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Movies
May 2, 2012 22:05:37 GMT -5
Post by architect on May 2, 2012 22:05:37 GMT -5
Pruning, so here's were all the movie news goes or else . . .
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May 2, 2012 22:06:43 GMT -5
Post by architect on May 2, 2012 22:06:43 GMT -5
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May 3, 2012 21:15:26 GMT -5
Post by architect on May 3, 2012 21:15:26 GMT -5
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May 21, 2012 22:24:25 GMT -5
Post by architect on May 21, 2012 22:24:25 GMT -5
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May 21, 2012 22:28:01 GMT -5
Post by architect on May 21, 2012 22:28:01 GMT -5
Could THE PAPERBOY become Serin's favorite movie ever? ;D Lee Daniels explains Nicole Kidman's 'Basic Instinct' moment Daniels says that all of the film's stars find themselves in some of the movie's breathless scenes -- from Matthew McConaughey, to Nicole Kidman, to John Cusack -- even Zac Efron (shield your eyes High School Musical fans!).
But the blogosphere has zeroed in on one particular scene being called "Nicole Kidman's Basic Instinct moment" -- naturally a reference to Sharon Stone's famous, well, revelation to police investigators in 1992's Basic Instinct.
"My daughter told me about the Internet reporters of this Basic Instinct moment," says Daniels, before admonishing, "It's actually a Paperboy moment."
"There ain't no Basic Instinct moment because we get down," he laughs. "This is just one of the many moments of us getting down in this movie."
The Paperboy focuses on a reporter (McConaughey) and his younger brother (Efron) who investigate a past murder in order to free a man on death row, (Cusack). Kidman, 44, plays the woman who brings the case to the brothers' attention, and has an affair with Efron's character -- despite the young actor only being 24.
Daniels leaves the rest to our imagination until the film screens next week. But he does make a vow: "There is definitely another moment more shocking than that." SOURCE
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Sept 27, 2012 19:05:35 GMT -5
Post by architect on Sept 27, 2012 19:05:35 GMT -5
I wasn't as wowed by the script as others but this trailer looks pretty great* STOKER Trailer *It's also spoily so beware
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Jan 17, 2013 20:55:55 GMT -5
Post by architect on Jan 17, 2013 20:55:55 GMT -5
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Jan 17, 2013 21:08:42 GMT -5
Post by architect on Jan 17, 2013 21:08:42 GMT -5
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Jan 17, 2013 21:11:26 GMT -5
Post by architect on Jan 17, 2013 21:11:26 GMT -5
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Jan 20, 2013 17:17:00 GMT -5
Post by architect on Jan 20, 2013 17:17:00 GMT -5
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Jan 31, 2013 20:56:10 GMT -5
Post by architect on Jan 31, 2013 20:56:10 GMT -5
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Feb 6, 2013 21:54:02 GMT -5
Post by architect on Feb 6, 2013 21:54:02 GMT -5
Colin Firth Confirmed for SLEEP Colin Firth is joining Nicole Kidman to star in Rowan Joffe's "Before I Go to Sleep," a thriller set up at Scott Free and Millennium Films. The film is based on Brit novelist S.J. Watson's book of the same name. Joffe adapted the screenplay, which centers on a woman (Kidman) with amnesia who wakes up each morning not know who she is; she keeps a journal to help try to reconstruct her memories, but dark truths emerge and she must question everyone around her. Firth will play her husband. Mark Strong and Anne-Marie Duff are also on board. It will shoot in London later this month. SOURCE
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Feb 21, 2013 21:23:23 GMT -5
Post by architect on Feb 21, 2013 21:23:23 GMT -5
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Feb 28, 2013 20:47:08 GMT -5
Post by architect on Feb 28, 2013 20:47:08 GMT -5
Listen to Clint Mansell's Stunning Soundtrack for Park Chan-wook's 'Stoker'
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Feb 28, 2013 20:50:48 GMT -5
Post by architect on Feb 28, 2013 20:50:48 GMT -5
Stoker director Park Chan-wook: 'In knowing yourself, you can liberate yourself' Park Chan-wook is clearly in a very dark place. His head is bowed, his mood blue. What terrible circumstances could be troubling the South Korean director who masterminded the queasy excesses of Oldboy and the rest of his Vengeance trilogy? Recent incarceration by an unknown malefactor? Is he being hounded by a secret black-market organ-smuggling operation?
In fact, his cat has died, and he's still struggling to cope. "I'd had him for more than 10 years."
Mooka, Park's Russian Blue puss, was just one of the victims of a kitty reaper that stalked the set of his new film, Stoker. Composer Clint Mansell's mog died at the same time. "The only consolation is that it didn't happen during shooting, but during postproduction," says Park. The sumptuous Stoker is his first English-language production, but it's unmistakably his work: adorned everywhere with picturebook flourishes – harvestmen creeping over slim ankles, brushed hair dissolving into cornfields, blood-spattered foliage.
And a domestic void is at its heart, too: Mia Wasikowska stars as India Stoker, an 18-year-old girl mourning the death of her father in a car accident, unlike her mother Evelyn (Nicole Kidman), who seems liberated – especially when her husband's mysterious brother Charlie (Matthew Goode) appears at the funeral. No one with that orange a tan can be trustworthy, and India, with a certain icky fascination, is on the interloper's case . . . Read the rest
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