Eve60 wrote:Thanks Eve, I haven't seen the trailer yet, but I guess there will be quite a few changes. I am so looking forward to this movie.
In the trailer, "Cal" says he was his college roomate, IIRC.
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Just Gee |
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Eve60 wrote:Thanks Eve, I haven't seen the trailer yet, but I guess there will be quite a few changes. I am so looking forward to this movie. |
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Schuey |
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Yes, I read on IMDB that a trailer has been released. Hopefully it will appear online soon enough. I'd really love to see it. Crowe's got top billing,
too!
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may2 |
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Here are some stills. http://community.livejour...idnt/30799701.html#cutid1
GOCUBSGO
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Just Gee |
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Thanks May
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Just Gee |
State of Play Trailer | ||
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Dec 24, 2008 6:20 PM.
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crowehoe |
State of Play Trailer | ||
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Click here At Yahoo
susiek
Behind every great man is a woman rolling her eyes.
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susi079 |
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FINALLY, FINALLY!!!
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susi079 |
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Schuey |
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C'mon Russell, this movie has to bring back all of your glory! I say: 4th Oscar nomination on the way and who knows, perhaps another win!
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lindylulu |
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The movie looks interesting and could have a broader appeal. I am wondering about Jeff Daniels in this one, he's a good character actor deserving of an
Oscar.
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desicrowefan |
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Crowe movie in April? HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME!
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susi079 |
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Me too Desi, me too! ![]() |
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Schuey |
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Spring releases seem to serve well for Crowe. Last time Gladiator was released in May and we all know how many awards he got for that...
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susi079 |
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Frankly my dear, I don't give a d*** about Oscar. I just want my Rusty movie next April.
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desicrowefan |
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Me too Susi!
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susi079 |
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Desi, don't we just luuuuuv April birthday?
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susi079 |
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Found this article from: http://www.huffingtonpost...tate-of-play_b_90719.html. Has it been posted before here? Sorry if it
has. There are several mentions of Russell, interesting though. See the bold parts. Yesterday, I lunched with Last King of Scotland Director Kevin McDonald on the set of his new film, State of Play. McDonald told me that on Saturday he and Russell Crowe and some others were racing a car in a scene around the Library of Congress. They
made it twice around without incident, but McDonald wanted a third go at it with a huge camera truck and all. One of the producers sitting with us rolled his
eyes back at the words "a third time" telegraphing that going for it just one more time a dozen times over is a McDonald trait. The Capitol
Police came out and nearly arrested Crowe and McDonald allegedly as "terrorist threats" -- but "nearly" and "did" are different
things. I was there on the set along with a group of other distinguished journalists -- including Bob Woodward, Margaret Carlson, Bob Schieffer, John Palmer, EJ Dionne, and Katty Kay. They wanted a blogger/journalist/wonk in the mix, and yours truly said sure. Our task was to make a large group of pretend journalists look more real when Robin Wright Penn makes a statement to the press following disclosure that her Congressman husband (Ben Affleck) may have been having an affair with a now deceased personal assistant. Affleck was standing behind Robin Wright Penn as she delivered her tearful, poignant comments to the press that "we" should all leave them alone and focus on matters of state that "matter." It was really cool -- and I learned a lot. First of all, Barack Obama should spend a day with Kevin McDonald who seems to defy gravity given the hundreds of wheels and operations and people who surrounded him on the set that day. He had it all going, but seemed to convey no stress at all about the tension and complexity of making the film shot work. Making movies and running a country, or campaign, are completely different of course -- but my sense is that Barack Obama would benefit from being seen as able to run a complex enterprise that had to produce results (I know. . .his campaign. . .but beyond that). Bob Woodward told me two things of interest. First, he said that the University of Texas which has his Watergate archives does not have everything. There are still other living sources that have not yet been disclosed and some "other big surprises" in the Watergate tale beyond Deep Throat's identity. Second, he told me that he doesn't take "senior citizen" discounts at the movies or elsewhere. Margaret Carlson told me that Eric Schmidt -- Google's CEO and the new Chairman of the Board of the New America Foundation where I work -- was "delightfully wonky" at the Gridiron dinner this week and sat at her table. (Our good friend Tom Toles of the Washington Post was one of the inductees this year. Congrats Tom!). Schmidt seems to be doing the rounds though as Bob Woodward told me had Schmidt over to his home for dinner recently. I wonder if Eric is planning to lateral over from his Google spot to become a political pundit. We were exceptionally well treated by the producers and directors of State of Play and got to have some real discussion with Robin Penn Wright and Ben Affleck. Affleck, no surprise, loves politics. He was thoughtful, modest, curious -- and wants to know a lot about Washington and the political scene. He said DC reminded him of Hollywood -- sort of a one industry power town in both places. Affleck told us that during his research about being a Congressman, he wanted to meet one and went over to the Capitol. Pretty soon, the whole Democratic leadership had assembled to meet him. I suggested that they were checking him out as a (future) candidate as much as he was kicking their tires. Affleck is an Obama guy -- though he said he did campaign for Hillary Clinton in her Senate race. Affleck asked us what the "state of play" between Obama and Clinton was -- and without putting words in any of the mouths of some of DC's top pundits -- the group split between the likelihood of an Obama or Clinton victory. A number thought that Obama would eventually win, but it would take some time. The others said that the Clintons would prevail. One person cynically said that "the Clintons would steal it from him." Another said Obama wasn't ready for prime time and the next month would be brutal for him. In any case, it was a fun day -- Hollywood meets DC's political scene. I was wedged between two of the "speakers" in the film, one of
whom is Russell Crowe's "dialect coach" -- Judith
Dickerson.
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Dec 28, 2008 12:11 PM.
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Schuey |
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Yes, that is a good poster!
It's just a damn pity Edward Norton didn't make it. How amazing would a Crowe-Norton combination have been? Replacing Pitt with Crowe was a win-win situation no matter what but it's just so disappointing they had to replace Norton... with Affleck. Oh well, maybe Crowe-Norton together sometime in the future. |
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susi079 |
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Oh well, maybe Crowe-Norton together sometime in the future.Amen to that. Really looking forward to watching their collaboration. ![]() |
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Just Gee |
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Screen Talk:
Brit TV classics to hit big screen
By Stuart Kemp of The Hollywood Reporter Friday, 2 January 2009 Hollywood never rests. Although the talk this month is all about the forthcoming Oscars, many are already looking ahead to the 2010 Academy Awards. And two heavyweight adaptations of hit UK television series are the films on everyone's lips. First up is the Oscar-winning Brit director Kevin Macdonald's adaptation of the BBC thriller State of Play. The original, about a team of newspaper reporters investigating a political conspiracy, starred Bill Nighy, John Simm, Kelly Macdonald and a young James McAvoy. Universal and Working Title's new screen version, set to be released around the world in April, sees Russell Crowe, Jason Bateman, Robin Wright Penn, Ben Affleck and Rachel McAdams take centre stage. Also in the works is another revamp of a cult BBC television thriller, this time set in and around the nuclear industry in the 1980s, Edge of Darkness. Run by the Oscar-winning Brit producer Graham King, GK Films' update is directed by Martin Campbell and stars Mel Gibson, Ray Winstone and newcomer Bojana Novakovic, a Serbian-born Australian actress. The aim is for them to replicate the critical and commercial success of Steven Soderbergh's 2000 film Traffic, based on a Channel 4 mini-series about drug-running. Soderbergh's movie scooped four Oscars and smuggled more than $120m out of cinemas worldwide. Big-screen versions of TV shows have always proved a rich seam to mine. Starsky & Hutch, starring Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson, grossed $170m around the world in 2005; Michael Mann's Miami Vice, starring Colin Farrell and Jamie Foxx, took $164m in 2006; and even Bewitched in 2005, based on the 1960s US TV show, twitched its nose to more than $130m from the global box office - despite a Razzie nomination for worst screen couple. Another iconic British TV show set to get the big-screen treatment is The Sweeney. The UK company DNA Films is working on a version, with Ray Winstone signed to star in the role John Thaw made famous, and Michael Fassbender rumoured to take the Dennis Waterman part. Fassbender was catapulted into the spotlight last year for playing IRA hunger-striker Bobby Sands in Steve McQueen's award-winning Hunger. Directing the men in the Cuban heels and flares will be roustabout Brit director Nick Love. To strike or not to strike? The season of goodwill is unlikely to last for the movie industry - especially front-of-camera talent - if Hollywood actors vote to strike later this month. The powder-and-paint brigade are being balloted on whether or not to down tools as early as the end of January over new contracts with producers. In such harsh economic times, the film industry can ill afford to be brought to a halt right now. Like every company in the world, Hollywood studios are slashing costs and plan to put far fewer films into production in 2009. This is bad news for the hundreds of thousands of people employed by the US film industry in LA and around the world, and few, including many of the actors, have the appetite for a strike this year. A strike involving the A-list - think Will Smith, Christian Bale, Tom Cruise, Ben Stiller, Brad Pitt, Meryl Streep, Nicole Kidman and Angelina Jolie - would provoke a furious rejigging of schedules as films are scrambled into production before industrial action. But industry gossips point out that many of the top names also have their own production companies. Smith is probably the only actor who still commands $20m a film, rising to $25m with his producer demands. So the smart money is on a speedy resolution before the Oscars roll round in February. Stuart Kemp is the UK bureau chief of 'The Hollywood Reporter' |
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