








Amanda Seyfried, Glamour Women of the Year Awards in London, on 2nd June 2009.
TAKING A WALK ON THE FILMIC SIDE, TRANSITING THE VINTAGE ROADS.
Jake Gyllenhaal kissing Anne Hathaway in "Brokeback Mountain" (2005).
I've been able to confirm that this project is the former UNTITLED CHARLES RANDOLPH which was featured in the 2007's Black List.
Jamie Reidy (Jake Gyllenhaal) is a charmer and a talker who is never still. He does not live up to his family's expectations of him or to the successes of his siblings. Jamie jumps from job to job, and eventually finds his niche in the pharmaceutical sales world.
It isn't an easy start for him, until he is able to use his polished skills with women to sell the new drug, Viagra, released by his company Pfizer.
Meanwhile Maggie Murdock (Anne Hathaway) is a pretty young woman with art-girl hair, a pugnacious manner and warm eyes. She consults Dr. Knight regarding her Parkinson's disease, while Jamie pretends to be his intern. Against her better judgment, she falls in love with Jamie". Source: www.tnmc.org
"We hear rumblings that blonde ingénue Emilie de Ravin has been tapped to star opposite Robert Pattinson in his upcoming drama Remember Me.
Known for her turns on ABC's Lost and the high school noir film Brick, de Ravin will play Pattinson's love
interest in Remember Me, about a couple struggling to stay together despite individual family tragedies.
5. Philadelphia (1993) - Philadelphia is a great gay/Aids movie starring Tom Hanks, Denzel Washington and Antonio Banderas. The film tells the story of Andrew Beckett (Hanks), a gay lawyer infected with AIDS who is fired from his law firm because his colleagues fear they might contract AIDs. This film is important because it was one of the first all-star casts, which could pull in big audiences, that tackled the issues of AIDs in the United States, and also introduced a more realistic picture of gays and lesbians. Although the film is about two gay lovers, the AIDs issue in the film was meant for everyone not only the gay, and it was the first time people thought about it that way on film. The film exploited the discrimination that gays and AIDs patients still undergo in our democratic society and began the change towards AIDs no longer with just the homosexual community but in all communities.
3. Fire (1996) - Get’s points for a unique perspective on the gay community. Fire is the first Indian film to explicitly show homosexual relations, and after its release many right-wing Hindu groups violently protested against homosexuality. In the film, two daughters-in-law who were forced to marry into the family on an arranged marriage become lovers. The women go through some hardships, but end up together. Although many critics loved the film calling it “explosive” and “pathbreaking,” many were outraged by the explicit lesbian relationship shown in the film.
2. Brokeback Mountain (2005) - Why? Because this film is iconic. Perhaps the issues of homosexuality aren’t in the forefront as they are with some others but Ang Lee’s film consists of some of the finest performances (Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal) and an extremely personal exploration of the pain of hiding who one really is.
The thing about Brokeback Mountain is that although it isn’t outwardly about gay rights, it’s about the misery of having to live in secret and denying one’s true self. Instead of taking an activist perspective, it went through the struggles of real people and shows how lying to oneself doesn’t make things better, it destroys lives.
1. Milk (2008) - Milk is an award winning biopic film about the life of activist and politician Harvey Milk. Milk has received very high acclaim and redefined Queer Cinema. I had never seen a gay film like Milk; most gay films are about two or three characters, but Milk is about the suffrage of an entire people. Although the movement started in Castro it stretched far and wide, and now with the film hopefully Milk’s message can stretch even further especially in a time when it’s needed most. Sadly, we haven’t come that since the 60’s-70’s, in fact some people may even say we’ve taken some steps backwards.
Although Sean Penn and Dustin Lance Black both won Academy Awards for the film it was probably the least well received, which shows that people aren’t ready for change. So what better time than now to let this great film motivate you. You can’t just sit and let things happen, get out there and make a difference like Black is currently doing with the couragecampaign and more!
"The Liberty Media studio has signed up for a modern take on "Hamlet" and attached a slew of big names to pull off the task.
"Twilight" and "Thirteen" director Catherine Hardwicke is attached to direct,
with Emile Hirsch, who helped conceive the idea, attached to star as the title character.
"Milk" producers Dan Jinks and Bruce Cohen will produce via their Jinks/Cohen banner.
angst -- the story of Hamlet is perhaps as timely and influential today as it was when it was written over 400 years ago."
with teen pic "10 Things I Hate About You," which was a retelling of "Taming of the Shrew",
and Ethan Hawke starring in a Hamlet update that focused on corporate politics". Source: www.hollywoodreporter.com
Nikki Reed and Emile Hirsch in "Lords of Dogtown" (2005)
I have more faith in Emile Hirsch, who is an underrated young actor choosing excellent roles in his rise to stardom.
He’s a few steps behind Leonardo DiCaprio’s great career and at this pace he could be a formidable fixture in Hollywood for some time. I imagine his work with Sean Penn and the equally great James Franco in Milk will be even more historic in hindsight. I’m looking forward to his Hamlet, even if it has been done so many times before". Source: newsinfilm.com
