WEIRDLAND

Monday, December 20, 2010

Attractive faces and Christmas gifts - Merry Christmas 2010!

Jake Gyllenhaal's character in "Love and other drugs" Jamie Randall offering Viagra as the best gift
Taylor Swift - Christmas theme decoration
Audrey Hepburn with Santa ClausBetty Grable with a handful of Christmas giftsRita Hayworth as GildaRita Hayworth garnishing the Christmas coniferous treeMe with a coniferous tree (a pine actually)Marilyn Monroe wishing a Happy New Year in the 50's
Emma Stone likes 50's styleWould you take a ride with Emma Stone?Who's Hot for Christmas: Emma Stone
Sophia Bush looking at watches in a Swatch store
Gwyneth Paltrow in InStyle January 2011
Kirsten Dunst does Christmas shopping on Saturday (December 18) in Los Angeles.
Katy Perry dressed as Papa Noel in concert
Ben Stiller, Jessica Alba, Robert De Niro and Owen Wilson attending the premiere of "Little Fockers" on 15th December 2010
Erika Christensen with Christmas lights
Amanda Seyfried buying organic smoothies?
Robert Pattinson filming with Uma Thurman "Bel Ami"Kristen Stewart in a poster of Twilight saga "Breaking dawn"The restaurant where a dinner scene in "Breaking Dawn" was filmed
Olivia Wilde in Women's Health magazine, January/February 2011
Maria Carey dressed as Mama Noel with a little snow man Paris Hilton - Christmas Card 2010
Reese Witherspoon goes shopping in a mall center in Los Angeles
Me in a local mall center anticipating the spirit of Christmas

New Interview with Jake Gyllenhaal & Anne Hathaway


[007disk.com] Interview with Jake Gyllenhaal & Anne Hathaway..."고화질 전체보기는 빠르고, 믿을 수 있는 www.007disk.com

Jake Gyllenhaal: 'one of the essential elements of a love story is sex'

Anne Hathaway and Jake Gyllenhaala Maggie and Jamie, driving the road of an addictive relationship in "Love and other drugs" (2010).

"The 30-year-old actor stars opposite Anne Hathaway in the comedy drama Love and Other Drugs, which charts the romantic relationship between a free-spirited woman named Maggie and a charming pharmaceutical sales rep named Jamie.

Jake and Anne filmed various sex scenes for the film and even posed together naked on the front cover of Entertainment Weekly magazine to promote the movie, but Jake has reiterated that the graphic nature of the scenes were important to the overall theme of the film.
“I think one of the essential elements of a love story is sex, and it should be. And if we were gonna be as open and intimate as we could be we’d have to do the same thing with sex. How can you believe these people are in love if they don’t wanna be naked around one another? I don’t know about you guys but I’ve never had sex with boxers on, it’s an odd thing,” he told Cover Media. “That was really important to us, somewhere in somebody’s unconscious that we were two people in love, not just actors telling a love story.” Source: www.musicrooms.net

Ane Htathaway in Figaro Madame France magazine, December 2010

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Happy 30th Birthday, Jake Gyllenhaal!

New poster of "Loe and other drugs" (2010)
New publicity stills of Anne Hathaway and Jake Gyllenhaal in "Love and Other Drugs" (2010)
I hope Jake has a birthday full of diversions and surrounded by his family and friends. Happy 30th Birthday from Jake Weird!



A video dedicated to Jake Gyllenhaal for his 30th birthday!

Songs "This love is true" by Skeeter Davis & Teddy Nelson and "Hot Love" by T. Rex and "Since I don't have you" by The Skyliners

R.I.P. Blake Edwards (26 July 1922 - 15 December 2010)

"Blake Edwards, the veteran writer-director whose films include the Pink Panther comedies, Breakfast at Tiffany's, Days of Wine and Roses and 10 and whose legendary disputes with studio chiefs inspired his scathing Hollywood satire S.O.B. has died. He was 88." Dennis McLellan for the Los Angeles Times: "Edwards, whose collaborations with his wife, Julie Andrews, included the 1982 comedy Victor/Victoria, died of of complications of pneumonia Wednesday evening."
His "reputation as a film director seems locked by some in the realm of lowbrow slapstick comedy and, in many cases, not particularly good ones, but Edwards's work as a director and a writer was more multifaceted than that," argues Edward Copeland. "True, at his heart he was a clown. A few years ago when the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences finally saw fit to bestow an honorary Oscar upon Edwards, he used his acceptance speech as an occasion for a gag, abetted by presenter Jim Carrey, showing up in a wheelchair with a broken leg and making it appear as if it went out of control and crashed through the wall of part of the awards show set." Still, his "resume was far more eclectic than you'd think and he did produce some classics."
Breakfast at Tiffany's in 1961 established Edwards as a stylish director who could combine comedy with bittersweet romance. His next two films proved his versatility: the suspenseful Experiment in Terror (1962) and Days of Wine and Roses (1963), the story of a couple's alcoholism, with [Jack] Lemmon in his first dramatic role."
Updates, 12/17: "In effect, he gave the physical comedy of the silent era and the character-based humor of Hollywood forebears like Preston Sturges and Billy Wilder a modern neurotic spin," writes the Boston Globe's Ty Burr.
Julie Andrews with Director Blake Edwards filming "The Tamarind Seed" - 1974

Roger Ebert: "His life was filled with laughter, its end, shadowed by illness. He remained productive as long as he could. As Inspector Clouseau once observed, in words written by Edwards, 'There is a time to laugh and a time not to laugh, and this is not one of them.'"
Source: mubi.com

"The Great Race" Director Blake Edwards 1964 Warner Brothers

"As Orson Welles said, when I once asked him what he thought was the difference between cutting up a scene or playing it through in one shot, “Well, we used to say that was what separated the men from the boys.” Blake Edwards was definitely among the men—-a really terrific guy—- and with him goes one of the final examples of real, classic filmmaking". Source: blogs.indiewire.com