clive owen
Clive Owen Joins Sci-Fi Film 'Anon' From 'Gattaca' Director
Owen will star in the Andrew Niccol film as a detective in a future where privacy is nonexistent.
Clive Owen Feels Better Than Ever in 'The Knick' Season 2 Trailer
Clive Owen returns as Dr. John Thackery in the second season of Steven Soderbergh's period drama.
Clive Owen Joins "Valerian" Alongside Dane DeHaan, Cara Delevingne
The "Sin City" star will play Commander Arün Filitt in Luc Besson's adaptation of Pierre Christin and Jean-Claude Mezières' comic series "Valerian."
'Last Knights' Trailer Sees the Light of Day
Clive Owen and Morgan Freeman go to war in the first trailer for Kazuaki Kiriya's Last Knights.
Watch Steven Soderbergh's 'The Knick' Pilot Online
Cinemax has released the first episode of its period medical drama online.
Steven Sorderbergh's 'The Knick' Recruits Four Actors
Andre Holland, Juliet Rylance, Eve Hewson and Michael Angarano join Clive Owen in Steven Soderbergh's upcoming Cinemax series The Knick.
Steven Soderbergh in Talks to Direct Cinemax's The Knick
Steven Soderbergh is in negotiations with Cinemax to direct and produce The Knick, a New York City-based period drama starring Clive Owen.

Josh Brolin Replaces Clive Owen for "Sin City" Sequel
"Men in Black 3" actor Josh Brolin has been cast in "Sin City: A Dame to Kill For" as Dwight, a role previously portrayed by Clive Owen in 2005's "Sin City."
Sin City: A Dame to Kill For Starts Shooting in November
Rosario Dawson teases that Sin City: A Dame to Kill For, the sequel to Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller's 2005 film, will finally begin shooting in November -- possibly with some changes to the source material.
Exclusive First Look at Intruders Comic Poster By Jacen Burrows
SPINOFF has been provided with the exclusive first look at Jacen Burrows' comic poster for Intruders, the thriller from 28 Days Later director Juan Carlos Fresnadillo.

Monahan to Renovate "Sin City 2"
Screenwriter William Monahan will write a new draft of the "Sin City" sequel. The writer has plenty of experience adapting work like "The Departed" into films, but can he adapt Miller's distinctive style?