"Apparently Rob got Kristen Stewart a guitar for her 18th birthday as quoted from a German magazine:"Yes, of a couple of people, I got something. Rob gave me a guitar, that is simply only beautiful and magnificent." - Kristen.
Source: teamsugar.com
TAKING A WALK ON THE FILMIC SIDE, TRANSITING THE VINTAGE ROADS.
"Apparently Rob got Kristen Stewart a guitar for her 18th birthday as quoted from a German magazine:






Jake with Reese's son Deacon, out for coffee in LA, on 16th May 2009. Pictures courtesy of Iheartjakemedia.com

"Let me introduce you to the principal Basterd, the head honcho Basterd, most Inglourious of all Basterds, Lt. Aldo Raine (insert applause here). We’ve got a first look at Brad Pitt in full resistance fighter gear for you. Remember, this ain’t your Warner Brothers 1950s WW2 hero, this is a hillbilly straight from the mountains of Tennessee, a man with a scar around his neck that “will never once be mentioned,” this is Brad Pitt in one hundred percent Quentin Tarantino Nazi-scalping business.
Here’s a little quote from the much quoted Aldo Raine opening speech: “… I sure as hell, didnt come down from the goddamn Smoky Mountains, cross five thousand miles of water, fight my way through half Sicily, and then jump out of a fuckin air-o-plane, to teach the Nazi’s lessons in humanity".




That’s how he got his hands on Edie Sedgwick at Pana Grady’s place after the shooting of Wood Velez, and Bobbie Newirth comes walking in and says something to Edie in front of me, she was with me, so I saw this, was an actual witness to this and said,
“He would like to see you and listen here I brought this for you…these two sugar cubes of acid LSD”, and he fed her a little bit of acid and uh and at that point I walked away, I wasn’t going to score with her that night anyhow (laughs). And I wasn’t going to be competing with Dylan".
"Co-star Emile Hirsch also had specific instructions about what to watch to play a Vietnam veteran struggling with the past in his climactic scene: "Ang described [the tone of the scene] as ice beginning to thaw, like the scene with Walken in The Deer Hunter where he's just beginning to recognize De Niro. ..."
Screenwriter James Schamus knew that Taking Woodstock was facing a challenge in being taken seriously here: "Going to Cannes with a comedy is pretty much putting a target on your back." But Taking Woodstock was also a chance for Lee to look at the counterculture he experienced through movies in his native Taiwan before moving to the U.S. at age 23: "I saw Woodstock when I was 14 ... I learned about America from the media ... and I feel like I missed the show." And, Lee offered, Taking Woodstock tries to wrap around the contradictions of the time: "Woodstock took place at the same time as the Manson murders. ..."
"Lee's film pulls you into it and immerses you in the fearlessness, humanity and full visceral thrill of getting involved in something so primal and communal. There's barely any rock in it for an hour, either, until The Doors rumble on the soundtrack and the approaching hippie horde can be heard on the horizon.
while Liev Schreiber as transvestite ex-Marine security guard Vilma is unbelievable. All these characters are simply part of Elliot's odyssey, and once the festival begins, Lee constructs Woodstock as a Heart Of Darkness-style journey through enlightenment and chaos, rather than simply misrule and madness. It's an apocalypse wow, and when Elliot takes a tab of very, very strong LSD and hallucinates to Love's mind-altering Forever Changes album, the (late) summer of love engulfs him in a surreal and beautiful CG-enhanced vision that anyone who's ever been to Glastonbury will appreciate or, depending on their drug intake, perhaps even remember". Source: www.empireonline.com
9) Donnie Darko (2001): Giant bunny hallucinations, time travel, iconic objects in unexpected settings (a jet engine in the bedroom?) and, of course, the end of the world. There's some, like, deep significance in the fact that it is Patrick Swayze as the motivational speaker. Doses will make it all make sense to you.
2) 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968): The first movie to market itself as "The Ultimate Trip". Is 2001 really a heavy movie? Let's put it this way: during one of its first screenings in Los Angeles, during the final "Beyond the Infinite" sequence, someone ran to the front of the screen screaming "It's God! It's God!" and dove into the screen. Source: movieblog.ugo.com

include three-time Oscar nominee Johnny Depp
and cocky newcomer James Franco, who both have the swagger -- and cheekbones -- to pull off a reasonable Ol' Blue Eyes. "One issue for Johnny is his age. He's 45. But he's youthful enough to play nearly anybody," a source said.
Other names we're hearing include Jake Gyllenhaal,
Justin Timberlake,
Mark Wahlberg, Michael Bublé and Jon Hamm.
And while there's been chatter about Leonardo DiCaprio, who starred in the director's "The Departed" and "The Aviator", a source says it's unlikely, simply because Di- Caprio looks nothing like Sinatra".

"Jake Gyllenhaal grabs a cup of coffee with Deacon Phillippe, girlfriend Reese Witherspoon’s son, on Sunday morning (May 17) in Ojai, Calif.
Yesterday, Reese took Deacon to his Little League baseball game.
Deacon’s dad Ryan Phillippe and his girlfriend Abbie Cornish are currently in Cannes right now premiering her new film". Source: justjred.buzznet.com
