Tag: television

2007 Feb 06

Killers Kill, Dead Men Die

Vanity Fair’s film noir made for this year’s Hollywood issue and its behind the scenes can now be downloaded off the videos archive:

I’ve also added captures from both videos:


GALLERY LINKS:
• Miscellaneous: Killers Kill, Dead Men Die (Thanks to Mariana)
• Miscellaneous: Killers Kill, Dead Men Die: Behind the Scenes (Thanks to Mariana)

VIDEO LINKS:
• Miscellaneous: Vanity Fair’s Killers Kill, Dead Men Die
• Miscellaneous: Vanity Fair’s Killers Kill, Dead Men Die: Behind the Scenes

2007 Feb 06

March’s Vanity Fair preview

E! News showed a preview of next month’s Vanity Fair Hollywood issue. We’ve got the caps and the video:

GALLERY LINKS:
• Television/Other Shows: E! News: Vanity Fair Preview
• Miscellaneous: Killers Kill, Dead Men Die: Behind the Scenes

VIDEO LINKS:
• Miscellaneous: E! News: Vanity Fair Preview

Watch a really cool film noir directed by photographer Annie Leibovitz and Michael Roberts created for this issue on the Vanity Fair website. And there’s also its behind the scenes here.

2007 Jan 27

Golden Globes TV captures + new photoshoot

GALLERY LINKS:
• Television/Award Shows: 64th Annual Golden Globe Awards
• Photoshoots/Outtakes: Set #003 (Thanks to Nora)

2007 Jan 13

Heads up for the Golden Globes!

The 64th Annual Golden Globe Awards will be telecast live on NBC this next Monday, January 15 (8 – 11:00 p.m. EST) [United States] at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. Other TV channels like E! and Warner will be showing specials and live interviews on the red carpet.

Little Children is nominated for Best Motion Picture (Drama) and Best Screenplay, and our golden girl is up for Best Actress (Drama, Little Children). Stay tunned or just ask your mom to record it. :)
Continue reading Heads up for the Golden Globes!

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