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Showing posts with label Movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movies. Show all posts

Thursday, July 10, 2008

David Duchovny Says Gillian Anderson Is a Good Kisser (The X-Files Spoilers)

David Duchovny seems to be getting a little sentimental on this movie but he still manages to include a reference to porn in the interview and say Gillian Anderson is a good kisser. Typical David!!David on kissing Gillian Anderson: "Is Gillian a good kisser? Yes she is. And we've kissed before over the years. It's been many years of kissing and it's not been a chore at all, at least not for Mulder. I guess you should ask Scully!"

David on how many times Mulder and Scully kiss on screen: "Somebody found one of these video pastiches that fans put together online - they'd cut all the kissing scenes together and set it to music. Gillian and I were watching and she said, 'I thought we only kissed once?' It was like a porn movie. It looked as if we were all over each other!" (video here)

David on admitting that the X-Files reunion was “sentimental” for him: “I realized that Gillian and I have changed over the years, but when you start reading these people, they haven’t. They are the same and they feel the same way about each other.”

David on showing some skin on the big screen: “There’s definitely some skin in this movie. And not all of it is being flayed or ripped apart. There’s some Gillian skin, and some of mine.”

Producer-writer Frank Spotnitz on the plotline: “The emotional story of Mulder and Scully is really the heart of the movie. It’s about their love story.”


We can tell you “The X-Files: I Want To Believe” story is set in winter 2008, so it’s happening in real time, picking up with Fox Mulder and Dana Scully six years after we last saw them alone in a hotel room after Mulder escaped the death penalty. Can’t wait to see this movie!! I’m so excited!! July 25!!!

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Sunday, June 1, 2008

Steal the ‘Sex and the City’ Style: Carrie, Samantha, Miranda & Charlotte

Are you a city girl? You wanna look as fabulous as your favorite ‘Sex and the City’ girl?? We have some tips and suggestions for you…
Carrie: Anything goes for this fashion icon. I heard she has a more “mature” look in the movie but the yellow bustier dress could have been worn by Carrie in the early days. I guess we’ll be able to judge for ourselves after seeing her 81 wardrobe changes in the movie (left to right: sister eek dress by Giles, edith bustier dress by Luella, and little joe tunic by Gail Elliott).
Samantha: Often form fitting dresses in solid bands of saturated color — usually in pinks, oranges and blues. Kim Cattrall wore the Nicole Miller dress above on an interview with Oprah and would have been perfect for the movie if it were in turquoise blue. Remember to wear your collar up if you have a similar outfit to the DKNY dress (left to right: color block stretch twill dress by Nicole Miller, leaf print dress by DKNY, and color block bandage dress by Hervé Léger).Miranda: It’s all about the fabrics for Miranda. Silky patterns and belted high waisted dresses look fantastic on her. Try the Vanessa Bruno deep purple dress with a gold belt (left to right: jet printed dress by Antik Batik, dance silk jersey dress by Single, and jersey mini by Vanesa Bruno).
Charlotte: Sweet Charlotte suits a-line skirts, particularly in pastels, or any outfit inspired by Audrey Hepburn (left to right: sleveless wrap dress by Neiman Marcus, diamond print dress by Milly, basketweave dress by Tibi).

My own favorite is Samantha!! Love her style! Love how careless and fun her character is but still stylish and classy… ok, maybe sometimes not as classy… but always fun! :D

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Saturday, May 31, 2008

‘Sex and the City’ Movie Review

The “Sex and the City” movie represents a kind of paradigm shift: It seems to be the first major motion picture produced with the TV series box-set purchaser in mind. If you curl up with your DVD player and watch seven or eight episodes of “Lost” or “The Sopranos” or “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” in one go, then spending 135 minutes (or, if you prefer, five episodes) in the theater with Carrie and the gang won’t seem unusual at all.Writer-director Michael Patrick King, one of the driving forces behind the original series, has cannily avoided trying to open up the material too much in taking it to the big screen. Samantha doesn’t go into outer space, Miranda doesn’t start talking to dead people, and Charlotte doesn’t break into a musical number. It’s simply an extension of the groundwork that the show already laid down, and for “Sex” fans who have waited four years for another fix, that’s all it has to be.

If you’re not into the show, of course, the movie’s probably not going to win you over. But if you spent Sunday nights glued to the hit series on HBO — or caught up with it later in its DVD or scrubbed-up TBS incarnations — then watching the movie will be as comfortable and as decadent as sitting on the sofa with a big bowl of chocolate chip cookie dough.

"Sex and the City" can't rightly be called a romantic comedy in the dismal, contemporary sense, though it is at times romantic and is consistently very funny. It's also emotionally realistic, even brutal. Carrie (Sarah Jessica Parker), Miranda (Cynthia Nixon), Charlotte (Kristin Davis) and Samantha (Kim Cattrall), now in their 40s and 50s, continue to navigate the choppy waters of urban life, negotiating relationships, work, fertility and friendship, only now the stakes are higher, the risks are bigger and decisions feel more permanent.

For a film that delights in indulging in frivolity at every possible turn, it examines subjects that most movies don't dare graze for their terrifying seriousness. And when it does, the movie handles them with surprising grace, wit and maturity. In other words, it's a movie for grown-ups of all ages. The press and industry screening I attended was uncharacteristically packed with women in their 20s, and my guess is that their interest had zero to do with the inclusion of Jennifer Hudson as Carrie's personal assistant -- though her character, Louise, is likable and allows the writer to expand the scope of the film from a story about four friends living in New York into a tale about the contemporary lives of urban women from early adulthood to maturity.

One of the best things about the movie is how it manages to confound expectations while satisfying them, an achievement for a movie based on material that had already plumbed every aspect of its characters' lives and tied up its narrative loose ends. But some, of course, remained, and that's where the movie takes off -- will Carrie and Big get married, will Charlotte have a baby, will Miranda and Steve live happily ever after, will Samantha be satisfied with just one man?

King answers all of these with unexpected twists, posing a good deal of bigger, more interesting questions along the way. How should women live their lives in a society that constantly limits them while pretending not to? What is the function of forgiveness, and why is it necessary for living?

The clothes, the restaurants, the apartments, the shoes -- they're also all there, of course, but then, even on the show, they were always the fantasy element, the sugar that helped the sometimes harsh emotional reality go down. The movie is no different, except that the personal upheavals are bigger, more life-altering and take on nearly tragic dimensions. Carrie's trajectory throughout the movie is surprisingly difficult, playing out on a much grander scale (at almost 2 1/2 hours), like a 19th century novel with occasional flights into blatant frivolity and lots of designer brand names.


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Thursday, May 22, 2008

Jason Lewis Interview: Sex and the City Hotness

Jason Lewis steamed up TV sets across the nation when he came aboard Sex and the City as Smith Jerrod, Samantha's most recent boy toy. And he's back doing more of the same in the SATC movie. But is the former fashion model more than just a pretty...uh, everything? Read on about how the actor has braved the paparazzi, the rumor mill, and tummy-rubbing fans ever since he got his big break.
What it was like to go back into the world of Sex and the City after four years?
It was nice. It was really — it was actually kind of phenomenal, because it was nice to get to work with those people again, first off. They used most of the same crew from the top to the bottom of pretty much everyone that was on the TV show. So it was like a little reunion. And in terms of doing the work, I think they did a — that's kind of a hard road to hoe. They've got a lot of audience expectations, time's moved forward, and I think they did a good job of delivering what that reality would be. So it was fun to work on.

Did it feel different this time around?
Yes and no. Again, so many of the same players were there. And as far as when it was a TV show, there was certainly no lack of bells and whistles. It was such a carefully and well-run production then, so not really.

What is happening with your character and Samantha in the movie?

I don't really know what I'm allowed to say there.

Have your characters moved to L.A.?
Well, I don't really know what I'm allowed to say there.

Has Smith's career taken off?
Definitely. I'll say that. The two of us have moved forward in our relationship. And she continues to work with me. And I'm doing much better in terms of my success.
Were there a lot of crazy crowds while you were shooting?
It depended where you were and how accessible the locations were. In New York City, there was a few where you're like, ''It's 30 degrees out right now. Go home! It's 2 in the morning. You're suffering. I'm suffering for you. I'm suffering for me.''

Did the crew have to put up decoys for outdoor shoots?
The paparazzi's probably the more infiltrating thing. They were there running around during a lovemaking scene we were shooting; they're trying to sneak through the windows of the house that you're shooting in.

Was it like that when you were shooting the show or did it get more intense for the movie?
Yeah, there would always be guys around then too. One point, we were working out on the beach for some stuff and the guys were literally getting in the way of the shot. I think at one point the set photographer had to push a guy out of the way to get his work done. He was like, ''Excuse me! We need to come through here! Move!''

What was the dynamic among the four ladies, etc.? There's been so many rumors and gossip about them not getting along.
I think that's what it is — rumors and gossip. People love rumors and gossip. Honestly, most of my stuff was with Kim alone. But the few scenes when we were all together, everyone was completely fine with each other, as they always were. I never really experienced the animosity you guys seem to experience solely in the press.

What is it like being a part of this phenomenon?
I feel pretty lucky. It definitely helps you in terms of getting other work and whatnot, but this is some of the really special TV that's been in the world and I got to be on it and I certainly had not much more to do than say the wonderful lines that were written for me. So I feel blessed.

What has been your weirdest fan encounter?
Weirdest fan encounter from the show? I once had a woman lift my shirt up and rub my belly while her husband was taking a picture of us. But then everyone asked me about that after I mentioned it and I felt terrible for the woman, so I stopped saying it.

Did she just run up to you, lift up your shirt, and rub your stomach?
No, I was doing a charity thing. I was en route. I was in Kentucky and I hadn't eaten all day, so I stopped by a bar to get a burger and a beer and they were there. And she asked if she could take a picture and I said sure. We were standing next to each other and she just lifted up my shirt and started rubbing my belly and her husband was like, ''Honey, what are you doing?'' And she said, ''It's OK. I've seen him naked on TV.'' And he says, ''No! No, honey. I don't think it is.'' I didn't have to say anything. I'm sitting there just going, What are you doing, lady?

Why do you think you landed the role in the first place? Did anyone ever tell you what you did to nail the audition?
Something about me being able to read. [Laughs]

How dare you?!
You know, I don't know, to tell you the truth. I know they saw a lot of people. I think I just understood the material and where they wanted it to be.

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Friday, May 9, 2008

Sarah Jessica Parker Opens Up to Parade Magazine (Photos)

Sarah Jessica Parker loves politics. As we wait for our lunch to arrive at her favorite Greenwich Village bistro, a few blocks from the townhouse she shares with her husband, Matthew Broderick, and their 5-year-old son, James Wilkie, she expounds at length on the Presidential campaign.On politics: “I just hope we can focus on how we are all Americans no matter what our specific political beliefs are,” she says, digging into her fava bean salad. “I truly believe that if you got a group of liberal mothers in a room with a group of conservative mothers, we would have the same concerns about our children and health care and education and how best to bring our troops home from Iraq and how to pay our bills. I hope we don’t lose sight of that.”

On Sex and the City and aging: “Carrie and Charlotte and Miranda and Samantha aren’t young anymore,” Parker says of the four lead characters in the film. “Their lives are much less frivolous. They can’t cope with their problems by putting on their sweats and staying up all night and ordering in food and gossiping about the men in their lives. There is less self-absorption but perhaps a little more self-awareness.”

Parker, however, has never been comfortable with too much self-examination. She never watches the dailies of the films she makes. She never reads her reviews. Never looks at pictures from a photo shoot. Which description of herself would she prefer: the young Audrey Hepburn, a Mary Tyler Moore for the new millennium or just James Wilkie’s mother? “Oh, please. That’s easy,” she answers. “James Wilkie’s mother. But there’s nothing ‘just’ about it. What’s hard about being a parent changes constantly. But that’s my first job—of my many jobs. That’s what’s most important to me.”

On childhood and her big family: “I was really lucky,” she says. “I think that if I had been raised a child of privilege, I wouldn’t be the working person I am today. I have a great appreciation for work. I think it’s incumbent on my husband and me to really stress and to show James Wilkie by example what it means to owe your community something and that he is not entitled to the benefits of our hard work. That doesn’t mean that I’m withholding or keeping from him the joys of childhood. I’m not Joan Crawford. But I also don’t want him to think the world he lives in is the real world. It’s not.”
“I guess one thing he’ll never have to worry about is having to wear hand-me-downs like you did,” I say.
“Oh, no. He only wears hand-me-downs because I’ve got all these older nephews,” Parker insists. “That’s the God’s honest truth. Plus, my mother saved all my brothers’ clothes. I am not kidding. I don’t think I’ve ever bought him any clothes. Maybe a new winter coat. I do buy him shoes, because everybody’s feet are different.”

Who’s the stricter parent, she or her husband? “I am,” she says. “Does it surprise anybody that I would be? It’s not that Matthew spoils him, but he just has a different way of parenting than I do. I was never spoiled. Oh, dear no. I was the baby of the family only for a wee time, and I was lucky to get any attention, let alone be spoiled. A few years ago, I found all our baby books. My two older brothers’ baby books were filled with pictures. Then we found mine, and it only had my name written in it. There was nothing else in there. Not one picture. So there you have it. I’ve been starved for attention ever since.”

But enough about her. She blushes (oops: self-examination) and turns her attention back to her son. “I’m his primary caregiver,” Parker says. “I put him to bed every night. I get him dressed. I’m the one who gives him his toothbrush. I take him to school every morning. He’s very small, but his personality is 6 feet 4. I’m spending the whole summer with him out at our beach house.”

Does she see herself sitting in a rocking chair next to Broderick in 30 years at that same beach house? “I don’t see any way out of it for him,” she jokes. “Poor fellow. But my son is so in love with his father. He really worships him, and that changes the way you see somebody and deepens it. The only thing he may love almost as much as his father are Legos and Star Wars and the cast recording of The Full Monty.”

Parker’s father is Jewish, and Broderick’s mother was also. They each consider themselves cultural Jews and are raising their son in the same tradition. Which means? “Well, your worldview is one of a Jew. You feel persecuted,” she half-jokes, her laughter filled with the rueful irony that is so identified with Carrie Bradshaw. “And you certainly recognize persecution when it’s happening to others. You have a lot of empathy. It’s bagels. It’s whitefish salad. But we also have a babysitter who is a devout, devout Catholic from Brazil, and she’s had some influence on him as well. She says prayers with him. I say prayers with him too every night.”

When her son gets old enough to start thinking for himself and tells her he wants to go to a house of worship, will she take him to a synagogue? “Oh, heavens. He’ll probably end up a Unitarian,” she says. “I go to an Episcopal church on Easter to hear the music. I think that’s rather glorious. Matthew’s sister is an Episcopal priest. And his other sister is a shrink. So James Wilkie’s got it covered on that side of the family.”

With all this talk of motherhood, I’m curious if Carrie Bradshaw, who finally marries “Mr. Big” in the movie version of Sex and the City, could possibly be pregnant. “Oh, I can’t tell you that,” Parker says coyly. I certainly hope she is pregnant. It would be great fun to watch Bradshaw in yet a second film of Sex and the City as she discovers—Manolo Blahniks and all—that her own most important role is a maternal one, just like Sarah Jessica Parker.

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Jason Lewis Makes Us Believe Romance is Not Dead

Jason Lewis, aka Smith Jerrod from “Sex and the City,” doesn’t stray far from his onscreen persona when it comes to the more amorous parts of his personality.
Lewis told Elle magazine that like his “SATC” character, he once had a fling with an older woman. “When I was living in France, I had a couple-month affair with a woman who was around 50. I never let her see where I lived, because I was a little scared of her. We’d meet in the city and she’d take me out to her chateau, have this great dinner, make love. In the morning, I’d ride her horse while she cooked me breakfast. Then she’d drop me off in Paris,” Lewis told Elle.
Lewis said connects to the “SATC” idea that you sometimes have to overlook some flaws in relationships. “I was with a particularly malodorous girl once — beautiful but really stinky,” he told the magazine. “ She had every body odor. I remember thinking, ‘Your arms stink. Your breath stinks. Oh, God, even your hair stinks.’ I had no idea what to do. I remember asking a female friend, ‘What do I do? Slip her acidophilus when I cook for her?’”
How cute!!? Jason gave hope to every single girl out there who ever thought romance was dead!!

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Sunday, May 4, 2008

Weekend Gossip Links: Creepy, Live & Hot

Oprah’s Exclusive Interview With Tom Cruise (Photos & Videos)

Matt Lauer Wants A Rematch With Tom Cruise (TEN)
Jessica Alba Gives Back (KnockedUpCelebs)
Opening This Weekend: 5/2/08 (CelebMonkey)


Carmen Electra models pole dancing on Wii nitendo? (Anything Hollywood)
Dakota Fanning is Growing Up and Beautiful! (Gravy&Biscuits)
Super-Cute Brooke Burke At ‘Motherhood Begins Now’ (SweetGossip)

Hot Madonna & Justin Timberlake Performance of 4 Minutes (Photos & Video)