Sunday, October 4, 2009

latest news of celibrities



Jennifer Aniston Leads 'An Interesting Life,' Says Costar
Aaron Eckhart calls the actress "easygoing" while filming Love Happens Source:
People.comThursday, Sep 17, 2009

Expecting diva-like antics from Jennifer Aniston? No way, says her co-star in the upcoming Love Happens.

"She was very easygoing, very effortless," Aaron Eckhart, 41, said at the movie's premiere in Westwood, Calif., Tuesday. "I think that's the word I want to use: effortless."

He explains, "She keeps good people around her. She's interested. She asks questions. She gets outside of herself and lives, I would say at the very least, an interesting life. It's not really always her own. She deals with it very well."

In between photo ops with Eckhart, Aniston, 40, attended Tuesday's premiere solo, smiling, taking pictures with fans, signing autographs and talking to press - though she kept her chatter brief.

"Love - that's what I love about love," Aniston told reporters. "That's it."

She described Love Happens, her romantic drama-comedy with Eckhart, as "a really good experience. Moving. See it. You'll see why."

Co-star John Carroll Lynch said, "I love that she suffers in this fishbowl of life, and I find her intriguing. I find it extraordinary."


Poor Jennifer Aniston. She’s heartbroken again, and it was a dirty breakup this time. Her boyfriend—a rock musician—cheats on her, and she discovers it by picking up a lipstick-stained wine glass. It’s a fictional breakup, of course—at the beginning of her new movie, Love Happens—but her twisted face and emotional stuttering are straight out of real life, where we're used to seeing Aniston on the receiving end of a guy's bad behavior. While most heroines from romantic comedies are perpetually down in the dumps (see: Sandra Bullock, Rachel McAdams, or even Julia Roberts), Aniston is playing her own version of cinéma vérité: it’s impossible to tell whether her character’s pain is any different from her own. Watching her like this feels strange, but familiar. We’ve been force-fed so many details of her romantic rumblings that any time a man cheats on her, walks out on her, or refuses to marry her (as Ben Affleck does in He’s Just Not That Into You), we’re reminded of the days when Brad Pitt mattered so much that boutiques were selling T shirts that said TEAM ANISTON and TEAM JOLIE.

That was five years ago, and still, Aniston has remained one of Hollywood’s most polarizing woman. Even when her own husband left her and coincidentally ended up in Angelina Jolie’s arms, many women didn’t come to her defense. Instead, they said: “Good for Brad.” From that debate, the subtext became a sad refrain: why is Jennifer Aniston still single? Now, it’s even sadder, because that’s the narrative the actress pushes in her own films. Like Lauren Conrad, she's become her own reality star, a woman whose life on screen is impossible to separate from real life.


'Jennifer's Body' star Megan Fox admits she's spooked by her 'supernatural' power over men

She has a beautiful face and a stunning figure ... but Megan Fox admits she is frightened by her amazing power over men.

Fox, 23, said she first realized her allure when she was 12.

“I think initially it’s sort of overwhelming because little girls are very much exposed to sexuality through the media and the entertainment industry and advertisements,” she told People magazine.

“So when you realize that you have the same power that you’ve watched women who’ve come before you have, it is frightening and you don’t know what to do with it.”
By Mike O'Brien
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Thursday, September 17th 2009, 11:09 PM



Guillermo Arriaga's "The Burning Plain" is a slow-simmer sort of film, taking every moment of its nearly two hours to bring its story of two families connected by tragedy to a boil. But it takes just 20 seconds to expose -- literally, expose -- its star, Charlize Theron.

Oh, yes, the gorgeous former model is naked.

But the scene leaves you far more uneasy than aroused. As mysterious loner Sylvia, Theron cuts a harsh, flawed figure in the cold, bluish light of morning. "Get out," she snaps to a man sleeping in her bed.

And she doesn't bother saying goodbye when he leaves.

"When I read the script I thought it was a great opening to the character," Theron says of her stark introduction, which might have caused any other actress to lobby for a rewrite. "You start asking questions immediately as soon as you see it. . . . 'Who is this woman? Who would be that cold to the man that she wakes up with?' "

Playing unlikable characters is nothing new to Theron, who won an Oscar in 2004 for her physically and emotionally unflattering turn as serial killer Aileen Wuornos in "Monster."


By Lavanya Ramanathan
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, September 18, 2009

Charlize Theron thrown out of America!

Hollywood star Charlize Theron was kicked out of America while filming Devil's Advocate, reoprts contactmusic.com.

The star has revealed she was briefly kicked out of America as her career was taking off - because she was working illegally in Hollywood.

As her work visa expired, Theron was still fighting for roles in Hollywood - and had just landed a role opposite Al Pacino and Keanu Reeves in 2007 film The Devil's Advocate when immigration officials caught up with her.

She explains, "I had to hold out for two years after playing the femme fatale in Two Days In The Valley because people wanted me to play that role. I think there was a conscious effort on my part to hold back and I didn't work for two years and I waited and really fought for roles in The Devil's Advocate and The Yards, Cider House Rules.

No comments:

Post a Comment