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TIME's interview with the actor and comedian continues on Time.com. Read these extra questions with Chevy Chase...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: More Questions with Chevy Chase | 4/16/2007 | See Source »

...time when grindhouses served as the unofficial outposts for a select set of disgruntled adolescents ill-served by the Hollywood studio system and looking for an alternative. An alternative which they found in low budget flicks that spanned several genres—kung fu, horror, and car-chase, being just a few—which were played incessantly at the grungiest of local theaters.The plot of “Planet Terror” involves zombie-producing toxic gas (just go with it) released by renegade military gang led by a gun-totting Bruce Willis, a knife wielding hero...

Author: By Aleksandra S Stankovic, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Grindhouse | 4/13/2007 | See Source »

...talk show [The Chevy Chase Show] that I went to Fox with was an entirely different concept than what was pushed on me. I would never do it again. What I wanted had a whole different feel to it, much darker and more improv. But we never got there...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 10 Questions for Chevy Chase | 4/11/2007 | See Source »

...Your reward for sitting through the logorrheic stretches of the movie is, first, a car crash - which, in the manner of Hong Kong action films, is shown as an instant replay, from four views - and then a long car chase. Here's the set-up: On a film shoot in Tennessee, a stuntwoman (played by Zoe Bell, who was Uma Thurman's double on Kill Bill) hears that 1970 Dodge Challenger, just like the one in Vanishing Point, is for sale. She and her girlfriends visit the peckerwood who has the car, and three of them take...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Grindhouse Is Girls, Guns, Cars — But No Sex | 4/6/2007 | See Source »

...anyone who’s loved, lost, stalked an ex, or made a lasting connection, and for the voyeur in all of us,” there’s no need to wait for someone else to immortalize you in a novel. Why not just cut to chase and memoirize your own “necessary” sins? —Reviewer Alison S. Cohn can be reached at acohn@fas.harvard.edu...

Author: By Alison S. Cohn, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Is This Really ‘Necessary’? | 4/6/2007 | See Source »

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