Quantcast
Channel: Oh No They Didn't!
Viewing all 143284 articles
Browse latest View live

Playing It Cool Official Trailer

$
0
0


It seems today is the day when trailers for movies shot in 2012 and have been sitting on a shelf are finally arriving. In case you missed it, the first trailer for Susanne Bier's "Serena," starring Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper, just dropped, and now comes the debut promo clip for "Playing It Cool" (which is either the international or new title as it was previously called "A Many Splintered Thing") and we're curious why this film has been collecting dust.

Starring a pretty good (on paper at least) ensemble including Chris Evans, Michelle Monaghan, Aubrey Plaza, Anthony Mackie, Topher Grace, Luke Wilson, Philip Baker Hall, Giovanni Ribisi and Martin Starr, the sorta-meta Justin Reardon directed movie follows a screenwriter who wants to write an action film but is pushed by his agent to do a rom-com instead. The twist? He doesn't believe in love. Ruh-roh!

Frankly, it looks like any number of standard, forgettable rom-coms and not something so dreadful that it needs to be hidden away. And yet, at this point, the movie is still without a U.S. release date or distributor. So check out the trailer. Maybe 2015 will see this thing finally drop?

source

Watch George Clooney Declare His Love for Fiancée Amal Alamuddin

$
0
0
On Sunday, at a dinner in Tuscany, Clooney was given a Humanitarian Award and fêted as guest of honor by Celebrity Fight Night. He brought along Alamuddin, for their first joint red-carpet appearance, and, in his acceptance speech, he revealed that the duo would be getting married “in a couple of weeks” in Venice.

And now we have been gifted with video footage (!!) of Clooney’s speech at the event



source
source

'Sordid Lives' sequel 'A Very Sordid Wedding' in works

$
0
0
It's official. There's a script for a "Sordid Lives" sequel.

Actors Newell and Rosemary Alexander, who appeared in the 2001 film (as Wardell and Dr. Eve, respectively) and other Del Shores productions, say much of the original cast will return for "A Very Sordid Wedding."

As the title hints, at least one character intends to tie the knot. Palm Springs fans who helped boost "Sordid Lives" to cult status may wonder which beloved character will walk down the aisle, but the Alexanders are mum on that point.

"I can't say whose wedding," Rosemary Alexander says.

When asked if Ty, the son who came out as gay in the first film, is the lucky groom, she smiles sheepishly and replies, "That's one idea, but I can't say whose wedding."

Shores, who plans to shoot and release the film in 2015, confirms that the betrothed's identity is a "big secret."

The original movie tells the story of a Texas family coming together in the aftermath of the matriarch's death, and starred Olivia Newton-John, Beau Bridges, Beth Grant, Delta Burke, and Leslie Jordan.

The film spawned the television adaptation in 2008 only lasting one season. It was Rue McClanahan's final acting role.



Source

The Knick: 1x05 promo pics + Interview with Cara Seymour

$
0
0






:(((((




Flying nuns, crime-busting nuns, nuns serving as midwives - TV nuns have come a long way over the years on the small screen, and Sister Harriet on The Knick is no exception. An Irish Catholic nun living in New York City at the turn of the 20th century, she runs the orphanage affiliated with the Knickerbocker Hospital or “The Knick,” a medical institution where doctors push the boundaries of their profession in order to save lives. Like today, a persons’ wealth - or lack of it - often determined their lot in life, but illness and death did not discriminate when it came to bank balances.

“I’ll never forget my first day of work on The Knick,” says Seymour. “We took over a corner of Bedford-Stuyvesant in Brooklyn for filming and it was just so magical because they [the crew] made it look like it was 1900. It was a very hot day, there was dust on the road — it’s just incredibly intense when you historicize a neighborhood because it feels a little bit spooky, especially when the location still retains much of its original architecture, both exteriors and interiors. You really feel like you’ve gone back in time. I remember poking my head out of my trailer at one point that day and seeing Juliet Rylance [Cornelia Robertson] and Eve Hewson [Lucy Elkins] walking down the street wearing their Edwardian costumes. The sun was setting and that [visual] silhouette was beautiful.

“All the scenes were jumbled up, so we didn’t film episode after episode in order. We shot in relation to when each location was available, so we might shoot scenes from episodes one, four and six all at once in a single location. On one occasion we were filming at a church in Yonkers, which was cool. However, because of the type of shooting schedule we were working to, you really had to be on your toes and read the scripts carefully so you knew what you were doing and where your character was in the story.”

Besides her religious duties, Sister Harriet also works closely with the head of The Knick’s social welfare office, Cornelia Robertson, when it comes to trying to find suitable homes for the orphans in their care. It is a job not without its daily stresses, which is probably why the sister smokes. More likely, though, her nicotine habit is fueled by the fact that Sister Harriet performs secret as well as illegal abortions for women desperately in need of such services. She has not taken on such a task lightly. In fact, the nun donates all the money she makes to the orphanage, but when one of The Knick’s ambulance drivers, Tom Cleary, discovers her “side job,” he wants a 60/40 split of the money, in his favor. The web that Sister Harriet weaves is, indeed, a very tangled albeit well-meaning one, which is precisely what Seymour loves about her character.

“When I read the first few scenes involving Sister Harriet, they leapt off the page for me,” notes the actress. “I’d never felt the spirit of a character as much as I did in just those few scenes. The writers have done an extraordinary job of creating such an unusual character. It was as if I were ‘meeting’ a real person as I read each script, do you know what I mean? It’s so exciting to read about a character that doesn’t follow straight lines and has complexity and humor.

“Sister Harriet is just a very passionate woman who’s driven by her heart, and yet on the surface, she has some spikes. I got the sense that she’s someone who has lived a bit. There was a great deal of story to come out of her, and I guess for me, the acting challenge was to take what came off the page and meet that or match that energy. I respected her, and that’s daunting when you respect a character so much. You don’t want to romanticize them, but rather respect them while still being honest in your performance.

“One of the ways in which Sister Harriet grows as a character is in her relationship with Chris Sullivan’s character of Tom Cleary, and I think their relationship is what helps drive our familiarity with these characters. As season one of The Knick unfolds and as you get to know Cleary, you get to know Harriet, too. At first, they have a wariness of each other, and I’m pretty sure she recognizes that he’s a little dishonest as well,” notes Seymour with a chuckle.

“Someone said to me after they saw the first episode ["Method and Madness"], that you forgive a lot about Tom Cleary because it’s as if he and Harriet are related. They’re almost like distant cousins, and there’s a love or caring there despite any flaws. What Tom has to go through in order to survive doesn’t make for a ‘pretty’ person, but in spite of everything that he has to do to survive, there are moments of real humanity and real heart. He and Harriet spar and she thinks that he could make more quality moral choices, but he can’t. So their relationship is a really fun and interesting one.”

In last week’s The Knick episode "Where’s the Dignity?" (directed by one of the show’s executive producers Steven Soderbergh) Tom Cleary and his assistant arrive at the hospital with a woman who is severely bleeding after trying to abort her pregnancy. Unfortunately, chief surgeon Dr. John Thackery (Clive Owen) is unable to save her. Cleary asks Sister Harriet to join him when he brings the body to be buried and has her say a few words on behalf of the deceased. This was a particular favorite scene of Seymour’s.

“We shot that scene in the graveyard on, I think, our second day of filming,” she recalls, “and it was one of those times that the confluence of a great director, great writers, brilliant storyline and a wonderful acting partner in Chris Sullivan produced a terrific outcome. It’s one of those situations that you don’t expect, and then when it comes along you think, ‘Wow, thank you very much.’ That was such a wonderful experience, made even more so in having been directed by Steven Soderbergh. He instills in and gives you such confidence that there’s a bigger reason why you’re doing this and to just relax. The one thing Steven said to me was, ‘just be calm,' and that everything would turn out to be impeccable, well-thought out and beautifully realized.”

Born in Essex, England, Seymour made her professional debut onstage as part of a theatrical group that she helped found. “I was at university in England and doing an undergraduate degree in theatre when I got together with some other women and we formed a theatre company,” says the actress. “We raised some money and wrote our own material, which we then took to the Edinburgh Festival. One of our plays about Northern Ireland did really well, and that’s more or less how I got started in the business.”

In addition to her stage work, the actress has appeared in several feature films including You’ve Got Mail, Gangs of New York, Hotel Rwanda, The Notorious Bettie Page, Jack & Diane and I Origins. “My first paid job in front of the camera was in a movie called A Future Gesture [a.k.a. The Break],” says Seymour. “I played a drug addict who goes crazy and stabs Stephen Rea’s character in a room at the Elk Hotel on 42nd Street in New York City, which is still there but all boarded up now. The actor who played my boyfriend had to have his teeth blacked out for the role, and the two of us kept singing, ‘All I want for Christmas is my two front teeth,’" jokes the actress. “Wherever that guy is today, God bless him.

“It’s funny, but I find privileged characters quite difficult to bring to life. I don’t know why, it’s just a general feeling. I find it easier to play characters that have been, perhaps, dealt not such an easy hand of cards in life. So I had a lot of fun with the role in A Future Gesture and it was a good kickoff for me into the world of filmmaking.”

Source: 1, 2

Game of Thrones Season 5 Is Casting People With 26 Inch Waists or Smaller

$
0
0


Read on for what this unique casting call could mean for the series’ next season.

ProjectCasting.com posted the following casting sheet for HBO’s Game of Thrones Season 5:

We are currently casting FEATURED EXTRAS roles for people of all ages 18 years and over, all ethnicities, and all genders for a production currently filming in Northern Ireland.

The catch? You must have a size 26″ WAIST or LESS. We really are looking for an eclectic group of people for this. If you know anyone (a friend, uncle, grandmother, etc) who would be interested in this but who are not necessarily on Facebook please help them apply for a role in this fantastic scene!

Filming dates are very rough but currently: between 1-4 days between Monday 20th October & 31st October


Winter is Coming presumes this may mean they’re casting the Children of the Forest. And we’re finding it hard to argue. There’s not many reasons we can think of to specifically cast folks who are small.

The Children of the Forest are a “non-human race” who lived in Westeros before the First Men. The wise men, or “Greenseers,” of their race could wield magic. They’ve been mentioned on the series a few times but we finally saw one in the flesh at the end of Season 4. Leaf, played by a child actor, was the one who saved Bran from the wights and threw a wicked fire ball. Presumably casting adults would be easier for HBO going forward.

SOURCE

Netflix's 3D Printing Documentary 'Print the Legend' Looks Equal Parts Amazing and Terrifying

$
0
0

As someone who has no real understanding of how 3D printing works, the process basically looks like sorcery, and therefore evokes equal measures of amazement and wanting to kill it with fire. The new Netflix original documentary Print the Legend doesn't look to be trying to diminish either reaction. The movie follows the leaders of consumer 3D printing, from basement startups to industry rivalries to TERRIFYING sorcery weapons.



Src1
Src2

Great, more accesibility to guns...

If you could, what would you print in 3D, ONTD?

Russell Brand Has Some Thoughts About the Celebrity Nudes Leaks, Other Things

Lie Witness News: Fashin Edition

$
0
0


Like he did with Coachellea and fake band names, Jimmy Kimmel sent "Lie Witness News" team to New York's Lincoln Center as Fashion Week wraps to dupe aspiring fashion know-it-alls into saying they like designers that are actually just pop culture figures (Betsy Ross, Duck Dynasty's Phil Robertson, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia). "Chandler Bing, I have heard of," one insists. Have you?

While we're here, let's discuss that vine of Mary-Kate and Ashley that has been going around

Source

James McAvoy will be bald in X-Men: Apocalypse

$
0
0
In his third film as famously-bald X-Men leader Professor Charles Xavier, actor James McAvoy will finally be shaving his head.

In an interview with Huffington Post McAvoy revealed little about the secretive 2016 sequel to Days of Future Past, but did reveal he will be losing his locks.

"I'll be older in this one," McAvoy said, "[And] I think I'm losing my hair finally. And, yeah, that's kind of all I know."

Director Bryan Singer revealed earlier this year that the sequel would be set in the 1980s, continuing the trend set by X-Men: First Class (set in the 60s) and Days of Future Past (set in the 70s).

McAvoy doesn't know much else about the film, which is still a way off entering production, but thinks he might do soon.

"I got an email from the [producer/writer Simon Kinberg] who informed me he was getting dead excited about stuff, but he didn't want to divulge anything for a couple of weeks, so I really don't know," said the 35-year-old.


X-Men: Apocalypse, like DoFP before it, will be a very different kind of X-Men film, this time pitting the heroes against an ancient all-powerful mutant whose name Apocaylpse is also his mission statement.

Apocalypse will be released on 19 May 2016.

Source

EBOLA RELIEF: Martin Gore of Depeche Mode Calls for Increased Support

$
0
0


We are witnessing a human catastrophe in West Africa with the Ebola crisis. Direct Relief needs your help to airlift medicines and supplies to health workers in urgent need. Please join Martin Gore of Depeche Mode in support of Direct Relief’s efforts in West Africa. For every dollar donated to Direct Relief on this page, Martin will match the donation dollar for dollar, up to $50,000. Please donate today: http://dpchm.de/ebola_dr

Source

Donate if and where you can, guys! This disease is horrific.

Tokio Hotel Release Video for Promo Single, Run, Run, Run

$
0
0
And much more! 'Tis a round-up post!



Today Tokio Hotel released a video for their song Run, Run, Run. Next Friday, Tokio Hotel will release their second buzz single, Girl Got a Gun, directed by Kris Moyes. Their final video and supposed official single will be Love Who Loves You Back, to be released on September 26th.



Yes that's exactly what you think it is. For the record, the song is said to be poppy with funky bass and a lackluster chorus. Interesting choice?




Alt title: "Scheisse fressen" (eating shit)















Bonus:




Pre-order isn't available in the U.S. yet which concerned some fans, but according to His Majesty himself, we will be getting the album!




source, source, source, source, source, source, source

This is Why Disney Characters Rarely Have Moms

$
0
0
Producer Don Hahn reveal’s a secret about Walt Disney’s past.



Ever notice how Disney characters—especially Disney princesses—rarely have moms? Their moms are either dead, have gone missing, or are otherwise unaccounted for? Ariel didn’t have one.

Cinderella didn’t either (fairy godmothers and evil step-mothers don’t count).

And while recent characters like Merida and Tiana did have moms, Frozen looped it back around, with not only Elsa and Anna’s mom dying at the beginning of the movie, but their dad too.

Glamour recently had a chance to sit down with legendary producer Don Hahn, who worked on The Lion King and Beauty and the Beast, as well as executive produced the Angelina Jolie version Maleficent and ask. Here’s why:



“I’ll give you two stories that are the reasons. I never talk about this, but I will. One reason is practical because the movies are 80 or 90 minutes long, and Disney films are about growing up. They’re about that day in your life when you have to accept responsibility.

“Simba ran away from home but had to come back. In shorthand, it’s much quicker to have characters grow up when you bump off their parents. Bambi’s mother gets killed, so he has to grow up. Belle only has a father, but he gets lost, so she has to step into that position. It’s a story shorthand.

“The other reason—and this is really odd—Walt Disney, in the early 1940s, when he was still living at this house, also bought a house for his mom and dad to move into. He had the studio guys come over and fix the furnace, but when his mom and dad moved in, the furnace leaked and his mother died. The housekeeper came in the next morning and pulled his mother and father out on the front lawn. His father was sick and went to the hospital, but his mother died. He never would talk about it, nobody ever does.

“He never spoke about that time because he personally felt responsible because he had become so successful that he said, "Let me buy you a house." It’s every kid's dream to buy their parents a house and just through a strange freak of nature—through no fault of his own—the studio workers didn’t know what they were doing. There’s a theory, and I’m not a psychologist, but he was really haunted by that. That idea that he really contributed to his mom’s death was really tragic.”

“If you dig, you can read about it. It’s not a secret within their family, but it’s just a tragedy that is so difficult to even talk about,” Don explained. “It helps to understand the man a little bit more...To me, it humanizes Walt. He was devastated by that, as anyone would be.”

source

Didn't know that about Walt Disney's parents. :(

Frat's Taylor Swift Lip Dub Is Better Than Taylor Swift Herself

$
0
0


Shrug off whatever Taylor Swift was doing in her embarrassing and problematic video for "Shake It Off" and make Delta Sigma Phi - Beta Mu's one-take wonder the official version you groove to. Pros include: No homophobia (good work, Frat!), no tweaking, and hella cute dudes.

The guys who made this video at Transylvania University (which is in Kentucky and not located in Dracula's castle — although, how cool would that be?) are pretty impressive. Not only must they have rehearsed this thing forever (because this is all ONE TAKE, you guys), but they seem like they're actually a pretty nice group of dudes, too.I know you can't tell that just by looking at someone, but guys singing unironically to Taylor Swift while not doing any weird "no homo" stuff and not even trying to be sexy (or twerking) (oh god, the twerking) seem like they'd be pretty down-to-earth and let all of us just hang with them and drink beer and listen to the latest Katy Perry and discuss her feud with T-Swizzle while keeping our grades up.

The biggest surprise for me was how many guys are in this frat. The videos I've seen about college fraternities usually feature 5-8 guys max. Live and learn, I guess!

Is 29 & married make it too late to get a college boyfriend because umm, them guys w/ beards tho. Also, I used Jezebel as a source. Please don't judge me, ONTD. I am already judging myself

SOURCE

25 Thought-Provoking Tupac Quotes About Life and Art

$
0
0


He has released more albums and appeared in more films in death than life. In 2012, his image was resurrected as a hologram for a performance at the Coachella Music Festival. And there have been countless “sightings” of the rapper, adding to the mythology that continues to swirl around his too-brief existence. The Guardian called him the “hip hop James Dean.” Tupac Shakur left behind a lyrical legacy that revealed an insight and inner turmoil. Caught between his role as a streetwise prophet and occasionally idealistic poet, the artist is best remembered through his words.

“My mama always used to tell me, ‘If you can’t find somethin’ to live for, you best find somethin’ to die for.'”

“No independent person just grew up and was born independent. You worked and you learned teamwork, and you learned cooperation and unity and struggle, and then you became independent. And we have to teach that and instill that. . . I mean, if this is truly a melting pot in the country where we care about them . . . we really need to be like that. . . . You need to help black kids, Mexican kids, Korean kids, whatever. But it needs to be real and it needs to be before we all die and then you say, ‘I made a mistake. I should have gave them some money. We really should have helped these folks.’ It’s gonna be too late. And then that’s when you’ve gotta pay your own karma. And that’s what God punishes when God punishes you.”

“America is the biggest gang in the world.”

“Every time I speak I want the truth to come out. Every time I speak I want a shiver. I don’t want them to be like they know what I’m gonna say because it’s polite. Im not saying I’m gonna rule the world or I’m gonna change the world, but I guarantee you that I will spark the brain that will change the world. And that’s our job, It’s to spark somebody else watching us. We might not be the one’s, but let’s not be selfish and because we not gonna change the world let’s not talk about how we should change it. I don’t know how to change it, but I know if I keep talking about how dirty it is out here, somebody’s gonna clean it up.”

“The only thing that can kill me is death, that’s the only thing that can ever stop me, is death, and even then my music will live forever.”

REST @ THESOURCE

Kristen Stewart Covers Elle: "Deciphering the Kristen Stewart Phenomenon"

$
0
0














Kristen Stewart is famous for—no, scratch that. Famous is too dinky a word to describe what Kristen Stewart is at this moment in America's cultural history. Kristen Stewart is a phenomenon for playing the girl in the Twilight movies, only, of course, she was really playing the boy. That's the secret of the franchise's appeal: It's a rehash of that tired old mothball-reeking, done-to-death, oh-Jesus-not-again Romeo and Juliet star-crossed-lovers redux, except—and here's what makes the material so fresh, gives it its kinky kick—he's Juliet and she's Romeo. Robert Pattinson's Edward Cullen—gorgeous, moody, high-strung, faintly anemic because he's a bloodsucker who refuses to suck human blood, his principles as lofty as his cheekbones—is the object of desire, and he is photographed as adoringly and fetishistically as Dietrich in any of the von Sternberg pictures. He is, as well, t
he beast that's also the beauty, one in serious distress, cursed to be 17 forever and mateless, a Prince of Darkness without a Princess, not to mention a prom king without a queen. It's Stewart's Bella Swan, quiet and strong and full of purpose, who brings an end to his loneliness by surmounting the obstacles, both physical and metaphysical, in their path, converting to vampirism so it's possible for them to unite for all eternity. (Those feminist-watchdog types, sensitive noses aquiver for the slightest whiff of peepees-are-better-than-weewees, decrying Bella and, by extension, Stewart as some sort of self-sacrificing, female-chump retro case, have, as usual, got it wrong. If Bella falls into a gender stereotype, it's not Clinging Vine; it's White Knight. She just has enough grace—gallantry, too—never to throw in her true love's face the fact that she's the one rescuing him.)


While we're on the subject of secret appeal, here's Stewart's: She's a lovely looking girl, possessed of both soulful intelligence and depth of feeling, yet in the blink of an eye she can turn into a hot young roughneck ready for action, for kicks, for anything. The former persona, delicate without being weak, is why she's so affecting in movies such as Into the Wild (2007) and Adventureland (2009) and On the Road(2012), the perfect match for Emile Hirsch's doomed wanderer and Jesse Eisenberg's lovelorn egghead and Garrett Hedlund and Sam Riley's word-drunk beatniks who only want to go go go even if it's to no place in particular or just into one another's beds. Which isn't to say that these numbskull boys always get it, can see what's smack-dab in front of them. (All Stewart has to do is look at Hirsch's Chris McCandless in a hurt and wondering way, and it's obvious he should bag that trip to
the Alaskan wilderness he can't shut up about and stay with her in her parents' rig in Imperial Valley.) The latter persona, so assured it borders on arrogant, borders on macho, is why she's able to pull off the low-lidded stares of pure lust she directs at Dakota Fanning's saucer-eyed cutie-pie in The Runaways (2010). It's why she's able to pull off, too, the trick of becoming Joan Jett, the woman who proved you don't need a cock to rock, you just need to strap on that guitar, strut that stuff, and create a sound that leaps right out of the jukebox—fast, urgent, full of vitality and aggression and rollicking good times.


Not that Stewart is the first young actress to discover what a turn-on gender ambiguity can be for an audience. Angelina Jolie, for God's sake! When Jolie went from nowhere to everywhere seemingly overnight in the late '90s, she wasn't only the hottest girl the world had ever seen, she was the hottest guy, too, with a swagger to her step, a curl to her lip, a bad to her bone: the most babelicious babe and the studliest stud, all in one. But in the past few years, it's as if she's so sexy her sexiness has come full circle. She appears complete unto herself, doesn't need another person. Her early vulnerability (the look in her eye was as often wounded as it was wounding) is something she's outgrown. Stewart, though, has still got it, and it's what makes her one of the most romantic—and exciting—female presences on the screen today.

Okay, so that's Kristen Stewart, the movie star and sex symbol.


I get together with Kristen Stewart, the person, at the tail end of a Monday morning in June in Culver City. We're meeting at the studio of artist Ed Ruscha. I'm from the East Coast, and tales of L.A. traffic have me good and freaked, so I arrive more than half an hour early. When Stewart shows up, on time to the minute, I'm being given a tour of a men's room filled with Marilyn Monroe tchotchkes; two dogs, both named Lola; and torn-out pictures of Jesus by Ruscha's brother, Paul. Stewart calls my cell to tell me she's outside. I open the door.


The girl on the other side might have made an eerily convincing young Joan Jett—says the real Joan, "Kristen studied me. Watched me talk, sing, breathe, just be. It got to the point where the two of us stood together and people couldn't tell us apart"—but it's a young Elvis Presley she's a dead ringer for: same almond-shape eyes (her vivid blue-green ones were dulled to a mud brown for Twilight), outlined in black, the lids heavy, hooded; same complexion, an undead shade of white, and without a mark, as poreless as marble; same mouth, narrow but full, made to sneer. She's rock 'n' roll skinny in tight jeans, scuffed Vans, a V-neck T-shirt, a pair of sunglasses dangling from the collar, hair long and tangled and dyed a brassy red, the roots dark. The look, pure Southern California street-punk guttersnipe, is very anti-glamour-puss. But she can downplay her natural assets only so much. Do I even need to tell you tha
t she's very, very pretty? And though now 24, she could pass for much younger—a kid, fresh out of high school.


Stewart and I shake hands, and I introduce her around. Her manner is bashful, skittish, but she also seems eager to connect. Not just with Ruscha, who entered the room at almost the exact moment she did, but with Paul and Ruscha's assistant, Susan, and both dogs. With me, as well. Ruscha leads us into the body of the studio, which is enormous, originally built by Howard Hughes to manufacture airplane engines. At 76, he's still handsome, lean and suntanned, with a thick head of gray hair and lady-killer blue eyes. (His past girlfriends have included actress Samantha Eggar and model Lauren Hutton.) He looks less like an artist than like an old-time star of Hollywood westerns—Gary Cooper, maybe—only paint-spattered. Sounds like a western star too, not using many words when he talks, the words he does use coming out in a soft Oklahoma drawl. An ex-squeeze once called him "the king of shit-kicker cool." The title still fits.


The rapport between Ruscha and Stewart is natural and instant. He knows she appeared in Walter Salles' adaptation of On the Road, playing Marylou, Dean Moriarty's "beautiful little sharp chick," not a day over sweet 16, first seen naked, save for a pair of white cotton undies, rolling the perfect joint. He brings out a fine-arts edition of Kerouac's novel—one of Stewart's favorites—that he created a few years ago, photographs illustrating the text. As he turns the pages, Stewart calls out the names of the objects and places pictured: now-defunct brands of beer and automobiles, a pack of filterless cigarettes—"We smoked so many of those on the shoot we thought we were going to die!"—a plate of apple pie à la mode, so-lonesome-I-could-cry stretches of Arizona highway, Mexican whorehouses. She does this not in a show-offy way but with the pleasure of recognition, because she's seeing something that mov
es or excites her.


After Ruscha closes On the Road, he and Stewart continue to shoot the breeze, pushing remarks easily back and forth. They're bonding over a mutual love of light leaks in photos when I'm forced to break in because of a 12:15 lunch reservation and a promise I made to Stewart's publicist not to be too much of a little piggy with her time. Ruscha pulls out two copies of his book Porch Crop, inscribes one to her, one to me, and, cowboy gracious, walks us to the door.


Stewart and I take her black Mini Cooper, actually her mom's, to a restaurant a few blocks away. Before we walk inside, though, she ducks into a little nook/alleyway for a cigarette, which she smokes nervous-fast. Once we're at the hostess's station, I understand her momentary spasm of anxiety. Her head is bowed, posture turtled—she's practically willing herself into invisibility—and still people's eyes are drawn to her like iron filings to a magnet. Everybody stares. I mean, everybody. Even the people who look like they're not staring are staring. It's at that moment I realize—re-realize, I should say, since I knew it before meeting her but forgot after, so low-key does she seem, so unassuming, so, well, normal—just how major league a celebrity she is. Realize also that she must live much of her life at the mercy of strangers. For example, if just one of our fellow patrons decides to blow her cover by calling a news
outlet (hey, this is L.A., people here probably have the scandal rags on speed dial) or tweeting that Oh Em Gee KStew is @ Akasha on Culver Blvd!!!, we'd have to go. Go hungry too.


The hostess leads us to a discreet table at the restaurant's rear. A waiter drops off menus and water. Stewart takes the chair facing the wall, giving her back to the room. Once it's clear we're alone and settled and no one's going to bug us, she visibly relaxes, pushing her hair out of her face and releasing the breath she must have been holding since we stepped through the doors.


For a minute or two we discuss the extreme weirdness of being her.


"So, basically, you can never look at people," I say.


"I'm obsessed with that. I'm always like, I can't look. Literally, most times, I would be staring at these girls [tilts her head to indicate which ones], but I haven't even glanced over there."


"Can't risk eye contact with strangers, right?"


"Right. Because then you're letting them in. But at the same time, you're like, What, I don't want to let anyone in? And, honestly, I'm super real with people. Incredibly. If someone's really cool and nice and just wants to talk, I will fucking hang out and chat all day."


The waiter returns, and Stewart opens her menu, quickly starts scanning the options.


While she's busy doing that, I'm going to address the big knock on her: that she doesn't like being famous or that she doesn't like being famous enough or that she's a little snot ingrate because she's insufficiently appreciative of the fame we, the public, mensches that we are, have bestowed upon her. As best I can tell, she gets this rep because there are times she doesn't say "Cheese" for the cameras. My sense of Stewart is that she's a naturally shy person, so she occasionally shrinks from the attention she provokes, and a naturally honest person, so she can't turn it on in an instant. And, okay, maybe she's a naturally rebellious person, too. And rebel spirit is in short supply in Hollywood. True rebel spirit, I mean, not just the trappings of it. There are plenty of starlets shticking badass—acquiring tattoos that can be covered with makeup, piercings that can be removed before shooting, substance addictions that a
re also conducive to weight loss. These girls, who show up at any red-carpet event that'll have them, flashing every capped tooth in their collagen-puffed mouths, are, at bottom, eager to please, are, at bottom, cowardly. They wouldn't dream of ever telling Mr. DeMille to take his close-up and shove it. My guess is that Stewart doesn't always play nice with the media because she knows the price for playing nice is too high. You give the media what it wants, and it takes and takes until you've lost yourself entirely, have become a smiley-faced, hollow-eyed nonentity—soulless, gutless, harmless. Better to stay defiant, keep your self-respect.


Back to lunch:


Stewart atones for her earlier cigarette with a kale salad. I copycat her order. The waiter takes away our menus, and we start the interview proper, getting the David Copperfield stuff out of the way first. Stewart is a local girl, born and raised in the San Fernando Valley. Her mom and dad are both in the show-business business: mom a script supervisor, dad a stage manager and TV producer. Stewart, at a very young age, decided to become an actor, not out of a desire for attention but for a job. "I wanted to go to work with [my parents] and have something to do," she says. "And the only thing you can do as a kid is be an actor. I saw kids on set, and I was like, What's that about? Why are they allowed to be here?" Her family background gave her a view of the industry that was brisk, practical, totally un-starry-eyed, and she's maintained it. Tim Blake Nelson, who directed her in the soon-to-be-released Anesthesia, marvels at her "
;blue-collar ethos."


Success came lickety-split. At nine, she landed the tomboy role in Rose Troche's The Safety of Objects (2001). At 10, she landed the tomboy role in David Fincher's Panic Room (2002). That she'd be a natural as Jodie Foster's daughter is a no-brainer, the two actresses matching up not just physically but temperamentally. ("Kristen was such a special, interesting, idiosyncratic child," Foster recalls.) Stewart would have to wait all the way till her eighteenth birthday for Twilight and superstardom, though when she signed on to the movie she thought, and with good reason, that it was an indie—mostly no-name cast, directed by Catherine Hardwicke, then best known for the ultra-low-budgetThirteen (2003).


"When did you realize how big Twilight was going to be?" I ask.


"The day the movie came out there was a picture of me—in the New York Post, I think. I was sitting on my front porch, smoking a pipe with my ex-boyfriend and dog. And I was like, Oh shit, well, I have to be aware of that."


She admits she found the sudden fame hard to handle: "I hadn't carved out my spot, and people hadn't gotten used to me yet. It was really fucking hard. I didn't interview well. I was really nervous. People fucking didn't respond that well."


In the past couple years, it's been back to the smaller-scale, more intimate projects Stewart was doing before and during the Twilight saga, with Snow White and the Huntsman as the notable exception. This souped-up, rock-'em-sock-'em retelling of the classic fairy tale enchanted audiences, if not critics, and helped make Stewart the richest of them all. (Forbes named her the highest-paid actress of 2012.)


The movie also wreaked havoc with her personal life, when Peeping Tom cameras caught her getting lovey-dovey with married director Rupert Sanders. (Poor Robert Pattinson seems unable to shake the role of ingenue as far as his relationship with Stewart goes. As we all know, the tabloids having mowed down hundreds of acres of forest to let us know, the actors portraying Bella and Edward fell into each other's arms as rapturously as their characters did. After the scandal broke, Stewart issued an apology to Pattinson in People magazine, essentially casting him as the Wronged Woman in the love triangle.) The media was brutal to Stewart, absolutely without mercy. Suddenly there were headlines in credible newspapers that read VAMP TRAMP and TRAMPIRE. The public was, if anything, even less forgiving. T-shirts bearing slogans like KRISTEN STEWART FUCKING SUCKS were stretched across many a pre—and post—pubescent torso. After winning Best Kiss four years r
unning at the MTV Movie Awards, Stewart and Pattinson weren't so much as nominated in 2013. She was reportedly dropped from the Snow White franchise because, duh, girls embroiled in love triangles can't play icons of purity. Jodie Foster passionately defended Stewart on The Daily Beast, promising her that "this too shall pass."


Foster must've been gazing into her crystal ball. Stewart managed to hold it together, at least publicly, didn't break down or crack up, and at last the press got bored or lost interest—moved on, in any case. And she seems to have channeled whatever anger or upset she was feeling into her work. She has two movies coming out later this year, Peter Sattler's Camp X-Ray, about the bond that develops between a guard (Stewart) and a detainee (Payman Maadi) at Guantánamo, and Olivier Assayas' Clouds of Sils Maria, about an aging star (Juliette Binoche) and her devoted—too devoted, perhaps?—personal assistant (Stewart), both of which have been knocking them dead at festivals.


I ask Stewart who she's dating these days. Are she and Pattinson secretly back together? Or is she seeing Nicholas Hoult, Hollywood's young hunk du jour? Or has close friend Alicia Cargile become more than that? (In just the past 48 hours I've read gossip items suggesting all three possibilities.) It's none of my beeswax, of course, except that asking none-of-my-beeswax questions is part of my job description. Stewart's polite about it—certainly more polite than I deserve—but lets me know that her private life is precisely that, a stance I find personally admirable if professionally frustrating. She is, however, willing to discuss in abstract terms how a private life is even possible for somebody like her: "I just have to be really conscious. It takes a little bit of the impulsive nature of life out of the equation, but I—"


Stewart's interrupted by a text-message buzz. While she deals with it, I'm going to deal with the other big knock on her: that she has no dramatic range, is the same in every movie, a one-trick pony, basically. And though it's undeniable that the characters she embodies tend to resemble one another—intelligent but nonverbal, troubled, a little withdrawn—they're not identical. Stewart herself is aware of her limitations: "Some people try to do that thing where you craft a character. I cannot be anyone other than who I am. If I can't empathize with something [my character] does, it's a problem. And sometimes I've had directors be like, It's not you, Kristen, it's the character. And I'm like, That's the laziest thing you can possibly say to me. It is me. It's definitely me." My feeling is that Stewart's limitations are, in fact, her strengths. As a performer, she's deceptively simple, so natu
ral is her style, so unforced. To play someone with a personality and consciousness totally unlike her own would be, in her mind, false. Says Jesse Eisenberg, "When we made Adventureland, [Kristen] would cut takes because she felt she was being inauthentic. She was 17!" Often what Stewart's doing appears plain and straight-ahead but is actually nuanced and complex, each of her roles a subtle variation on a common theme: herself. She's an American—Made in California, like the title of that famous Ed Ruscha piece—a West Coaster with a West Coaster's instinctive modesty and hatred of pretension and cool, courtly grace. If she can't make it look easy, she doesn't want to do it at all. Just because she makes it look easy, though, doesn't mean it is, and just because she doesn't put on the airs of an artiste doesn't mean she isn't one. You never see her acting, proof of how very good an actress she is.



Stewart sends off her text, and we keep the conversation going for a few more minutes. Our plates have long since been cleared, though, and she's sipping at the dregs of her coffee, me of my tea. I signal for the check, and we head outside. I sense she wants to smoke but is reluctant to light up because we're walking next to each other and I'm visibly pregnant. Once we say our goodbyes, she reaches for her keys, and I return to the restaurant to ask the hostess to call me a cab. As I wait, I look out the window. There's Stewart, slouched against the hood of her mom's Mini Cooper, squinting into the sun, a cigarette dangling from her lips. After taking a final drag, she lets the flaming butt fall to the pavement and swings her body through the driver's-side door. She starts up the car and enters the heavy flow of traffic on Culver without a pause or hitch. The princess of shit-kicker cool.


Kween Kristen TYFYT


Source1, 2, 3, 4

Miley Cyrus Covers Led Zeppelin "Baby, I'm Gonna Leave You"

An interview with Queen of the Clouds & 2014's Pop Savior, Tove Lo!

$
0
0

Tove Lo isn’t just ready to take over pop; she’s ready to conquer the whole atmosphere. Her full-length Queen of the Clouds [out Sept. 30, iTunes link] flutters to new territory altogether with its unabashed lyrical honesty, lithe melodies, inventive instrumentation, and enigmatically engaging spirit. Simply put, it’s one of the most unique, unforgettable, and undeniable albums you’ll hear all year. This is the birth of the icon and Queen of the Clouds.

In this exclusive interview with ARTISTdirect.com editor in chief Rick Florino, Tove Lo talks the album and so much more.

Did you approach Queen of the Clouds with a defined vision?
With the EP, Truth Serum, it was sort of accidental when I looked at the songs I wanted. I had written so much at the time. I looked at the songs I picked, and I was like, "Hey, this is the story of this relationship!" That was unplanned [Laughs]. For the album, I have it in the back of my head, but I don't write according to it. I write whatever I need to write about. Usually, I write way more than what's on the album. I have so many demos I pick from. I did know that I wanted it to be cohesive and have some storyline. I didn't expect it to be the pattern of all my relationships, but it's turned out that way. Queen of the Clouds is three chapters of how things usually go for me in a relationship.

Is storytelling an important part of songwriting for you?
Aside from my own life, I get a lot of inspiration, and it's like I have a movie rolling in my head when I write the lyrics. I want people to be able to see and feel that situation I was in or that they've been in. It's really important to me that comes through in the song.

What else influences that?
It's more generally life. I don't think I read more or watch more movies than the average person. I haven't watched a movie in a long time because I don't have any spare time whatsoever [Laughs]. I do like anything that brings new stories or situations into my life though—like if you're reading or watching something that's way outside scope of your life. It's a good inspiration to start writing. Then, usually, I bring it back to my own experiences. For example, I have a song called "Heroes" I did with Alesso. I randomly watched an episode of the series of Heroes. I was thinking of being a kid and wishing I had these powers when I would pretend. There's nothing extraordinary about me in that way, but you always wish you could have that. Something will set me off, and I'll start writing. Then, I'll circle back to my own experience.

What's the story behind "Out of Mind"?
That comes after I have the pain and I'm trying to get over this heartbreak. It's when you moved on and you're sort of okay, but you still have that little scar. It will always be there. Those thoughts about this other person will always haunt you a bit. In the video, I have these ghosts chasing me. When you go through something like that, it always sticks with you.

What song from Queen of the Clouds resonates with you the most right now?
It changes like every other day [Laughs]. For right now, it's "Talking Body" and "My Gun". We rehearsed "My Gun" for the first time last night, and it sounds awesome. I'm in a bit of a happy good place. Those are part of the first chapter—"The Sex". So maybe I'm feeling frisky at the moment [Laughs].

What artists shaped you?
When I was eleven- or twelve- and first started buying my own records, I was way more into grunge. I loved Nirvana, Hole, and Silverchair. They were my top three. Then, I started listening to Lykke Li and Robyn. They inspired me to write on my own. Also, I'd say Charlotte Gainsbourg. She's super cool. A lot of female writers who write and produced themselves inspired me.

When did the title Queen of the Clouds come to you?
I never decide the title until I've got all the songs. I was looking at it. It comes from the song "Not On Drugs". Ever since I released the EP in March, everything has happened so fast. All of a sudden, I'm traveling the world with my band and playing all of these shows. It's been pretty amazing. Besides feeling like I'm floating on top of the world, I'm trying to take a step back and look at everything like, "Okay, this is my world now" and take it all in. That's how I feel. I feel like Queen of the Clouds [Laughs]. I was proud of the title Truth Serum. I felt like it described what it was about. It was important for me that the album name did the same thing or it represented me.

What connects the EP and the album?
It's just me. They're all very personal songs for me. All of the love I've been through connects it [Laughs]. I'm open and raw about everything that's on my mind. The album shows more of the good stuff than the EP shows.

If you were compare the album to a movie or a combination of movies, what would it be?
I always want to say my favorite movie [Laughs]. I can't do that because it's not describing the album. I'd say something like (500) Days of Summer because it starts so amazing and beautiful, and then it ends in pain. My favorite movie is Pulp Fiction or anything by Quentin Tarantino. I don't know who I am in (500) Days of Summer. Maybe, I'm a combination of the guy who gets hurt and her leaving. I like that film.

Perhaps, the album could be a combination of (500) Days of Summer and Kill Bill?
Exactly!

Check out some of Lo's singles:



ONTD, do you like the album? What's your fave track?


Source

Keira Knightley - Toronto International Film Festival Roundup

$
0
0



Variety Studios present "The Imitation Game"

Keira with a beautiful tan and a cute Chanel dress:







"The Imitation Game" Press Conference




Benedict on Keira: "She's a friend, and she's brilliant."


wearing Dolce & Gabbana



"The Imitation Game" Premiere


wearing Chanel couture



"Laggies" Photocall and Press Conference


talking about uncomfortable shoes with Sam Rockwell


wearing Stella McCartney



"Laggies" Premiere

Apparently it was VERY windy that day




wearing custom Michael van der Ham



Various Portraits at TIFF










Interview at Studio Q



Keira dropped by Studio Q and had a very interesting and quite lengthy interview with Jian Ghomeshi

She talks about sexism in the industry in the business saying that, "I've been really lucky with the people that I've worked with. And I've been tremendously lucky with the types of characters that I've had to play but it's very clear that there are less roles for women than there are for men. Particularly you look at this film (The Imitation Game) and there are two women characters in this film, the rest of the film is male characters. You look at the number of female directors, writers, producers, there are very, very few. Financiers, there are very, very few. There's a lot of actresses. There's a lot of brilliant actresses, there aren't that many good roles for them. (...) Again, I'm very lucky but finding them is very hard. I get offered some great things but there's a lot of people. It's a very crowded pool and a lot of the scripts that are really great are coming to quite a number of us and you have to fight for it."



princess keira thanks you for your time


Sources: 1, 2, 3

'Orange is the New Black' writer files for divorce - Show made me realize I'm a lesbian

$
0
0
One on of the head writers for "Orange is the New Black" has filed for divorce ... the logical step since she's now realized she's a lesbian and is dating one of the female stars.

Lauren Morelli just filed divorce docs -- obtained by TMZ -- from her husband of 2 years, Steve Basilone. It's actually a joint petition ... probably because Steve realizes that ship has sailed.

The story is amazing. Lauren began writing for OITNB 5 months after she got hitched. Lauren says as she started writing for the main character -- who had once been in a lesbian relationship -- she saw herself in the character. Lauren says she began to feel like a fraud ... married to a man but clearly gay.

According to Lauren ... as she began writing about Piper's blossoming relationship with the very hot Alex ... "I found a mouthpiece for my own desires and a glimmer of what my future could look like."

Enter Samira Wiley -- who plays Poussey. It's Lauren's new GF.


According to divorce docs, it's all very amicable. She gets her Lexus, her apartment and her sapphire engagement ring. He gets the Mazda hatchback.

Source

"NO GOOD DEED" (Idris Elba, Taraji P. Henson) #1 at U.S. Box Office

$
0
0


Variety: "No Good Deed" Easily Dominates "Dolphin Tale 2" at Friday Box Office

There’s a new “guardian” of the box office.

A newcomer, Idris Elba and Taraji P. Henson’s “No Good Deed,” has finally pushed “Guardians of the Galaxy” off its throne. The Sony thriller opened to $8.8 million Stateside on Friday and is headed for a $24 to $25 million launch that will provide a much-needed boost to the historically low U.S. box office earnings.

Warner Bros.’ “Dolphin Tale 2” was runner-up on Friday, while Marvel-Disney’s “Guardians” is far from out of the game at number three, ahead of Fox Searchlight’s “The Drop.”

“No Good Deed” stars Elba as an escaped convict who terrorizes Henson (a DA-turned-stay-at-home) and her two children in their own house.

The film, which carries a modest $13 million production budget, stands to benefit from targeting under-served African American audiences. It reunites Elba with his “Luther” TV show director, Sam Miller, and “Obsessed” producer, Will Packer, who is also behind the “Think Like a Man” franchise, which stars Henson. Lee Clay co-produced with Packer.


Alcon Entertainment’s “Dolphin Tale 2” kicked past the competition with $4.3 million on Friday. The family film will likely debut to $15 million.

If weekend estimates hold, the sequel will be behind the 2011 original, which opened to $19.2 million, then went on to earn $72.3 million domestic. Harry Connick Jr., Ashley Judd, Morgan Freeman, and Kris Kristofferson return, with Charles Martin Smith back at the helm.

Meanwhile, another newcomer, the late James Gandolfini’s final film, “The Drop,” opened to $1.5 million in limited release. The crime thriller had a solid fourth-place finish and is en route for $5 million this weekend.

Gandolfini plays a bar owner (in the last movie he filmed before his tragic death) whose mob-controlled Brooklyn dive, which serves as a money-laundering “drop” for the neighborhood gangsters, is robbed.

Based on Dennis Lehana’s short story “Animal Rescue,” the gritty crime drama is directed by Michaël R. Roskam and stars Tom Hardy as Gandolfini’s cousin, an ex-con-turned-bartender, and Noomi Rapace.

Chernin Entertainment produced “The Drop,” which premiered at the Toronto Film Festival last weekend.

This year’s box office champ and summer savior, “Guardians of the Galaxy,” made $2 million on Friday to place third after four consecutive wins. It’s set to gross $7.5 million by Sunday and pass $305 million.

“Guardians” is on track to hit that milestone on the foreign front as well as it opened in Japan this weekend, but hasn’t yet entered the coveted Chinese market, where it’s set to launch next month.

Paramount’s sixth weekend of “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” rounded out the top five with an estimated $1.2 million on Friday. The pizza-loving reptiles are on track to earn just shy of $5 million by Sunday, which would raise its cume to $180 million.

Source: http://friday-box-office-no-good-deed-winner-dolphin-tale-2-no-2-1201305135

Viewing all 143284 articles
Browse latest View live


Latest Images