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Tom Hanks, Rita Wilson celebrate 35 years of marital bliss

Tom Hanks, Rita Wilson celebrate 35 years of marital bliss(Photo Credit –Instagram) While many people advise against sharing the journey with Hollywood star Tom Hanks given all his travel films have him at the receiving end of problems, his wife Rita Wilson would disagree. The two recently celebrated a huge anniversary marking 35 years together since they tied the knot. The famous couple, both 66, took to social media to share a sweet snap of them together to mark the occasion, reports Mirror.co.uk’. Tom and Rita…

Punisher #10 Preview: Marital Bliss

Can Frank Castle put punishment behind him, leave the hand, and live a normal life with his undead wife in this preview of Punisher #10?Published Sat, 18 Mar 2023 07:56:10 -0500 by Jude Terror | Welcome to our preview of the upcoming issue of Punisher #10! Can Frank Castle put punishment behind him, leave the hand, and live a normal life with his undead wife in this preview? I'm joined by Bleeding Cool's AI writing assistant, LOLtron, to give us its thoughts on the preview. Now, LOLtron, I'm warning you, no trying to take…

Fleishman Is in Trouble by Taffy Brodesser-Akner audiobook review – sex, selfies and marital meltdown | Books

Toby Fleishman is a newly divorced doctor and father of two alone and adrift in New York after 14 years of marriage. A bundle of anxiety and neuroses, he wakes up every morning in a place that isn’t the family home and thinks: “Something is wrong. There is trouble. I am in trouble.” He is overwhelmed by the possibilities of online dating, where, for the first time in his life, women can’t get enough of him and deluge him with semi-naked selfies: “All this new opportunity! There weren’t enough hours in the day!” But his…

Bergman Island review – marital woes show up on a trip to Ingmar Bergman territory | Film

Here is an elegant and ruminative dual narrative from Mia Hansen-Løve, a parallel romance concerning monogamy and its discontents. It’s set on the Swedish island of Fårø, home to Ingmar Bergman and the location of many of his films, his house and properties there being preserved as a festival and study centre site. It’s intriguingly autobiographical and the Bergman-adjacent discussion and ambience creates something instantly serious, although the effect is also sometimes self-conscious and desiccated. Perhaps in order to…