News

Stars Jennifer Aniston and Will Forte displayed a strong sense of friendship on the carpet. Both largely known for their comedy, the pair tried out a new genre with “Life of Crime.” ...
If you're still smarting from a sharp disappointment from this summer (ahem, “Snowpiercer”), you could do a lot worse than bounce back with a just-good-enough rebound like “Life of Crime ...
It’s a tough life for Jennifer Aniston in her latest movie, Life of Crime. The Emmy-winning actress, 45, stars in the upcoming dark comedy as a jilted wife—a role she has some experience with.
Based on Elmore Leonard’s novel “The Switch,” LIFE OF CRIME is a dark caper comedy starring Jennifer Aniston, John Hawkes, Yasiin Bey, Will Forte, Mark Boone Junior, Isla Fisher and Tim ...
Jennifer Aniston closed out the Toronto International Film Festival with the premiere of her upcoming film Life of Crime on Saturday. The dramedy centers on Ordell Robbie (Def) and Louis Gara ...
Jennifer Aniston joined her Life of Crime co-stars Will Forte and Tim Robbins to premiere their new Elmore Leonard crime comedy at the closing night of the Toronto International Film Festival on ...
The 1978 Elmore Leonard novel, "The Switch," is now a new movie called "Life of Crime." Jennifer Aniston is the leading lady and plays the victim of a kidnapping. Her husband, played by Tim ...
Jennifer Aniston plays a discarded wife in Life of Crime, new adaptation of Elmore Leonard novel REVIEW: Life of Crime may be a low-rent version of American Hustle, but Jennifer Aniston and her co ...
Jennifer Aniston is a kidnapped woman whose husband doesn’t want her back in the first trailer for caper film Life of Crime.
"Life of Crime": Jennifer Aniston stars in a black-comic Labor Day surprise Aniston, John Hawkes and Yasiin Bey enliven this adaptation of Elmore Leonard's '70s crime farce ...
After six years of bringing together the Elmore Leonard novel-turned-indie film, the cast and crew of “Life of Crime” arrived Wednesday night for its West Coast premiere at the ArcLight ...
This Elmore Leonard adaptation is late-summer piffle, but Aniston and a sharp supporting cast make it an exceedingly entertaining one ...