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TAKING A WALK ON THE FILMIC SIDE, TRANSITING THE VINTAGE ROADS.










New/Old pictures of Kristen Stewart in Elle UK magazine, Outtakes by Matthias Vriens-McGrath
Taylor, 21, says she wrote the song as a response to critics who didn’t like her music, but the video seems to have a lot of metaphor to a bad relationship — likely with Jake, 30. Primarily, Taylor takes the role of an old-time damsel-in-distress, tied to train tracks by a mustache-twirling bad guy. The lyrics that play over the scene may surprise you:
“You, with your switching sides,
Jake Gyllenhaal awaits a train passing in "Source Code" (2011)
THE KILLERS (1946, Robert Siodmak. Ava Gardner, Burt Lancaster)
THE ASPHALT JUNGLE (1950, Huston. Sterling Hayden)
Emilio Estevez as Two-Bit Matthews in "The Outsiders" (1983) directed by Francis Ford Coppola
Songs "She called me baby" by Bobby Bare, "He sure he's the boy I love" by The Crystals and "That'll be the day" by Buddy Holly.
Michelle Lombardo plays Tyler Murphy in Girltrash: All Night Long (2010) directed by Alexandra Kondracke


Jake Gyllenhaal as Donnie Darko and Mary McDonnell as Rose Darko in "Donnie Darko" (2001) directed by Richard Kelly






Julianne Moore as Amber Waves and Heather Graham as Rollergirl in "Boogie Nights" (1997) directed by Paul Thomas Anderson
Michelle Monaghan and Jake Gyllenhaal in "Source Code" (2011) directed by Duncan Jones
Jake Gyllenhaal was joined by fellow co-stars Vera Famiga and Michelle Monaghan to promote the movie, which sees Gyllenhaal waking up in the body of an unknown man and given a repeating eight-minute mission to prevent a suicide bomb on a Chicago train". Source: www.metro.co.uk
Molly Ringwald, Anthony Michael Hall and Emilio Estevez in "The Breakfast Club" (1985) directed by John Hughes
Anthony Michael Hall as Brian Johnson - the nerd of the group. He gets detention for having a flare gun in his locker that went off by accident. Johnson has a troubled home life because his stern parents want him to do well academically and he frequently thinks about committing suicide, the main reason that he had the gun in the first place. At the end, he writes the essay for Mr. Vernon on how he sees the group, thus giving them the name "the Breakfast Club."
Natalie Kenly, ex-nanny, model and Charlie Sheen's goddess
"Something which Charlie Sheen's 'goddess' should have taken on board before last night's diabetes gala. Because Natalie Kenly looked like she had dressed for a fancy dress party in her French maid-style outfit.
The 24-year-old made sure all flashbulbs were pointing her away posed for pictures at the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation's annual gala. And while other female guests dressed demurely and suitably for the fundraising night, Kenly looked like a French maid in her short and strapless sequinned black dress with chiffon netting and a white skirt over the top". Source: www.dailymail.co.uk
“I feel bad for the fans because there was never that final episode where Alan, like, comes into my room calling my name and pulls back the closet door and there I am hanging, with a note saying, ‘How do you like me now, Chuck?’, Sheen laughed. Well, that would actually get us to watch the show for once. Can’t argue with ratings!
"It didn't take long for Grahame to discover that she'd been effectively blackballed. Everyone knew of her behavior on the set of "Oklahoma!", and despite another Academy Award nomination for her performance as Ado Annie, no one wanted to work with her.
Her career was effectively over. When later asked about having to play the game in Hollywood, she replied, "I don't know what the game is. I don't think I ever understood Hollywood." Source: www.shebloggedbynight.com
“She has the manner of a schoolgirl and the eyes of a sorceress.”
The book "Suicide Blonde: The Life of Gloria Grahame" by Vincent Curcio is at its strongest when analyzing Gloria’s career, and the author includes an excellent analysis of why she never became a star: “She was offbeat, both in her beauty and her acting, and producers never were sure what to do with her.”
Humphrey Bogart and Gloria Grahame in "In a lonely place" (1950) directed by Nicholas Ray
“She had a terrible way of appearing to be totally absent from anywhere, which is probably the very thing that made her a star in the films; she put a peculiar kind of distance between her and what was happening at the moment.
This disengaged quality about her in films is what made her unique. There was a kind of loneliness about Gloria, and in a way, her greatest acting moments were lonely moments.” Source: phoenixcinema.wordpress.com
