Friday, March 1, 2013

Rooney Mara talks abour her new movie, Side Effects



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The piercings, tattoos and jet-black hair are long gone, but there's still something of Lisbeth Salander about Rooney Mara.


The 27 year-old actress, who leapt to fame playing Stieg Larsson's fictional heroine in David Fincher's adaptation of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, arrives for our interview all in black. Shirt, jeans, jacket and boots – it's as if she's raided the wardrobe of the bisexual hacker Salander, or can't let go of the role that won her an Oscar nomination for Best Actress last year.

We're sitting in a Berlin hotel room – Mara sipping on a fruit tea, her hair wrapped up in a bun. "I feel that my life is really simple," she tells me, relief in her voice. "I'm still not recognised." That surely is about to change, with Mara starring in Side Effects, Steven Soderbergh's latest film (and possibly last, if he keeps his word about his retirement). A thriller set in the world of prescription medicines, Mara plays Emily Taylor, a New York spouse who is put on a new depression-battling wonder-drug, only to experience some deadly consequences.

Dealing with a very contemporary issue – the over-use of mood-stabilising drugs in western society – for Mara it felt all too familiar. Raised in New York, where her father is vice-president of player evaluation for NFL team the New York Giants, it was all around her. "Definitely growing up, I knew a lot of kids who were on prescription drugs, for sure," she says. "It's also really easy to get a prescription. It's really easy to fake needing one, because everything is online. You just look up all the symptoms. People always do it."

For Mara's first role since Dragon Tattoo – one that offers far more scope than playing the antisocial Salander did – she read the script the day she was nominated for the Oscars, and had 12 hours to decide. "It was really a no-brainer," she says. "I really wanted to work with Steven, first and foremost. I knew he was gonna be retiring and it was probably my last chance to do that." So is it true? Is the director of Traffic, Ocean's 11 and Erin Brockovich really on his way out? "He hasn't given us any reason not to believe [him]," she replies, with a shrug.

20373463As confident as she is on screen, Mara is more insular in person. Despite a career that's seen her go from the remake of A Nightmare on Elm Street to Fincher's The Social Network, she doesn't yet feel "comfortable" rubbing shoulders with the Hollywood elite. "I definitely feel like an outsider – put it that way. It can be a very isolating job. It's not like you always feel like you're in this big community.

"I think other people do feel that way, [those] who've been in the club longer, but I feel like an outsider still. I feel like I shouldn't be here."

Unsurprisingly, she felt exactly this way on Oscar night – competing with Michelle Williams, Viola Davis, Glenn Close and eventual winner Meryl Streep. "Even though I knew I wouldn't win, it was still very nerve-wracking. You're on display." She didn't go to the bathroom all night, perhaps wracked by the fear that she might – just might – win. "Because I feel like an outsider and don't feel like I deserve to be there yet, I would've been horrified to go up. I would've been so scared. Not that I wouldn't have been grateful – I just would've been terrified."

One of four children, Mara's older sister Kate is also an actress (and has just recently been cast in Fincher's Netflix-broadcast remake of the BBC parliamentary drama House of Cards), though the two are very different. "I think it comes easier to her. She's a little bit more open and friendly than I am. She's the likeable one." Still, after graduating from high school early, Mara joined the Travelling School, an open-learning environment that took her to South America for four months, across Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador. "Getting out of the bubble of where I grew up and going out and seeing the world changed my life," she admits.

Having also established her own charity in Kenya, Faces of Kibera, underneath her rather shy persona, there is a steely determination to Mara, even if she can't quite adjust yet to how in demand she really is. She's just worked for Being John Malkovich director Spike Jonze, on his new future-set film, Her. And, having shot indie movie Ain't Them Bodies Saints with Ben Foster, she also spent two-and-a-half months with Terrence Malick on his as-yet-untitled new film, rumoured to be set to the backdrop of the Austin music scene. "It was the most unique experience I think I'll probably ever have in my career," she says. "I can safely say that."

There's also still talk that she will reprise her role of Lisbeth Salander for sequel, The Girl Who Played With Fire. "Hopefully they will do it," she nods. "It's definitely something I'd want to do." For the moment she's planning to take some time off; originally intending just to make Side Effects and the Malick movie, until the other two popped up, last year's furious workload has left her spent. "I hadn't planned on doing four films. I think that's a lot," she says. "I don't want people to get used to seeing me and annoyed by my face." There's little danger of that – at least for now.

Side Effects was named "Critics Pick" by the LA Times! And speaking of prescription med fraud, I knew this premed chick in college who had her mom forge a diary to get an adderall prescription. She asked me to proofread it for believability once.

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Halle Berry Will bec back To X-Men



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As X-Men: Days of Future Past rolls toward production (insert Professor X pun here) there remains some big question marks about the cast. Director Bryan Singer has already established that this is a reunion film, bringing back multiple actors from the original trilogy, but there are some key names missing. Chief among them is Halle Berry. While Patrick Stewart, Ian McKellen, Hugh Jackman, Anna Paquin, Shawn Ashmore and Ellen Page are all set to return, there hasn't been any definitive news about whether the Oscar winning actress would be back as the mutant known as Storm. Today we still don't have anything definitive, but at least we're getting closer.

With The Call set to arrive in theaters soon Berry is currently doing press rounds and in an interview with Shadow and Act she revealed that there's a very good chance she will be back in her white wig for Days of Future Past. While the article contains no actual quotes, the site says she told him, that there are "a few details that are still being negotiated which she couldn't get into," but that she was well-aware that production is aiming to start in April. The impression that the interviewer got was positive, saying, "It's very possible that something could happen and that she won't be in it at all. But that's not a possibility that I got from her."

In addition to all of the aforementioned actors, James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender, Nicholas Hoult and Oscar winner Jennifer Lawrence are set to reprise their respective roles from X-Men: First Class. For all the latest updates on the film, be sure to head over to our Blend Film Database. - See more at:

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Thursday, February 28, 2013

Kim Cattrall to get achievement award from Canadian Screen Awards



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TORONTO – “Sex and the City” star Kim Cattrall is being recognized for her body of work.

The actress will receive a special prize for “outstanding artistic contribution to film and television” at the inaugural Canadian Screen Awards.

The award recognizes “a remarkable person who has made their mark on the film and television industry.”

Academy head Helga Stephenson says Cattrall “is a fabulously successful Canadian performer who proudly embraces both sides of the border.”

The Canadian-raised actress is best known for starring as lusty singleton Samantha in the HBO series “Sex and the City” and its spinoff movies. She also appeared in the PBS mini-series “Any Human Heart,” Roman Polanski’s “The Ghost Writer” and the 1987 comedy “Mannequin.”

Cattrall was to receive the prize at an industry gala tonight honouring select categories in TV drama, comedy, variety and children’s programming.

The top prizes at the Canadian Screen Awards will be broadcast Sunday on CBC-TV. The bash replaces the previous Genie and Gemini awards, which separately honoured the best in homegrown film and television.

This fall, Cattrall will star with Don McKellar and Bob Martin in an adaptation of the BBC2 series “Sensitive Skin.” Shooting is expected to take place in Toronto in September.



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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Mila Kunis in Marie Claire UK April 2013



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With her highly anticipated film "Oz The Great and Powerful" set to hit theaters next week (March 8), Mila Kunis garnered herself some added exposure by covering the April 2013 issue of Marie Claire UK.

Looking absolutely enchanting in white for the Craig McDean-shot front page, the 29-year-old actress opened up about everything from "That 70's Show" to her hectic Hollywood life.








During the interview, the "Black Swan" beauty chatted about moving on from television, and said, "When '70s ended I went on a mission to prove everybody wrong. I read for movies I would never do. I auditioned for everything, just to show I could do it. I needed to prove I was capable of doing things other than—forget comedy—other than a TV show."

She's definitely proved herself in Hollywood, and Mila accepts the changes that come with more esteem, explaining, "To say my life hasn't changed would be a lie. It has changed, I don't really know how. I can't complain, nor am I complaining, but I can't leave my house as freely as I used to. But I've also traveled a lot for work, so that's changed. I have been very lucky."

Although she's extremely talented and successful, the brunette beauty wants more from life. "I don't think I can do three-movies-a-year thing. It's too much. There comes a point in your life where you want to be... home."

"I want to explore other parts of this industry to see what aspects of it I can get myself into, so that I can.. work out of home maybe? Like producing. Then I can have, like, a life, in one location," she adds.

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

New image of Nicole Kidman as 'Grace of Monaco'



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Monaco's royal family may have denounced it as "pure fiction", but the first official picture of Nicole Kidman as Grace Kelly suggests the Australian actor looks the part in the forthcoming biopic Grace of Monaco.

Directed by La Vie En Rose's Olivier Dahan, the film reportedly tells the story of Grace's intervention between France and Monaco in 1962, when the two states were in dispute over tax laws in the principality and a coup was a genuine possibility. Kidman, 45, plays Kelly in her early 30s, but the princess's children are more concerned about what they perceive as a "pointlessly glamorised" depiction of their mother. Prince Albert, the current ruling monarch of Monaco, issued a joint statement with Princess Caroline and Princess Stephanie last month denouncing the project as historically inaccurate. "We have had absolutely no association with this project, which claims to be about the lives of our parents," the royal trio said.

Kidman, responding at a special screening of her new film Stoker in London last week, said she was determined to present a carefully crafted take on Alfred Hitchcock's best known muse. "I wanted to be respectful of her, her story and her essence so hopefully that will all come through," she said. "It's exciting but at first it was daunting. At the same time I had studied her and felt a kind of tenderness towards her."

Kelly became known as Princess Grace after the star of Dial M for Murder and Rear Window left Hollywood for a new life as the wife of Monaco's Prince Rainier III in 1956. She died in 1982 after suffering a stroke at the wheel of her car.


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Nicole Kidman says older women can still enjoy a successful career on the big screen.

The movie industry has been criticised in recent years over its dearth of roles for actresses once they reach their forties.

Nicole, 45, told the Radio Times: "I love that Emmanuelle Riva, who is 86, may well win best actress at the Oscars (the Oscar was won by 22-year-old Silver Linings Playbook star Jennifer Lawrence). That's glorious. That says something great about the longevity of an actress's career.

"Everyone always says 'oh, they only have a shelf life of 40 years' and you look at that and you go 'no way'."

The star admitted that she was "incredibly lonely" after her Oscar win for The Hours in 2003, because of the end of her 10-year marriage, in 2000, to Tom Cruise.

Nicole, who plays a lonely widow in psychological thriller Stoker and a woman who marries a convicted killer on death row in The Paperboy, said that "leading lady" roles were behind her.

"My desire, particularly now as I get older, is to play character roles," the Grace of Monaco star said.

"The Paperboy is a character role and so is Stoker, and Grace of Monaco. And it's a great thing being a character actor - the leading lady thing is fine but the interesting stuff is the character parts.

"I'm not interested in playing myself and I'm not interested in playing the same thing over and over again. I'm not good when I have to be the girl next door. That's just not my thing, so the more extreme the better in a way."

Nicole, who has two children with her country singer husband Keith Urban, said of winning the best actress Oscar: "That was a very strange time in my life because it was the collision of professional success and personal failure".




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    Lindsay Lohan: "She's finally made a decision to turn her life around," says source



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    Lindsay Lohan's lawyer has made an unexpected move.

    Mark Heller, the attorney who took over representing LiLo in her ongoing probation violation case, filed a legal motion on Friday to put the case on a "slow track" in order to give the troubled actress time.

    According to the court documents, Heller argues that there should be a "continuance" on the case because it will "enable the Defendant who is pursuing and participating in certain activities which will benefit her and afford her more of an opportunity to be a productive and responsible person and contributor to society."

    A source tells E! News that the activities proposed will include "various public service and various charitable efforts."

    "She's finally made a decision to turn her life around," the source added.

    The documents continue to state that, "the Defendant has made a commitment to herself to elevate her life and participate in activities which will advance her desire to lead a model life."

    The motion also seeks to dismiss charges made against Lohan after police claimed she lied about who was driving her Porsche when she was involved in a Santa Monica car crash back in June, claiming specific procedural irregularities in the ways authorities responded to the incident.

    It sure hasn't been a good day for Lohan. Earlier today, the embattled Liz & Dick star for hit with a $56,000 tax lien for 2011.

    Source: E! News source 2



    Monday, February 25, 2013

    10 Ladies that rocked the best dresses at the 2013 Academy Awards



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    House of Geekery brings you their picks for the 10 Best Dressed Ladies at the Academy Awards.

    1. Naomi Watts in in Armani Privé
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    2. Jessica Chastain in Giorgio Armani
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    3. Sally Field in Valentino
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    4. Amanda Seyfried in Alexander McQueen
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    5. Charlize Theron in Christian Dior Couture
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    6-10 at the Source 2