| 5 Great Things For This Weekend |  | | 1.The Crying Game Grab your tissue box and click through EW's gallery of the movie scenes you told us leave you blubbering every time, from Steel Magnolias to Old Yeller to Dumbo | | - 'Pad' Crash Jake Pavelka and Vienna Girardi will be sharing the Bachelor Pad starting Monday. Awkward! Click to see the EW exclusive clip of their first moments in the same space since their cringe-inducing post-break-up interview on The Bachelor!
- Help! Get your first look at this week's EW cover featuring the stars of The Help, in theaters Aug. 10; preview the cover story, including candid interviews with stars Viola Davis and Octavia Spencer
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The Voice American Idol fave Adam Lambert has never shied from controversy, and Sunday’s premiere of Behind the Music: Adam Lambert is no exception – see an EW exclusive clip -
Oh, Henry Man of Steel director Zack Snyder's Superman reboot, won’t reach theaters until 2013, but you can see the first photo of star Henry Cavill donning the iconic cape and emblem now! | | |  | | Falling Skies 9-11PM TNT, SEASON FINALE Summer's white-knuckle pleasure, about survivors of an apocalyptic alien invasion, ends its first season with a rebel yell: Pill-popping Weaver (Will Patton) assaults Boston's towering alien base, while Tom (Noah Wyle) prepares for the evil ETs' final strike. Sure, the story's assembled from used parts — Lost and Battlestar Galactica, especially — but it's by no means rusty. Better yet, the finale bears the unmistakable mark of exec producer Steven Spielberg, right down to a mother (ship) of a cliff-hanger that plays like a dark, mirror-universe version of Close Encounters of the Third Kind. A- —Christian Blauvelt More Tonight's Best TV | | | | IN THEATERS THIS WEEKEND |  | Rise of the Planet of the Apes The biggest disappointment of the halfhearted, digitally impersonal Rise of the Planet of the Apes, apart from how just-okay it is in almost every way, is that the grandeur from previous Apes films is gone B- Full review | The Change-Up Bateman, in particular, is enjoyably nimble and unbuttoned when he sheds his usual persona of responsible-and-exasperated guy and lets some devil out C Full review | | The Future What begins as a floppy little drama about a couple of limp-flower thirtysomethings ends in a deep and extraordinary demonstration of how the world spins forward, whether we're ready or not A- Full review | ADVERTISEMENT  |  | | |
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