Tag: little children

2007 Jan 08

Kate Winslet vanishes into her roles

Sarah Pierce, the central figure in Little Children is a mess. It goes beyond her uncombed hair, baggy overalls and rat’s-nest purse. She’s a smart woman who has somehow ended up in a dumb life that doesn’t feel like it belongs to her. In this she seems very different from the famously grounded Kate Winslet, who plays her in the Todd Field film of Tom Perrotta’s story of suburbia and its discontents.

Ms. Winslet, whose finely wrought performance has already won her a Golden Globe nomination and could well land her on this year’s Oscar ballot, deliberately rejected a dumb life after Titanic made her a worldwide celebrity at 22. She refused to become a Hollywood cliché, embarking instead on a decade of playing chewy, interesting parts in a series of films ranging from offbeat indies like Hideous Kinky and Holy Smoke to prestige projects like Iris and Quills She was the flaky, bewitching Clementine in Michel Gondry’s Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind and the teary, overwrought Ophelia in Kenneth Branagh’s Hamlet. She has mastered the role of glamorous yet gracious luminary, dolling up for the red carpet and dishing on the talk shows with what appears to be genuine relish.

Continue reading Kate Winslet vanishes into her roles

2007 Jan 07

10th International Palm Springs Film Festival Awards Gala

Added pics from the Palm Springs Film Festival in which Kate was honored with a Desert Palm Achievement Award for Little Children yesterday, January 6.

GALLERY LINKS:
• Awards & Galas: 10th International Palm Springs Film Festival Awards Gala

Please keep in mind that I’m always looking for contributors. For more information, go here. :)

2007 Jan 06

Little Children Reviews

“…There are so many fragments of human minutiae parading around here, and that’s what makes “Children” an unbelievably good, transporting film…” ¾ FilmJerk.com“…A film that embraces the complexities of human nature instead of pretending that they don’t exist.” — Moneycontrol

“…The movie is consistently fascinating to watch. Not an easy movie, but definitely worth watching…” — Di-ve

“…The story has the tight focus of the best novellas, a tart balance between cynicism and humanism…” — StarTribune.com