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Thursday, September 09, 2010

Fashion random bits

Maggie Gyllenhaal style in Harper's Bazaar - August 2010
Kate Winslet for Longine DolceVita collection
Kristen Stewart - Flaunt magazine outtake
Megan Fox - Elle US magazine September 2010
Maria Bello in a dressing roomMolly Sims in a room full of clothes and shoesJulianne Moore in Bulgari jewelry and watch advertising campaign Summer 2010

"Venice may be desperate for funds to restore its crumbling architecture, but the city's mayor has drawn the line at a billboard displaying a nude photograph of actress Julianne Moore.
The advertisement, for luxury accessories brand Bulgari, shows the 49-year-old posing on a chaise longue with a handbag and two lion cubs. It had been due to adorn the Doge’s Palace, which overlooks St Mark’s Square and the city's lagoon. But the newly-elected mayor Giorgio Orsoni called the poser 'inappropriate' and has demanded that it be replaced by a less risqué image". Source: www.dailymail.co.uk

Zooey Deschanel in Rimmel beauty adPenelope Cruz by Mario Testino for Elle France September 2010
Ryan Gosling & Michelle Williams on W Magazine "Blue Valentine" October 2010 cover. Make-Up & Grooming by Jeanine Lobell
Milla Jovovich in promotion of her clothes line "Capsule Collection by Milla" at Matsuya Department Ginza in Tokyo on 1st September 2010
Carey Mulligan wearing a Night Out Haute Hoodie
Milla Jovovich photoshoot by Guy Aroch for LA Times Magazine September 2010
Kate Winslet in Vogue China Octobre 2010 phtoshoot
Amanda Seyfried in Elle Magazine October 2010 photoshoot by Carter Smith
Gemma Arterton in Glamour magazine, October 2010Gemma Arterton - GQ UK magazine, October 2010
Gwyneth Paltrow Fashion Night Out on 8th September 2010
Eva Longoria holding a Chanel shoe boxEva Longoria Parker at The Perfume Shop to promote the UK launch of her new fragrance 'Eva' on 5th September 2010 in LondonEmmy Rossum wearing shoes by Pour La VictoireRebecca Hall wearing dress, shoes and bracelets by PradaLindsay Lohan - Leggins 6126 Behind the Shoot (Yu Tsai)
Emma Roberts wearing a black handbag by Miu Miu at
"Brothers" premiere on 22nd November 2009:

Noir Scenarios: Zodiac, The Killer inside me, Human Desire, etc.

"Consequently, Zodiac forms something of a companion piece to Se7en and its cynical, world-weary view of personal quests for "justice." As with Brad Pitt's detective Mills, Gyllenhaal's Graysmith brings himself and his clan to the brink of ruin in order to stop a serial killer, and learns—albeit to a lesser extent than the tragic Mills—that happy endings are the stuff of fairy-tale fiction. Jake Gyllenhaal and Chlöe Sevigny as Robert Graysmith and Melanie in "Zodiac" (2007)

An honest man who pays a weighty price for trying to be something he's not (namely, a detective), Graysmith—despite a somewhat upbeat "where are they now" textual coda—thus eventually comes to resemble a classic noir hero. And the fact that he continues, to this day, to write about the infamous, never-captured S.F. boogeyman adds a final, poignant punctuation to Zodiac, with Graysmith's inescapable enthrallment suggesting that for many, true obsessions never really die". Source: www.slantmagazine.com

Jake Gyllenhaal and Chöe Sevigny attending 'Zodiac' Cannes Film Festival Photocall 2007

"Inquisitor centers on Dashe's character "Lulu", a young girl with a Louise Brooks hairstyle who finds a pile of suspicious old books. Based on the writings inside, she becomes convinced that they were once owned by the infamous Zodiac killer. What's more, she suspects that her elderly neighbor Hazel Reedy (Hunt) is Zodiac's widow. The two women sit across from each other in Reedy's claustrophobic home and trade subtle jabs while the truth lingers in the air like decades of trapped cigarette smoke. Both Hunt and Dashe are fantastic in this noirish tale". Source: www.midnightpalace.com

"Michael Winterbottom's adaptation of Jim Thompson's "The Killer Inside Me" is one of the deepest, darkest films noir ever made -- an unflinchingly nasty, nihilistic piece of work that pulls no punches, literally or figuratively. This is what noir is all about: facing the worst possibilities of human nature, a bottomless sense of dread that makes you feel like you're drowning in fetid bog of blood (see "Macbeth"). And it's all your fault, the undeniable consequences of following your own overpowering desires, of making your own messy mistakes. And maybe some rotten luck -- the kind you invariably bring on yourself.
At the start of the movie, on the drive out to what becomes the scene of his first pair of homicides, Lou lays the groundwork for what's to come in his choked, matter-of-fact voiceover:
"Out here you say yes ma'am an no ma'am to anything with a skirt on. Out here if you catch a man with his pants down you apologize, even if you have to arrest him afterwards. Out here you're a man and a gentle-man or you aren't anything at all. And god help you if you're not." Source: blogs.suntimes.com

Jessica Alba as Joyce Lakeland in "The Killer Inside Me" (2010)

"Bello counterbalances poignant hard-luck symphonies in Permanent Midnight or Paycheck with witty and fascinating studio gigs that betray a business acumen and an artistic dexterity all her own.
Bello bolted for New York City, toiling in telling off-Broadway fare like The Killer Inside Me, an adaptation of the Jim Thompson pulp noir""Maria Bello’s breakout screen performance arrived in 2003, opposite William H. Macy, in the form of emotionally battered cocktail waitress Natalie Belisario in Wayne Kramer’s romantic noir sleeper hit The Cooler. It featured what is perhaps the most joyful and unvarnished screen sex scene in many years—the scene made Bello a star but not strictly for its frank depiction of gritty motel room sex, which was at once giddy, erotic, playful and wise;" Source: fest08.sffs.org

Maria Bello and Kristen Stewart at "The Yellow Handkerchief" in Los Angeles on 17th February 2010

Maria Bello and Ben Stiller as Kitty and Jerry in "Permanent Midnight" (1998)

"Permanent Midnight is actually a personal memoir of scriptwriter Jerry Stahl, and David Veloz picks Ben Stiller to help him ponder the past; personal selection is a tasteful parallel for vindicating the performance you need out of your lead.

It's a film that's a lot about sex and even a lot more about drugs. Jerry is relating his sins to Kitty (while committing more sins with her, played by Maria Bello) and his dive to the deep funk of where losers lie". Source: members.tripod.com

"The part of his mind that considered odds and consequences had shut down entirely, snuffed by the sheer adrenal rush of holding her, falling together into the Impala's sunken upholstery. He took her face in his hands as he kissed her, wanting to just get it right, to stamp the moment, to blunt the thunder of fear pounding in his skull as the rest of him succumbed to a sensation beyond pleasure, a kind of twisted relief that he'd macheted all his moorings, that whatever happened now would happen because he'd said 'Fuck It' to everything that had rendered him, for more years than he could count, a soul-dead, heart-numbed misfit staggering from pill to pill just to get through the dull risk of his own existence."
— Jerry Stahl (Plainclothes Naked Copyright © 2001)

More Noir scenarios and femme-fatales:
Virginia Madsen as Dolly Harshaw in The Hot Spot (1990)

Gloria Grahame (archetypal femme-fatale)

Gloria Grahame and Sterling Hayden in "Naked Alibi" (1954)
Gloria Grahame and Glenn Ford in "The Big Heat" (1953)
Gloria Grahame and Humphrey Bogart in "In a Lonely Place" (1950)
Glenn Ford and Gloria Grahame in "Human Desire" (1954)

"I used Gloria Grahame and Glenn Ford again, with Broderick Crawford, in Human Desire, but the picture was turned on its head. The Renoir film is about the psychopath, a sex killer. This is about a woman who cheats, for no good reason, really. The script was nowhere near the caliber of Clash By Night and very far from the Zola novel about the human beast. Alfred Hayes, the writer, and I wanted to go back to that concept in Zola, but the producer resisted. He wanted the woman to be a slut, a beast. To my surprise, after we changed Zola, we still got good notices in Paris. All Jerry Wald [the producer] cared about was the trains. He thought the train going through the tunnel in the Renoir was such a wonderful symbol of sex. I tried to do something different, with the tracks and the boxcars, to give the sense of fate, being hemmed in by massive objects. And we used low-key light in the studio interiors to make the surroundings seem shabby and dreary". -Fritz Lang about the shooting of "Human Desire"

Marie Windsor and Sterling Hayden in The Killing (1956)Rita Hayworth as Elsa Bannister in "The Lady from Shanghai" (1947)Joan Bennett in The Woman in the Window (1944)
Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall as Phillip Marlowe and Vivian Rutledge in The Big Sleep (1946)

Jake Gyllenhaal honored by Middle Eastern comedy festival

Jake Gyllenhaal and Gemma Arterton attending Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time Premiere in Moscow on May 11, 2010

"Champions of Middle Eastern culture, Ronnie Khalil and Ryan Shrime are set to reinvent last year’s highly successful Middle Eastern Comedy Festival, to be held in Los Angeles, Oct. 4-7, 2010. The event will showcase stand-up comics of Middle Eastern descent, including Arabs, Israelis, Persians, Afghanis, and more, as well as stage a variety of comedy sketches.Jake Gyllenhaal at Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time Moscow Premiere on 11th May, 2010

The festival will kick off at Hollywood’s Laugh Factory with a “brown carpet gala”, followed by three nights of entertainment at the Acme Comedy Theatre. At the closing awards ceremony, Khalil and Shrime will honor Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time star Jake Gyllenhaal". Source: punchlinemagazine.com

For more information: www.mideastcomedyfest.com

Anne Meara, Christine Taylor, Ben Stiller and Jerry Stiller attending Project A.L.S. "Tomorrow Is Tonight" 11th Annual Benefit Gala 2008

"Jerry Stiller and Ann Meara – a long respected comedy team – read a letter written by [George] Carlin on Jan. 9, 2006, days after he was released from the hospital, having been operated on for congestive heart failure. The letter concludes: PS: “No need to reply unless you need medical advice.”
Jerry and Anne then brought up their kids, Ben and Amy Stiller, who both gave short reflections on Carlin, with Ben calling George “one of the comedy gods” and calling him “incredibly kind and warm hearted” while onset of, what Ben called a shitty TV movie of the week Working Trash, in which the pair co-starred". Source: punchlinemagazine.com