Wiki News/New this week: 'iCarly: The Movie', 'Cats & Dogs: Revenge of the Kitty Galore', 'Dinner for Schmucks'

"iCarly: The Movie" Carly Shay (Miranda Cosgrove) and her brother (Jerry Tranior) and two best friends (Jennette McCurdy and Nathan Kress) and the rest (Mary Scheer, Noah Munck and Aria Wallace) goes on their vacation to Los Angeles where iCarly may officially come to an end. Rated G for all ages admitted.

• Miranda Cosgrove is here to have some fun and take us on an enjoyable vacation to Los Vegas.

"Cats and Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore": The ongoing war between the canine and feline species is put on hold when they join forces to thwart a rogue cat spy with her own sinister plans for conquest. Lending their voice talent are Bette Midler, Nick Nolte, Christina Applegate, Neil Patrick Harris and Sean Hayes. Rated PG for animal action and humor. Midnight screenings tonight; review

• RELATED STORY: Cats, dogs score some laughs in Bond-inspired 'Kitty Galore'

"Charlie St. Cloud": A young man overcome by grief at the death of his younger brother takes a job as caretaker of the cemetery where he's buried. He's able to actually see his brother, talk to him and play catch with him -- until a girl comes into his life. With Zac Efron, Amanda Crew, Ray Liotta and Kim Basinger. Rated PG-13 for language, sexual references, sensuality and an accident scene. Midnight screenings tonight; review today at freep.com.

• RELATED STORY: Efron tries to grow up in sentimental 'Charlie St. Cloud'

"Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky": A closer look at the little-known and short-lived affair between the celebrated designer and Russian-born composer in 1920 Paris. Rated R for strong sexuality and nudity. In French with English subtitles.

"Countdown to Zero": Documentary from filmmaker Lucy Walker ("The Devil's Playground," "Blindsight") traces the history of the atomic bomb and makes a case for nuclear disarmament. Rated PG for mature content and images of destruction.

"Dinner for Schmucks": A rising executive (Paul Rudd) invites IRS employee Barry (Steve Carell) to a monthly event thrown by his boss. It's a so-called dinner for idiots that offers certain advantages to the exec who shows up with the biggest buffoon. Rated PG-13 for crude content, partial nudity and language.

RELATED:

• Review: Steve Carell makes 'Dinner For Schmucks' tastier than it ought to be • Story: Steve Carell brings heart to his quirky role in 'Dinner For Schmucks.'