Archives for 2010
Kristen Stewart: Sundance Behind the Scenes with ET and MTV
Chris Cooper: Robert Pattinson and the Paparazzi and Fan Blitz
Veteran character actor, Chris Cooper, talked to MTV at Sundance about what it was like shooting Remember Me with Robert Pattinson. Chris’ movie, The Company Men, is getting good buzz in Sundance. It co-stars Ben Affleck and Tommy Lee Jones.
Twilight Lexicon Interview: Chris Heyerdahl Part 1
We had the chance to interview Chris Heyerdahl at the Creation Entertainment Official Twilight Convention in Miami. Chris was nursing a horse voice in a really chilly room as you can see from his down vest and cup of tea. We have a transcript below. Part 2 and 3 will be out later this week. [Read more…]
Howard Shore to Score Eclipse
Howard Shore the mater behind the Lord of the Rings score is on board to score Eclipse. Shore is also tapped for the upcoming Vancouver Olympics’ music.
“No matter how much hate is thrown at The Twilight Saga, you can’t deny that the franchise has reeled in its fair share of talent. Not only have they brought in talented and acclaimed actors like Dakota Fanning, Anna Kendrick, and Michael Sheen, but it’s brought in gifted composers like Alexandre Desplat to write music for the vampire romance. Now the saga has upped their game even further as Movie Score Magazine reports that Howard Shore (responsible for the Oscar winning music from the Lord of the Rings trilogy) has been brought on to compose the score for the third forthcoming installment in the series .”
The Runaways: A Runaway Hit at Sundance
Before the screening came out there was a joke running around on Twitter that Sundance should be renamed Krisdance because of all the praise Kristen Stewart was getting for Welcome to the Rileys and The Runaways. However, Dakota Fanning, now that the movie has been screened is also getting some major praise.
Three Part Audio Interview With Kristen and Dakota.
From Collider: (Collider also has the best in-depth synopsis of the movie, in other words it’s more than a paragraph but doesn’t totally spoil the plot.)
“What I really liked about the movie is that it doesn’t take any sides about The Runaways story. Writer/director Floria Sigismondi paints a realistic portrait of Los Angeles in 1975 and what was going on in Joan Jett’s and Cherie Currie’s lives. We get to see how each of them lived and what brought them together. And after they got famous and made it in the record industry, Sigismondi paints a portrait not of judgment or condemnation, but simply as it was. The story has enough ups and downs that she didn’t need to use a heavy hand to tell the story, which some filmmakers might have done.”
“I loved The Runaways. It really does rock. The movie is the true-life story of the short-lived but legendary all-girl rock band, with Kristen Stewart starring as Joan Jett and Dakota Fanning as Cherie Currie.
Stewart does what she does best: play the anguished outsider. But Fanning really nails it as the 15-year drug-abusing sex kitten Cherie. This is a Dakota you have never seen, getting so lost in the role that there are times she is almost unrecognizable.”
“The Runaways” works on a lot of levels, and will no doubt be a big hit with little effort. My only quibble is that the films cuts too fast from the demise of The Runaways to Joan Jett’s overnight hit with “I Love Rock and Roll.” The film ends on a minor note rather than with a big flourish. How did Jett come to record her signature hit, and why isn’t that song, in concert, a rockin’ finale? But these are little things. “The Runaways” provided just the energy that’s been missing here in Park City. We needed it.”
“Forget the executive producer credit for Joan Jett, the true telling credit for the film is where director Floria Sigismondi found her source material–lead singer Cherie Currie’s memoir.
Indeed, “The Runaways” is owned and just about swallowed up by Fanning’s riveting portrayal of the singer (not too dissimilar from the way Currie overwhelmed the group). First glimpsed as a teen literally transforming into a woman, this is the performance that seems sure to launch Fanning into a new thrilling phase of her career. From a sulking broodish David Bowie enthusiast to a howling rock goddess Fanning sells sells sells. I’d watch that band. Hells yeah.”
Justin Chon Talks to the Korea Times
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Here’s a tip to “Twifans,” or diehard followers of the infectious hit “The Twilight Saga” ? if you happen to be shopping in Orange County, Calif., drop by The Attic. You might catch Justin Chon ? aka. Eric Yorkie in the movie ? lifting boxes.
“A couple of guys came up to me the other day in my store and I told them that they could get a picture with me if they made a $200 purchase. I’m just kidding,” the Korean-American actor told The Korea Times in Seoul last week, with a bout of hearty laughter…It turned out to be a crazy ride.”
Read the rest here.
Kellan Lutz and Mandy Moore a Couple?
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It seems so…on screen. Just Jared (who just had Kellan do an exclusive New Year’s event for them) got the scoop.
“Kellan Lutz plays husband of Mandy Moore in a new movie called Love, Wedding, Marriage, sources confirm exclusively to JustJared.com.
The romantic comedy has Mandy playing a marriage counselor whose parents separate after many, many years together. She feverishly attempts to get them back together, jeopardizing her own marriage.”
So it looks like Kellan will be doing Romantic comedy rather than all brute force since the Conan the Barbarian part slipped away earlier last week.
Kristen Stewart: Welcome to the Rileys at Sundance
Kristen Stewart’s Welcome to the Rileys where she co-stars with James Gandolfini of Soprano’s fame has been getting some really fantastic reviews.
USA Today said:
“Though she’s playing young, this is no innocent story. Her character, sometimes calling herself “Mallory,” sometimes “Allison,” is vulgarly sexual, coming on to Gandolfini when he stops into a strip club on a business trip, though he is immediately turned off by her obvious youth and vulnerability. Instead, he pays her to let him try to save her — but fines her for cursing, and tries to get her to leave her dangerous and degrading line of work.
In her first scene, Stewart is wearing knee-high fishnets, a bra that isn’t much of one, and a red tartan skirt as she lunges and thrusts from the stage. It may sound provocative, but her character is so obviously wounded, both emotionally and physically, judging by the many bruises on her body, that it quickly becomes awful instead of enticing.
Gandolfini wants to throw his coat over her, and the audience does, too.” Read the rest here.
Kristen talked to E! about the the Welcome to the Riley’s experience here and to MTV below.
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