Showing posts with label biopics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label biopics. Show all posts

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Tom Hardy to play Elton John in biopic titled 'Rocketman'


Actor Tom Hardy is set to play Elton John in the biopic, ‘Rocketman.’

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
BY ETHAN SACKS

Tom Hardy is going from battling Batman to grappling with the Rocketman.

The British actor is set to star as Elton John in the biopic, “Rocketman,” producers announced Wednesday.



Directed by Michael Gracey, the film will focus on John's progression from a talented youth to a music legend. The acclaimed pianist himself is cooperating with the project, re-recording some of his iconic songs for the movie, the Wrap reported.



“Tom is a stellar talent who will add extraordinary depth and nuance in bringing Elton’s story to life,” producer Steve Hamilton Shaw said in a release. “We are excited to have such a gifted actor on board.”


READ MORE HERE: http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/tv-movies/tom-hardy-play-elton-john-biopic-rocket-man-article-1.1494398

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch: JULIAN ASSANGE, OFFICIALLY THE BIGGEST A-HOLE IN THE WORLD

ESQUIRE
By Paul Schrodt



In case you needed any more proof the open letter has officially jumped the shark, Julian Assange has come aboard. Assange wrote a letter to Benedict Cumberbatch, the actor who plays him in the upcoming film The Fifth Estate, after Cumberbatch made an attempt to contact Assange. Now that letter is posted on WikiLeaks. (And, by the way, just because you WikiLeak your open letter doesn't make it any less open.) Assange's letter smacks of his usual smugness, but it also seeks to do the two things all inappropriate open letters do:

The letter 1) establishes a false sense of intimacy between Assange and Cumberbatch. "The bond that develops between an actor and a living subject is significant."

And 2) It suggests Assange has anything of historical importance to tell Cumberbatch and the world. He does not.







READ MORE HERE:

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Michael Fassbender and Jake Gyllenhaal in the running to play Lance Armstrong (entertainment.ie)



Last Saturday we reported the news that there would be a Lance Armstrong biopic coming our way, with Lost creator JJ Abrams at the helm. We then asked you which actor you thought would best portray the cyclist's fall from grace. With tongues already wagging in Hollywood, there's since been a bunch of names thrown into the mix and we couldn't agree more with the following two suggestions; Bradley Cooper and Michael Fassbender. Both have the chops to pull it off, both have the looks and athletic physique too. It's the folk at Ladbrokes who bring us this news, announcing a 3/1 odds for each actor.

When asked by the BBC about the possibility of bringing Armstrong's story to the big screen, Cooper (whose currently enjoying the lead up to the Oscars on the back of his performance in Silver Linings Playbook) expressed his interest by saying: "I think he's fascinating. What a fascinating character. I remember Matt Damon was going to do his autobiography at one point years ago. I remember thinking, that would be a great character, I'd love to play that character. I would love to do something, I think he's pretty fascinating."

READ MORE: http://entertainment.ie/cinema/news/Michael-Fassbender-and-Jake-Gyllenhaal-in-the-running-to-play-Lance-Armstrong/161039.htm

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Ewan McGregor: Sir Jackie Stewart wants Ewan to play him onscreen



FRI, 17 FEB 2012 11:15A.M.

Hollywood bosses are eyeing a biopic of motor racing legend Sir Jackie Stewart - and the track ace wants Ewan McGregor to play him onscreen.

Brokeback Mountain producer Bill Pohlad is preparing to shoot the movie, which will focus on Sir Jackie's friendship with his Formula 1 protege Francois Cevert, who was killed in a track accident in the US in 1973.

Triple world champion Sir Jackie has read a draft of the untitled film's script and has given the greenlight for the project - and he's recommending Pohlad signs up fellow Scot McGregor to play him in the movie.

Read more: http://www.3news.co.nz/Jackie-Stewart-wants-Ewan-McGregor-to-play-him-in-biopic/tabid/418/articleID/243214/Default.aspx

Friday, February 10, 2012

Naomi Watts will play Princess Diana in "Caught in Flight (contact music)

Naomi Watts - Naomi Watts Playing Princess Diana In Biopic About Her Last Days

10 February 2012 12:29
Naomi Watts picture



Actress Naomi Watts is set to play Princess Diana in the upcoming biopic Caught In Flight. The Mullholland Dr. star is said to have taken over the role of the princess from The Tree of Life actress Jessica Chastain, who pulled out for unknown reasons.

Caught In Flight will be directed by Oliver Hirschbiegel, who directed the Oscar nominated 2004 film Downfall, about Hitler's last days. Caught In Flight will also follow a similar theme to Downfall; it is said to be about the last two years of Princess Diana's life, from her failed marriage to Prince Charles to her work as a humanitarian. According to Reuters, the initial plot is much different to the original idea, which was to focus on a secret affair between 'the people's princess' and heart surgeon Dr. Hasnat Kahn.


Sunday, February 5, 2012

A big movie is being planned on the life of Lady Diana (Daily Mail)



Princess Diana is set to be played by a leading Hollywood actress in a £30million movie based on the years before her divorce from Prince Charles.

Oscar-winning South African actress Charlize Theron, 36, and Carey Mulligan, the 26-year-old English star of An Education, are both being tipped for the lead role.

British film producer Stephen Evans, who has scored success with The Iron Lady about former Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher, is basing the film on Diana's bodyguard's memoirs.

Evans said he wanted to show the world the truth behind what happened to Diana, who would have turned 51 this year, before her 1996 split from her husband.

It will be told partially from the point of view of Ken Wharfe, who could be played by Ewan McGregor, 40.

Wharfe was trusted to look after her sons Princes William and Harry, who called him 'Uncle Ken', and released a controversial book called 'Diana: Closely Guarded Secret' in 2007.

The acclaimed producer, who has been working with the late princess’s private secretary Commander Patrick Jephson on the film, would not reveal who is favourite to play the lead roles.

 
He said: 'It’s a slightly closed book until we get her. We are ¬looking at one or two relatively unknowns we think could play Diana well, and also one or two very famous people.

'How do you know when you’ve found the right person? When you’ve made the movie. You see, that’s the risk.'

His film could be the third Diana biopic to come out in the next two years.

Keira Knightley, 26, and Scarlett Johansson, 27, are rumoured to star in a Pathé film called Diana, while rising American actress Jessica Chastain, 30, is set to star in Caught in Flight.

That film will focus on Diana’s relationship with heart surgeon Hasnat Khan.

Evans told the Sunday Mirror that the film, due for release in 2013, deals with the 11 years of her life 'just after' she gave birth to Harry.


Read more:  http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2096741/Princess-Diana-movie-Hollywood-blockbuster-divorce-Charles.html?ito=feeds-newsxml

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Clive Owen: Nicole Kidman said she enjoyed her love scene with Clive Owen. duh. (Show Biz Spy)


The actress romps inside a collapsing building with Clive Owen in upcoming TV movie Hemingway and Gellhorn and Nicole loved every minute of it.

“It’s awesome,” she says of the Earnest Hemingway biopic.

“It really emphasises that they came together through war. Two people that will make love through a building collapsing — that says something about who they are and that is why I think that scene is important.

“You really see that this is where they are at their most comfortable and their most passionate and that is where their love thrives.”

http://www.showbizspy.com/article/243109/nicole-kidman-enjoyed-clive-owen-love-scene.html

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Idris Elba to Play Nelson Mandela in Upcoming Biopic (EurWeb)

 *

It’s settled then.

Sexy British actor Idris Elba will play the role of former South African president Nelson Mandela in an upcoming biopic.

You may ask why he was chosen out of all people. There’s no telling, but one thing is for sure: he’s good.

Elba has taken on some pretty major roles lately, including movies like “Thorand Takers.”

But this one may be a bit challenging as movie watchers will have to decide who among the list of actors (Morgan Freeman, Sydney Poitier, De Klerk, Terrence Howard, and Dennis Haysbert) plays the better Mandela.

http://www.eurweb.com/2011/12/idris-elba-to-play-nelson-mandela-in-upcoming-biopic/  EurWeb

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Meryl Streep as Margaret Thatcher - The Iron Lady - An insult? No, this shows why Maggie was so mighty

By Baz Bamigboye
Mail OnLine


Last updated at 10:36 PM on 14th November 2011

Iron Lady: Meryl Streep gives a breathtaking performance as Margaret Thatcher
Iron Lady: Meryl Streep gives a breathtaking performance as Margaret Thatcher

Many feared the worst when they heard Meryl Streep was to play Margaret Thatcher in a new film.

Not only was Baroness Thatcher to be cast as a rather befuddled, elderly woman looking back on the triumphs and disappointments of her life, but Streep is also of a very different political hue from Maggie.

It was commonly agreed that our greatest Prime Minister since Churchill would be vilified.

Such fears are misplaced. Having just seen the film in a London preview before its release in January, and then having spoken at length to Meryl Streep about her role in The Iron Lady, I can state categorically that the doomsayers were wrong.

Streep’s portrayal will, I have no doubt, come to be seen as magnificent portrait of Lady Thatcher.

And when I spoke exclusively to the double Oscar-winning actress about playing her, she declared herself to be in ‘awe’ of Lady T, adding that this was the biggest role she had undertaken in her career. ‘It took a lot out of me, but it was a privilege to play her, it really was,’ she told me.

‘It was one of those rare, rare films where I was grateful to be an actor and grateful for the privilege of being able to look at a life deeply with empathy. There’s no greater joy.’

The 62-year-old star, who was in London to see the completed film, explained how she admired Thatcher’s willingness to stand and be leader, a decision which meant she had to offer her life, and her family’s, ‘on an altar’ to the public good.

‘I still don’t agree with a lot of her policies,’ said Streep. ‘But I feel she believed in them and that they came from an honest conviction, and that she wasn’t a cosmetic politician just changing make-up to suit the times. She stuck to what she believed in, and that’s a hard thing to do.


Mighty Maggie: Meryl Streep as the Iron lady and Jim Broadbent as Denis Thatcher deliver a stunning performance
Mighty Maggie: Meryl Streep as the Iron lady and Jim Broadbent as Denis Thatcher deliver a stunning performance


'An incredibly divisive figure, but you miss her clarity today': Meryl Streep on Margaret Thatcher, pictured here with her husband Denis outside Downing Street
'An incredibly divisive figure, but you miss her clarity today': Meryl Streep on Margaret Thatcher, pictured here with her husband Denis outside Downing Street

‘She’s still an incredibly divisive figure, but you miss her clarity today. It was all very clear and up front, and I loved that eagerness to mix it up and to make it about ideas.’

Of modern politicians, Streep added: ‘Today it’s all about feelings. You know, “How do I come off?” and, “Does this seem OK?”.

You want people who are willing to find a solution. I admire the fact that she was a “love-me-or-hate-me” kind of leader who said: “This is what I stand for.” It’s a hard thing to do and no one’s doing that now.’

'I'm amazed at how she coped with such hatred': Meryl Streep spent hours watching videos of Margaret Thatcher to study her mannerisms
'I'm amazed at how she coped with such hatred': Meryl Streep spent hours watching videos of Margaret Thatcher to study her mannerisms

There are moments in the film which will give today’s leaders pause for thought. At one point, in an imaginary scene set in the present, Thatcher is at a dinner party where she declares that she does not agree with having a coalition government.

In another powerful moment, she decries the lack of ideas in politics and insists that politics should be about thoughts that lead to actions. It makes David Cameron and others seem like pygmies with all their focus groups telling them how they come across to the country.

The film, directed by Phyllida Lloyd from a screenplay by Abi Morgan, who wrote the recent BBC drama The Hour, is told from the point of view of Lady Thatcher living in London several years after the death of her beloved husband Denis (played by Jim Broadbent and, in his younger years, Harry Lloyd).

She’s being urged to get rid of Denis’s things, his clothes and effects. Poignantly, his set of golf clubs still stand by the bedroom door, and she hallucinates that she can see and talk to her late husband. As she goes through his things over a three-day period, memories of the highs and lows of her life come flooding back.

The film opens with a scene of an old lady wearing a headscarf walking to her local shop for a pint of milk, and as the camera zooms in we are startled to discover that it’s Lady Thatcher. She returns home to have a conversation with an imaginary Denis about the price of milk — a shocking 49p.

Although such moments are affectionately done, some might feel they are intrusive. An invasion of a great lady’s privacy.

But for Streep such scenes were as powerful as sequences involving world events or Mrs Thatcher handling the Miners’ Strike or the decision to sink the General Belgrano.

‘The decision to let go of your husband’s things after he’s gone is a very hard thing,’ said the actress. ‘These decisions you make in your personal life are as profound as any decision about the Falklands. Everything counts. In a big ambitious life, everything counts’.

Smiles: When Streep (centre) was cast to play Mrs Thatcher, there was an outcry but she has proved reviewers wrong (pictured here with friends Eileen Atkins and Vanessa Redgrave at yesterday's event)

Smiles: When Streep (centre) was cast to play Mrs Thatcher, there was an outcry but she has proved reviewers wrong (pictured here with friends Eileen Atkins and Vanessa Redgrave at yesterday's event)


Meryl Streep
Meryl Streep
Captivating: Meryl Streep arriving yesterday at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences tribute to Vanessa Redgrave at the Curzon Soho in London

Politically charged: Streep, pictured left as she greets actor James Earl yesterday, said when Thatcher was first elected those on the left didn't like her policies but were pleased a woman had made it
Politically charged: Streep, pictured left as she greets actor James Earl yesterday, said when Thatcher was first elected those on the left didn't like her policies but were pleased a woman had made it


The film is also a love story. It makes it clear that despite the difficulties of living in the public spotlight — especially when the twins Mark and Carol are born (we see both as young children, but only the adult Carol later; Mark is at the end of a phone) — Margaret and Denis adored each other.

There are fictionalised scenes suggesting The King And I was her favourite musical, and there are three instances of Denis and Margaret waltzing to the show’s famous Shall We Dance number.

When Streep was cast to play Mrs Thatcher, there was an outcry. How could an American actress possibly capture the nuances and sensibility of a woman raised above a grocer’s shop in Grantham? How could she possibly understand the issues of class and politics that Thatcher had to rise above to achieve her ambition?


Meryl Streep
Margaret Thatcher.
Admiration: Although the film shows Margaret Thatcher's (played by Meryl Streep, left) political life it also conveys the difficulties the former Prime Minister (right) had living in the spotlight

Well, only an actress of Streep’s stature could possibly capture Thatcher’s essence and bring it to the screen. It’s a performance of towering proportions that sets a new benchmark for acting, a searing interpretation that looks at the big forces that shaped Mrs T’s life.

Interestingly, some Left-leaning people might think it glorifies her. At the screening I attended, I sat next to a woman who, once upon a time, canvassed against Thatcher, yet by the end of the film she was so touched she was in tears.

The film’s certainly not the Left-wing propaganda many feared when the movie was first announced more than two years ago.

Streep noted that, when Mrs Thatcher was elected leader in the Seventies, ‘we on the Left didn’t like her policies but secretly we were thrilled that a woman had made it, and we thought, “Wow, if it can happen there in England, it could happen here.” But we’re still waiting in America.’


Love story: The film takes a look at the woman behind the cameras and her final days in office are depicted as a tragic opera where the heroine is banished in tears
Love story: The film takes a look at the woman behind the cameras and her final days in office are depicted as a tragic opera where the heroine is banished in tears

Warming to her theme, she added: ‘I do think it’s something to do with sex. I do think it’s a deep unease about women being in power, and even though I think I’m taller than most men, it’s the littler agenda.

‘It’s about the head man. There are vestiges of people thinking women are not as bright and not as capable, and I think Margaret Thatcher knew that and so she over-prepared to make sure she knew everything that would ever be asked of her, and be ten times more prepared than any of her colleagues — which probably annoyed them.

‘But that’s what it took to get there and to stay there. It’s astonishing what she did, but it took stamina, which she had plenty of, and guts. But there was also a cost in her private and professional life.

It’s about the head man. There are vestiges of people thinking women are not as bright and not as capable, and I think Margaret Thatcher knew that and so she over-prepared to make sure she knew everything that would ever be asked of her, and be ten times more prepared than any of her colleagues — which probably annoyed them.'
Meryl Streep

‘I think of that Spitting Image puppet of her with its eyeball coming out and I wonder really what does it feel like to be a person represented by that. To be a leader willing to take the level of hatred for the decisions they make, I really do stand in awe of that.’

The actress spent months watching and listening to videos and broadcasts so she could get a sense of Mrs Thatcher’s body language and voice.

During a House of Commons scene, when Mrs Thatcher is Edward Heath’s Education Secretary, her accent is ridiculed and an opposition backbencher shouts: ‘The lady doth screech too much.’

Later, there are scenes where her political mentor Airey Neave and media strategist Gordon Reece convince her to lower and deepen her voice and to give herself what they term ‘important hair’.

Streep wears several wigs in the film and in the more contemporary scenes she wears prosthetic make-up to age her. The look is so astounding that at one point I felt the producers had somehow obtained private home footage of the real Lady Thatcher.

Meryl Streep
Remembered: The Iron Lady film cements Thatcher's (pictured) place in history

Streep should win an Oscar for the Thatcher voice alone, not just for the incredible transformation.

The film focuses on episodes in her life and premiership including the Miners’ Strike, the Brighton bombing, the Falklands and her firmness in Cabinet, which led to charges of bullying. Her final days in office are depicted as a tragic opera where the heroine is banished in tears.

The Falklands scenes might stir some controversy. ‘Sink it!’ she demands when told that the General Belgrano might be steaming towards our carriers.

But she’s not cold and unfeeling. When her own men are killed, she writes to the families, telling them that their sons ‘did not die in vain’. The screen Thatcher talks of the tough decisions she had to make for which she would be hated but perhaps understood years later.

Then Denis pipes up with: ‘Or forget you entirely and chuck you out with the rubbish.’

Twenty-one years after she left office, Mrs Thatcher is far from being forgotten. To some she has become a feminist heroine, a political giant. To others she’s still loathed for her divisive policies.

Damian Jones, The Iron Lady’s producer, believes it is Mrs Thatcher’s ‘bloody-mindedness’ that has ensured she has endured as an icon.

‘She is bloody-minded British,’ he says. ‘I think there are traits in her that, whatever your politics, people acknowledge as being part of our national character’.


Ding dong: Meryl poses in front of Big Ben and the Houses Of Parliament
Ding dong: Meryl poses in front of Big Ben and the Houses Of Parliament


There is no doubt that Maggie will always be remembered for being resolute and for helping to make Britain great again. And now she’ll be remembered, too, for being brilliantly portrayed by Meryl Streep.

The actress was making a short trip to London to see a completed version of The Iron Lady and she had also requested to meet women newspaper commentators from across the political spectrum and to discuss their views of Thatcher.

She also attended last night a special event hosted by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences,the folk behind the Oscars, honouring Vanessa Redgrave.It was held at the Curzon cinema in Soho, central London with David Hare, Ralph Fiennes, Eileen Atkins and other major actors.


The grand unveiling: The poster for The Iron Lady is revealed by Meryl
The grand unveiling: The poster for The Iron Lady is revealed by Meryl

The Iron Lady opens in the UK on January 6.


Saturday, November 12, 2011

Leonardo DiCaprio/Clint Eastwood J. EDGAR: Middling Box-Office Debut

 Zac Gille 



Armie Hammer, Leonardo DiCaprio, Judi Dench, J. Edgar Hoover
Armie Hammer as Clyde Tolson, Leonardo DiCaprio as J. Edgar Hoover, Judi Dench as Anne Marie Hoover, J. Edgar

According to unproven — and quite possibly unfounded — rumors, FBI emperor J. Edgar Hoover enjoyed wearing some nice-fitting dresses every now and then. Ironically, this weekend the all-powerful Hoover will surely be beaten at the US/Canada box office by another cross-dresser: Adam Sandler in Jack and Jill. How the mighty have fallen.

At no. 5 on the domestic box-office chart, Clint Eastwood's J. Edgar will likely rake in $10-$12 million for the weekend after grossing $3.5-$4 million on Friday. Even if the Hoover biopic reaches $12 million, that means an acceptable — though hardly very promising — $6,312 average at 1,901 locations. (Deadline has $13 million for the weekend, but that could be a typo, unless Warner Bros. is expecting the adult-oriented J. Edgar to soar on the weekend proper, much like Puss in Boots and other kiddie flicks.)

Comparisons to Gus Van Sant's Milk, which were possible on Wednesday, become trickier at this stage. Written by J. Edgar screenwriter Dustin Lance Black, the 2008 drama about the gay San Francisco politician Harvey Milk never played at more than 900 North American locations — and that happened more than two months after its late November debut. Made for a reported $20m, Milk went on to gross only $31.84m at the domestic box office; J. Edgar's final tally remains up in the air as it depends on the film's box-office hold in the next couple of weekends. 

Eastwood's film was reportedly shot in 39 days for $35m. It currently has a mediocre 55% approval rating among Rotten Tomatoes' top critics.

J. Edgar stars Leonardo DiCaprio as Hoover, Armie Hammer (one of the leads in Tarsem Singh's Mirror Mirror, which opens next year) as the FBI honcho's intimate companion Clyde Tolson, Naomi Watts, Stephen Root, Ed Westwick, Amanda Schull, Michael Gladis, Josh Stamberg, and Zach Grenier.

Also: Josh Lucas as Charles Lindbergh, Miles Fisher as Jim Garrison, Lea Thompson as Lela Rogers (Ginger Rogers' right-wing mother), Jeffrey Donovan as Robert F. Kennedy, Dermot Mulroney as Norman Schwarzkopf, and Gunner Wright as Dwight Eisenhower.
And finally: Judi Dench as Anne Marie Hoover, Christopher Shyer as Richard Nixon, Ken Howard as U.S. attorney general Harlan F. Stone, and Jennipher Foster as Lucille Ball.
J. Edgar picture: Keith Bernstein / Warner Bros.

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