WEIRDLAND

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Billy Burke talks "Breaking Dawn" wrapping in Baton Rouge, Mackenzie Foy arrives in Vancouver, Ashley Greene in Teen Vogue

Robert Pattinson, Billy Burke and Kristen Stewart as Charlie and Bella Swan in "Twilight" saga

“We get along in this weird ethereal way that I haven’t gotten along with any costar before,” Burke said of Stewart. “She brings something that makes me want to go to work.”









At the premiere for his new movie, “Drive Angry 3D,” Billy Burke chats with Access about the progress for his upcoming movies, “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 1 & 2.” Source: www.accesshollywood.com

"Mackenzie Foy, the actress who will play Edward and Bella's child Renesmee in Breaking Dawn, arrived in Vancouver to continue shooting the saga yesterday. She stopped to sign autographs for fans as she headed to check out the Canadian city where her older Twilight costars shot New Moon and Eclipse.

Ashley Greene in Teen Vogue magazine, March 2011

Taylor Lautner is still hanging out in LA before reporting to work in Canada, while Ashley Greene took advantage of a weekend off to celebrate her birthday in Las Vegas with boyfriend Joe Jonas". Source: www.popsugar.com

Oscars revamp, Faulkner's 'To have and have not', Lauren Bacall, Honorary Awards

"Hawks bought the literary rights to Ernest Hemingway’s To Have and Have Not from Howard Hughes, who had unsuccessfully tried to make a movie of it at RKO. The novel, published in 1937, was one of Hemingway’s less popular books, and originally no one in Hollywood was especially excited about the property. But when Hawks chose to direct it and signed on Humphrey Bogart as leading man, the project was regarded as money in the bank.
Humphrey Bogart and Walter Brennan as Harry 'Steve' Morgan and Eddie in "To have and have not" (1944)
Bogart had labored for years as the villainous tough guy in more than a score of Warner Bros. films. In The Maltese Falcon (1941), his portrayal of Sam Spade defined the cinematic version of the classic American private eye. And as Rick Blaine in Casablanca (1942), he proved himself as a romantic lead. Whether in a white dinner jacket or a trench coat and snap-brim fedora, Bogart was, by the early 1940s, one of the top movie stars in the world and also a timely symbol of post–Pearl Harbor America: tough but compassionate, skeptical yet idealistic, betrayed yet ready to believe again, and, above all, a potent and deadly opponent.
Mayo Methot and Humphrey Bogart at home, circa 1944

Offscreen, however, Bogart was a man in a deeply troubled marriage of five years to actress Mayo Methot. Mayo, alcoholic and mentally unstable, had stabbed him in a rage one night in 1942 while he was making Across the Pacific, an incident that was kept secret from the press and from the police. But Bogart, whom his friend John Huston, the director, described as “morbidly faithful” persisted in the marriage". Source: www.vanityfair.com

Lauren Bacall as "Slim" in "To have and have not" (1944) directed by Howard Hawks, written by William Faulkner and Jules Furthman

William Faulkner said: 'The past is never dead. It’s not even past. As far as I’m concerned, making films and preserving them are the same thing. In this room, none of us who make films and watch them would be here without the people who came here before us'.

Jake Gyllenhaal attending the 82nd Annual Academy Awards on 7th March, 2010 in Los Angeles

"Unfortunately, as part of a general Oscars revamp that included expanding the Best Picture category to 10 nominees and tightening up the requirements for Best Song nominees, in June 2009 the Academy decided to bump all so-called ‘Testimonial’ awards from the telecast to a separate, more intimate, Governors Awards dinner event held in November. Accordingly, Kevin Brownlow, Jean-Luc Godard, Eli Wallach, and Francis Ford Coppola have already received their 2011 Honorary Awards and Thalberg Award respectively. The Academy’s only official reason for this change was to circumvent the telecast’s time limitations and ensure that ‘each honoree will be given his or her full due, without compromise.’ The honorees are still big, it’s the telecast that got small. But some of the ‘fine print’ of the new policy, together with 2010 and 2011′s tripling of the customary Honorary Awards rate suggests that the Academy also just wanted to be able to honor more people.
Roger Corman, Lauren Bacall and Gordon Willis attend the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' Inaugural Governors Awards on November 14, 2009 in Los Angeles

I especially recommend Caleb Deschanel’s toast to cinematographic legend Gordon Willis at the first event. It’s true: Deschanel could not have spoken about his friend at that length or in that precise, affectionate, in-group marked tone except in a relatively intimate environment (and certainly not in the Kodak Theater). With relatively little effort, the Academy could turn the current on-line video of the Governors Awards dinner into a proper show for internet or cable TV network (say, AMC or Bravo) distribution, or both. And with elites, gourmets, and old-timers catered for elsewhere, the Oscars telecast could concern itself exclusively with film’s present. Lauren Bacall arrives backstage at the 82nd Annual Academy Awards held at Kodak Theatre on March 7, 2010 in Hollywood

Stars of Twilight wouldn’t have to pretend to know or care who Lauren Bacall is". Source: www.oomska.co.uk

Jake Gyllenhaal arriving at the Four Seasons Hotel in LA

Jake Gyllenhaal arriving at the Four Seasons Hotel in LA on 22nd February 2011

"Jake Gyllenhaal was star-struck. Sofia Coppola was a little kid. Josh Brolin first went to the Oscars as the guest of his nominated wife. And once again this year, first-timers such as 14-year-old supporting actress nominee Hailee Steinfeld are likely to log their own unforgettable memories. Jake Gyllenhaal was totally overwhelmed: "It's like this mind-blowingly intense situation. And, yet, at the same time, oddly normal, which makes it even more strange". George Clooney greeting Jake Gyllenhaal at the 78th Annual Academy Awards on March 5, 2006 in Hollywood

"I remember George Clooney shaking my hand at one point as I was walking to my seat, and not believing it. And I remember so many — a sea of famous people's faces, I remember that." Source: washingtonexaminer.com

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Jake Gyllenhaal receives instructions from Vera Farmiga in "Source Code"


The first clip from Duncan Jones' new sci-fi thriller 'Source Code' has been revealed courtesy of Summit. The clip shows us its' stars Jake Gyllenhaal ('Donnie Darko') and Vera Farmiga ('Up in the Air') in action. Captain Colter Stevens (Jake Gyllenhaal) wakes up in the body of an unknown man and he discovers he's part of a mission to find the bomber of a Chicago commuter train in "Source Code"
Vera Farmiga plays Carol Goodwin in "Source Code" (2011)

Brit filmmaker Jones (whose previous effort was the remarkable 'Moon', starring Sam Rockwell and Kevin Spacey) is certainly a director to look out for and we're pretty confident that 'Source Code' should be one hell of a ride. The gorgeous Michelle Monaghan co-stars alongside Jeffrey Wright, Russell Peters, Michael Arden, Cas Anvar and Kyle Allatt.
'Source Code' huts theatres across the US on 1 April and on th 22 April 2011 here in the UK. Source: www.horror-asylum.com

"It's terrifying to be the lead. There's a moment of excitement, and then pure terror" -Vera Farmiga

Why You Should See "Source Code": Duncan Jones was given 5 times the money he had for his low budget sci-fi rejuvenator Moon, not to mention Jake Gyllenhaal, Michelle Monaghan, Vera Farmiga and Jeffrey Wright. This is the kind of high-concept project that could be an action-packed Groundhog’s Day. – Dan M. Source: thefilmstage.com

The 83rd Annual Academy Awards 2011 nominees video



The Academy Awards 2011 - The Ultimate Collection (Part 2)

This video contains all of the oscar nominees and movies for 2011 for best picture, best director, best actor and actress, best supporting actress and actor and best animated film as well as a few foreign films.

Movies:
The Social Network
Inception
The Social Network
Black Swan
127 Hours
Winter's Bone
True Grit
The King's Speech
Rabbit Hole
How to Train Your Dragon
The Fighter
Toy Story 3
Biutiful
The Kids Are Alright
The Illusionist
Blue Valentine

Monday, February 21, 2011

Humphrey Bogart and the Oscar Myth

Humphrey Bogart had written an article in "Cosmopolitan" declaring 'It's about time someone stuck a pin in the Oscar Myth and let out all that hot air contained in the Academy Awards'. As he saw it, the only way performances could be weighed against one another was to have all actors play the same part -Hamlet- and for all actresses to play, for example, Mildred Pierce. Lauren Bacall squeezed her husband's hand as the winner was announced: Humphrey Bogart. 'A scream went up from the audience', Lauren remembered, 'I leapt into the air'. Humphrey kissed her, went up onstage, and proceeded to go against everything he had grumbled about to friends and in print, acknowledging the help and generosity of John Huston, Katharine Hepburn, and Sam Spliegel.

Humphrey Bogart (1899 - 1957)

"But it was “Casablanca” (1942) that made Bogart the American film actor of his time. It has been written about extensively, including Aljean Harmetz’s definitive “Round Up the Usual Suspects”, so it suffices to say here that Kanfer provides a satisfying summary of its making and importance in film history. He provides similar summaries for other films, most notably “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre” (1948), “The African Queen” (1951) and “The Caine Mutiny” (1954).
The value of this book, then, lies in Kanfer’s insights into and analysis of the way that Bogart worked and how it made him “the most perversely attractive actor in the history of cinema.” Source: www.suntimes.com

Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall with more Hollywood personalities boarding an airplane to Washington, on 28 October 1947

Two page partly printed DS, Warner Brothers' contractual letter signed clearly by Humphrey Bogart relating to a movie speculatively entitled 'Project 7' by Martin Rackin in which Bogart would play the role of Martin Ferguson, the movie would be directed by renowned New York stage director Bretaigne Windust.
The finished movie was called 'The Enforcer' (Murder Inc) and was to be Bogart's last for Warner Brothers in 1951

“Now we have fine leading men such as George Clooney and Brad Pitt but there’s something generic about them, no wounds, no despising death in the manner of Bogie in Casablanca” says Henry Allen in The Wall Street Journal. We’ve seen stars rise up in the 50 years since, but “the post-Bogart guys have so little personal identity that stage impressionists can’t even imitate them.” Even if Bogart fell prey to some vices in his later years, “his best side still drives American psyches.”

Bogart set the tone for a type of character, and actor, we often see today. “He is every bit as diffident and as gruff as any 2010 antihero, and yet his prickly dignity marks him as a timeless American icon.” Source: www.mediaite.com

Humphrey Bogart receives his "Best Actor of 1951" award from actress Greer Garson on stage of the Pantages Theater on 23rd March 1952

"He was devilish if he thought you were a phony," his friend and costar Katharine Hepburn wrote. "Like a cat with a mouse, he'd never let you off."
Still, his characters had about them an essential decency and a kind of reluctant kindness that may have seemed so authentic because it reflected the man, as well as the actor". Source: www.latimes.com

Bogart met John Huston in the legendary Warner’s “green room” named for its apple green walls, Bogart was still a stock actor and the two struck up a conversation. "The directing of a picture involves coming out of your individual loneliness and taking a controlling part in putting together a small world. A picture is made. You put a frame around it and move on. And one day you die. That is all there is to it." -John Huston

Ryan Reynolds, Jake Gyllenhaal, Anne Hathaway and James Franco in Vanity Fair (March 2011)

Inside Portraits From Vanity Fair's Stunning Hollywood Issue: "A few weeks ago we saw the star-studded cover of Vanity Fair’s 2011 Hollywood Issue, which featured Anne Hathaway, Jake Gyllenhaal, James Franco and Mila Kunis among others. Now, as we get closer and closer to the Oscars, it’s come to take a look at the Hollywood portfolio inside the magazine!" Source: www.popsugar.com.au

David Fincher, Aaron Sorkin and Jesse Eisenberg
Annette Bening
Natalie Portman
Helena Bonham Carter

"At this moment of awards-giving and back-patting, however, we can all agree to love movies again, for a little while, because we're living within a mirage that exists for only about six or eight weeks around the end of each year. Right now, we can argue that any system that allows David Fincher to plumb the invention of Facebook and the Coen brothers to visit the old West, that lets us spend the holidays gorging on new work by Darren Aronofsky and David O. Russell, has got to mean that American filmmaking is in reasonably good health. Amy Adams and Mark Wahlberg, co-stars in "The Fighter" (2010) directed by David O. Russell

But the truth is that we'll be back to summer—which seems to come sooner every year—in a heartbeat. And it's hard to hold out much hope when you hear the words that one studio executive, who could have been speaking for all her kin, is ready to chisel onto Hollywood's tombstone: "We don't tell stories anymore." Source: www.gq.com