage from 1927-1941.
As we battle daily about whether...
- 7/18/2021
- by Carissa Pavlica
- TVfanatic
Sports writer Jim Dent had the best of both worlds when deciding to write the book Twelve Mighty Orphans: The Inspiring True Story of the Mighty Mites Who Ruled Texas Football. He had ragtag kids languishing in a Texas orphanage who were able to find the self-respect and courage necessary to overcome stigmas the label “orphan” possessed on and off the field in 1927, as well as a leader in Coach Rusty Russell who would end up revolutionizing football with the advent of the spread offense. That’s feel-good camaraderie and historically relevant biography all wrapped into one to tell an unlikely story that even gets a cameo from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. No surprise that Hollywood would come calling, too.
Ty Roberts’ 12 Mighty Orphans isn’t, however, a Disney property, despite its narrative fitting their catalog of underdog sports dramas. And that’s not necessarily a bad thing when you...
Ty Roberts’ 12 Mighty Orphans isn’t, however, a Disney property, despite its narrative fitting their catalog of underdog sports dramas. And that’s not necessarily a bad thing when you...
- 6/15/2021
- by Jared Mobarak
- The Film Stage
"What if we were all meant to be together?" Paramount has released an official trailer for an inspiring, feel-good drama titled Mighty Oak, the latest from veteran producer / filmmaker Sean McNamara. In the ensuing years from losing her vocalist brother in a tragic car crash, a young guitar prodigy comes into play - which is left up to speculation that he could be a reincarnation of her late brother. The film tells the story of a band manager who encounters a 10-year-old music prodigy named Oak, played by newcomer Tommy Ragen, a real-life prodigy whose music inspired the screenplay. This film also stars Janel Parrish, Carlos PenaVega, Alexa PenaVega, Levi Dylan, Raven-Symoné, Nana Ghana, Rodney Hicks, Gianna Harris, & Ben Milliken. Sorry to say, it looks like made-for-tv extra cute, inspirational junk that some people will love. But there's not much to see here. Here's the official trailer (+ poster) for Sean...
- 6/24/2020
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
What happens when movie theaters have been closed for a pandemic, and studios are skittish about releasing content that might not get seen?
It seems that you get movies that would have otherwise gone direct to video suitable for the whole family(ish) that can play across the nation's few open theater chains and drive-ins.
One such film is Mighty Oak, a flick starring Janel Parrish of Pretty Little Liars fame and a young fellow named Tommy Ragen, a ten-year-old music prodigy and songwriter who can play a mean guitar.
The story of Mighty Oak follows Parrish's character, Gina Jackson aka Jean Jacket, as she works alongside and manages a band -- Army of Love -- fronted by her brother, Vaughn (Levi Dylan) on their quest for fame and fortune.
That rise is hardly meteoric as, on the night of their big break opening for Arcade Fire at the Hollywood Bowl,...
It seems that you get movies that would have otherwise gone direct to video suitable for the whole family(ish) that can play across the nation's few open theater chains and drive-ins.
One such film is Mighty Oak, a flick starring Janel Parrish of Pretty Little Liars fame and a young fellow named Tommy Ragen, a ten-year-old music prodigy and songwriter who can play a mean guitar.
The story of Mighty Oak follows Parrish's character, Gina Jackson aka Jean Jacket, as she works alongside and manages a band -- Army of Love -- fronted by her brother, Vaughn (Levi Dylan) on their quest for fame and fortune.
That rise is hardly meteoric as, on the night of their big break opening for Arcade Fire at the Hollywood Bowl,...
- 6/16/2020
- by Carissa Pavlica
- TVfanatic
Faith — the old-fashioned kind, call it spiritual or religious — is a feeling of earthly but ethereal belief. Yet most of the movies that get lumped into the category known as “faith-based” have a ploddingly literal, you-gotta-see-it-to-believe-it quality. They’re about having faith in something beyond the here and now, yet they tend to hinge on miracles that are as quantifiable and high concept as a secular person’s dogged rationality.
Take, for instance, “Mighty Oak.” It’s one of the first movies to be released in theaters since the onset of the pandemic, and technically speaking it’s not a “faith-based film.” Which is to say:
Yet the movie, which tells the story of a cherubic 10-year-old rock ‘n’ roll prodigy, is all about believing in the mystical phenomenon that is reincarnation. So yes, it’s a faith-based film.
But “Mighty Oak” is a faith-based film that wouldn’t look...
Take, for instance, “Mighty Oak.” It’s one of the first movies to be released in theaters since the onset of the pandemic, and technically speaking it’s not a “faith-based film.” Which is to say:
Yet the movie, which tells the story of a cherubic 10-year-old rock ‘n’ roll prodigy, is all about believing in the mystical phenomenon that is reincarnation. So yes, it’s a faith-based film.
But “Mighty Oak” is a faith-based film that wouldn’t look...
- 6/6/2020
- by Owen Gleiberman
- Variety Film + TV
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