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Monday, September 07, 2009

The next Meryl Streep?

Jake Gyllenhaal, Reese Witherspoon and Meryl Streep on the Spanish poster of "Rendition"/"Expedient Anwar".

"But it seems a good time to ponder who might be the next Meryl Streep, as the season features a number of leading roles for up-and-coming young women. Some names are familiar; some less so; all have the potential to make a Streep-like impact.
Emily Blunt
I first noticed this young British actress in "My Summer of Love" four years ago and she was mesmerizing, playing a cool, glamorous teenager sophisticated beyond her years — sometimes. And then I saw Blunt doing a note-perfect comic turn opposite Streep in "The Devil Wears Prada," holding her own as an eye-rolling assistant, and I didn't recognize her. And I saw her in "The Jane Austen Book Club", "Dan in Real Life," "Charlie Wilson's War" — ditto. Like Streep, she disappears into her roles, changing her voice, her carriage, her presence. (She seems taller in some movies than others; the mark of a true chameleon.) This fall, she'll star in "The Young Victoria" (opening Nov. 13), playing the British queen in the early years of her reign.

Abbie Cornish
"A Good Year", the inheriting-a-vineyard-in-France Russell Crowe vehicle from a few years back, is looking more interesting by the day. Appearing in it as Crowe's love interest was a then little-known French actress, Marion "La Vie en Rose" Cotillard. And, in a featured role, was an even-lesser-known young Australian named Abbie Cornish. She's since turned up in "Elizabeth: The Golden Age" and doing a soft Texas accent in Kimberly Peirce's "Stop-Loss", making an underwritten character into something warm and urgent. Her breakthrough role comes this season, as Fanny Brawne in Jane Campion's "Bright Star" opening Sept. 18. Brawne was the young neighbor of the poet John Keats and fell in love with him, despite opposition to their relationship. In a quietly lyrical performance, she shines — yes, like a star.

Carey Mulligan
I know — you're asking "Who?" Soon, you won't be asking. But trust me, you've seen this Brit before: Mulligan was a young Bennet sister alongside Keira Knightley in "Pride & Prejudice" and has a small role in "Public Enemies". But she'll make her name with the upcoming "An Education" (opening in November), as a teenage girl in '60s London growing up a little too fast. Though 23, Mulligan effortlessly becomes 16 on the screen, in that one-minute-mature, one-minute-giggly way of all 16-year-olds. She'll make you think of Audrey Hepburn — and she'll make you think you've seen someone completely new. Remember this name.

Ellen Page
She's the only name on this list who already has an Oscar nomination next to it — for her sweetly sardonic work in "Juno." Like Kristen Stewart and Zooey Deschanel, Page's performances tend toward a coolly quirky deadpan, but there were moments in "Juno" and "Hard Candy" where her composure broke just a bit, letting us see the vulnerable character within. Talented, poised and just 22, Page seems ready to challenge herself — if her signing on for the title role of a big-screen BBC production of "Jane Eyre" last year is any indication. This fall, we'll see her falling in love with roller derby in Drew Barrymore's "Whip It" (Oct. 2).

Amanda Seyfried
You want versatility? Just look at three roles for this ethereal-looking blonde: "Mean Girls" in which Seyfried delivers a masterful comic performance as a dimwit; TV's "Big Love" hauntingly uncertain as the teen daughter in a polygamist family, feeling her way into adulthood; and a sweetly natural singing ingénue in "Mamma Mia!" — Meryl Streep and Amanda Seyfried, at "Mamma Mia!" premiere afterparty, Central Park Boathouse on July 16, 2008, New York.

playing, let us note, Streep's daughter. This fall she's tackling horror in "Jennifer's Body" (Sept. 18) — written by Diablo Cody, whose "Juno" made a star of Page — and drama in the title role of Atom Egoyan's "Chloe" (no release date yet set).

Audrey TautouBetter known than many others mentioned here, this Frenchwoman (whose looks inspire comparison to another famous Audrey) has been quietly amassing some impressive credits since charming moviegoers in Jean-Pierre Jeunet's enchantingly quirky "Amélie." She's done a romantic comedy ("Priceless"), a crime thriller ("Dirty Pretty Things"), a big Hollywood blockbuster ("The Da Vinci Code"), a historical drama ("A Very Long Engagement"), each time with conviction and skill. So why do we still think of her only as the doe-eyed, love-struck Amélie of eight years ago? Perhaps soon we'll think of her as Chanel: She stars this fall in "Coco Before Chanel" (opening in October), a tale of the great French fashion designer's early years". Source: seattletimes.nwsource.com

Sunday, September 06, 2009

Overcoming fakeness with melodics

Lee Ranaldo, Steve Shelley, Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore: SONIC YOUTH.

Sonic Youth and Wilco are two of my favourite indie rock bands, I own practically all their existent discography, and I've had the immense luck of having contacted some of their members in the past. I had sent Sonic Youth's former fanclub Sonic Death a letter, rambling poetry and a few drawings of mine made with Manleys.
Lee Ranaldo sent me a postcard from Italy, with a graffiti design writing me on it: "I hope you have a great life". Glups!


Sonic Youth - "Bull in the Heather"
Album "Experimental Jet Set, Trash & No Star"


Actual Wilco formation: Glenn Kotche, Mikael Jorgensen, Nels Cline, Jeff Tweedy, Pat Sansone and John Sirratt.

I've seen Wilco live twice in Spain, Zaragoza, (Sala Oasis), in 2005 and 2007. Jeff Tweedy sort of winked at me. I've been an user in Wilco Message Board Via Chicago, Jeff Tweedy's wife Sue Miller is registered there and posts from time to time and thanked me for my videos of Youtube I've made using some of Wilco's tunes as soundtrack.

As examples: "Wristcutters" video, Patrick Fugit video, Nora Zehetner (A Princess featuring "My darling"), Michael Cera -"I'm always in love", Emile Hirsch ("Alone"), "California stars" video, Lately, that's impossible since Youtube doesn't allow me using Wilco's songs anymore. Ironic, since Jeff Tweedy is a known spokesman for peer to peer music sharing and internet free downloading.
Anyway, Jeff has been one of my most laid-back crushes, and I loved him so much in Sam Jones' documentary "I'm trying to break your heart" (2002).

Sam Jones says of "Sunken Treasure" verses in the DVD booklet: "I'm not ashamed of rock & roll"... "Tweedy told me about how he ended up with those lines: "In the end, that was the punch line: the music is important".


Tribute to Jay Bennett. Jay Walter Bennett (November 15, 1963 - May 24, 2009) was an American guitarist, multiinstrumentalist, engineer, producer, and singer-songwriter, best known for his work with the band Wilco. On May 24, 2009 Bennett died unexpectedly in his sleep. Note from Weirdland: My favourite Wilco album is "Summerteeth", and Bennett's contribution in it was notable in its intoxicating sound.Sparklehorse is other of my fetish indie groups, and I included some of their most memorable tunes in my cherised homages to Kirsten Dunst ("Sunshine"), Michael Cera collage ("Sick of goodbyes", "Sad and beautiful world"), Michael Cera ("Comfort me"), Emile Hirsch ("Gold day") in youtube. Sparklehorse sent me via Myspace a message: "thank you for your support".
I worship Mark Linkous!


Nikki Reed attending a concert of her friends The Dills.
Nikki Reed as Rosalie Hale in "New Moon".
"The M&Ms in her hand drop to the floor like marbles, her soft face crumples and she starts to cry. 'I have nobody. I have surrounded myself with people who are fake just because I need to talk to somebody.'
Nikki Reed with her best friend Kristen Stewart, they love "not in a weird way" each other.

'With girls, friendships are hard because you have to learn to get to a maturity level to love them but not want to be them', Reed says".
Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

Sean Penn & Robin Wright's home on sell

"Hollywood couple Sean Penn and Robin Wright Penn have put their San Francisco-area home on the market for $15 million.The house is in the small Marin County town of Ross, about 18 miles north of San Francisco. The Penns bought the 2.2-acre property in 1996 for $2.1 million and spent more than two years rebuilding the 1933 Spanish-style house, says Coldwell Banker broker John McGeough, who has the listing". Source: www.sanfranciscosentinel.com

Saturday, September 05, 2009

Brave New World film version by Ridley Scott

"Ridley Scott is going back to the futurism.

The director who helmed “Blade Runner” will take on one of the most highly regarded dystopian works of literature, Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World.”
Scott and DiCaprio will produce via their respective Scott Free and Appian Way banners, with Michael Costigan also producing for Scott Free and George DiCaprio producing at Appian. Peter Cramer is overseeing for Uni. DiCaprio is shooting the Christopher Nolan adventure tale “Inception” but does not have a movie lined up after that.“Brave” has had several go-rounds on television, including a Leonard Nimoy-Peter Gallagher pic on NBC in 1998. But Huxley’s idea-rich novel hasn’t had a shot on the big screen.Huxley sets his book in a seemingly perfect 26th century world that has achieved harmony by tightly controlling birth, which takes place mainly in laboratories, and outlawing family. The world is populated by a series of five castes, each with its own defined roles.

Characters who figure in to the story are Bernard, a lower-caste member, and Lenina, the woman with whom he is infatuated.
DiCaprio is would likely play Bernard, who is persecuted when the leaders of the society find his behavior antisocial.George Orwell’s “1984” has had several theatrical turns, including Michael Anderson’s Columbia version in 1956 and the somewhat better regarded John Hurt-toplined take 25 years ago.
The director took the Philip K. Dick novel “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep” and turned it into the 1982 futurist pic “Blade Runner.” While the movie divided critics and didn’t enjoy a great theatrical run, it has had a long life on video and become a cult classic".
Source: www.riskybusinessblog.com

"If you had a God, you'd have a reason for self-denial".
"But industrial civilization is only possible when there's no self-denial. Self-indulgence up to the very limits imposed by hygiene and economics. Otherwise the wheels stop turning."
"You'd have a reason for chastity!" said the Savage, blushing a little as he spoke the words.

"But chastity means passion, chastity means neurasthenia. And passion and neurasthenia mean instability. And instability means the end of civilization. You can't have a lasting civilization without plenty of pleasant vices."
"But God's the reason for everything noble and fine and heroic. If you had a God…"

"My dear young friend", said Mustapha Mond, "civilization has absolutely no need of nobility or heroism. These things are symptoms of political inefficiency. In a properly organized society like ours, nobody has any opportunities for being noble or heroic. Conditions have got to be thoroughly unstable before the occasion can arise. Where there are wars, where there are divided allegiances, where there are temptations to be resisted, objects of love to be fought for or defended–there, obviously, nobility and heroism have some sense. But there aren't any wars nowadays. The greatest care is taken to prevent you from loving any one too much. There's no such thing as a divided allegiance; you're so conditioned that you can't help doing what you ought to do."

" Anybody can be virtuous now. You can carry at least half your morality about in a bottle. Christianity without tears–that's what soma is."

"But the tears are necessary. Don't you remember what Othello said? 'If after every tempest came such calms, may the winds blow till they have wakened death.' There's a story one of the old Indians used to tell us, about the Girl of Mátaski. The young men who wanted to marry her had to do a morning's hoeing in her garden. It seemed easy; but there were flies and mosquitoes, magic ones. Most of the young men simply couldn't stand the biting and stinging. But the one that could–he got the girl."
"Charming! But in civilized countries," said the Controller, "you can have girls without hoeing for them, and there aren't any flies or mosquitoes to sting you. We got rid of them all centuries ago."
The Savage nodded, frowning. "You got rid of them. Yes, that's just like you. Getting rid of everything unpleasant instead of learning to put up with it. Whether 'tis better in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune, or to take arms against a sea of troubles and by opposing end them … But you don't do either. Neither suffer nor oppose. You just abolish the slings and arrows. It's too easy".
Source: www.huxley.net

"Whip it!" Featurette

In VS magazine with Drew Barrymore and Juliette Lewis, photoshoot by Ellen Von Unwerth.

WHIP IT Behind the scenes with a very earnest Drew Barrymore.
"I know that many of you aren't too excited for WHIP IT, which follows Ellen Page's roller derby escapades as she tries to fit in at high school. But how does a minute long, behind the scenes look with Drew Barrymore sound?

Yeah, I didn’t think that would win you over. I actually believe this movie could be rather cute, but yes, I’m probably only going if a date makes me, which will save me some amount of man-points. Watching the featurette, I realized that Drew Barrymore in real life is EXACTLY like Drew Barrymore in every movie she’s ever been in, hence why MY DATE WITH DREW was a pretty surreal experience.

It’s the girl’s directorial debut, so be nice".
Source: www.joblo.com

Emile Hirsch on Jimmy Kimmel interview


Emile Hirsch joked with Jimmy Kimmel about his green converse sneakers, Emile said that no one would be caught dead in a store buying them.

Emile talked about his artistic upbringing in New Mexico, and about his mother's artistic craft.

It was shown a montage of Hirsch's different hairdos style throughout the years in his films. The fans in the audience whooped and hollered about Emile's hair-do in "Into the Wild"!