Saturday, August 27, 2011

DAN STEVENS




I'm not really posh, says 'Downton Abbey' actor Dan Stevens


Dan Stevens, a star of the period drama Downton Abbey - which returns to ITV next month - knows what it's like to be thrust into an upper-class world.

Dan Stevens at Highclere Castle: 'Maybe a drama set in a world where everyone knew their place is slightly comforting'

By Daphne Lockyer
9:30PM BST 27 Aug 2011


Dan Stevens was recently invited to a dinner in a multi-million pound Belgravia home, the honoured guest of a wealthy, aristocratic fan of Downton Abbey. It is not, the actor insists, the kind of place you would have found him before he started playing Matthew Crawley, the handsome cousin who stands to inherit the ancestral pile despite his lowly status as a middle-class lawyer. “But the show’s success has opened so many doors, and allowed me to peek inside worlds I’d never normally be a part of,” he says.

Indeed, at the dinner, Stevens was amused to note that, in an age when live-in servants might be seen as a throwback to the Downton Abbey era itself, his host had “an actual, real-life butler”.

“Just as we were going up for dinner, the butler pulled me aside and whispered: 'Mr Stevens, before you go up, we’d just like you to know that we’re huge fans of the show.’” By ''we’’, Stevens assumed the butler was referring to himself and the rest of the downstairs staff, the modern equivalent of Downton’s Mr Carson (played by Jim Carter) and his team.

“I was delighted by the compliment because it shows that Downton Abbey appeals completely across the classes. It’s loved not just by lords and ladies, but also by domestic servants and even by the bloke who came to fix my dad’s boiler the other day.

“It’s set in a time when England was mired in class and everyone knew their place, yet it manages to break through all the class barriers in terms of its appeal. I’m definitely all for dramas that do that.”

Then again, the sticky question of class is one that Stevens has been pondering for most of his life. Meeting him today in the library at Highclere Castle – the home of the 8th Earl and Countess of Carnarvon, where Julian Fellowes’s period drama is filmed – he seems perfectly at home. If you knew nothing about his background, you would think that Stevens’s blood was as blue as his eyes – an impression heightened by his heroic bone structure, cut-glass accent, impeccable manners and easy charm.

Blame his education, says Stevens, who was a boarder throughout his adolescence at Tonbridge School, followed by three years reading English at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, where he hung out with the Footlights set. “I came out of the wash, I suppose, appearing to be much more upper class than I really am. But when people accuse me of being really posh, I think, 'Hang on a minute. No, I’m not!’”

In reality, Stevens, now 28, was born in Croydon to a mother who he has never known, and was swiftly adopted by two teachers. Genetically speaking, he has no idea from where he is descended, never having wanted to track down his birth mother. Still, he says, the parents who loved and raised him were not upper class. “My dad’s family were pretty working class, actually.” His mother, for example, was a cleaner. “Her father was an architect, so one of the professional middle classes.” But definitely no blue blood.

His education, too, came courtesy of his brains rather than his parents’ bank balance, as he won a scholarship to Tonbridge. “In many ways, I realise that going to that school and to Cambridge have set me up for life,” he admits. “But, at the same time, it does help me to sympathise with some of the characters I’ve played.” He cites Nick Guest, for example, the hero of the BBC adaptation of Alan Hollinghurst’s Booker Prize-winning The Line of Beauty. “He was very much a middle-class guy thrust into an upper-class world, and I do know how that feels.

“And then, of course, there’s Matthew Crawley himself. I think he’s Julian [Fellowes]’s way of introducing an insurgent middle-class character who’s there to question the status quo of class and privilege. The viewers are invited to see the strange world that he finds himself in through Matthew’s eyes.”

The success of Downton, he suggests, could be partly due to our continuing obsession with class. “Despite Tony Blair declaring that we’re now a classless society, we’re certainly not. And maybe a drama set in a time when everyone knew their place is slightly comforting.”

The first series of Downton harked back to the last era in which class was so clearly delineated. “The new series, though, kicks off in the trenches of the First World War. So the old order is about to be literally and metaphorically blown to smithereens.”

In the much-awaited eight-part series, Matthew Crawley is an officer experiencing the horrors of the Somme. Still recovering from his broken relationship with Lady Mary Crawley, he has met Lavinia Swire while on leave, become engaged and now, much to Lady Mary’s chagrin, returns to Downton to introduce her to the family.

“Of course, the audience will probably always root for Matthew and Mary to get back together, because their relationship had so much spark and passion. Mary was as tricky as Lavinia, now, is good and gentle – and although that possibly makes her the less interesting option, Julian is posing questions about love and what is likely, in the end, to bring people contentment.”

Stevens already has his own answer to that. He is very happily married to South African jazz vocalist-turned-singing teacher, Susie Hariet. “I’m lucky to be married to someone who entirely gets what I do. She is totally sympathetic to the actor’s life. Her own mother was an actress, so she sort of grew up with it.”

They met in 2006, when they were appearing at different theatres in Sheffield. “I was getting my kit off every night at the Crucible doing The Romans in Britain, and she was appearing in a musical. We met and it was pretty instant.”

He wonders if Susie’s own view of class may, subconsciously, have been part of the attraction. “She has absolutely no concept of the British class system and, after 10 years here she’s still trying to work it out. I suppose it was refreshing to meet someone who had the same level of bemusement about it as me.”

The couple now have a 21-month-old daughter, Willow. Fatherhood is, he says, “something every actor should do. And I certainly know enough actors who are practising,” he laughs. “In my case, it made me rethink the way I approach work. It feels both more – and less – important. I want to spend as much time as I can with my family, yet I’m aware of having to bring home the bacon. I also want Willow to be proud of me and to be able to point to the screen and say, 'There’s Daddy.’”

Watching his tiny daughter grow has made him think again about his own roots. He and his younger brother were adopted from different mothers. “I don’t know much about my biological background. But I do know that I’ve always been the idiot who got up on stage and wanted to perform from a very young age. So it could be in my nature. I don’t know.”

While not entirely ruling out the possibility of some day looking for his birth family, his reluctance so far, one suspects, comes from his loyalty towards his parents. He could not, he says, have wanted for a more supportive or loving family to have grown up in. “And now that both my brother and I have children of our own, it’s brought the family even closer.

“Right now, we’re about to celebrate my mum and dad’s 40th wedding anniversary, and we’ll all be together in Walberswick in Suffolk. It’s a place that’s always been important to us. I even proposed to my wife there.”

Stevens’s career started when the director Sir Peter Hall spotted him as a first-year undergraduate acting alongside his daughter Rebecca in a Footlights production of Macbeth. He went on to work extensively with Hall, and was nominated in 2005 for the Ian Charleson Award for his portrayal of Orlando in As You Like It. Other roles since have included Edward Ferrars in the BBC’s Sense and Sensibility. “But Downton is the thing that seems to have really opened doors.”

Recently, he and other members of the cast were invited to the Cartier International Polo Day at the Guards Polo Club in Windsor. “Like the Belgravia dinner, it was one of those occasions where you’re in a completely different element. Everybody at our lunch table was extremely sweet about the show, but they also mostly lived in enormous country piles with lots of horses. But then, as I discovered, if you play polo you need about 11 horses each for every game. I’m learning all the time.”

The learning curve includes a recent stint in Hollywood filming Vamps – “a romantic comedy with fangs” – which also stars Alicia Silverstone and Susan Sarandon.

Modestly, he doubts he’d have been cast had it not been for Downton. “Fortunately, the Americans also love the show. In their case, they have a different class system to ours – a vast and powerful middle class but no earls or barons of their own. That’s probably why they adore shows like Downton, which have lots and lots of them.”

'Downton Abbey’ returns to ITV on September 18


Source: The Telegraph

PEOPLE WHO ANNOY ME!!! BLOGALICIOUS TOUR!!

This post is part of the Blog-a-licious Tour, a great road trip of variety!!  The destinations are listed at the bottom of this post - visit each one and leave a comment!  Enjoy!

PEOPLE WHO ANNOY ME.



What can I say about this? I’ve realized that there are themes more than people that annoy me. For example, parents of single children, now I hope I don’t offend anyone with this statement, it’s just the ones I happened to have come across.


I know a total of three kids that are only children and I have had problems, or more specifically my daughters have had problems with each one of them. The most irritating thing in my experience has been that all of these parents have the same thing in common: they can’t accept that their kids can be little brats, EVER!


Naturally, being an only child you’re used to having all the attention and when you don’t get it then you have to somehow claim it. And that usually means bullying other kids or being brats in general.


That’s all I will say on that topic.


Since starting doing this whole online thing, Twitter, Facebook, blogging, I’ve also come to be annoyed by certain people, I’ll just call them Lady Macbeth (no offense to the original) and Chubby. I ‘met’ them when I joined their website (cult) last summer, at first everything was perfectly fine, I could talk about my huge crush all day long, no problem.


As time went by, I started noticing certain pattern from certain people, especially people friendly to LM. Just subtle things, like ignoring my comments or contributions, contradicting things I said or making me feel inadequate.


I thought I was just imagining things, I got a couple of personal messages telling me certain things that I found infantile, to say the very least. By this time, these people were really, really annoying me and I was wondering if it was even worth following my favorite actor if I was going to have to deal with the members of this cult.


Finally one day everything went to hell and came back. I was accused of being a problem member, that I was posting too much (in a fansite, is there such thing?), that I was doing this or not doing that.


LM tried to lecture me on how to behave properly, at which I proceeded to tell her to mind her own business. Who was she after all, to tell me, a complete stranger how to behave. The gall. At that point I had already decided I would leave the site, it was NOT worth the aggravation.


My good friend came to my defense very passionately and got kicked out of the cult immediately. Chubby made sure she was gone promptly, not after she was hackled and bullied by other cult members, coming to the defense of the site owners. I had seen enough.


Needless to say the interactions are still hostile, I basically try to ignore them, they get into cat fights every now and then and insult and annoy mostly. I’m learning to live with it. I figure the internet is a very big place and there should be room for everyone in it. There are always bullies, just like in real life. You have to deal with that. So annoying!


HENRY CAVILL

Henry Cavill As A Glasses-less Clark Kent On 'Man of Steel' Set

By Andrew Weymes on August 26, 2011
0diggsdigg
Henry Cavill As A Glasses-less Clark Kent On 'Man of Steel' SetThe big story of the day is that Clark Kent will wear contact lenses in director, Zack Snyder's Superman outing, 'Man of Steel.' Star of the film, Henry Cavill had some photos and videos taken of him while he was shooting scenes in the small city of Planos, Illinois. They can be viewed below, courtesy of the unofficial Facebook page for the film.

A Clark without glasses is yet another little tweak of Snyder's film that deviates from tradition. For example, when Cavill is in his heroic attire as Superman, he's without his trademark red undies. None of this is anything to get too wild about, but somewhere, there's someone staging a boycott group. That group will form an alliance with the people who refuse to see 'The Dark Knight Rises' unless Anne Hathaway's Catwoman knits some ears and a tail onto her costume.

A video of Cavill walking around the set as Clark is below as well, along with others which include helicopters flying around, and a segment from the local ABC news station. The segment reveals that even though a lot of interesting stuff is open to the public, some of the set has been closed off. That must be why the shots of Superman looking ready to thrown down with Faora (Antje Traue) are from such a distance.

The cast of the film also includes Amy Adams as Lois Lane, Michael Shannon as General Zod, Russell Crowe as Jor-El, Kevin Costner as Jonathan Kent, and Diane Lane as Martha Kent.

'Man of Steel' is being prepped for a release date of June 14, 2013.

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Friday, August 26, 2011

FINALS FOR THE ANGLOPHENIA FAN FAVORITES!!!!

Finals for the Anglophenia Fan Favorites!!

FIRTH VS. RICKMAN


(frickman)

BARE KNUCKLE BRAWL!!!

(I said knuckle you screaming women!)


http://blogs.bbcamerica.com/anglophenia/2011/08/26/vote-in-the-anglo-fan-favorites-finals-colin-firth-vs-alan-rickman/2/

GLENDA JACKSON

A long time ago in a land far far away - England - there lived a beautiful actress, brilliant.  She left acting to become a Member of Parliament.
The very best Queen Elizabeth I - other than the original

Glenda Jackson

JUDI DENCH - OCCASIONAL SWORD APPAREL IS ENTIRELY APPROPRIATE


OPENPRESS) August 26, 2011 -- In 2008, the actress Dame Judi Dench was awarded the Freedom of the City of London. She said afterwards that she was looking forward "to being able to drive my sheep over London Bridge, and occasionally wearing a sword in public."

She was referring to the quirky rights that in times gone by are reported to have been bestowed on those who were granted the freedom of London. As well as sheep and swords, recipients also had the right to a 'silken rope' in the event that they were to be hanged, and could also expect favourable treatment from police if they were found drunk in the street.

The exact truth behind many of these old customs is often debated, indeed some believe they never existed at all, but on September 21st a group of volunteers will drive some sheep across London Bridge in aid of the Red Cross charity.

This follows on from a similar event in 2008, where 500 liverymen drove their sheep across London Bridge and raised ฃ40,000 for the Lord Mayor's Appeal. The reason for using the bridge is that non-freemen could expect to pay a tax when moving their livestock across the river, while the honoured few were exempt.

Hotels-london.co.uk offers many hotels in the vicinity of this fun, good natured event. The Strand Palace Hotel is just down the River Thames in Covent Garden, while Bermondsey Square Hotel is south of the river in Southwark.

For more information on the London Bridge Sheep Drive, visit www.timeout.com/london/around-town/event/234441/london-bridge-sheep-drive

Thursday, August 25, 2011

RICHARD ARMITAGE




Richard thanks his fans


And this is a perfect example of why we love our British actors so very much! What a sweetheart of a guy! Thank you to Richard Armitage Online for sharing this with his fans.

Message from Richard Armitage, 25th August 2011


Dear Friends,

I would like to take this opportunity to say a huge thank you for all the kind gifts which have been sent to me over the last few weeks, for my birthday; so many gifts, cards and emails of good wishes from all over the world. (Poland, Ukraine, Japan, Russia, Germany, Korea, Itlay, USA, Canada, Netherlands and all over the UK)

I will be so 'well read', drunk, fat, warm and sweet smelling thanks to your generosity.

I am particularly excited to let you know that the "Just Giving" donations to our four charities has reached an amazing £11,933! In addition to donations to Oxfam and Christchurch Earthquake appeal, which I find both thoughtful and moving.

I am afraid there may be some delay in remitting thank you letters and any requests for signing photos, as I am in New Zealand for the rest of the year, but am working on a system to remedy this.

So middle age has arrived and apparently 'life now begins'. I look forward to the next chapter, there is nowhere I would rather be at this moment than exploring "Middle Earth" with my new family of Dwarves, Elves, Men, Wizard and Hobbit. What a gift to be here, in this place, at this time. I can't wait to share it with everyone. I am a very fortunate man.

Much love
RA

THREE MUSKETEERS


The Velvet Fog voice of Matthew Macfadyen

KEIRA KNIGHTLEY

A New, Slightly Different, But Much Improved Poster For David Cronenberg’s ‘A Dangerous Method’


Sex, psychology, spanking, Cronenberg…”A Dangerous Method” has it all and we’ll see soon if the film will build sufficient buzz to take it through the awards season as a contender.
Set to premiere at Venice and hit TIFF and NYFF shortly thereafter, Sony Pictures Classics believe they’ve got a strong horse in the race, but let’s hope the marketing material gets a little more inspired than this. Granted, this new French poster for the film unveiled by Mars Films is an improvement on the similar Italian version—giving the three giant heads a semi-transparent treatment to at least indicate how their characters overlap—let’s hope future one-sheets are a bit more compelling. Surely with all the bedroom escapades, these posters could be a bit…spicier? Sex sells, people, not the cerebral.
Anyway, as a reminder, the film stars Viggo Mortensen, Keira Knightley and Michael Fassbender, in a story that centers on the relationship between Carl Jung (Fassbender) and Russian-Jewish patient Sabina Spielrein (Knightley), which turns sexual, ultimately causing a rift between Jung and his mentor Sigmund Freud (Mortensen), but also catalyzes strong findings in regards to Jungian psychoanalysis. It opens on November 23rd in limited release. Full poster below.

COLIN FIRTH, CIARAN HINDS

New UK Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy Trailer

Another glimpse of Gary Oldman, Colin Firth and Tom Hardy in action.

Posted 25th August 2011, 2:57pm in Film


There are now just weeks to go before the release of one of the most anticipated films of 2011.

Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy boasts an incredible British cast, with Gary Oldman, Colin Firth, Tom Hardy, Benedict Cumberbatch, John Hurt, Mark Strong and Ciaran Hinds just some of the names.

Let the Right One In director Tomas Alfredson appears to have made the classiest thriller in years with his adaptation of John le Carré's classic spy novel. Find out if it's every bit as amazing as it looks on 16th September.

Meanwhile, make do with this brand new UK trailer.

Based on the classic novel of the same name, the international thriller is set at the height of the Cold War years of the mid-20th Century. George Smiley (Gary Oldman), a disgraced British spy, is rehired in secret by his government – which fears that the British Secret Intelligence Service, a.k.a. MI-6, has been compromised by a double agent working for the Soviets.



Read more: http://www.thisisfakediy.co.uk/articles/film/new-uk-tinker-tailor-soldier-spy-trailer#ixzz1W3SWn2xg

ALAN RICKMAN, DANIEL RADCLIFFE - HARRY POTTER

365 Days, 100 Films #44 - Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (2011)



Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2, 2011.

Directed by David Yates.
Starring Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, Alan Rickman, Michael Gambon, Gary Oldman, Ralph Fiennes, Warrick Davis, Helena Bonham Carter, Maggie Smith and Robbie Coltrane.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
SYNOPSIS:

Hogwarts is under attack by Voldemort’s evil forces as the Harry Potter franchise (finally) draws to a close.


“First row? Is that all you’ve got?” I asked naively the Wednesday after Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part II / 7B’s release. Not only that, but quite far to the left, too. It’s a long film, and the human neck has yet to evolve for a cinema on Orange Wednesdays.

The theatre was packed to capacity, and there was an almost tangible mixture of emotions filling the air. People were excited, of course, for the franchise’s climax. But there was also a huge sense of inevitable loss, of bittersweet bon voyage. A lot of youngsters’ childhoods were about to end.

Personally, I’ve never quite understood the Harry Potter films. The books, sure, I love ‘em - but the films never captured me the way it has done so many others. I can appreciate Prisoner of Azkaban, because it’s a genuinely good film, and Deathly Hallows: Part I / 7A was nice and dark, but the franchise’s acting has always prevented any actual emotional investment. Emma Watson (Hermione Granger) performs with her eyebrows, and not in a Jack Black-way, whilst Daniel Radcliffe (Harry Potter) is utterly unconvincing. It’s something in his voice. He seems to deliver all as though stuck in some desperate A-Level drama. The adult cast are spot-on, but they only make for light relief.

However, this is meant to be a review of the franchise’s last instalment, not the series entire. But such is rendered impossible by 7B’s disregard of anyone who hasn’t seen the previous films. The argument is, of course, that anyone watching the eighth instalment in a franchise without seeing the others is asking for a little confusion. But this is an ‘event’ film. How about opening on a five-minute television-style catch-up, a montage detailing the epic mythology of Harry Potter? It would be corny, but it would certainly make the main attraction feel even more special. And if that was deemed a television aesthetic, unworthy of the larger screen, then why not present the catch-up in an animation similar to the ‘Tale of Three Brothers’ scene in 7A? Seven previous films is a lot to take in and remember. Such an opening would ease understanding of what is at stake and the various character motivations, even for the die-hard fans (the ones that call Severus Snape “Hans Gruber”).

As for the film itself - it’s a war movie. Hogwarts, the school in which our heroes were nurtured, is under attack by Lord Voldemort’s (Ralph Fiennes) forces. After an opening robbery of Gringotts bank (you know, the most secure place in the magic world, their Fort freaking Knox - into which they practically waltz), Harry, Ron and Hermione arrive at Hogwarts to help their fellow classmates and faculty of teachers. They attempt to find the last Horcruxes (objects containing fragments of Voldemort’s soul, which, while still existing, render him immortal) and destroy him. That’s all 130 minutes of it.

Which is good. That’s a healthy length for a conclusion so large and poignant. The characters with whom we have grown up and love should be allowed time to depart from our lives, and, in some cases, theirs. But they aren’t, and this is the huge structural flaw of 7B.

Siege warfare movies work best when different sub-plots are intercut with the main. It’s called parallel editing (cross cutting), and is where the film jumps between various events happening at the same time. It creates tension as they all build towards a climax. Now, this is how 7B should have been structured; showing Harry trying to find Voldemort; then a scene between Ron and Hermione looking for a Horcrux; followed by Lupin, Professor McGonagall and the Weasleys defending a part of the school; etc. This would give the characters a chance to breathe and connect with the audience rather than a sudden, muted shot of the occasional death. The adult cast would be given a lot more time this way, diluting the poor ‘child’ acting.

It appears as though the most boring thing about the films of Harry Potter is Harry Potter himself. The coolest elements, however, are when the adults and teachers jump into action and bust out their magical chops. For a kid in real life, parents and teachers are boring. They hardly ever perform anything of excitement. But when they do, without embarrassing the child, their perceived monotony is shattered. When one’s father stands up to someone; when a family friend recalls a story about the things they and your parents used to get up to; when a teacher would perform some awesome personal skill in assembly on the last day before summer holiday. Such notions are teased throughout the franchise of its adult characters, and sometimes they are let loose. What 7B needed was an equivalent of The Clone Wars’ mass Jedi battle. Instead, after a few opening skirmishes, 7B almost exclusively follows Potter’s narrative. Fair enough, it’s the main plot and all, but jeez does it drag.

Which is a lot of negativity for a film that is actually really rather enjoyable. The women either side of me were gently sobbing in that packed theatre, as were many others behind. On occasion, they would audibly bawl. It’s certainly effective, but it could have been a great film if it followed the solidity of the instalment before it (7A). There’s always a sense that the film is only emotional because it’s the end, rather than being actually any good.

7B’s main merit, however, is Voldemort. You never really see him on top before this film. He’s always grumpy with something, or killing some poor Death Eater. There’s a moment in 7B, though, when Voldemort kinda thinks he’s got it won. He’s there, in the grounds of Hogwarts, strolling back and forth across his army, cracking wise against Harry and all those fighting for him. The words he spits, and the tone in which he hisses them, are those of a jock in an American High School film. He’s humiliating the nerd before the entire school, and he’s in his element. It works for three reasons. 1) Fiennes does a great Voldemort. 2) Harry Potter and the rest of the child cast feature very little for most of it. 3) Voldemort, as a character, is exposed for what he really is. He’s a cocky jerk, a bully, a brat. And all the while, when he believes he is at his strongest, dramatic irony conspires against him. We know he’ll get his desserts.

Before this, Hogwarts had always shown itself as the home of our protagonists. It’s the place that sheltered Harry from his family situation, and brought the magic out of them all. But 7B shows Hogwarts is also the natural environment for Voldemort. It means a lot to him, you can tell. Unfortunately, Neville (Matthew Lewis) ruins it with some truly appalling acting. Nonetheless, Voldemort’s bravado is almost the best moment of the franchise.

But one more tops it; brief in its delivery, but brilliant because of its insignificance. As they fight on top of Hogwarts, Harry calls Voldemort “Tom”. For once, Radcliffe gets the delivery spot on, and the name cuts Voldemort deep. His real name is an insult. What could be more disrespectful than calling a teacher by his real name rather than ‘Sir’? At least those at Hogwarts had earned respect. Voldemort commands his ‘Lord’ status through fear. Throughout all eight films, even near the end of this one, characters are still afraid to speak Voldemort’s name. It’s a sign of the terror he has instilled in all. Yet this arrogant teenager calls him “Tom”, and it hurts his pride worse than any Avada Kedavra.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

LUKE EVANS - THE RAVEN

New Poster For James McTeigue's The Raven Starring John Cusack!
Brand new one-sheet has been revealed for The Raven, a new film from V for Vendetta director James McTeigue. John Cusack plays Edgar Allan Poe, who is hunting down a brutal serial killer. Check it out!
When a mother and daughter are found brutally murdered in 19th century Baltimore, Detective Emmett Fields (Luke Evans) makes a startling discovery: the crime resembles a fictional murder described in gory detail in the local newspaper—part of a collection of stories penned by struggling writer and social pariah Edgar Allan Poe (John Cusack). But even as Poe is questioned by police, another grisly murder occurs, also inspired by a popular Poe story.

Realizing a serial killer is on the loose using Poe’s writings as the backdrop for his bloody rampage, Fields enlists the author’s help in stopping the attacks. But when it appears someone close to Poe may become the murderer’s next victim, the stakes become even higher and the inventor of the detective story calls on his own powers of deduction to try to solve the case before it’s too late.




Starring John Cusack, Luke Evans, Alice Eve and Brendan Gleeson, The Raven is set to his theatres on March 9, 2012.

RICHARD ARMITAGE - STRIKEBACK

Just one more Richard Armitage video - I promise.  This is so beautiful.  Now I want to see all of Strikeback.  Thanks, May.

HENRY CAVILL - SUPERMAN

Superman ditches red underpants for Henry Cavill's 'Man of Steel'

Wednesday, August 24 2011, 9:55am EDT Add comment
By Simon Reynolds, Movies Editor
Superman will ditch his signature red underpants for the upcoming Henry Cavill movie Man of Steel.

Recent photos snapped from the set of Zack Snyder's superhero reboot show Cavill's Superman in full costume, without his red underwear, as he approaches villains General Zod (Michael Shannon) and Faora (Antje Traue).

The images surfaced on an unofficial Superman: Man of Steel Facebook page alongside pictures of a school bus and a damaged aircraft to be used in Smallville scenes.

'Man Of Steel' movie set
'Man Of Steel' movie set


Both Christopher Reeve and Brandon Routh's Superman movies carried over the character's red underpants from the comic book.

Cavill's Superman outfit was revealed earlier this month, but deliberately cast in shadow to keep fans guessing about his superhero attire.

The forthcoming 'New 52' DC Comics relaunch will see the Man of Steel's costume reworked to tie in with the Christopher Nolan-produced movie.

Man of Steel, co-starring Amy Adams, Russell Crowe, Kevin Costner, Diane Lane and Laurence Fishburne, will open in cinemas on June 14, 2013.

More Superman coverage:
> Man of Steel plot promises Superman origin, world "under attack"
> Henry Cavill as Superman sparks mixed reaction
> Henry Cavill 'pushing body to limit' for Superman
> Superman loss left me depressed, says Joe Manganiello


View the evolution of the Superman costume in our Man of Steel gallery below:

DOWNTON ABBEY

Trench war comes to Downton Abbey

The new television series uses a replica of a First World War battlefield – constructed in a field just outside Ipswich .

Taff Gillingham, left, and Iain Hollingshead in a replica First World War British trench - Trench war comes to Downton Abbey
Taff Gillingham, left, and Iain Hollingshead in a replica First World War British trench Photo: WAYNE NEAL
Imagine you’re the producer of Downton Abbey. You have a £12 million budget to film the next series, eagerly anticipated by 13 million viewers. But episode one opens at the Battle of the Somme and you need a convincing trench. Do you risk accusations of bad taste by paying one of the museums in France to film there? Do you buy a JCB and a plot of land and start digging? Or do you film it all in CGI and hope no one notices?
Just as you start to despair, your location scout comes back from East Anglia and says, you’ll never guess what, but there’s a field on a farm just outside Ipswich with two purpose-built trenches, one German, one British, a carefully sculpted no man’s land and more machine-gun posts than you can shake a poster of Kitchener at. It’s been hired over the last decade by everyone from Channel 4 documentaries to Blue Peter. What’s more, the guy who runs it is a military history buff with access to hundreds of expert extras, uniforms and replica weapons.
Taff Gillingham, 45, is one of those lovely British fanatics blessed with infectious enthusiasm and a bizarrely effective idea. The son of an RAF officer, he began collecting uniforms aged six. While working in television production he became increasingly frustrated by erroneous military detail on screen. Instead of carping about such howlers as actors kitted out in tin hats in 1914 (they weren’t issued widely until later), he and a friend set up a company called Khaki Devil.
Ten years on, he is able to provide standard uniforms from 1899 to the present day, including such obscure versions as the 15th Ludhiana Sikhs, an infantry regiment in the British Indian Army (for a Channel 5 documentary on Victoria Cross recipients). His replica props range from Great War pay books to leave passes, corned beef tins to Maconochie Stew labels, Army Cyclist Corps bicycles to Lewis machine guns.
Having formed a supply company, however, he also found himself building trenches for productions all over the country, only to have to fill them in again afterwards. So he teamed up with a farmer to build a permanent trench on a fallow, chalky field outside Ipswich. “We had to get planning permission, much to the amusement of the local council,” he says. “There are no local government guidelines on trench building.”
Instead, using the British Trench Building Manual of 1916 and a JCB, they carved out the basic structure in just 10 days, including shell holes, latrines, a stretcher-bearers’ post and a network of communication trenches.
In 2006, for the BBC’s documentary The Somme – From Defeat to Victory, they added a German trench at the top of the hill, its banks covered in poppies, a flower that grows as well in Suffolk as in Flanders. Between the two they cultivated an artfully bleak no man’s land, complete with barbed wire and half-destroyed fibreglass trees held together with nails.
“It’s a large enough set for the camera to pull back and show the scale,” says Gillingham. “Although if they’re filming in no man’s land, they have to use a blue screen to block out the electricity pylons.”
Other adaptations for filming include making the angle of the zig-zagging trenches less acute (they were normally built at 90 degrees to prevent blasts killing everyone). A drainage ditch above the British trench stops rainwater doing too much damage. And there is a small “island” in one trench where a cameraman can stand and get repetitive shots of soldiers filing past.
One’s overwhelming impression, however, on entering the trenches is how realistic they appear. Boxes of .303 ammunition sit in alcoves in the walls. Ladders lie ready for going over the top. A thousand sandbags protect your head until you do so. A 20-minute bombardment during filming of The Somme – From Defeat to Victory was apparently so realistic that a local old boy, boasting glorious Suffolk whiskers, emerged from his bath to see what was going on.
Gillingham is a stickler for detail, gleefully sharing a rumour that Steven Spielberg’s expensive production of War Horse, due for release at the end of this year, features Israeli ammunition boxes in its WWI trenches.
When Downton Abbey came to film in March, Gillingham instructed the actors on trench life (he won’t say which ones, although we know from interviews that Matthew Crawley, played by Dan Stevens, has swapped his lawyerly linen suit for a more sober uniform). Lessons included how to load a rifle properly, and remembering to bend your elbow while marching and not stamp your feet.
“It makes me wince when people get it wrong,” he says. Gillingham appointed himself “sergeant”, in charge of his “A team” of 75 best extras, many of them re-enactment enthusiasts from clubs such as the Great War Society. He’s seen a rough cut of Downton’s war scenes and – high praise – thinks they “almost look like a documentary”. Aside from the film crews, Gillingham rents his trench out cheaply to student productions and the Suffolk branch of the Western Front Association, which held a poetry evening last week. He also gives talks in schools about the Great War, attempting to shatter the “lions led by donkeys rubbish” promulgated by such poetry.
“It really p––––– the old boys off,” he says, many of whom he met while filming The Last Tommy for the BBC. “But that generation was far too polite to say so. The last 100 days of the First World War were among the most successful in British military history.”
Gillingham’s only regret appears to be his inability to have persuaded Working Title, which bought the film option for Sebastian Faulks’s novel Birdsong, to use his trench, despite calling them twice a year for a decade. Eventually, it was decided that the book was unfilmable in a two-hour format and Working Title is adapting it as a BBC series in Hungary, which, unlike the UK, offers substantial tax breaks for television productions.
One wonders, though, what will happen after 2018 if interest in trench-war films dies out. Will Gillingham turn the field into the ultimate paintballing experience?
“You know, you’re the third person this week to ask that,” he replies with a smile. Whatever happens, there’s some corner of an Ipswich field that is for ever France.

COLIN FIRTH, CAREY MULLIGAN - MY FAIR LADY

Colin Firth
Colin Firth is reported (in the Telegraph) to be seriously considering taking the Professor Henry Higgins role in a remake of My Fair Lady, which will also star Carey Mulligan as Eliza Doolittle.
The script is being adapted by Emma Thompson, and will be directed by John Madden, who gave us Shakespeare In Love, which means it’s probably going to be very, very good.
And, as Rex Harrison so ably proved, Colin doesn’t even really need to sing all that well. Vocal gymnastics are not required, just a certain British stiffness.
Like this:

Here’s what else is going on today:
• Late breaking ‘60s news! Sir Paul McCartney has finally buried the hatchet with Decca records, some 50-odd years since they turned down the Beatles. His new ballet score, Ocean’s Kingdom, will be released on the label later this year. (via Gigwise)
• More late breaking ‘60s news! Twiggy is recording a new album! Fab! Gear! Etc! (via Breaking News)
• Something we’ve long suspected to be true has finally been confirmed, Simon Cowell is officially no good at the nurturing thing, according to himself (via Music Rooms)
Liam Gallagher has dropped his lawsuit against brother Noel, now that Noel has admitted that the reason Oasis cancelled their V festival concert in 2008 was because Liam definitely did have laryngitis, and not a hangover. (via Contactmusic)
• Meanwhile, Liam’s former Blur rival, Alex James, has revealed a new range of cheeses, inspired by children. There’s a ketchup cheese, a sweet chilli cheese, and even a chicken tikka masala cheese (he’s already made a cheese cheese, before you ask)
Alex told the Sun: “I love everyday cheese and I love posh cheese. There’s room for everything. In a world where most things are becoming more similar, cheese is becoming more different.”
• Cheryl Cole’s ex-husband Ashley has apparently given up on getting his wife back, because even HE admits he can’t be trusted. (via Unreality TV)
Ricky Gervais can’t make up his mind about hosting the Golden Globes again. (via Metro)
Kate Moss is too scared of fish to learn to scuba dive. (via the Mirror)
Ken Loach’s 40-year-old documentary about Save The Children, which was commissioned by the charity and then banned when they realised it painted some of their activities in Kenya in a less than flattering light, is finally going to be shown. (via Female First)
• Let’s end this as we started, with a song. Here’s a newie from Florence and the Machine, which comes from her as-yet-untitled second album, due out on November 7th:

My, she’s a fair lady eh?

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

COLIN FIRTH, CIARAN HINDS - TINKER, TAILOR, SOLDIER, SPY

John le Carré Makes A Cameo In ‘Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy’


The anticipation for “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy” was building long before any of the exciting trailers for the film had arrived, and the reason is pretty clear. With “Let The Right One In” director Tomas Alfredson tackling John le Carré‘s classic novel with an insanely great cast that includes Gary Oldman, Tom Hardy, Colin Firth, Benedict Cumberbatch, Ciaran Hinds, Mark Strong, Svetlana Khodchenko, Toby Jones, John Hurt, Stephen Graham and Kathy Burke, how is it possible not to be anticipating the film? With its Venice premiere just around the corner, and U.K. release following shortly thereafter, it looks like the man whose novel served as the source material is receiving some big screen recognition.
Keep your eyes peeled when you watch the film as the Guardian reports that you’ll be able to spot le Carré in a scene that takes place during the MI6 Christmas party. He’ll be the bloke standing next to the guy dressed up as Lenin, even singing along to a mock Russian national anthem. It’s a nice hat tip to the author and it’s only the second time Carré has gone in front of the camera, having peeked his head into George Roy Hill‘s 1984 effort “The Little Drummer Girl.” Carré has also already seen the film and gives it a firm thumbs up, saying, “Through my very personal prism, it is a triumph. And if people write to me and say, ‘How could you let this happen to poor Alec Guinness,’ I shall reply that, if ‘poor Alec’ had witnessed Oldman’s performance, he would have been the first to give it a standing ovation. I’m very proud to have provided Alfredson with the material, but what he made of it is wonderfully his own.” It seems the likelihood of Oldman’s journey to an Oscar is getting stronger day by day.
And well, that’s about it for now. “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy” will hit U.K. theaters on September 16th and lands on our shores in what seems a way, way too long two months later on November 18th. Some new character images have also arrived via CinemaTeaser and you can check them out below.