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Created:
Tue Jun 09, 09 10:40 AM
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165 Points
Number Of Entries:
18
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Sacha Baron Cohen as Bruno poses nude on cover of GQ


[ Category: Movie Star News ]

NEW YORK - Sacha Baron Cohen strips down as his naked alter ego — the flamboyantly gay Austrian fashionista Bruno — for the July cover of GQ magazine.

He sports a tanned glow and a shaggy head of highlighted hair, and is artfully posed.




The actor-comedian's 2006 movie, "Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan," was a surprise box-office hit.

His new film, "Bruno," is scheduled for release July 10.

Baron Cohen staged an elaborate prank at the MTV Movie Awards. In character as Bruno, he descended from the ceiling on a wire in a fake mishap that ended with his bare hindquarters in rapper Eminem's face. Eminem stormed off in a huff, but later said he was in on the joke.


Source


Jessica Alba won't face vandalism charges


[ Category: Movie Star News ]

OKLAHOMA CITY - Police have decided against pursuing a criminal vandalism case against Jessica Alba over some posters that were plastered around downtown Oklahoma City.

Police Sgt. Gary Knight said none of the owners of property on which the posters were placed wanted to press charges against Alba, who has apologized.





Police never interviewed the 28-year-old co-star of the "Fantastic Four" movies, "Sin City and "Good Luck Chuck." She is in Oklahoma City shooting a movie, "The Killer Inside Me."

Police found the posters — aimed at raising awareness about sharks' declining numbers — glued to a downtown bridge, utility boxes and a billboard for the United Way charity.

Knight said it is typical not to pursue vandalism charges when property owners don't want to prosecute.

Source


John Woo on a new mission: boosting Chinese films


[ Category: Movie Star News ]

Hollywood film director John Woo has returned to his roots to bring a traditional Chinese story to the big screen, and hopes this will garner new interest for Chinese films globally.

Woo, well known for his choreographed action movies such as "Mission: Impossible II," said "Red Cliff" aims to convince young Chinese that movies don't need a Hollywood stamp to be good and to prove the merits of Chinese films to Western audiences.



"Red Cliff," the most expensive Asian-financed movie made with a $80 million budget, is about the ancient Chinese battle of that name. It is Woo's first Chinese-language film since the 1992 thriller "Hard-Boiled" and his first U.S. release in six years.

Woo said the scale of the movie made it an epic with action and romance akin to "Troy," "Gladiator" or even "Lawrence of Arabia" that should appeal to an international audience.

"I wanted to prove that in China we have the ability and the talent to make big movies like Hollywood but adding something that's never been seen before," Woo told Reuters on the sidelines of the 56th Sydney Film Festival where "Red Cliff" is showing.

"I wanted to make a movie that would appeal to people all over the world, that would bring people together because even though we come from different cultures, we have a lot in common."

Woo, 63, who has directed over 26 films, is well known for his Hollywood movies such as "Face/Off" and "Broken Arrow." He is renowned in Asia for gangster dramas and action movies including "The Killer" and "A Better Tomorrow."

But Woo said he has struggled over the years to unite his two audiences, so with "Red Cliff" he set out to make a movie that rose above cultural and historical barriers.

However, the movie has had different versions released in Asia and elsewhere.

In Asia, the film was released in two parts, totally four hours in length, but for Western markets Woo cut the sub-titled movie back to a single film running for 2- hours.

"This was hard to do but trimming the movie has not changed the story or the spirit of the movie at all," said Woo. "But I would not do it that way again. It was too hard."

Woo said financing the film, despite its high price tag, had been easy and the movie had already made a good profit.

His own production company, Lion Rock Productions, was joined by China Film Group Corp, Taiwan's CMC Entertainment, Japan's Avex Entertainment, China's Chengtian Entertainment and Korea's Showbox.

"Everybody loves the story and most people in Asia have read the book ("Romance of the Three Kingdoms") on which it is based. They also had a lot of confidence in me," he said.

The film is set in the year 208 in the dying days of the Han dynasty, culminating in the battle of Red Cliff in which 2,000 ships were burned.

Woo said the movie had been a hit in Asia, breaking box office records in Japan and China where the film market is growing strongly but badly needs international exposure.

Woo said he wanted to make more Chinese movies although he also had some projects underway in Hollywood.

"No matter the movie, people will see the John Woo touches. When they see a single white dove flying, they will get excited," he said.

(Yahoo Movies): Source


Larry David stars in Woody Allen's new film


[ Category: Movie Star News ]

NEW YORK - On "Curb Your Enthusiasm," Larry David's alter ego has realized two fantasies: starring in a Mel Brooks production (as Max Bialystock in "The Producers") and acting in a Martin Scorsese film (as a Jewish gangster).

Now, like a "Curb" story line come to life, David stars in Woody Allen's latest film, "Whatever Works."

As co-creator of "Seinfeld" and the creator-star of HBO's "Curb Your Enthusiasm," the 61-year-old David has already left his stamp on television with a penchant for bitter, cringe-inducing realism. "Whatever Works" marks his most notable foray into movies or even acting.




"The script came in the mail and I opened it up and saw the character was on page one," said David in a recent interview. "I went to page 50, he's on page 50. I turned to the end, he's at the end. I went, `Oh my God. What is this?' I realized what it was."

Allen originally wrote the script in the '70s with Zero Mostel in mind. After Mostel — a Tony-winning actor best remembered by movie fans as the original Max Bialystock — died in 1977, the screenplay stayed in a drawer until the threat of an actor's strike last summer had Allen looking for a project to begin quickly.

The director's longtime casting director, Juliet Taylor, suggested David for the role. Allen says he'd been a fan of David, who actually had two tiny parts in Allen's "Radio Days" and "New York Stories."

"He's my kind of an actor," Allen says. "He's just a natural actor. He doesn't do anything on the screen or in the scene that he wouldn't do in real life. He doesn't give you any false emotions or suddenly launch into dramatic or actor's mode."

In the film, David plays grouchy, misanthropic Boris Yellnikoff — a retired, divorced physicist and self-proclaimed genius. A young runaway (Evan Rachel Wood) begs him for shelter, and gradually Boris' life changes — especially when her parents (Patricia Clarkson, Ed Begley Jr.) arrive.

"Whatever Works" is funny, philosophical and New York-centric — more in line with Allen's films in the '70s and '80s, when he was hitting his stride with films like "Annie Hall" and "Hannah and Her Sisters."

Neither David or Allen, though, consider Boris an alter ego of Allen.

David gave Allen every chance to back out of casting him — arguing that he doesn't really act on "Curb," that he's playing himself.

"He was always kvetching that he couldn't act," Allen says. "So I felt, look, the guy's going to be funny. He's always funny — I don't have to worry about that. ... As it turned out, the dramatic scenes were the ones he had the least amount of problem with. First takes, he'd do the dramatic scenes seemingly effortlessly. He agonized much more over the jokes."

Boris is more caustic than David, but there are some similarities.

"It wasn't that foreign to me, feelings of misanthropy," David deadpans. "The character is a little more out there than I am in that regard. I mostly like people."

Two basic characteristics of Boris were difficult for David: his long monologues, delivered straight to the camera, and his fondness for shorts. David hates wearing shorts and says he spent "all of my spare time" working on memorizing dialogue. (Much of "Curb" is improvised and he carries a notebook everywhere to jot down jokes.)

Boris maintains that he has "an enormous grasp of the human condition." David says he simply has "an enormous grasp of my own condition. That's bad enough."

David has been in the film business before. Several of the fake movies that Jerry, George, Kramer and Elaine discussed on "Seinfeld" are the titles of screenplays that David wrote but never got made.

He still gets calls from producers about "Prognosis Negative" but says he won't make it now. Another was "Ponce de Leon," who he still thinks is a funny character: "An actual explorer who a queen gave a ship to go look for the fountain of youth? I mean, what is going on with these people?"

After "Seinfeld," David wrote and directed "Sour Grapes," a 1998 comedy that starred Steven Weber and bombed.

Says David: "I would do that a lot differently if I had to do it over again."

He's now shooting the seventh season of "Curb," which will feature guest appearances from the "Seinfeld" principals. Though most TV shows — and many comedians — run out of new material over time, David has shown a seemingly never-ending reservoir of observations about life's quirks, curiosities and hypocrisies.

"If there was a drop-off, I would know it, recognize it and I wouldn't do it," says David, who left "Seinfeld" two season before it ended only to return for the finale. "I seem to have a pretty good feel for an idea that tickles me. If it doesn't, I know it."

Acting in films appears to be something that tickles David. He doesn't consider "Whatever Works" a one-off and would "definitely" act again.

When David watches his performance, he's squeamish, but not as much as you might expect.

"I'll think, `Oh, I really liked that. That was good, Larry. Good going, Larry' — as opposed to the `Oh, you stink, you stink,'" says David. "Sometimes I'll surprise myself."

( Yahoo Movies): Source


Morning Piss: Lindsay Lohan's Lost Career


[ Category: Movie Star News ]

I'm sick of complaining about Jen Aniston's career, since I know she's totally not taking any of my well-meaning advice to heart. Maybe when Marley & Me 5 gets released straight to basic cable she'll think about pursuing some meatier parts, or at least a better haircut than she had in Management.

Here's hoping that's what happens to Lindsay Lohan, another doll in desperate need of a career do-over, once Labor Pains debuts on ABC Family in another month. You can't wait to skip it altogether? Then check out the trailer above.



Yes, that's the same gal who sparkled in megahit Mean Girls five years ago, who lived every actor's dream to work with legendary director Robert Altman before he died and who once had boobs more coveted than ScarJo's rather than a protruding rib cage.

In the blink of a DUI and a couple of chemically powered car chases, LiLo went from A-list star to ditched D-list dame. Hell, even L2's li'l sis has more heat nowadays—Ali totally outlasted Linds in my Most Awful contest! Can ya believe it?

Babe actually talks as if fronting a spray-tanner was her main goal in life! And yet she still yaks on about her Oscar dreams. Sorry, Linds, they don't give Academy Awards for leggings lines. Best you can wish for at this point is another Razzie. Or winning next year's Most Awful Celeb. I'd vote for ya!

(Yahoo Movies): Source


Miley Cyrus movie starts filming in Ga. next week


[ Category: Movie Star News ]

TYBEE ISLAND, Ga. - Tybee Island has landed a starring role in the new Miley Cyrus movie, and audiences seeing the film next year won't have to wait for the credits to find out the name of the beach town filling the screen.

Location managers for the movie "The Last Song," which starts filming on Tybee next week, told residents at a town meeting Monday that the island proved too unique to masquerade as Wrightsville Beach, N.C.




Novelist Nicholas Sparks, who wrote the movie's script, initially set the story in Wrightsville and Wilmington, N.C. But filmmakers persuaded him to change the location to Tybee Island and neighboring Savannah so they could include local landmarks such as the island's towering lighthouse and the oak-shaded squares in Savannah's historic district.

"We had a hard time trying to hide the fact that this was Tybee and Savannah was Savannah," Bass Hampton, the film's location director, told about 80 residents at Tybee city hall.

The movie features 16-year-old Cyrus, the star of "Hannah Montana," as a teenage girl struggling with her parents' divorce who tries to reconnect with her father during a summer at his home in a quiet beach town.

Filming starts Monday on Tybee Island, 12 miles east of Savannah, and is expected to stretch into mid-August.

The Walt Disney Co. had considered making the film in North Carolina, but ultimately chose Georgia because the state offered a better incentive package. Local officials estimate the production will bring $8 million in direct spending to the area during the next two months.

Having Tybee Island's name on the screen — on signs for a beach festival and emblazoned on police cars and fire trucks — should make for an even bigger payday after the movie hits theaters in 2010, said Diane Schleicher, Tybee's city manager.

"When the film releases, the impact on the economy here is going to be immense," Schleicher said.

Still, there will be some drawbacks for the island's 3,400 residents.

Hampton said filmmakers will spend several days shooting at the island's fishing pier, which will mean closing the attraction to visitors periodically, and roadblocks will go up around the beach house being used as a location.

Tybee resident Monty Parks, who opened an Internet cafe near the pier a few months ago, said he hopes to sell plenty of lattes to the film crew and gawking tourists.

"If you're somebody who wants Tybee to stay out of the limelight, you're going to be broken-hearted," Parks said. "I think there's going to be a lot of people here. It's going to be great for me."


( Yahoo News ): Source


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