Showing posts with label Fifty Shades of Grey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fifty Shades of Grey. Show all posts

stars, sex and nudity buzz : 01/15/2013

‘Texas Chainsaw’s Alexandra Daddario Join New HBO Series ‘True Detective’
EXCLUSIVEAlexandra Daddario, star of the recent No.1 movie Texas Chainsaw 3D, Elizabeth Reaser, co-star of the blockbuster Twilight Saga franchise and The Wire alums Wood Harris and Michael Potts have joined the cast of True Detective, HBO‘s upcoming eight-episode drama series starring Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey. The project is described as an elevated serial narrative with multiple perspectives and time frames. It centers on two detectives, Rust Cohle (McConaughey) and Martin Hart (Harrelson), whose lives collide and entwine during a 17-year hunt for a serial killer in Louisiana. The investigation of a bizarre murder in 1995 is framed and interlaced with testimony from the detectives in 2012, when the case was reopened. Michelle Monaghan was recently cast as the female lead, Hart’s wife Maggie. Daddario will play Lisa Tragnetti, a sexy court reporter whose relationship with Hart takes a dark turn for them both. Reaser will play Laurie Perkins, Cohle’s (McConaughey) pretty, refined girlfriend, a surgeon who works at the hospital with Maggie, and has dated Cohle for 4 years. Potts will play Maynard Gilbough, a cerebral detective. Harris will play Detective Thomas Papania, Gilbough’s partner. The two question Hart and Cohle about the 1995 case and feel the duo is hiding something. Daddario, repped by UTA and McKeon Myones, next reprises her role as Annabeth in the Percy Jackson sequel Sea Of Monsters. Reaser played the lead on the CBS series The Ex List and has done arcs on The Good Wife and Grey’s Anatomy.

[LISA TRAGNETTI] 26, Caucasian, dark haired and sexy. Having an affair with Hart, he goes to her instead of home. The breakup is bad and she goes to Hart’s home and tells Maggie everything…Supporting, appears in 3 episodes.

* Hallelujah! Woody, you lucky sonofabitch! I will post more updates on Alexandra Daddario's possibly first nude scene ever. Yes..you heard it right. The role requires nudity according to a New Orleans talent agency. It's amazing. Nothing is confirmed right now. Nothing is set in stone yet. I reiterate - more info will come soon. 
I think this will be a some sort of test run for Daddario - fingers crossed - auditioning later for Fifty Shades of Grey. Her character will only be in few episodes and is having an affair with Harrelson's Martin Hart. I'm not sure if they're going to shoot the sex scene with her and Woody's Martin Hart just as a gimmicky shocker to show the viewers Marty's other side. But pretty sure Alex will be topless in non-sexual content. They will start shooting next week. 
Guys, make sure to check regularly Alex tweets (please don't harass her about the nudity or anything relating to the series. I heard the same thing happened to Maggie Grace). She has began to update consistently; hopefully the bosomy wonder will leave clues and posts almost abstract-like musings as her nude shoot edges close. 

Please don't embed the videos at another site. I been flagged twice and before I can remove the video, the actresses concerned took down the vid first. Uploaded to my own Vimeo account as a precaution.



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Paul Abbott To Produce English-Language Take On Supernatural Series ‘Les Revenants’


Originally produced by France’s Haut et Court for Canal Plus, Les Revenants aired in eight one-hour episodes last fall, drawing record numbers for the pay-TV channel. Paul Abbott, creator of the British and co-creator of the U.S. version of Shameless, and his AbbottVision will produce the English-language adaptation for the international market. The series, with the English working title They Came Back, centers on a group of men and women in a small Alpine village who find themselves in a state of confusion, trying to return to their homes. What they don’t yet know is that they’ve been dead for several years, and no one is expecting them back. AbbottVision has a first-look deal with Fremantle Media Enterprises which acquired the rights to the project and will handle international distribution.

* Don't be surprised if Paul cast Kaya Scodelario. Her sullen almost gloomy nature is well-suited to play one of the roles in the bleak tale.

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'Canyons' star James Deen on working with Lindsay Lohan, the 'NY Times' article, and always being known as 'that porn guy'


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Like many a pop culture aficionado, The Canyons star James Deen read the New York Times story on Lindsay Lohan/ The Canyons over the weekend. But unlike many fans gobbling up the article for intel on Lohan, her co-star Deen read the feature, which outlined Lohan’s love of chaos and inappropriate on-set behavior, with bemused wonder. “The best way I can describe [the Times article] is actual life events reflected in a mirror and then retold for dramatic effect,” Deen said on the phone with EW this morning. “It’s accurate enough that it can’t be said that it’s not; it’s not a lie. But it’s twisted enough that if you were actually there you’re like, ‘Wait. That’s not exactly what happened.’”

What did actually happen was Deen (real name Bryan Matthew Sevilla), affectionately known as ‘the porn star next door’ with over 4,000 credits to his name, started hearing his name thrown around by screenwriter Bret Easton Ellis on Twitter. Ellis was looking for an actor for an upcoming noir thriller, and needed the person to be conformable with a lot of nudity. Enter Deen. What Deen didn’t know at the time was the low-budget project that would become The Canyons, directed by Paul Schrader, would also be starring Lindsay Lohan — and that equaled a lot of extra drama.

Deen wasn’t all that familiar with Lohan. He’d heard the stories about her self-destruction with drugs and alcohol, but he’d never actually seen a Lohan movie – not even Mean Girls. So when Lohan appeared for her first day on set with him – late, as The Times wrote, Deen didn’t know what to expect. There is audio floating around of the two of them arguing over a scene one day, with Deen saying he was doing The Canyons “for fun,” which seemed to anger Lohan – a convo Deen chalks up to a misunderstanding.

“It’s just the delicate ego of the Hollywood person,” he said. “I’ve learned that most people in the Hollywood mainstream world are so delicate, fragile and egotistical. [Comments like mine] really f*** with their heads.”
* Nails it right on the head.

One day on set that Deen is eager to talk about is the duo’s already-infamous sex scene, which would mark Lohan’s first on-camera nudity for a film. “The Times said there were a bunch of other porn stars there, but that’s not right,” he said. “It wasn’t like we were all having sex and an orgy in the bedroom! During rehearsal, everyone was talking the scene to death. Schrader was so uncomfortable. I think the issue was every other [cast member] was so comfortable, it made Lindsay feel like she didn’t matter. …I think Lindsay wanted [the nudity] to be a bigger deal than it was. She needs attention. [She wanted the crew to be naked] and they just laughed. So Schrader is freaking out and then this is what actually happened: Schrader looked her in the eye and said, ‘I’m not making my f***ing crew do that. But you know what?’ strips his clothes off except for his socks, walks to the monitor, and says, ‘Action.’ And Lindsay ran out from the closet, giggling like crazy, and we shot the scene. One take.”

Beyond the occasional flare-up, Deen said that he got along well with Lohan, hanging out with her  to build chemistry, and that for a bit after the shoot [it concluded end of July] they would continue to text. While they have different “lifestyles,” “She herself doesn’t bother me at all,” Deen said. “It’ll be interesting [to see how the movie turns out]. It might be really good; it might be really strange. But either way, it’s going to be cool to watch.”

As for what his own future holds post-Canyons, Deen isn’t concerned about getting past the porn-star label (nor does he have any plans to stop making adult films and transition entirely to more mainstream fare). “Hollywood is always going to see me as ‘that porn guy,’” he said. “There is no way to avoid it…I do adult because it’s what I love.” But he is working on other projects in addition to shooting his scenes, most notably producing. He’s taken to Kickstarter to get funding for a sci-fi western steampunk short called Cowboys and Engines.  “I’m not going to be the next Brad Pitt or Marlon Brando. I’m that porn guy. And after [The Canyons] comes out, I’m still going to be that porn guy. And maybe I’ll be that porn guy who gets offered a little indie every now and then.”

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Joe Manganiello Gears Up For True Blood Season 6: The Scripts Are ‘Pretty Wild!’

Joe Manganiello attends the HBO after party at the 70th annual Golden Globe Awards at Circa 55 restaurant at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on January 13, 2013
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. -- Caption Joe Manganiello has been sporting a longer-locked look lately, thanks to his role in Arnold Schwarzenegger’s next movie, “Ten,” but he’s about to chop it down.

“It’s gonna get cut off this week to go back to ‘True Blood,’” he told Access Hollywood on Sunday night on the pink carpet at HBO’s Golden Globes after-party.

Joe plays Alcide Herveaux — a contractor (and werewolf) in “True Blood” — and he hinted at the drama ahead for his character when the show returns to HBO later this year.

“[It’s] racier,” he said. “My character’s taken over the wolf pack, so as an alpha, and a pack of dogs, you gotta regulate, you gotta set it straight with everybody so there’s some violence. It’ll be fun.”

Joe said the material he’s read for the new season amps things up.

“This is Season 6 and the first couple scripts I read – I think they’re doing a lot of stuff that they maybe held back on the past couple years,” he told Access. “They’re pretty wild. I think it’s going to be a pretty wild season.”


Temperatures have dropped in Southern California, and with plenty of skin on display in the series, Joe is hoping things change by the time he hits the set later this week.

“Wednesday night I start shooting, so I really hope it warms up by then or it’s going to be a really tough night,” he laughed.


* Bring on more of Kelly Overton in the buff.

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Felicity Jones: Fifty Shades of Grey role depends on the film-maker and script 
Felicity Jones has been tipped to play Anastasia Steele in Fifty Shades Of Grey (Picture: Daniel Lynch)
Felicity Jones has been tipped to play Anastasia Steele in Fifty Shades Of Grey (Picture: Daniel Lynch)



Felicity Jones talks about her new film Cheerful Weather For The Wedding and being tipped to play Anastasia Steele in 50 Shades of Grey.

Before meeting Felicity Jones, I stumble across a YouTube clip featuring images of her and Chris Hemsworth, of Thor fame. The three-minute montage, compiled by a young fan, is accompanied by text citing their ‘phenomenal acting talents’ and ‘physical appropriateness’ to Anastasia Steele and Christian Grey, the characters in the steamy novel Fifty Shades Of Grey, which is to be made into a movie. When I mention this to 29-year-old Jones, she looks bored. She has clearly buffered this speculation before.

‘It all depends on the film-maker and script, just like any other job,’ she says of the role, adding: ‘Anyway, I’ve heard there’s lots of campaigns by fans pushing other brunette actresses but I guess I should thank this person who went to all that trouble.’

She is, however, intrigued that sites such as YouTube can be used to help cast an actor in a role or propel an unknown film-maker into the public eye. ‘There’s always a place for immensely well-crafted cinema but, at the same time, it’s important we have fresh, unusual ideas with no budgets coming through the digital medium,’ she says.

So far, her career has spanned both these extremes – and lots in between: the improvised 2011 Sundance Film Festival favourite Like Crazy was shot on a tiny Canon EOS 7D camera with no budget (Jones did her own hair and make-up); romcom Chalet Girl showed off her comic timing; her credible portrayal of Luise Miller at the Donmar got the theatre world’s attention; she held her own alongside Maggie Gyllenhaal in Hysteria, the story behind the creation of the vibrator; and she has just finished filming The Invisible Woman with Ralph Fiennes, about Charles Dickens’s secret mistress, Nelly Ternan.

But today we’re here to talk about her current release, Cheerful Weather For The Wedding. This glossy big-screen adaptation of Julia Strachey’s 1932 novella sees Jones play Dolly Thatcham, the headstrong older daughter of Hatty Thatcham, played by Downton Abbey heavyweight Elizabeth McGovern.

Dolly is about to get married to handsome-yet-dim Owen but her former lover, Joseph, arrives on the morning of the wedding, threatening to derail the day. His presence causes all sorts of melodrama, especially for Dolly’s acerbic mother, who is desperate for the day to go ahead.

In the hours before the ceremony, we watch Dolly swigging rum from the bottle, vomiting and reliving memories of her summer romance with Joseph, which are depicted through sun-drenched flashbacks. These golden scenes contrast starkly with the iciness of her winter wedding, mirroring Dolly’s emotional state.

‘Dolly is a very complex character and quite an alternative heroine,’ says Jones. ‘She’s pitched as a rebellious young girl but she’s actually quite scared of being with the man she loves, so she goes with the safe option – she’s actually a coward.’ The actress, who chose a degree in English literature from Oxford over drama school, adds: ‘There is something very hard about all the characters – I love how unsentimental they are. I studied Virginia Woolf and this film reminded me of Woolf’s wonderfully acidic diaries.’

If Jones were in Dolly’s position, which man would she choose? ‘Well, you’ve got to go with your heart, haven’t you?’ she grins.

And what of Jones’s heart? She’s happy to mention her boyfriend, artist Ed Fornieles. They’ve been together since university and live in Hackney, east London, although these days, Jones spends a lot of her time in LA. But that’s all she’s willing to reveal.

‘I find that if you know a lot about an actor’s personal life then, instinctively, it is harder to believe in the character they are playing,’ she says. ‘I like going to the cinema and being surprised and that’s more difficult when you know every single detail about the actor on screen. Besides, I couldn’t be that open, simply for my own sanity.’

She currently appears in a Burberry shoot alongside Cara Delevingne and is also the face of Dolce and Gabbana make-up. Doesn’t her modelling contrast with her serious acting career?

‘The campaigns are very high-fashion and I approach them as if I were playing a character,’ she says. ‘To be the Burberry girl, I got into a chic, 1960s and Jean Shrimpton-esque mood. So, in that sense, I feel it doesn’t threaten what I do.’

This week, Jones will leave Hackney and LA behind for the Sundance Film Festival in Utah, where her latest film, Breathe In, is showing. She plays an exchange student whose arrival at an upstate New York home has devastating consequences for the family. It stars Guy Pearce and reunites her with Like Crazy director Drake Doremus, although Jones says it is a far more solemn picture.

Once, when asked why she went for a role in Hysteria, Jones simply replied that she wanted to play someone silly. What mood is she in for 2013? ‘My last few roles have been quite heavy and serious,’ she says. ‘So I’m ready for something lighter. I’m feeling playful.’


Cheerful Weather For The Wedding is out now on DVD, Blu-ray and digital download
Like Crazy was a hit at Sundance Film Festival (Picture: File)
Like Crazy was a hit at Sundance Film Festival (Picture: File)



How Jones prepares for her roles

Felicity Jones has a strong method approach to her acting. ‘The more preparation I’ve done, the more comfortable I feel,’ she says. ‘I guess it’s because I take an academic approach: I prepare as much as I possibly can in order to be as spontaneous as possible on the day. I love the idea of doing something I’ve never done before.’

For Chalet Girl, where Jones starred alongside Tamsin Egerton (pictured right), she spent a month in the Alps learning to snowboard, followed by an undercover stint scrubbing toilets and partying in St Anton.

‘I fell over about 50 times a day – it was an incredibly painful process but it felt extraordinary to even put on a snowboard and move down half a mountain.’

For Breathe In, Jones learned how to play the piano. Guy Pearce plays her piano teacher. You can work the rest out.

While treading the boards and playing Luise Miller, a deeply religious character, she immersed herself in Catholicism. ‘I knew a very religious family and I’m not from a religious background, so I spent one month living with them and attending Mass. It was an intense but interesting experience.’

And for Page Eight, David Hare’s TV thriller, Jones plays Julianne, a talented artist and daughter of Bill Nighy. So she immersed herself in the art world, which wasn’t too difficult thanks to her boyfriend Ed Fornieles. He introduced her to his friends at the Royal College of Art, where she hung out and even attempted to take some ‘terrible pictures’ herself.


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29-years old English model Agyness Deyn : Craig McDean [Interview]February 2013
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26-years old Dutch model Milou Sluis : Daniel Roche [Be Magazine]February 2013

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TV’s most naked truth

What does the "Girls" star's casual nudity say about us -- and the Howard Sterns made so uncomfortable by it?



TV's most naked truth
In the run-up to Sunday night’s “Girls” season premiere, the old repetitive war over the show’s content took on a new dimension: Radio shock jock Howard Stern attacked neither the youth nor the perceived entitlement of showrunner/star Lena Dunham, but her display of her body. Stern called Dunham “a little fat girl who kinda looks like Jonah Hill and she keeps taking her clothes off and it kind of feels like rape … I don’t want to see that.” New York Post TV critic Linda Stasi took a similar tack, calling Dunham “a woman with giant thighs, a sloppy backside and small breasts … compelled to show it all.”

Anyone who saw the premiere knows that even by the standards of “Girls,” there was a great deal of nudity in the 30-minute episode, which ended with Dunham’s character Hannah stripping down to her thong. An episode later in the season, teased in the season’s trailer, has Hannah baring her breasts in a revealing mesh top everywhere from a dance club to a pharmacy; when asked what she is, or isn’t, wearing, she nonchalantly replies, “Oh, a shirt!”

The real-life Dunham is equally unfazed by criticism. Appropriating Stern’s mocking terms, she told David Letterman: “It put me in the best mood! I just want to be like, my gravestone says, ‘She was a little fat chick and she got it going.’”

We’re a long way from Sarah Jessica Parker demanding a no-nudity clause so that she could wear a bra while in bed with Mr. Big. Dunham’s audience, for whom issues of race and class have been far more contentious than those of her body, seems to accept her nudity as part of the story line.

“Not only does she look like them, but her matter-of-factness about her body is the way they feel,” said xoJane editor Jane Pratt of her writers in Dunham’s age group. Pratt ran an essay by a writer praising Dunham’s showing off a body “remarkable in its unremarkableness.”

Perhaps nudity of all sorts on air is coming to be, well, unremarkable too, rather like depictions of violence: something to which we’ve become desensitized. Said Pratt, “It’s very matter-of-fact — and that’s one of the reasons it has made an impact. It’s not like she’s trying to make a statement. It’s just part of what she does. And the matter of factness of that — that’s the strongest statement.” She compared the series’ plot-driven use of nudity to those Dove ads that showed off the bodies of “real women,” as opposed to models. “What does that mean? It’s labeling, still, as opposed to just getting over it and stopping making a big deal out of what is absolutely normal diversity.”

In early “Girls” episodes, Dunham mocked Hannah’s body at times by having her wolf down cupcakes and buy ice cream cones after attempting to jog. This early into Season 2, though, her body shape is off the table as a matter of discussion. It’s the fact of her body, and what she does with it, that moves the plot forward.

Such arguments, prompted at last on the Internet by Dunham’s utter comfort and seeming lack of explicit political intent, have long been tropes of nudists and naturists. “Naturism gives women power or gives them the feeling of being empowered. It makes them feel, I’m in control here,” said Nicky Hoffman, the editor of the Naturist Society’s magazine, noting that accepting nudity necessarily means getting over micro-analysis of bodily quirks. While Dunham (obviously) isn’t affiliated with the pro-nudity movement, her fixing the lens on herself makes the issue of exploitation moot. (Even the male-gaze chop shop MrSkin.com, which publishes nude pictures of glamorous actresses repurposed from TV and movies, recognized the auteur in Dunham, praising her in a roundabout way for “direct[ing] herself to get nude.”)

“Nudity in our society is associated with sex, and a nude woman is automatically considered a ‘slut’ and someone who is asking to be disrespected or raped,” said Gypsy Taub, one of the activists fighting the recent ban on public nudity in San Francisco, where nudists had traditionally traversed the Castro.

Said Taub: “I can’t imagine art without nudity. I can’t imagine life without nudity. True artists have always been free from body shame. Freedom of self-expression is impossible for a person who is imprisoned by body shame because body shame is a form of self-hate.”

The “entitlement” perceived by fans and detractors of “Girls” — Hannah feels no shame about expressing her needs for sex, for attention, for money from her parents — extends to pride in a body that’s neither model-thin nor traditionally “plus-size,” just hers. Said Christina DiEdoardo, the lawyer fighting the San Francisco nudity ban, “If I had a dollar for every time I saw a comment, like, ‘I’d be in favor of [ending the ban if the nudists] were hot chicks.’ But it’s about the speech, not about who’s speaking. If it were attractive women in their early twenties, people would not be offended by this. But because they’re real people, men are offended by this.”

“Seeing nudity that’s not there for titillation and that represents different body types is still somehow shocking to people,” said Pratt, the editor, “or revolutionary, or horrifying to people, or considered something that should be Photoshopped. But her visibility right now and what she’s doing with showing herself and not making any big thing about it, it’s a super important moment in evolving body culture.”

And the culture’s being moved forward not merely by the show itself but by the discourse, often enraged, surrounding it. Pratt admitted that she hadn’t yet seen “Girls,” but had seen the coverage, both positive and negative. “I’m definitely aware of some people seem to be outraged by how much of her body Lena Dunham reveals on the show. It may not be that she’s driven to show us her body however that body looks. It may be that it’s just part of the story line.” Sometimes, a mesh shirt is just a mesh shirt.

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Sci-Fi Short “R’ha” Grabs Attention of Internet and Hollywood

rha movie
A few days ago, a video was posted to Vimeo that the Internet buzzing over the weekend. With over half a million views and universal praise, the response to the sci-fi short R´ha would be impressive on its own. Add in that the effects look Hollywood good and that it was written, directed, and animated by a 22 year-old German film student named Kaleb Lechowski, and the video becomes downright staggering. Watch it for yourself after the break.

The short film is an interrogation scene from a much larger plot. Machines have taken over an alien planet, and a computer entity tries to torture one of the aliens to find out where the rest of his people have escaped to. 


While the short doesn’t exactly have a unique storyline, it’s effectively made and has a nice twist. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the short has sparked the interest of some film execs, and Kaleb is expected to head to Hollywood later this month (presumably for meetings).

You can follow Kaleb and R’ha on Facebook, Tumblr, DeviantArt, and YouTube. He’s very open about his process and has said there will be more work put out related to R’ha.


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Hayley Atwell meets Bugs Bunny

Hyman74Roth

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Most Anticipated Films from the Sundance Film Festival!Sundance-rotating1

By: Joey Magidson and Terence Johnson

Sundance Film Festival is right around the corner! Joey and I are incredibly excited to attend the festival on behalf of the site and are looking forward to all the films and people we will meet. As many of you know there are a ton of films that premiere at Sundance so, Joey and I decided to take an in-depth look at the schedule and find the films that we are the most excited to see at the festival. Take a look at our Top 10 Most Anticipated Sundance Films after the jump!

Joey’s Top 10
10. Lovelace: This one is just morbid curiosity on my part.  I’m fairly certain that this Linda Lovelace biopic will be a mess, but what has me hopeful in a small way is that the directors previously made Howl, a film that made my Top 10 list a few years back.  Amanda Seyfried as Lovelace is, well…interesting.
9. A.C.O.D.: Earlier this year Richard Jenkins mentioned a project to me while I was interviewing him called Adult Children of Divorce.  That film is now premiering at the fest and features a great cast including Adam Scott, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Jessica Alba, and Jenkins.  Could this be the breakout comedy of Sundance?
8. S-VHS: I enjoyed the found footage horror flick V/H/S last year, and now we get the sequel, one of the first to ever play the festival (though not the only one this year, or in fact the only one on my list here).  If the filmmakers can continue to show off diverse scares while keeping things interesting, this could easily be a new indie horror franchise to annually look forward to.
7. The East: Brit Marling made a lot of fans with her last film at Sundance, the similarly themed cult film Sound of My Voice.  Now she’s got her sights set on anarchist groups, and with a bigger cast that includes Ellen Page, I’m very interested to see what she’s up to now.
6. The Way, Way Back: The co-writers of The Descendants get their chance to direct, and the final product sounds like it could be akin to Adventureland, a favorite of mine.  I feel like either Steve Carrell or Sam Rockwell could potentially break out into next year’s Oscar race from this one, so I’m really looking forward to it.
5. Upstream Color: I still don’t know if I understand Shane Carruth’s other film Primer, but it’s truly something different.  The promise of something just as intelligent and different has me very excited for this one.
4. The Spectacular Now: The writers of (500) Days of Summer, the director of Smashed, along with Mary Elizabeth Winstead and Shailene Woodley in the cast?  This seems almost tailor made for me.
3. Prince Avalanche: Once upon a time I would have included David Gordon Green on a list of my favorite directors working today.  His studio comedies have been a very mixed bag, but a return to more indie territory, along with a teaming of Emile Hirsch and Paul Rudd…well, he’s got me hyped up for one of his movies again.
2. Don Jon’s Addiction: I love actors who step behind the camera, and I’m a huge Joseph Gordon-Levitt fan, so this is one of my most anticipated films of 2013, Sundance be damned.  Add in Scarlett Johansson to the cast and only one other title at the festival has me more hotly anticipating it.
1. Before Midnight: Part of me feels like Julie Delpy, Ethan Hawke, and Richard Linklater are playing with fire by trying to take two perfect films and add a third to them.  Still, I’m dying to see what’s happened to these characters, so if I could only see one film at this year’s fest, I’d have to go with this one!

Terence’s Top 10
10. A Teacher – Try though I may, I can never resist juicy sounding material as you will see with this and the following entry. A Teacher is about a teacher who falls in love with one of her students. What’s so interesting about this premise is that it plans to focus on how a relationship such as this would exist in the modern world of sexting and other technological impulses.
9. Two Mothers – Robin Wright + Naomi Watts in a drama about two women who fall for each other’s sons is either a bad Lifetime movie waiting to happen or a glorious critique of social taboos. Either way it sounds fantastic and I am certainly planning on catching a screening.
8. Stories We Tell – Sarah Polley’s documentary got some great publicity coming out of  Telluride and I’ve been keeping tabs on this documentary since then. I’m thrilled that this film will be at Sundance for my viewing. To even talk about the details of the plot, but sufficed to say Sarah Polley set out to make a love letter to her family and ended up discovering more than she thought possible. Polley is one of most interesting directors working today given the deft touch she employs with difficult subject matter and I’ve no doubt she’s delivered again.
7. Kill Your Darlings – Daniel Radcliffe has proven himself very capable outside of the Harry Potter franchise but tackling the role of Alan Ginsberg is something that should really test him and his abilities. He won’t be going it alone however, as Kill Your Darlings stars one of the best ensembles in a film playing at Sundance (Dane Dehan, Elizabeth Olsen, Jack Huston, Michael C. Hall, Kyra Sedgwick and Jennifer Jason Leigh).
6. Don Jon’s Addiction – Joseph Gordon has really exploded in a big way the past few years and even if he was merely acting in this movie it would be one of my anticipated films. But given that he both wrote and directed this film, and got a fantastic supporting cast to join him, I am thoroughly intrigued as to what JGL will do with this movie.
5. American Promise – Coming off a year with such great documentaries, I’m now energized for what the art form can do. This documentary about two African American boys growing up and their experiences going through public and private school. Education is a cause near and dear to my heart and I’m looking forward to seeing what critiques the directors can bring forth about its place in the African American community.
4. Ain’t Them Bodies Saints – This film stars one of my favorite young actors (Nate Parker) and two other actors I greatly admire (Rooney Mara and Casey Affleck) in a tale about an outlaw couple who struggle to reunite after the father is thrown in jail. This movies sounds like a mix between Terrence Malick’s Badlands and Bonnie and Clyde, and with that cast I’m certainly going to be first in line to see it.
3. kink – One of the Midnight selections for the festival is this documentary which takes an inside look at the porn studio Kink which operates from inside the San Francisco Armory Building. For those of you unfamiliar, Kink makes porn that caters BDSM community. This sounds like a fascinating subject for a documentary and having grown up in the Bay Area, I’m incredibly drawn to how the industry has flourished in San Francisco. If anything, this movie can’t not be titilating right?
2. Stoker – I want this movie in front of my eye balls right this second, but I guess I can hold on Park Chan-Wook’s English language film till Sundance arrives. The trailer was so atmospheric and Kidman looks like she’s having a ball playing the evil mother of the tale. Add to the intrigue that the script was penned by Prison Break Wentworth Miller and you’d have the most anticipated film at Sundance except for…
1. Fruitvale – I vacillated between putting this and Stoker number one, but given the real world implications and commentary it won out. Fruitvale, the telling of the story of Oscar Grant is something that is very close to my heart. As a both an African-American and a Bay Area resident, the actual ordeal was like something out of a nightmare and I was incredibly invested in the social issue it brought forth. Having had a front row seat to the whole ordeal, I am incredibly interested in how they are planning to tell the story. Will they go for shock value or be more restrained? The closeness I feel towards the story will probably make this one of the tougher films I’ll have to sit through but with a cast that is led by Oscar winner Octavia Spencer and Michael B. Jordan, I’ll be sure to watch.

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More city co-eds turning to sugar daddies for school support
By REBECCA ROSENBERG and REUVEN FENTON

More New York City co-eds are turning to a new source of income — sugar daddies — to cope with the rising cost of their college tuition, surprising statistics released yesterday reveal.

And the majority is enrolled at New York University, according to the sugar-daddy dating site SeekingArrangement.com.

Nearly 300 NYU co-eds joined the site’s service last year seeking a “mutually beneficial” arrangement with rich older men — a 154 percent jump over 2011.

It was the second-highest number of new members for any college in the country.

Hundreds more young women from Columbia, Cornell and Syracuse universities also have recently signed up for the service, the site said.


“I’ll admit that I’ve thought about doing something like that,” said a Columbia junior who gave only her first name, Karen.

“It would be easier in some ways than working, taking classes and then spending years paying back loans.”

Alex Cranshaw, 22, who graduated from NYU last year, said three of his female classmates had sugar daddies — including a woman whose benefactor financed a whole semester in Madrid.

“He funded her tuition, paid for her housing, gave her spending money and paid for her airfare,” Cranshaw said.

“She told her parents she got a scholarship. They had no idea.”

Not all students approve of the arrangements.

“Clearly, we need more financial aid if those are the lengths people are going to pay for school,” sniffed Ashley Thaxton, 20, an NYU theater major.

“I have friends who work multiple jobs, and there are other opportunities to support yourself through school,” she said.

Still, few jobs bring in as much money — and as many extra benefits.

The average co-ed “sugar baby” receives about $3,000 a month in allowances and gifts from her sugar daddy, enough to cover tuition and living expenses at most schools, said Jennifer Gwynn, a spokeswoman for the site.

In New York City, where cost of living and learning are higher, sugar babies can fetch as much as $4,000 a month.

NYU and Columbia are among the nation’s most expensive universities, with Columbia ranking third with $59,208 in total annual costs and NYU ranking fifth with $58,858 in total annual costs, a recent Forbes magazine survey found.

The Pew Research Center says one out of five households are in debt because of student loans.

“I can understand why someone would be desperate enough to do it,” said Abby Kron, 19, an NYU student studying communications.

“But I don’t support it.”

Then again, “it’s easy to stand in judgment when you or your parents’ economic status allows you to pay your tuition in traditional ways,” she said. 


* Why it's still so surprising to some folks? It's been going on for years and is quite common now. Trust me. It ain't so glamorous. The things sugar-baby have to give up, must do and willing to indulge in all the sick fantasy the guy has in his mind. Will even make a hardened porn star hesitate for a second or two.

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Porn on the Precipice

Last year wasn't the best year for the porn industry.

Piracy continued to ravage the already suffering video business. And scandal rocked the industry more than once. The industry suffered a setback in November when voters in Los Angeles County passed a resolution that made condom use in adult films shot in the area mandatory – and, depending on how the issue is enforced, could mean a lot more than that.

Despite that, industry insiders are upbeat about 2013. The industry, estimated to make roughly $14 billion per year in revenues, is in the midst of transition. Thanks in part to the incredible success of "Fifty Shades of Grey," mainstream America is more curious and open to the industry. New stars are rising to the forefront. And new revenue streams are starting to fill in the gaps created by the downturn in traditional video.

The mainstreaming of the industry seems to be one of the themes of this year's Adult Entertainment Expo, which starts this week. The AVN Awards (the so-called "Oscars of porn"), for example, will feature entertainment by normally family-friendly Cirque du Soleil.

For an industry that's striving for some mainstream acceptance, though, porn's problems are growing – and the AEE is a good indicator of that. Attendance at the industry's annual trade show was down 8 percent last year – and floor space for exhibitors was reduced by almost 40 percent.

Part of the reason for that is the ongoing consolidation among porn companies – which limits the number of companies who might have a presence at the show. Manwin, owner of several so-called 'tube' sites that stream porn clips for free (think YouTube – only with hardcore pornography rather than "Gangnam Style"), continues to buy up studios. And while it seemed as if that spree would go unchallenged, Larry Flynt recently started flexing his company's muscle to offer some competition.

"I think the stronger companies will continue to survive and grow," said Michael Klein, President of LFP, Inc. "The business is stil growing - knock wood. It's improving and revenue is still there. … We think a healthy business is one that has lots of competitors."

LFP stepped to the spotlight in October, when it purchased New Frontier Media, a broadcaster that oversees nine adult-themed pay-per-view networks, including XTSY, TEN and Penthouse TV. Manwin and an investment holding company were considered the front runners for the company, so many in the industry were surprised when LFP emerged from the background to take the company.

Klein says that while LFP/Hustler hasn't been as active on the acquisition front, that has been a deliberate decision.

"We've been offered a number of the companies sold in the past year, but we just didn't feel the value was there," he said. "If someone wants to pay too much for a company, we'll let them do that."

Manwin, meanwhile, has problems of its own. Managing partner Fabian Thylmann was arrested in Brussels in December and extradited to Germany on suspicion of tax evasion. He was released on bond right before Christmas, but the arrest of the company's frontman has put Manwin on the defensive.

"Manwin's managing partner is currently the subject of an investigation by the German tax authorities and accordingly, no conclusion was reached in this matter — as of the date of this release," the company said in its only statement about the matter. "Manwin's global operations remain unaffected and, as is customary with our company, we will not comment on pending legal matters."

The passage of a law requiring condom use in all porn films is another shadow hanging over the industry. The industry maintains that its testing requirements are sufficient – but was forced to shut down last year for weeks following a syphilis outbreak that occurred when a prominent male performer hid his diagnosis from producers. It was the third shutdown in three years due to infectious disease.

While the Free Speech Coalition, an industry trade group, is appealing the Constitutional merits of the law and determination on how it will be enforced is being determined by county officials, porn companies are trying to plan for the industry's worst case scenario.

While several have threatened to move out of California, that's unlikely – but filming of the movies may move elsewhere. Among the whispered locations are Florida, Nevada, Mexico and Europe.

This all comes as more and more women become curious about the industry's products, a side benefit of the "50 Shades of Grey" phenomenon. Just as eBook sales of erotic fiction have spiked in the past year, porn companies have seen an explosion in the success of their films tailored for a female audience.

"It's been picking up -- mostly on the DVD side," said Allison Vivas, president of Pink Visual. "It's been picking up since Wicked picked up on this and started making productions that were more female friendly. … On the digital side, what we're looking at is the tablet market. We don't imagine a woman enjoying this sort of thing sitting in front of her computer screen in her home office."

Meanwhile, the adult novelty business is exploding. A push by major corporations, including Church and Dwight , in the field has led to increased sales and their appearance in stores that wouldn't have considered stocking them a short while ago.

"Toys are where the growth is in this industry – and where it seems to continue to be," said Scott Taylor, president and founder of New Sensations. "In this time of recession, to still see growth in that field says something."

Because AEE is one of the industry's tent pole events, though, most of the conversations about the challenges the industry faces this year – and the problems of 2012 – will remain in the back rooms, well out of the earshot of fans that come to rub elbows with their favorite stars.

The show, as always, must go on.

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Model Film: Anastasia Arteyeva

Film by: Chris Vongsawat (vongsawat.com)
Model: Anastasia Arteyeva (modelmayhem.com/565522)


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Sundance 2013: January Jones chases frontier justice in 'Sweetwater'

January-Jones_510x317.jpg

January Jones is ready to get her hands dirty. Best known for playing the icy and elegant ex-Mrs. Draper on Mad Men, the beautiful blonde stars as a vengeful 19th-century frontier woman in Sweetwater, an indie with Ed Harris and Jason Isaacs that premieres next week at the Sundance Film Festival. Sarah and her Hispanic husband, Miguel (Eduardo Noriega), court trouble when a sadistic local rancher (Isaacs) eyes their land and is threatened by their independence. But when Miguel disappears, Sarah proves she’s no pioneer pushover.

“She reminded me of Clint Eastwood in Pale Rider, kind of dark and mean,” says Jones. “She has a stalking, predator type quality that I’d only really seen in male roles, and I tried to summon that up when I was playing her.”

Harris plays a sheriff who might prove helpful to Sarah’s plight, but they both have to face down Lucius Malfoy himself. “When I first met [Isaacs] off screen, he’s super charming and a very handsome man with very blue eyes,” admits Jones. “But there were moments in the film when he needed to frighten me, and he did a good job. There wasn’t a lot of acting involved.”

Sweetwater-Poster.jpg

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'My grandparents watched my bathroom masturbation scene': Girls star Allison Williams on her very supportive family


As season two of the award-winning HBO series Girls hits the small screens in the UK on Sky Atlantic Monday night, it's clear to see one of its leading ladies Allison Williams it set to become a household name.

Her character, the beautiful yet uptight Marnie, went through an emotional ride in the first series, breaking up with her long-term boyfriend after having a sexual awakening in her office toilet, and a massive falling out with main girl Hannah - played by writer and director Lena Dunham.

That bathroom scene could have made a lesser actor blanch at the prospect, but it didn't stop some of her older relatives tuning in to see their granddaughter in action.
Older fans: Allison Williams says her grandparents watch her on the hit HBO show Girls
Older fans: Allison Williams says her grandparents watch her on the hit HBO show Girls
Speaking to Company magazine about filming that particular sexual scene, Allison said,  'There were moments reading the script that I thought, “WOW, okay!"'
'It’s the most private thing anyone can do, but being an actress can make you feel vulnerable. But of course, my grandparents watch the show.'

'I don’t know why I was so concerned though, they have been alive for virtually 90 years, so who am I to presume that sex never existed before me?' Allison reasoned.

Her grandma and grandad aren't the only people who have been glued to their screens throughout the first season, with critics singing Lena's praises for her comedy drama.
And this recognition was made official when the Judd Apatow produced show won two Golden Globes on Sunday night.
The best: Allison said getting the part of Marnie was 'the best' thing to have happened to her
The best: Allison said getting the part of Marnie was 'the best' thing to have happened to her
If Allison was hoping for a reprieve in the second series, she was left disappointed, with the opening episode showing Marnie getting some action from the unlikeliest of avenues.

But she's clearly got over her early shock, to realise this is 'the best' gig she's ever got because it portrays a life accessible to most of their viewers: 'There is nothing alienating or too hipster about it. We’re not dating handsome boys, they’re weird. 
'It’s like a digital time capsule,' Allison explains, 'people will watch it in 20 years time and it will sum up a certain generation.'
Google ban: The star said she asked some other actresses for advice and they all said 'don't read anything;
Google ban: The star said she asked some other actresses for advice and they all said 'don't read anything;
Award-winners: Allison with co-stars Lena Dunham, Zosia Mamet at the Golden Globes on Monday
Award-winners: Allison with co-stars Lena Dunham, Zosia Mamet at the Golden Globes on Monday
To some nay-Sayers, the actress and some of her co-stars family connections - Allison's dad, Brian Williams, is the biggest NBC anchor man in America - makes the series less credible.

However the Yale-educated star believes that 'at the end of the day, even if all these wonderful doors are open for you, you have to stride through them.'

She steers clear from reading this type of criticism by refusing to fall into the trap of self-googling herself, but although she doesn't enjoy reading about herself, she does enjoy catching up on the gossip on her favourite news website:
'I’m obsessed with Daily Mail online – talk about guilty pleasure! All day, every day.'

The full interview with Allison can be read in the February issue of Company magazine (also available in digital edition) and behind the scenes footage of the cover can be viewed online
Cover girl: The full interview can be found in the February issue of Company magazine
Cover girl: The full interview can be found in the February issue of Company magazine

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Hugh Bonneville bares all in 'Da Vinci's Demons'

'Downton Abbey' star reveals a side of himself fans won't see on PBS


'Hugh Bonneville' '/' PBS"Downton Abbey" fans will see actor Hugh Bonneville like they've never seen him before when he appears in Starz's new series, "Da Vinci's Demons."

The drama, which debuts in April, will feature a pants-free Bonneville in the beginning of the first episode, no less.

We know Lord Crawley has hit a financial rough patch in Season 3, but nudity? That is not suitable behavior for an Earl. What would the Dowager Countess say?

All jokes aside, Bonneville, 49, is a Shakespearean-traine​d thespian. And maybe baring his backside on a cable series liberated him. After all, he most certainly won't be doing so on "Downton."

As for "Da Vinci's Demons," it follows a young and sexy Leonardo Da Vinci (Tom Riley), a genius who must fight against social constraints dictated by religion and class. David S. Goyer, who co-wrote "The Dark Knight" trilogy, is the brains behind the eight-episode series. Bonneville plays the Duke of Milan.

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stars, sex and nudity buzz : 01/11/2013

There’s No Way ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’ is Going to Be NC-17

Kelly Marcel
Let’s be real for a second. Even if screenwriter Kelly Marcel claims that Fifty Shades of Grey is going to be NC-17, there’s no chance that it will be. For that to happen, Universal — one of the biggest studios in Hollywood — would have to convert the best-selling, phenomenon level property they spent $3m to acquire into an aggressive message aimed directly at the MPAA (which is partially funded by Universal) and risk money on the film not screening in a lot of theaters. Had The Weinstein Company gotten the rights, this might be believable, but it’s beyond the realm of possibility as it is, and there are two situations playing out that I can see here:
  1. This is a screenwriter — who from what I can tell has some serious game — pointing to the bleachers or having a laugh by going over the top.
  2. This is part of a cultivated marketing plan to make the property even more titillating and dangerous which will culminate in them either achieving an NC-17 (maybe they’ll have Ryan Gosling go down on Michelle Williams in it) before pulling it back for an R or aiming for an R regardless of the NC-17 publicity.
Obviously there’s going to be sex in it, but if The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is still an R, it’ll be truly surprising to see Grey manage to go harder. But truly, the reason this doesn’t pass the smell test is that a lot of major theater chains won’t even run an NC-17 film. Universal isn’t going to risk their bottom line on principal. It could be that the studio sees this as a dare to exhibitors — saying, “Go ahead. Lose out on all the money you’d make this event film because of its rating.” But how likely is that? Plus, the film also doesn’t even have a director yet to weigh in with a creative vision. When it does, we’ll have to see if he or she also has NC-17 designs.

If Universal is honestly strapping in to release the first modern adults-only blockbuster, kudos to them. But until they get a willing cast and director, shoot, cut, and come back from the MPAA with the scarlet letter stamped to their reels, all of this seems just a bit far-fetched.
Although, when it inevitably gets its R-rating, maybe theaters will be nice enough to hand out themed blindfolds for the children of terrible parents who bring them regardless of the MPAA’s judgement.

Hi Roger,
I am very interested in your take on this 50 Shades rating. I agree with you that it will likely be released as an R and not an NC-17. However, I think it is very likely that they will shoot material that would garner an NC-17 but only release it on the DVD (boosting sales). Do you have any insight into the specific differences between an R and an NC-17? My assumption is that any kind of erection is too much - even for an NC-17. But I do believe there is a chance of a male full frontal. I also believe that we are likely to see extensive female full frontal at least on the unrated DVD (would that cross the line to NC17?). If they write an explicit script and use it to cast brave actors, I am optimistic about the DVD release regardless of the theatrical version. Shia LeBouf and others are making the idea of mainstream actors engaging in explicit scenes more "aesthetic". If there was ever a role where nudity and explicit interaction is not gratuitous but essential to the role, this is it. 

Please answer this question - in the wildest best case scenario (even if it is very unlikely), what is the most risque activities that could take place during the filming?
-A faithful reader 


[1] DVD sales are very much important to studios as it's one of their top money makers (the real cash machine for them) despite rampant piracy. However - and I'm pretty sure about it and will get a confirmation in few days - there won't be any unrated edition of FSOG. In fact unrated has gone the way of the dodo when it comes to sex scenes or nudity. It's too much hassle for the producers. I'm just not talking about FSOG. Practically every R-rated theatrical releases with sexual content or theme will never receive unrated/restored/extended edition until something changes in near future. So many issues are involved including extra compensations for the actors who sees it as a new material. In recent years actors sign on dotted line with an understanding of what-you-see-is-what-you-will-ever-get when it's a sex scene with nudity. The fear of being inadvertently exploited is very much real for actresses. So much so it's written in the contract that any post-production editing requires the presence of either the actress or her rep if it's a (racy) scene involving her. It's the norm practice now for every flicks and cable series with nudity.

[2] Erect penis is some sort of last frontier in American mainstream cinema. MPAA will refuse to issue any sort of certificate (even NC-17) if erect penis is clearly seen within a vicinity of a female in a possible sexual scenario. Even if it's a fake cock often seen in foreign productions. It's safe to say cable will soon (maybe in second half of this decade?) have an actor with real boner on late night slot before motion picture follows suit (optimistic MPAA will be more open-minded towards on-screen sexuality and nudity down the road when generation X become majority members).

[3] Now that Marcel have written the 'main' script, it will go through the usual process of scrutiny, discussion and finally trimming it to satisfaction of the producers. There will be round-the-table meetings with studio execs, hired (uncredited) script supervisors, MPAA consultant, demography analyzer/expert, Marcel with possible inclusion of the author. All the relevant group involved in pre-productions.
This is just an initial meet-up. Nothing is decided until the director and DP comes into the picture. My preferred choice is Paul Verhoeven but that is unlikely to materialize. More negotiations after the principal actors are hired. The initial porn-like script now transform into something of a R-rated mishmash with added contributions from the director, the DP suggesting which scene could be shot and which one could be problematic and actors (and their rep) requiring certain scenes to be excised or altered (body double is a must for more vigorous scenes). It will be a long arduous process including the casting the FSOG two leads. Auditions will proceed in usual two-pronged approach. Auditioning bunch of upcoming/unknown actors as back-up in case if the original plan to cast few chosen and well-known performers on the wanted list falls
through.


[4] To your question of risque activities during shooting - probably nothing that's out of ordinary. I'm not sure if you referring to the simulated sex scenes or off the cam sexual bloopers. You can read more about FSOG here. My take is they are going for a relatively experienced actor to play Christian and a first-timer (in nudity department) to play Anastasia. My choice is clear. The one and only Alexandra Daddario. She has the vulnerability and at same time the steely resolve to surprise you when you least expect it. And I want to see her world-class boobies.

[5] Shia LeBouf flick will be filmed with body doubles for close-up explicit scenes. Shia will be having real sex but editing means viewers unlikely to see him sticking his cock into the actress pussy or her mouth.

The Top NC-17 Rated Films Of All Time


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Banshee’: Latest edition of cable pulp is just more of the same


“Banshee,” premiering Friday night on Cinemax, is part of the movie channel’s goal to plaster itself with flinty new action series that are really just re-pulped pulp made as stylishly as possible. You need it like you need another hole in your head.

Produced by Alan Ball (“True Blood,” “Six Feet Under”) and created by two literary novelists (Jonathan Tropper and David Shickler) who ought to know better, it’s the story of a master thief who, upon completing a 15-year prison sentence, winds up in rural Pennsylvania. He’s in search of — in no particular order — his ex-girlfriend, revenge against Russian mobsters, closure and, while he’s at it, a full-on Amish drug war.

And because all cable dramas are apparently made in a ­vacuum, “Banshee” has the audacity to behave as though its bloody violence, implausible set-up and studied ugliness are somehow vanguard television. In fact, it’s just more of the same.

As the unnamed antihero, New Zealand actor Antony Starr is a taut, ill-tempered, wee fireplug of a man in the Jason Statham mold, exactly suited to bullet-ridden pap like this. When he learns that his ex-girlfriend and former partner in crime, Carrie (Ivana Milicevic), is living under a new identity in the little town of Banshee, he motorcycles out there to find her. (But first, a shootout on the streets of Manhattan with said Russian thugs. Wait, sorry — first the humpy sex scene with a random bartendress. God love ya, Skinemax.)

Banshee, of course, is a town filled with characters that one can only imagine as color-coded notecards tacked up on the writers’ bulletin board. Soon there’s a plot twist that sets up the entire series: A newly hired sheriff is shot dead in a nearly empty barroom, and before anyone — you and me included — figures out what’s what, the mystery man buries the body and passes himself off as the lawman.

At least Starr’s character now has an (assumed) identity: Sheriff Lucas Hood. Once sworn in by the naive mayor, Lucas learns that Carrie is now a real estate agent married to Banshee’s chief prosecutor (Rus Blackwell), whose singular obsession is to convict Banshee’s ubiquitous crime boss, Kai Proctor.

As played by Ulrich Thomsen, Proctor is immediately too much of a bad thing, just another one of cable’s overwritten evildoers. He’s a deranged owner of a meatpacking plant and a drug lord who controls just about everything in Banshee. Outcast from his Amish upbringing, Proctor sexually brutalizes his 24-7 slave harem, and when an employee displeases him, he feeds his fingers to his attack dog.

It’s disturbing to watch, but also, as far as this genre is concerned, disturbingly banal.


Amish meet violence, sex in ‘Banshee

“Banshee” Series premiere tonight at 10 on Cinemax. Grade: C+

A slow-pokey drama punctuated by shocking violence and sex, executive producer Alan Ball’s “Banshee” plays like a hoarse whisper at the moon.

New Zealand native An­tony Starr un­con­vincing­ly plays Lucas Hood, a thief who served 15 years in prison and assumes the identity of a sheriff in the small town of Banshee, Pa.

Here he is able to reconnect, sort of, with his onetime partner and lover,­ Carrie (Ivana Mili­cevic, “Vegas”), who has a new identity as well, and a family. She also secretly trains with the ferocity of a UFC fighter.

Ukrainian gangster Rabbit (Ben Cross, “Star Trek”) is tracking both, determined to get the diamonds they stole from him years earlier.

Lucas is aided by — shades of “True Blood’s” Lafayette — transvestite computer hacker Job (Hoon Lee) and Sugar Bates (Frankie Faison, “The Wire”), an ex-boxer who now runs Banshee’s favorite bar.

“Banshee” is the first ongoing scripted series to take advantage of viewers’ apparent fascination with the Amish.

Local businessman Kai Proctor (Ulrich Thomsen) went “English,” runs the town like a feudal kingdom and metes out his own brand of sadistic justice, turning those who offend him into puppy­ kibble — literally.

Other Amish characters play into the drama, including Rebecca Bowman (Lili Simmons), who is chaste by day and likes to be chased at night.


Perhaps the most recognizable face is Matt Servitto, best known for playing an FBI agent on “The Sopranos” and here co-starring as bitter Deputy Brock Lotus, who questions his new boss’ methods.

The opening chase sequence is well staged, even it does seem to defy physics. The sex scenes are so graphic, you might feel the need to check your own ID.

Lucas has a habit of going all Steven Seagal on anyone who ticks him off. There are enough of those to ride out the hour, if you have it to spare.

“I usually get by with my charm,” Lucas says at one point. Judging from the first two episodes, “Banshee” will soon be quieted.


* Don't want to sound like a creepy perv but Lili Simmons was only 18 when she stripped off for pretty raunchy sex scenes. There is some discrepancies about the year she was born. The official release is 1993 but some had it at 1994. I'm going with latter. It's also a rarity on an American cable series (or in movies) to see an 18-year old play a twenty-something character and actually getting naked as well.

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Sneak Peek of Maggie Grace, Sebastian Stan and More in PICNIC- Performance Highlights! (TV Content)

William Inge's Pulitzer Prize-winning play Picnicreturns to Broadway in a striking new production helmed by acclaimed director Sam Gold (Roundabout's Look Back in Anger, Seminar). Academy Award winner Ellen Burstyn stars alongside theatre veterans Reed Birney (The Dream of the Burning Boy) and Elizabeth Marvel (Other Desert Cities), rising stars Maggie Grace ('Lost') and Sebastian Stan ('Gossip Girl'), Emmy Award winner Mare Winningham (recently seen in Tribes), Madeleine Martin (August: Osage County) and Ben Rappaport (Hope Springs). BroadwayWorld brings you just-released performance highlights below!


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'Unkahi' (The Unsaid)

1takemediaTrue love lies in understanding the unsaid words. Spread over months of massage sessions a bond of sisterhood develops between a rich woman and her masseuse. She tells her stories of her happy married life and her lovely husband. Through her, masseuse sees perfect love that every girl longs for. But very often in life, people use words to run away and hide from the reality; the masseuse stumbles upon the truth. And then she deals with it the next day.
Short Film "Unkahi" was selected for screening at International Film Festival of Cinematic Arts (IFFCA). Los Angeles and has also won an award for Excellence in Screenplay there. IFFCA.org



Date No. 25

A BOLD thriller about a sexy 30 year old woman and the date of her dreams
Nina, a South-Asian woman, pushing 30, who meets all these losers online , has pressure from her traditional parents about marriage, finally meets a great guy on her 25th experience from this dating website. So does it go as planned?



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Famke Jansen Welcomes You To

Famke Jansen Welcomes You To 'Hemlock Grove'

By JARETT WIESELMAN 
Like most, I first fell for Famke Jansen as the bone and ball busting Xenia Onatopp in 1995's GoldenEye. Since then, it's been endlessly exciting watching the leggy brunette cut a swath through Hollywood in a wide variety of films. But her genre work (from The Faculty to the X-Men series) has been the most exhilarating, which is why I'm doubly excited for her turn in the Netflix original, Hemlock Grove.

Eli Roth's gothic thriller (developed by Brian McGreevy and Lee Shipman) revolves around the eccentric residents of a dilapidated former Pennsylvania steel town and the murder of 17-year-old Brooke Bluebell.
Jansen can also be seen in this month's Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters as one of the tracked titular monsters; a film that provided her with the biggest test of her professional career. ETonline sat down with Jansen at The Television Critics Association Tour in Pasadena, CA earlier this week to talk about both roles, and whether or not X-Men fans can expect her to board Bryan Singer's X-Men: Days of Future Past.

ETonline: What appealed to you about Hemlock Grove?
Famke Jansen: [The producers] wanted to give it a Twin Peaks feel, which is how they got me. They had me at Twin Peaks, because it's the only time I've ever watched television. What I liked about that show, and what I think is comparable to Hemlock, is that it's non-linear. Nothing wraps up neatly. Nothing is ever fully explained. There are so many unsolved cases and mysteries throughout; that drew me towards wanting to be a part of this.

ETonline: What did you like about your character, the very powerful Olivia Godfrey?
Jansen: I like the mystery of her, and she remains mysterious throughout. I don't like repetition. I was very aware of not wanting to go into territory I've already explored [which is] hard with 20 years of acting, particularly because everyone kind of gets typecast anyway. But I didn't want to re-do anything. Especially Nip/Tuck, because I felt like that is the most similar to this. Don't get me wrong, I loved [Ava Moore, her Nip/Tuck character], but there were specific things I wanted to do to get away from comparisons. Like speak in a very intentional dialect.


ETonline: Were you looking to do television, or did this experience feel more like a 13-hour movie anyway?
Jansen: For me, it's perfect. I don't come from television, I don't want to go to television, every time people talk about me ding a TV show I want to run the other way. This feels like new territory [and] there's no looming corporation over our heads giving us notes. That felt great.


ETonline: You took three years off to make Bringing Up Bobby and then went into Hansel and Gretel, Taken 2 and Hemlock Grove. Was it nice to turn off the producer side of your brain after getting Bobby made?
Jansen: Yeah, although, ironically, Hansel has me in full-on prosthetic makeup, which took 3 hours every day. It's like going from having full control and being the queen of a film to being strapped down with makeup and toxins being applied to you. It was a rude awakening.


ETonline: I always imagined that the prosthetic process has to be painfully arduous for actors.
Jansen: I really had trouble with it. They were working on my hands and nails and face at the same time, so I tried everything [to pass the time]. My boyfriend got me an iPad so I could play The New York Times crossword puzzle, but I couldn't because my hands were stuck. And then I couldn't have my dog around me because I didn't want him around the toxins ... and no one wanted to be around me because I was so ugly [laughs]. I'm glad I got to do it because it was a really fascinating process.


ETonline: How so?
Jansen: Other than seeing yourself transform into something, [you] have to rely on an entire new set of skills. I couldn't really rely on my face because of the prosthetics, or my eyes because I had contacts in -- I was full-on glued together. I didn't even have my teeth. And so much of the makeup was doing the work for me because it's so scary, so I didn't know how much acting I needed to do. How much is too much? It was an interesting way of re-approaching acting.


ETonline: Given what you said about not liking to repeat yourself, I'm curious, does that mean you don't want to reprise the role of Jean Grey in Bryan Singer's new X-Men movie, which is bringing back Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart and Sir Ian McKellan?
Jansen: Oh, I've just become a full on whore at this point because I need money [laughs]. Right now, everything I've ever said goes out the window. I would love to come back in every X-Men movie anyone ever wanted to make, I'll play every character I've ever played again and again. Rounders 2? Bring it on. Whatever we can think of... 


ETonline: At the end of the day, what is it that you want people to take away from Hemlock Grove?
Jansen: That it's its own thing. I'm never very keen on boxing things in. That's why my entire 20 years as an actor, I've tried to come out of my box -- but I'm giving that up. I'm crawling right back in there and becoming a whore [laughs]. Boxed in whore. Prostitute. Whatever you want to call it. I think Hansel and Gretel is a very good example of [redefining genres]. It's a fairytale that everyone has grown up with, but they've reinvented it. We constantly have to reinvent every genre because audiences have become so sophisticated, so you constantly have to find ways of reaching people. I'm hoping Hemlock Grove can do that. Can be its own thing and redefine what people expect from this genre.


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The Endless Night: A Valentine to Film Noir

 

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27-years old German-Polish fashion model Hana Nitsche is proud to be a sugarbaby. She was discovered on Germany’s Next Top Model and has been in all of the big fashion mags.
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Netflix Should Have Acquired Starz, Says CEO

Indeed, the CEO said there could be a credible argument that Netflix should acquire Starz Entertainment, which is a principle source of content distribution to multichannel video distributors via 17 premium channels, including the flagship Starz and Encore brands with approximately 20.8 million and 34.3 million subscribers, respectively.
“You could make a case Netflix needs Starz’ cash flow,” Maffai said. “And Netflix would benefit from being able to distribute Starz Originals programming more broadly.”
He added that Netflix could have fared better economically during the next four years had it acquired Starz, which included rights to Disney and Sony Pictures movies, in addition to Starz Originals programming such as “Camelot,” “Magic City” and “Spartacus,” among others.
I would agree with him wholeheartedly, but I don’t think that a Starz/Netflix merger or partnership is out of the question in the slightest. In fact, if anything, it seems like the hand is being very publicly outstretched. Starz’s new subscription partner, Blockbuster Online, is going under, and Netflix has new guns like Redbox starting to horn in on their territory, tied to popular cable services that can directly undermine them by saving people money when bundled with their cable subscriptions. Netflix needs content, and they need security, and those Starz subscriptions could go a long way to making sure the bucks keep rolling, and people stay around for the long haul.

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Bullied Into Nudity and Porn!

SuperTruth77

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High Maintenance // Olivia

from
A nameless cannabis delivery guy delivers his much needed medication to stressed-out New Yorkers in this character-driven web series. High Maintenance was created by husband and wife team Ben Sinclair and Katja Blichfeld. They produce the series with their BFF Russell Gregory as Janky Clown Productions.
Starring:

HELÉNE YORKE wishes she was as cool as everyone who has been on/produces/directs High Maintenance.  The God awful truth is that she’s a princess from LA and likes it when you buy her things. Even while writing this she’s thinking “I bet everyone reading this is wishing they were friends with me,” when in actuality, you’re all probably pretty relieved you’re not.  Soon you can see her in Masters of Sex on Showtime.  You’re welcome. (PS. Max Jenkins is her hero.)


* HELÉNE YORKE of course will be very naked in Showtime' skin-fest Masters of Sex. One of the best nude scenes of 2013. She is currently back in L.A shooting the pilot season.

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Lindsay Lohan 'Canyons' Article Was Pretty Accurate
0110-tmz-lindsay-lohan-canyons

Lindsay Lohan admits ... she was a bit of a pain in the ass on the set of "The Canyons" ... but she's adamant she did NOT drink and drive.

Sources close to the actress tell TMZ ... Lohan is well aware of the article published in the New York Times chronicling the madness that went down during the production of the movie.

Lohan is telling friends ... most of the stories in the article are TRUE -- she was late a few times, she was nervous about getting naked and she argued with producers ... but LiLo says stuff like that happens all the time on movie sets, so it's no big deal.

But we're told Lindsay says the allegations that she boozed on set and got behind the wheel of a car afterward are totally bogus. She claims she's not that stupid and irresponsible.

When there WAS booze on the set, sources close to Lohan say it was provided by the director Paul Schrader -- who would often pour vodka shots for the crew at the end of a shooting day. Lindsay swears she didn't partake in the alcoholic festivities.

In the end, Lindsay says she's not mad about the article -- and still has a good relationship with everyone she worked with, including producers, co-stars and even the director -- who she claims has already approached her about a new project.

The feeling's mutual for 'Canyons' producer Braxton Pope -- who called TMZ Live yesterday, and did verbal backflips to say how "excellent" Lindsay was ... and claimed the benefits of having her in the film "far outweighed" the challenges.
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Sundance 2013: Kristen Bell on 'The Lifeguard' and working while pregnant


The-Lifeguard
Kristen Bell may be petite in person, but she packs a mighty wallop on screen, both as an acerbic comedic actress whose words can sweetly cut you, and as just a smart gal a lot of girls, and women, can look up to.

In The Lifeguard, premiering at this year’s Sundance Film Festival in the U.S. Dramatic Competition category, Bell takes a darker turn, playing a woman who quits her reporter job in New York and returns to where she grew up in Connecticut, taking a job as a lifeguard and falling into a dangerous relationship with a teenager. Check out this exclusive image of Bell, above, from the film. If her sullen expression is any indication, she’s settled into the doldrums, a purgatory stage of life with hints of The Graduate.

The star of TV’s Veronica Mars and now Showtime’s House of Lies chatted with EW about her great chemistry with The Lifeguard‘s first-time feature film director Liz W. Garcia, what it’s like filming House of Lies while pregnant (she’s due in the spring), and her reign as Gossip Girl‘s saucy narrator coming to an end with the conclusion of the six-season series. R.I.P!

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Describe your role in The Lifeguard and working with Liz Garcia. The premise seems to have certain similarities to The Graduate, in terms of someone trying to find themselves, albeit with darker consequences.
KRISTEN BELL: I had been looking for something that I felt spoke to me of someone going through a metamorphosis. I find change so interesting. I love Liz’s writing. She wrote this phenomenal script, One Percent More Human, that was set up numerous times, and she had plans for that to be her directorial debut with Kristen Stewart and Evan Rachel Wood, and then she got pregnant. She ended up pushing it, so The Lifeguard was her first movie. She doesn’t steer away from sexuality, which most female writers do. There’s a tenderness, which makes it clear she’s a female writer. The idea of what do you do when you get stuck somewhere in your life is what appealed to me. 

You’re known for your comedies, but even Veronica Mars had a great mix of wit and some drama. Is The Lifeguard mostly dramatic?
It’s primarily a drama. There are funny moments. Much like life, there’s more drama than comedy. Liz is surprisingly witty and funny, despite the darkness of her writing. When she reached out, she said, “I want someone who has a voice that is similar to mine that is sharp and funny.” This is a girl that should have it together. Everyone has that time in their life where they look back and say, “That was when everything was perfect.” But there’s no such thing. Transitions are happening in everyone’s life in the movie. I go back and I’m living with my mother, and she’s a 55, 60 year old woman who’s retiring.

Your character also seems to make questionable decisions, becoming involved with a teenager. By the way, it’s great Martin Starr — who is always hilarious — co-stars with you.
The movie centers around a girl who is at a tipping point when it comes to decisions, and you see her make quite a few bad ones before she comes to a good one. People around her are on a little less dangerous level. Martin plays her gay best friend from growing up and is yet to fully acknowledge it. Like, “Here are these cupcakes I like, but I’m not going to eat them.” There’s a certain point in your life where the people in your life around you say, “Come on and have a f–king cupcake, bro?” These characters are all jumping off this cliff and hope they don’t break too many bones.

On a separate personal note, you’re pregnant, and that’s a huge shift in life. When are you due?
I’m due end of spring. I’m not not pregnant. When you see me [at Sundance], it will be obvious. This is without question the biggest transition I’ll make in my life to date.

So how is going to Sundance for you? You must be a festival vet by now.
I have been quite a few times. It’s a bit feeling like Universal Studios these past few years and less like a film festival. … I’m not there for longer than 48 hours because I’m working on House of Lies. It’s going to be cold as balls! I think I’m going to a dinner on the night of the 20th called I Am That Girl [a community-building organization to inspire girls and women]. By the way, you kind of go brain dead when you’re pregnant. You’re kind of in a Dopamine phase. I’m kind of happy all the time, and dumb.

You regularly play interesting, smart female characters. Aligning yourself with organizations such as I Am That Girl, you also come across as someone just invested in women having a better future.
Our culture is headed in a direction that’s balanced and appropriate. Let’s start looking at the things that make us empowered as women. Women are less likely to push the red button and go to war. I also love the idea that we’re concerned with balancing out our careers as females.

What else is on your plate work-wise?
I’ve just been doing House of Lies. The season has been so much fun. They are always trying to hide my pregnancy. I’m always hiding behind a box, or a purse. I love working on that show more than I can possibly explain. Don Cheadle is a better human being than he is an actor. He’s the captain of the ship, with these two funny jesters. They love the fact that I’m pregnant. That’s the show I wish would go on for 10 years. This year the scripts are phenomenal and funny. We’ll stop filming around Feb. 12, around Valentine’s Day, so I’ll have a little bit of pregnancy time after. Also, Gossip Girl ended a couple of months ago. I loved that job, was sad to see it go.

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Go Behind-The-Scenes with Ashley Benson, the New Face of Faviana!

Ashley Benson - Faviana modelThere’s no denying that Ashley Benson is a fierce and talented young starlet. She not only stars as Hanna Marin on the ABC Family series Pretty Little Liars but she also has been busy creating buzz on the movie circuit as well, starting with a daring role in Spring Breakers, which also features Selena Gomez, James Franco, and Vanessa Hudgens. Well, it seems that many fashion houses and companies are taking note of how amazing and captivating the blonde bombshell is because, aside from her sweet campaigns with HP and Bongo Jeans, she can now add ‘Faviana model‘ to her growing list of accolades!
In her first photo shoot for the renowned formal wear designer, Ashley pretty much mirrored a scene from 27 Dresses in which Katherine Heigl models a series of unique dresses for James Marsden. The 23-year-old PLL actress similarly slipped into not one not two but SEVENTEEN spectacular dresses from Faviana’s spring collection — and each one, although different in color, style, and texture — looked stunning on her. (Psst. One of the gowns was actually inspired by the Prabal Gurung gown that Jennifer Lawrence wore to the premiere of The Hunger Games in 2012!)


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33-years old Vietnamese actress Thi Kieu Trinh Nguyen in Bi, dung so! (2010)

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Femme Fatales of a Generation: Hitchcock’s Icy Blondes


Alfred Hitchcock provided audiences with entertainment over a fifty year career in the film industry: his debut film was the 1925 silent film ‘The Pleasure Garden’ and his final feature length production was the dark thriller ‘Family Plot’ in 1976. Hitchcock was a master of craft behind the production of his films, constantly challanging audiences expectations, incorporating his ‘typical’ macguffin to lead his spectators astray and double crossing them in terms of narrative themes and situations. We all remember wondering what happened to the stolen money in ‘Psycho’ after it played such a significant part of the films first act.

Recently, I wrote a feature defining the James Bond films as a genre; this article lead me to write my own list of top ten and worst ten Bond Girls over the past fifty years. As I sat back, after writing both features, I couldn’t help think how interesting the female characters were in the Hitchcock films. Hitchcock himself was obsessed with women, mainly blondes, leading him to coin his own identifying phrase of the ‘Icy Blonde’ for his female protagonists. These weren’t women of the time: sure they were beautiful and eye-catching (just like the Bond Girls are) but at the same time they were independent, strong, determined and most of all, mysterious.

I often find it’s hard to sum up the ‘correct’ definintion of an ‘Icy Blonde’: Hitchcock stated that he felt blondes made better victims and that audience members would always see them as whiter-than-white. Does this mean that ‘Icy Blondes’ are protagonists or antagonists? Still, the answer is a complicated one. Although Hitchcock said blondes make better victims, more than likely meaning they’re innocent and helpless, he has the likes of Janet Leigh’s Marion Crane in ‘Psycho’ running around with half-a-million dollars in her back pocket after robbing her employers, similar to Tippi Hendren’s Marnie.

When analysing the ‘Icy Blondes’ I find myself defining them as the femme-fatales of the Hitchcock generation: whether good or bad, each and every ‘Icy Blonde’ has a dark side, not many male protagonists should ought too cross. Hitchcock created this; women who don’t conform to contemorary society. They isolate themselves from the realities of life and become something more unique and interesting, and as I’ve stated before, mysterious. The ‘Icy Blonde’ is often the biggest mystery of the film: her loyalties lie with herself and nobody else and depending on what stance she takes, controls the rest of th film.

Hitchcock didn’t include his infamous ‘Icy Blonde’ in every film but when he did he made sure they made an impact, not only on the film, but the world surrounding the film: over the years they have become the talking point when analysing Hitchcock as an auteur. They are the Bond Girls of the Hitchcock films: each as unique and different as the last. Each, with their own motive and own agenda. These aren’t your typical women.

On that note, it’s hard to compile a top ten list when it comes to Hitchcock’s ‘Icy Blondes’ as the analytical scale between each character varys too greatly to define why one is better than another. Each ‘Icy Blonde’ is an interesting and puzzling creature, with so many layers creating and developing their own personal character. Looking over Hitchcock’s film as a voyeur (a position Hitchcock loved to put his audience in), there are a few ‘Icy Blonde’s that stand out as iconic characters in movie history, who rightfully deserve there place there.

Lisa Fremont portrayed by Grace Kelly in ‘Rear Window’


Kelly still remains one of the princesses of the big screen: she was a movie gem in her day and Hitchcock knew this for sure. After working with the master auteur in his film ‘Dial M for Murder’, Hitchcock wanted the blonde beauty back to work on his latest project, ‘Rear Window’. The film is one of Hitchcock’s most famous, respectively, and has earnt it’s place in cinematic history. In the film, Grace Kelly portrays our disabled protagonists socialite girlfriend, Lisa Fremont. Grace brought grace (pun) and elegance to the role: her entrance to the film is on a par with Audrey Hepburn’s entrance in ‘Breakfast at Tiffanies’: iconic.

However, Fremont’s character actually embodies the dominant male characteristics of the time. As our protagonist, Jeff, is wheelchair-bound, he is unable to investigate the suspicious activities that are goin on in the apartment across from him. This leads the seemingly innocent and niave Fremont to investigate herself, actually breaking into the suspected murderer’s apartment across the way.

During the 50′s, the men dominated the action in the films leaving the women to play the helpless victims in need of saving. ‘Rear Window’ switched the gendered stereotypes; although Fremont is introduced as a wealthy socialite who only seems to enjoy the luxuries of life, she soon illustrates a more sophisticated core to her personality, more than the male. An edgier side shines from Grace Kelly’s Fremont making her one of the most well remembered ‘Icy Blondes’ of all time.

Madeleine Elster portrayed by Kim Novak in ‘Vertigo’


To this day, ‘Vertigo’ remains a bit of a mystery, much like it’s leading ‘Icy Blonde’ Madeleine Elster. The film, which has generated cultural recognition over the many years, is said to be a reflection of Hitchcock’s relationships with his women, in particular his actresses. The leading protagonist, Scottie, is fixated with controlling the ‘look’ and ‘appearance’ of a woman he has recently met who bears a resemblance to a woman who recently knew and fell in love with.

Madeleine is on the other end of the spectrum to Lisa Fremont: she is much darker and much more of a troubled soul. I always slightly find myself lost for words when analysing Elster’s character, as much is left to your own interpretation. Elster is believed to be haunted by a deceased woman who she is fascinated with, according to her worried husband, Gavin. The film is about fascination and fixation: Madeleine is both fascinated and fixated, possibly even haunted by the soul of a woman known as Carlotta Valdes while Scottie is facinated and fixated with creating his ideal woman in a stranger: his ideal woman, is Madeleine.

Madeleine is represented as a dragon in human form: she is often seen calm and brooding, waiting for that moment to strike when she can’t control her inner-emotions and feelings causing her to break away from the chains and illustrate her anxest and anger, leaving others, especially men, in a vulnerable state. This is what is interesting about Madeleine; her deep character. Her personality can change with the snap of her fingers.

Over time, ‘Vertigo’ has become one of Hitchcock’s most celebrated films and Madeleine Elster is surely one of his most memorable characters, thanks to Kim Novak who brings her to life on screen with such dark beauty and a haunting presence.

Eve Kendall
portrayed by Eva Marie Saint in ‘North by Northwest’


Some see ‘North by Northwest’ as the first James Bond film as it incorporates all the elements that a James Bond film of the early days had. Although I don’t fully agree, I can completely understand why. Part of this comparison boils down to the character of Eve Kendall, who, on screen, is represented as Hitchcock’s version of a Bond Girl, in an ‘Icy Blonde’ form.

What strikes me with Kendall is how close she is too Ian Fleming’s own Bond Girls in his written novels. It’s as if Hitchcock wanted to get there first on showing the world what a real Bond Girl would look like on screen along with how they should be illustrated in terms of character loyalty: as we know, not all our Bond Girls are so loyal. Kendall isn’t always a loyal ‘Icy Blonde’: her loyalties often switch between our protagonist and our antagonist, until we understand the real plot twist.

Eve Kendall was a sophisticated woman of her time: like Grace Kelly in ‘Rear Window’, she doesn’t always need a man for protection. She is just as smart as she is beautiful, but a word to describe Kendall is ‘devious’. Until the end of the film we don’t know the real Eve; this is something common in Hitchcock films. Hitchcock positions us as voyeurs: we’re not supposed to know too much.

Marion Crane portrayed by Janet Leigh in ‘Psycho’


Probably the most iconic of all ‘Icy Blondes’, Marion Crane is a dangerous woman. Unusual for any film, not just Hitchcock’s, Crane meets her demise halfway through the movie: something that left many film-fans baffled at the time and still has the same effect on us today. From first seeing Marion, audiences knew something wasn’t right, but we were still stunned when she robbed her work and intended to start a new life of luxury with forty-thousand dollars.

Leigh captured that ‘woman-on-the-edge’ persona: a woman who seemed to have it all, but all wasn’t enough. She had a good job, was surrounded by friendly people and was most of all liked and trusted. ‘Icy Blondes’ can never be trusted: they are too devious and manipulating, hence their over-shadowing mystery. Marion was agenda driven: she knew what she wanted and she intended to see her plan through only before realising what she’d done would gloom her life forever.

In comparison to the Fleming Bond Girl characterisation, Marion embodied the doomed-Bond Girl role: a woman who would meet her maker after putting herself and the protagonist in danger. Stealing the money from her employer put her in danger, Marion just didn’t realise how close danger was when she pulled up at Bates’ Motel to stay the night. Marion is not only a complex character, but an icon on screen: her death infamous death scene is one of the most remembered and one of the most haunting of it’s generation.

These four ‘Icy Blondes’ were iconic of there time and represented a new woman: the Hitchcock woman, one that we will not fully understand even to this day. Many theorists may come and go and try and make solid interpretations of the characters but I don’t think even Hitchcock could tell you the facts about these women. They’re too secretive for even the auteur to understand fully.

If this list was to carry on, other famous names would appear: Tippi Hedren started her career by working as Hitchcock’s leading ‘Icy Blonde’in the sinister-thriller ‘The Birds’ and collaborated with him once again playing the title character of ‘Marnie’ alongside Sean Connery. Hedren’s career came with thanks to Hitchcock who put her in the spotlight but after Hitchcock illustrated ways of his former controlling protagonist Scottie in ‘Vertigo’, Hedren realised the famous auteur was fixated with her in an uncomfortable and uneasy sense.

Grace Kelly also starred in ‘To Catch a Thief’ where she played ‘Icy Blonde’ Frances Stevens: yet another independent and smart woman of her time. Carole Lombard starred as Ann Smith in ‘Mr and Mrs Smith’: a woman who was determined to show her resilience to a man illustrating the fact that she can stand on her own two feet. The list is endless and it makes us question, could Hitchcock himself be seen as a genre?

The question is there and the facts are on screen: one thing for sure is, the Hitchcock ‘Icy Blondes’ were femme fatales of their generation, and it was as interesting watching them on screen over the years as it is analysing their complex characteristics now.

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Vogue exclusive video: Phoebe Tonkin for Ellery

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Greg Yaitanes On Banshee’s Startup-inspired Production Strategy

Greg Yaitanes On Banshee’s Startup-inspired Production Strategy

Emmy-winning director/producer Greg Yaitanes used repurposed strategies from tech startups on the Cinemax show, Banshee, a testing ground for a new kind of production efficiency that enhances creativity.


It’s not like Banshee wasn’t enough of a pressure cooker--after all, it’s Alan Ball’s first series since HBO juggernauts True Blood and Six Feet Under, and HBO-owned Cinemax’s first original scripted production. When Greg Yaitanes--an Emmy-winning director and producer of hit shows like Lost, Grey’s Anatomy, and House M.D.--landed as showrunner, he used the drama as a template for restructuring TV production.
An early investor in Twitter, Foursquare, Square, and Pinterest, Yaitanes utilized technology, managerial ideas from Silicon Valley, and his own out-of-the-box thinking to cut costs while enhancing staff creativity. The strategy brought his adrenaline-fueled pilot--which airs Jan. 11--under budget by a reported 7% and picked up an additional episode’s worth of savings throughout the season, which he put back into the stunt and art departments for more powerful visuals.

“The biggest challenge, as a manager, was planning the product, the show, and infrastructure to achieve the product--the stages, sets, location, and cast--at the same time,” he says. “When I did House, I came into an existing ship that was fiscally struggling. I could manage and get the show on track. With Banshee, the set of challenges were completely different. Banshee required my being managerial and creative at the same time from the ground up. Those sides were always fighting each other. I had to learn to achieve creativity within certain limitations.”
Greg Yaitanes. Photo by Gregory Shummon

Chomping at the bit

Yaitanes, who’d spent House’s final two seasons as an executive producer, had tired of network TV’s tight production schedule (“I felt like I was making stuff to fit between commercials”) and actively pursued Banshee as his first showrunning gig. The action drama chronicles an ex-con named Lucas Hood, played by Anthony Starr, who assumes the identity of a deceased sheriff of corrupt Banshee, PA to engage his own brand of justice.

“I wouldn’t say lobbying so much as stalking,” laughs Yaitanes. “I’d heard a year earlier that Alan Ball was cooking up a new show. I was tracking the project, periodically sniffing around, until it finally came time to meet.”

Taking his cue from the Silicon Valley design prototype, Yaitanes put together a pitch video, a montage of movie scenes that effected the tone he envisioned for the series, which was created by Jonathan Tropper and David Schickler. “For the first time, it gave people a look at what the show could feel like,” he says.
“Alan gives people great room to do their best work,” he adds. “We had an immediate understanding of each other’s creativity. I felt I could create something that furthered his own brand of heightened dramas, but in a new style.”

The pitch video was the first of many ideas from the technology sector he would borrow in overseeing Banshee, which shot over seven months in North Carolina last year.
A newly freed Lucas Hood, played by Anthony Starr. Photo by Fred Norris/courtesy of HBO

Lean and mean

In terms of cost, Yaitanes treated the production like a startup. He cut down on paper, DVD, travel, and shipping costs using such technology as Google Maps Street View to location scout, Cast It Talent to view actor demo reels, (which Yaitanes helped develop) to replace script binders, Scenechronize to create scenes and distribute scripts, Pix System for production collaboration, iChat and Skype for meetings, and prosumer Canon cameras to shoot. He found new editors and camera operators through YouTube, Vimeo, and Twitter. For the title sequence, Yaitanes returned to his roots--tapping Tin Punch Media, a new production studio cofounded by his brother, Jason, and Twitter cofounder Biz Stone.

He found a no-frills studio in Charlotte, NC, which offered tax credits and lower union rates. “The least technological thing I took from the tech world was to find a creative space quickly,” he says. “In startups, you set up in your parents’ house, garage, or apartment, and keep an openness to that office space. I didn’t look for a traditional soundstage--more like a warehouse we converted into sets and offices. The open floor plan enabled me to walk through the different departments on the way to the stage. It kept me in touch with the different facets of the product that way.”
He scheduled shooting days smarter--cutting overtime by wrapping actors and crew as they finished, instead of keeping them around for the entire day. And he asked each department to shave small non-essentials from their budgets. “Back in the '80s, American Airlines took one olive out of their inflight meals, and saved $40,000. I charged everyone with finding their "olive"--the one thing in their department that could reduce savings.” The result bought the production seven additional shooting days.
Actors Ulrich Thomsen (left) and Alpha Trivette. Photo: Fred Norris/courtesy of HBO

Non-linear thinking

In order to have more time to prepare for the season, Yaitanes pushed for a 10-episode order up front, and began shooting once the 10 scripts were finished.

Episodic TV traditionally shoots in sequence, with as little as a week between episodes. “Because I had all the scripts, I thought, 'Why should I go in order?'" says Yaitanes. “You want the first thing people see--the pilot--to be as good an experience as you could possibly get. So I shot episode four first--which I chose because it had a lot of the same elements as the pilot. That enabled me to work out the growing pains, the chemistry, defining character, in the fourth episode. The first episode was the fifth episode filmed. By then, everyone knew their character, so there was no preciousness about it. They were so relaxed by time they shot it. There’s a slight difference in episodes three to five, but by then the audience is in and more willing to forgive them.”

Storytelling beyond the show

With the series telling the main narrative, Yaitanes arranged for backstory and additional dramatic flourishes through the WelcometoBanshee.com and Cinemax.com/Banshee sites. Thirteen prequel videos and an IDW-public comic series, both titled Banshee Origins, will reveal backstories. There will also be a GIF store, real-life tweets from characters, changing show title sequence, and final after-credits clip that offer clues to character motivations and future episodes.

“The story of Banshee is a 20-year story,” says Yaitanes. “We pick up after Lucas’ release from jail, but he had a whole life in prison and before. I was interested in the story behind the show.”
The online stories were resourcefully figured into the production budget and schedule. “I can’t stand to see waste,” says Yaintanes. “No matter how well we schedule a season, there are unused pockets of time. Why should the cast and crew be idle when we can use them in that time to create something that could go towards a richer experience? We used that time without taxing the budget to create the short online films about character backstories that tied into the comic books. We want it to feel like a treasure hunt.”

Even the title sequence drops clues about characters. The 75-second opening reveals a table top of photos with images that reflect their character’s inner psychology. The photos change every week. A component of the WelcometoBanshee.com site, called The Vault, will launch during the season and update episodically. The Vault is "unlocked" with the code combination seen in the show’s opening titles. Utilizing interactive video technology, The Vault will host all 10 versions of the evolving narrative title sequences, with creator commentary, to enable viewers to uncover their hidden symbolic meaning.

Share the power

One of the more unusual aspects was the salon-like setting Yaitanes created on-set, which he began cultivating at the hiring stage. He used the pitch video to communicate his vision and attract like-minded crew members. It paid off in unexpected ways. Costume designer Patia Prouty came up with an idea for a fashion-forward photo shoot with the female cast members. Professional photographer friends would use set visits as muses for cast portraits and time-lapsed videos that Cinemax then embraced as marketing vehicles.
Greg Yaitanes. Photo: Fred Norris/Cinemax
“Another thing I learned from Silicon Valley is that I don’t need to be in charge of everything all the time,” says Yaitanes. “People were empowered to be their own producers, and the ones who got that, shined. I didn’t have a lot of money to pay people, so I had to make them want to come to work every day. I surrounded myself with people who were game. When I left House, I’d hit the limit of people’s creativity. I was the only one left who wanted to innovate. With Banshee, I just wanted people excited about all the other ways we could tell stories. It really meant a lot when people told me, 'In my whole life, I never got to be so creative or have my voice heard.'"

He made sure his directors could shepherd their episodes through the entire production process. Yaitanes, who directed three of the 10 episodes, found three other directors from the U.S. and Europe with indie filmmaking sensibilities, and ensured their input through post-production. “The more of themselves they brought, the more ownership they felt they had in the episodes,” he says. “I wanted to create an environment where they did not feel like they were punching the clock. I wanted filmmakers to share ideas, take the ball further down field and, in turn, influence me.”

In terms of storytelling platforms and streamlined production, “I’m hoping that Banshee is a game changer--taking TV further down the field,” says Yaitanes. “That would be an accomplishment I’d be very proud of.”

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