Showing posts with label 2005 Pride and Prejudice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2005 Pride and Prejudice. Show all posts

Sunday, February 17, 2019

The story of Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette, a heroine of French literature, focuses on her early struggles. KEIRA KNIGHTLEY

NOTED



No one ever made a good movie about writing. Scribbling or tapping away at keys does not a gripping drama make. It’s the life of the scribe that matters: scandal, strife, experience. An Ernest Hemingway biopic would be unwatchable if it weren’t for the constant drinking and occasional plane crashes.

Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette, the French woman of letters and Nobel nominee, crammed in about as much as Hemingway, her career spanning the charmed peak of La Belle Époque to the end of World War II. With Keira Knightley in the titular role, Colette charts her earlier years, from prim country girl to dedicated libertine.
During the film’s unpromising opening, she’s plucked from her idyll by handsome suitor Henry Gauthier-Villars (Dominic West), better known to Parisian society as “Willy”: a muckraker and connoisseur of popular filth, for whom the truth is something that always needs to be sexed up.
He introduces Colette to the city’s voluptuous charms: a demure Louisiana belle (Eleanor Tomlinson), saucy vaudeville acts, the transgender pioneer Mathilde de Morny (Denise Gough). But he turns out to be both adoring and manipulative. He publishes one of Colette’s novels under his own name, takes the credit for creating the semi-innocent, semi-Sapphic schoolgirl character of Claudine and bows alone for the applause of an enraptured audience. We’re in similar territory to the recent Glenn Close movie The Wife, or the rumours about Vladimir Nabokov and F Scott Fitzgerald.

Willy is no outright villain, though. His love for Colette is genuine, although selfish, earnest but blind. He’s a product of a scandalous age. And it’s here that Knightley, so familiar with these bodice-ripping period pieces, truly excels. She plays Colette with an irrepressible sense of dignity: rather than condone her husband’s philandering, she demands honesty. Rather than churning out Claudine novels, she runs off to the theatre.

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Is Matthew Macfadyen attached to new MI5 Spy comic thriller Mindhorn?

CHORTLE



Julian Barratt is writing his first feature film.

The Boosh star has teamed up with comedian Simon Farnaby, best known for Horrible Histories and Yonderland, to write the comic thriller Mindhorn.

It revolves around a former MI5 spy whose eye has been replaced by an ‘optical lie detector’, which means he can literally see the truth. He now lives in the Isle of Man, where he is a crack plain-clothes detective.



BBC Films have developed the project, which is being produced by Ridley and Tony Scott’s company Scott Free in association with Boosh programme-makers Baby Cow.

Filming starts on July 27 on the Isle of Man, which has a development fund run through Pinewood Studios to attract such projects.

No casting has yet been announced, although Ripper Street and Spooks actor Matthew Macfadyen has been rumoured to be attached to the film.


READ MORE HERE: http://www.chortle.co.uk/news/2015/06/24/22725/julian_barratt_writes_a_movie

Saturday, May 2, 2015

Rosamund Pike to play leading role in The Spark, based on autism memoir bestseller w/video

AUTISM DAILY
April 30, 2015 by News In Brief


Rosamund Pike – Is probably best known for her leading role as the psychopath Amy Elliott Dunne in the film, Gone Girl.

She is now set to play the lead role in a new film called, The Spark. The film is an adaptation of the book by Kristine Barnett, The Spark: A Mother’s Story of Nurturing, Genius, and Autism.

The book is based upon her memoirs that center around her caring for her son, Jacob, with autism. Pike has been cast to play the role of Barnett.

The story focuses on how Barnett decided to take Jacob out of special education classes, against her husband’s wishes, and how eventually at the age of 13, he became a quantum physicist.



Friday, April 18, 2014

Brendan Gleeson: Film review: Calvary – essential viewing

IRISH POST
By Stephen Martin on April 17, 2014


Calvary
Director: John Michael McDonagh
Starring: Brendan Gleeson, Chris O’Dowd, Aidan Gillen, Dylan Moran, Kelly Reilly and Pat Shortt
★★★★ (out of five)

“I FIRST tasted semen when I was seven years old,” are the first words of dialogue in John Michael McDonagh’s Calvary, as uttered by a disembodied voice to a discombobulated priest in a darkened church confessional.

“Certainly a startling opening line,” the priest responds, voicing the thoughts of the audience. “Is that supposed to be irony?” the disgruntled confessor asks. “I’m sorry,” the priest says, “let’s start again.”

This introductory exchange sets up the narrative style of McDonagh’s movie, fusing serious commentary with bone-dry satire.



McDonagh –a second-generation Irishman raised in central London – draws characters that spend most of the time conventionally acting out the absorbing drama, yet periodically collapse the artifice with deflating self-references.

They offer oblique winks to camera, breaking the fourth wall and waving across to the viewer. It’s a Brechtian, Beckettian, Bunuelian cocktail of forlorn hope, mordant humour and a cold moral vacuum. Yet all-the-while, it urges us not to have sleepless nights.

It’s also excellent, a cleverly-devised story (if a little thin on plot) featuring fine performances from top Irish talent. The superb Brendan Gleeson leads the cast as the embattled Fr James, vicar to an isolated coastal community, who is informed by one of his flock that he will kill him, “a week on Sunday,” in an abused victim’s revenge upon a depraved Catholic Church.

The man who makes this threat is known to Father James, though he remains a mystery to the audience until the climax.

“I’ll give you enough time to put your house in order,” he generously promises. The rest of the movie invites viewers to guess the identity of the killer among the townsfolk they meet, as the good father tends to his “pastoral duties”.





Friday, October 25, 2013

'Ripper Street' Series 2 Episode 1 spoiler-free review



CULT BOX
Wednesday, 23 October 2013 16:56
Florence Vincent

In the opening moments of ‘Pure As The Driven’, a policeman is hurled through the first floor window of an East London building and impaled on the iron railings below, and - BAM! - just like that we’re back in the grimy, gritty, glorious action of BBC One’s Victorian crime drama Ripper Street. Meaning, in other words, that it’s time to reach for the smelling salts.



Inspector Edmund Reid (Matthew Macfadyen) and his cronies Bennet Drake (Jerome Flynn) and Homer Jackson (Adam Rothenberg) are soon on the case of the impaled bobby, and before long they find themselves in the heart of London’s Chinatown, in search of mysterious beauty Blush Pang. Before the hour is out there has been the discovery of lies, corruption, murder, and a dangerous new drug that looks set to flood London. Oh, and the Elephant Man has popped up for good measure as well.


Not quite as rigorously compelling or charmingly over-the-top as the best episodes of Series 1, ‘Pure As The Driven’ is nonetheless a strong opener, giving us plenty of fun with the Story of the Week and establishing solid series-long strands.

Bennet has a new wife and Jackson is ensconced with Long Susan (MyAnna Buring) once again (with both happy marriages look set for trouble), whilst neither Reid’s wife Emily nor Miss Goren are anywhere to be seen. An enigmatic conversation with Long Susan leads us to believe Reid is up to something untoward, but – as expected – we don’t get many answers in this opening episode.

Despite the rough and tumble approach, there’s a wit and elegance to proceedings. The costumes and sets are brilliant, as is the period dialogue and thrillingly vivid slang. And there’s also the sense that this is a show that wants to give us a bit of everything.



READ MORE HERE: http://www.cultbox.co.uk/reviews/episodes/8240-ripper-street-series-2-episode-1-review

Saturday, October 12, 2013

Matthew Macfadyen: What is it about Jeeves and Wooster?


Matthew Macfayden (left), and Stephen Mangan (right) with director Sean Foley (centre) on the rehearsal set of their new Jeeves and Wooster play Perfect Nonsense

THE TELEGRAPH
By Jasper Rees1:00PM BST
08 Oct 2013

The consistency of a divine soufflé. The delicacy of finest bone china. Choose your own image to embody the unimprovable prose of PG Wodehouse.

Those who tamper with it do so at their own peril. The BBC’s recent attempt to capture the bucolic anarchy of the Blandings books had all the sophistication of a whoopee cushion. So we must treat a new stage version of the even more untouchable Jeeves and Wooster with trepidation.



Perfect Nonsense is bearing down on the West End with a cast that may at least smooth the furrowed brows of worried Wodehousians. Stephen Mangan, who plays Bertie, is a victor ludorum in comic buffoonery — as seen in Green Wing and Episodes and above all in the Tony-winning The Norman Conquests.



Matthew Macfadyen will bring to his Jeeves the same still poker face he deployed to such effect in Spooks, but having starred in Private Lives (opposite Kim Cattrall), he also knows about stage mayhem. So that’s all tickety-boo.


But there is a twist. In what is being billed as An Evening with Jeeves and Wooster, there is just one other actor in the cast. So in this adaptation of The Code of the Woosters — the one with the cow creamer — who is going to play Roderick Spode, Sir Watkyn Bassett, Gussie Fink-Nottle, Stiffy Byng and, with no actress on the payroll, the redoubtable Aunt Dahlia? The answer is that the ever resourceful Jeeves will, with the help of his valeting colleague Seppings. He will also supply set, costumes and lighting.



Yes, like previous West End comedy blockbusters The 39 Steps and The Play What I Wrote, Perfect Nonsense is a short-staffed play within a play. That explains the presence of the comedy director Sean Foley, one half of the comic troupe The Right Size whose stage hit The Ladykillers is doing a second stint in the West End. As they wrestled with the script supplied by Robert and David Goodale, the stars and their director explain how it’ll all be all right on the night.

Jasper Rees Wouldn’t it have been so much simpler to do a straight adaptation?

Stephen Mangan It would have probably felt a little bit, why do it? I can’t imagine it being as fun to do. Part of the problem is you’re taking all those perfectly constructed sentences and shouting them in a theatre. Will they survive? This preserves a lot of Bertie’s wit. I’m just banking on the fact that the sort of person who enjoys Wodehouse is the sort of person who won’t come along looking for problems.

Sean Foley A dutiful old-style rep version would be deathly boring. It’s a brilliant conceit. Bertie has been told he’s a wonderful actor and why doesn’t he just tell one of his wonderful stories in a theatre one night? He thinks, what a terrific idea, and within 30 seconds it’s a disaster. Jeeves comes on and save the day, and how.

Matthew Macfadyen It’s interesting to think how many people will think it’s a conventional proscenium arch retelling of a PG Wodehouse book. The fourth wall is in and out the whole time. The audience really is the fourth character in the play.

JR Which must make it particularly hard to rehearse?

SM When you read the script first you laugh a lot. And then as you work on it over the weeks it becomes less and less funny because you’ve heard all the jokes. The show is like a thousand-piece jigsaw and at the moment I feel like I’ve lost the pieces. Noises Off was the same. You go, “This is never going to work.”

SF It’s like four-dimensional chess. Or even seven, let’s be honest. It’s why I love first previews because it’s when you meet the audience. I sit there in the last dress rehearsals going, it’s a disaster. And then the healing wave of laughter comes and you’re away.

SM They are exciting evenings but I do always think, what lunatic comes to a first preview? Why would you want to see a show that isn’t ready yet? But we need somebody there.

MM Buffering, that’s our new word. In the course of a mini run we’ve just stopped where the downloading has stopped and we just don’t know what’s coming next. It’s not even a question of trying to remember. But we are lucky in the sense that Jeeves and Wooster are putting it on and they’re hoping for the best.

READ MORE HERE: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/theatre/theatre-features/10361252/What-is-it-about-Jeeves-and-Wooster.html

Monday, September 9, 2013

Dame Judi Dench - Dame Judi Dench To Undergo Knee Surgery - Report

Judi Dench, Venice Film Festival

CONTACT MUSIC
By WENN
8 September, 2013

Veteran British actress Dame Judi Dench is preparing to undergo knee replacement surgery after struggling with chronic joint pain, according to a U.K. report.

The 78-year-old Bond star is set to have surgery on both her knees, reports the Mail on Sunday newspaper.

A source tells the publication, "She'll have the first knee done this month, with the second operation scheduled for the new year to build in plenty of recovery time."




Friday, September 6, 2013

Keira Knightley's Husband Carries Her Cases For Her Through Venice Airport!

keira knightley and husband james righton walking through airport doodle

PEREZ HILTON
September 5, 2013

Such a gentleman!

Keira Knightley's new hubby James Righton is scoring some major points by carrying his lady's designer garments for her after the two touched down in Venice yesterday!

And he did it with a big 'ol smile too!


The two are in town for the annual Venice Film Festival and based on the Valentino label on that bag, we're guessing Keira will be wearing one AH-Mazing gown tomorrow night!

Before they walk the red carpet though, the newlyweds walked through the airport terminal, looking super chic while doing it!

Keira wore a white shirt dress with gold buttons for the trip. She sacrificed comfort for fashion with some 4-inch wedges and of course, some sunglasses.


Sunday, August 25, 2013

Brenda Blethyn may have gone blonde but Vera won't change


Brenda-Blethyn-stars-as-Vera-Stanhope-in-the-ITV-drama-Vera

EXPRESS
By: Pam FrancisPublished: Sun, August 25, 2013

IT takes a certain kind of actress to play a character like ITV's female cop Vera Stanhope.

One who doesn't mind wearing layers of shapeless "bag lady" clothes and a hair-flattening scarecrow hat.

"Usually when you see a female detective, she's a bit of a pin-up," says Brenda Blethyn.



"But Vera's no sex symbol, which I find very refreshing. Just because she's scruffy doesn't mean she doesn't command total respect from her team.

"There should be a 'Vera' fashion line, shouldn't there?" she jokes.

"Vera's style tips... I can see it now. Or maybe she could turn up in the Christmas special of Downton Abbey in Victorian costume with her Vera hat on."

Cue more laughter from the 67-year-old actress who, it has to be noted, is looking very un-Vera-like when we meet over tea in London.

In fact, she is sporting a rather glam blonde hairdo and a smart black trouser suit: "I often go for suits. I'm not a frilly person but I do like to be nicely turned out, as my mother would say."


Brenda has no children of her own ("I had no strong need and it's just the way it worked out") but has played mum to some of Hollywood's finest - Brad Pitt in A River Runs Through it, Jane Horrocks in Little Voice and Keira Knightley in Pride & Prejudice, one of her favourite roles.

These days Brenda Blethyn OBE is such a national institution that it's easy to forget she was a late starter, quitting her job as a British Rail clerk at the age of 27 to go to drama school.

Huge success followed in theatre, but it was at 50 that she found fame, with her third film - Mike Leigh's Secrets and Lies - winning her nine awards, an Oscar nomination and a guaranteed, glittering career for life.

Doesn't she ever get to the point where she wants to put her feet up?

"If I did, after a month I'd probably think, 'Well that was nice - I needed that. What now?'"


READ MORE HERE: http://www.express.co.uk/entertainment/tv-radio/424619/Fair-cop-Brenda-Blethyn-may-have-gone-blonde-but-Vera-won-t-change

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Rosamund Pike Emerges as Front-Runner to Star in David Fincher's 'Gone Girl' (Exclusive) 6:00 AM PDT 7/17/2013 by Tatiana Siegel (THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER)



But still remaining to be cast is the titular missing wife, which would be a juicy and high-profile role for a thirty-something actress. A project insider dismisses the possibility of Charlize Theron taking on the project, as had been reported. "Charlize is not doing this movie," emphasizes the source. A studio insider also rules out Natalie Portman -- who had been in the mix to star in Fincher's The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo before he cast Rooney Mara -- and Emily Blunt as potential candidates due to their availability. Reese Witherspoon, who optioned the book last summer via her Type A production company, is on board as a producer only and will not star.




"There's no shortage of women interested, [and it] will just come down to who Fincher wants," the studio source notes. Jack Reacher co-star Rosamund Pike, whose name has never been mentioned in conjunction with Gone Girl, is said to be the latest contender.

Also a question mark is the shape of the screenplay, which is considered to be a particularly tricky adaptation given that much of the first half of the book is told through diary entries. Flynn is adapting, though the author has not penned a screenplay before. But the project insider says at this point there is no need for an expensive 11th-hour rewrite. "Gillian is taking it all the way with David," the insider insists. "They've found a great rhythm together."


Sunday, July 14, 2013

Matthew Macfadyen interview with Gino!

Keira Knightley 'in baby dilemma (FILM NEWS)


FROM FILM NEWS....

Keira Knightley reportedly can’t start having children due to hefty career obligations.

The 28-year-old British actress married The Klaxons musician James Righton just months ago.

The newlyweds are said to be eager to start a family, but apparently Keira simply has too much on her plate professionally to get pregnant anytime soon.

Keira starred as Elizabeth Swann in some of the Pirates of the Caribbean movies and apparently the studio wants her back for an upcoming film.




Although the star loves her work, it is said that she is experiencing personal conflict about taking on the job.

“They have asked Keira to reprise her role as Elizabeth Swann,” a source told Star magazine.

“Right now, all she and James want to do is start a family, but she also has a huge loyalty to the film franchise.”



Keira’s husband James is said to be encouraging her to do what feels right.

Apparently the rock star wants his wife to be happy and is willing to wait to have kids until she is ready to become a mother.


Thursday, July 11, 2013

Keira Knightley: 'Other Typist' Producer & Star! (JUST JARED)


Keira Knightley: 'Other Typist' Producer & Star!


Keira Knightley and her husband James Righton cuddle up close to each other as they walk down a quiet street on Wednesday (July 10) in East London, England.


The 28-year-old actress was recently announced as the star and producer of the upcoming flick The Other Typist, according to THR.

Fox Searchlight recently acquired the rights to the movie, which is based upon the novel of the same name by Suzanne Rindell.



READ MORE HERE: http://www.justjared.com/photo-gallery/2907291/keira-knightley-other-typist-producer-star-12/

Sunday, July 7, 2013

World's End's Rosamund Pike a Hot MILF in Esquire UK (photos) English Actress's New Comedy Set for Release July 19 By The ImproperStaff, July

RosamundPike Esquire front Worlds Ends Rosamund Pike a Hot MILF in Esquire UK (photos)

This month, Pike will supply some of the eye candy for “The World’s End,” a doomsday comedy by Edgar Wright and British comedian and actor Simon Pegg.

Pike will play one of five old friends, including Pegg and Martin Freeman, who reunite after 20 years and decide to finish a pub crawl they started last time they got together. Only problem, aliens are invading the earth.

Although Pike may be known as a blonde bombshell, she had a classical English upbringing.

She’s only child of concert musicians and opera singers Caroline Friend and Julian Pike. Her father currently works as a professor of music and head of Operatic Studies at the Birmingham Conservatoire. She started acting as a teen but still managed to graduate from Oxford with a degree in English.



She has the range to play proper roles like the eldest Bennet sister in 2005′s Jane Austen classic, “Pride and Prejudice,” with Keira Knightley, Carey Mulligan and Jena Malone. Or in off-beat comedies like “The World’s End.”

“To be made to laugh is one of the greatest things on Earth and to be in the company of people who do that the best – like Simon and Nick – is the best,” Pike told Esquire. “It’s good for the soul.”

Her latest film debuts July 19.

Pike is so hot she had a two-year relationship with gay actor Simon Woods. She gave birth to her first child, a son, Solo in May 2012, with Robie Uniacke, whom she’s been dating since 2010.

Check out her photos and follow TheImproper on Twitter for the best in film and movie coverage. 
FOR MORE OF THE ESQUIRE ARTICLE GO HERE

READ MORE: http://www.theimproper.com/film/10615/worlds-ends-rosamund-pike-a-hot-milf-in-esquire-uk-photos/

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Rosamund Pike sizzles in lacy underwear on the front cover of Esquire SHE achieved international fame after playing smoking hot Bond Girl Miranda Frost in Die Another Day. (EXPRESS) By: Kelby McNallyPublished: Wed, July 3, 201

Rosamund-Pike-looked-phenomenal-as-she-posed-in-her-underwear-ANDREW-WOFFINDON-ESQUIRE-

And Rosamund Pike has proved she can still get fans hot under the collar after posing in her underwear for the August issue of Esquire magazine.

The actress - who is currently starring in comedy The World's End - sizzled as she posed up a storm in a racy black underwear set, showing off her enviable curves and flawless skin.


Laying on a bed in a pair of high waisted knickers and a matching bra, the 34-year-old looks as though she is certainly bound to gain a few more male fans as she plays with her hair flirtatiously.

Rosamund, who is set to play Sam in the forthcoming blockbuster, opened up about that it was like to act alongside funny men Simon Pegg and Nick Frost in the accompanying interview too.

‘‘It’s been great," she revealed

Rosamund's full interview appears in Esquire's August issue, on sale Wednesday 3 July. Also available in digital edition.


For exclusive photos go to www.esquire.co.uk/women/article/4214/rosamund-pike-exclusive-hot-pictures/

READ MORE: http://www.express.co.uk/news/showbiz/411987/Rosamund-Pike-sizzles-in-lacy-underwear-on-the-front-cover-of-Esquire