Tag Archives: jessica chastain

Chicago Film Critics Name ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ Best Picture

The group gave Zero Dark Thirty its top Best Picture and Best Director prizes in addition to Best Actress for Jessica Chastain , while Lincoln ‘s Daniel Day-Lewis took Best Actor with the Chicago Film Critics Association Monday. [ Related: Golden Globes Unveil 70th Edition Nominees And ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ Takes Top National Board Of Review Honors ] [ Related: LA Film Critics Name ‘Amour’ Best Picture, Boost ‘The Master,’ Jazz Up Oscar Race ] The wins follow: Best Picture: Zero Dark Thirty Best Director: Kathryn Bigelow, Zero Dark Thirty Best Actor: Daniel Day-Lewis , Lincoln Best Actress: Jessica Chastain , Zero Dark Thirty Best Supporting Actor: Phillip Seymour Hoffman , The Master Best Supporting Actress: Amy Adams , The Master Best Original Screenplay: Zero Dark Thirty by Mark Boal Best Adapted Screenplay: Lincoln by Tony Kushner Best Foreign Language Film: Amour Best Documentary: The Invisible War Best Animated Feature: ParaNorman Best Cinematography: Mihai Milaimare Jr. , The Master Best Original Score: Jonny Greenwood , The Master Best Art Direction: Moonrise Kingdom Best Editing: William Goldenberg & Dylan Tichenor , Zero Dark Thirty Most Promising Performer: Quvenzhané Wallis , Beasts of the Southern Wild Most Promising Filmmaker: Benh Zeitlin , Beasts of the Southern Wild [ Related: NY Film Critics Circle Spices Up Oscar Race With ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ Best Picture Pick ]

Continued here:
Chicago Film Critics Name ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ Best Picture

What Does Nolan’s Final Word On ‘TDKR’ Mean For Those Joseph Gordon-Levitt Batman Rumors?

Christopher Nolan may have left the door wide open for speculation at the end of The Dark Knight Rises where Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s Gotham cop John Blake is concerned, and he is producer/co-writer on Zack Snyder’s Man of Steel , which the rumor mill suggests could see a Very Special Gordon-Levitt cameo . But in a chat with Film Comment about his entire Batman trilogy, Nolan was asked if he was completely done with his Dark Knight universe. So what are the implications for those JG-L rumors? (Spoilers, if you haven’t seen TDKR …) “For me, The Dark Knight Rises is specifically and definitely the end of the Batman story as I wanted to tell it,” Nolan said, “and the open-ended nature of the film is simply a very important thematic idea that we wanted to get into the movie, which is that Batman is a symbol. He can be anybody, and that was very important to us.” I know, I know. Nolan keeps using phrases like ” specifically and definitely the end ” but it’s just so hard to let go of the hope that he’s just messing with us. ” Nah, J/K you guys — Joe’s totes the new Batman! ” the geekosphere desperately waits for him to say. Well, good luck getting anything concrete out of Nolan. I believe him when he says his run with the Batman universe is over, although that doesn’t mean it’s not possible that Gordon-Levitt might pop up at the end of Man of Stee l in a bat-cowl to give Superman a Justice League fist bump. Warner Bros. may love Nolan for giving them a super respectable, arguably Oscar-worthy Batman series, but they’re not dumb. WB will squeeze every drop of Bat-juice out of the character, regardless of how Nolan retains the integrity of his fully explored, definitely closed chapter of Bat-lore. “Not every Batman fan will necessarily agree with that interpretation of the philosophy of the character,” Nolan said, “but for me it all comes back to the scene between Bruce Wayne and Alfred in the private jet in Batman Begins , where the only way that I could find to make a credible characterization of a guy transforming himself into Batman is if it was as a necessary symbol, and he saw himself as a catalyst for change and therefore it was a temporary process, maybe a five-year plan that would be enforced for symbolically encouraging the good of Gotham to take back their city.” “To me, for that mission to succeed, it has to end, so this is the ending for me,” he continued. “And as I say, the open-ended elements are all to do with the thematic idea that Batman was not important as a man, he’s more than that. He’s a symbol, and the symbol lives on.” Symbol, protege, replacement, reboot — what do you make of the Gordon-Levitt rumors in light of Nolan’s comments? [ Film Comment ] Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

Visit link:
What Does Nolan’s Final Word On ‘TDKR’ Mean For Those Joseph Gordon-Levitt Batman Rumors?

REVIEW: Kathryn Bigelow’s Angular ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ Is A Stunning, Riveting Achievement

Kathryn Bigelow’s angular thriller  Zero Dark Thirty   begins and ends with events that have been seared into public memory — the attacks on September 11, 2001 and the death of Osama bin Laden on May 2, 2011 in Abbottabad, Pakistan, two incidents that bookended a decade in which America’s sense of security and place in the world were radically shaken. The film presents the story of what happened in that dark space between.  Using a combination of whatever details screenwriter and journalist Mark Boal could turn up in his research and cautious fiction, Zero Dark Thirty details how the U.S. was finally able to track down and kill the elusive head of the organization responsible for the worst terrorist attack on our soil. But at almost two and a half hours long — an epic running time that never seems excessive but makes you feel the stretch of the years being chronicled — the film also teases your attention away from those known events, and brings it to the gritty, exhausting and sometimes ugly work being done on the ground and the type of people who engage in it. It’s a curious thing that two of the awards season’s most significant films are stealthy procedurals:  Lincoln , which beneath the surface gloss of a prestige biopic is a vivid showcase of the messy, difficult means by which the amendment to outlaw slavery was passed, and  Zero Dark Thirty , which is an examination of how contemporary warfare has so much more to do with information than with sending troops out into battle. Both reveal the strenuous, time-consuming and ethically complicated efforts behind their well-known achievements. While Steven Spielberg’s film uses these exertions to bring animation, prickliness and warmth to characters that could have been wax-museum distant, Bigelow’s consciously holds its emotions at arm’s length, where they’ll be less likely to interfere with the work being done. Such is the choice made by its heroine, known only by her first name, Maya, and played by  Jessica Chastain as a crisply dedicated but green CIA analyst with few other interests in her life other than tracking down bin Laden — a target she comes to fixate on as she builds experience and confidence. Zero Dark Thirty plays out in the shrouded and unpretty backstage of the War on Terror: embassy cubicles, dusty military camps and black sites where detainees undergo “enhanced interrogation techniques” that the film does not soften. Maya arrives fresh from D.C. to witness a prisoner being worked on by Dan (Jason Clarke, slipping easily from sardonic to savage). Sleep deprivation, waterboarding, confinement boxes and beatings — Maya doesn’t take easily to these techniques but doesn’t shrink from them either. Soon she’s ordering them herself as she searches for information about Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti, rumored top al-Qaeda courier and the man she thinks is key to finding bin Laden. The early fuss by Obama opponents who claimed the film (originally slated for an October release) would be a propagandizing election tool is laughable in context. The story starts long before Obama’s arrival on the presidential stage, and his on-screen presence in a single scene, in which Maya and her colleagues watch his televised speech about America not engaging in torture, is representative, in a wincingly complicated way, of how the new administration’s stance will complicate and slow what they’re doing. Zero Dark Thirty eschews the personal by design. We know nothing about Maya’s background, she has little enough of a life to explore outside of her work and doesn’t take to others easily. Our sense of her emerges slowly by way of Chastain’s elegantly steely performance. Maya doesn’t tend to let down her guard in front of others, and so our ideas about her inner life come from glimpses around its edges and through those moments when she lets things slip — from the warmth that bleeds into her interactions with her coworker and eventual friend Jessica (Jennifer Ehle) or the way she takes to writing the number of days of bureaucratic inaction on important information she uncovered on the door of her boss George’s (Mark Strong) office. Maya is suited to this life, as draining and dangerous as it is, and Chastain’s physical delicacy provides stark contrast to the character’s strength. She’s an unconventional action heroine with an amusingly atypical (for a female lead) interest in making nice with those around her. Like  Jeremy Renner’s bomb tech in  The Hurt Locker , Maya hones herself to become the perfect tool for the job at hand. But  Zero Dark Thirty is less interested in movie indulgences than its predecessor, which may be why its coolness makes it an easier effort to admire than to lose yourself in. Its periodic action sequences — involving two very disturbing bombings, a shootout and the raid itself, which is staged in urgent darkness and threaded with misgivings about whether or not it’s a mistake — are brilliantly staged, but they’re stations along the journey, to be braved, pushed past or endured. Maya’s true place is at a computer or making her case with growing conviction in a conference room as important men played by Kyle Chandler, Harold Perrineau, James Gandolfini, Mark Duplass and others are confronted by the force of her will, and the SEALs brought in to storm the compound (among them Chris Pratt, Taylor Kinney and Joel Edgerton) eye her with wary respect. Zero Dark Thirty  makes you feel every step of Maya’s journey, but it’s her impressive achievement and that of the film itself that we’re left contemplating, not her humanity — a stunningly well-realized whole with few soft spots to latch onto. RELATED STORIES: ‘Zero Dark Thirty’: Strong Women, Ambiguous Ethics Drive Bigelow’s Oscar Pic TRAILER: Jessica Chastain Hunts Bin Laden In Kathryn Bigelow’s ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ CIA, Defense Dept. Sued Over Kathryn Bigelow’s Osama Bin Laden Movie, Naturally Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

The rest is here:
REVIEW: Kathryn Bigelow’s Angular ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ Is A Stunning, Riveting Achievement

Braless: Celebrity Nudity on DVD and Blu-ray 11.27.12 [PICS]

Nude on Blu-ray, Jessica Chastain goes bra-less in Lawless (2012). The bootlegging drama will put a long arm in your pants 1-hour 12 minutes in, when redheaded Jess flashes butt and breasts. Plus, it also features the flawless funbags of Malinda Baker as she sits on the bed. Also releasing, Luck has been canceled by HBO, but a new Season One Blu-ray gives us Kerry Condon , Weronika Rosati , and the peaks of Dawson’s Creek mom Mary-Margaret Humes to remember them by. Finally, Australian drama Burning Man (2011) will put the fire in your pants with nude scenes from Rachel Griffiths and more. See pics after the jump!

Original post:
Braless: Celebrity Nudity on DVD and Blu-ray 11.27.12 [PICS]

Jessica Chastain Goes Braless for Lawless

Nude in theaters, Jessica Chastain bares 100-proof boobs in the bootlegging drama Lawless . Plus, get your boob tube fix as Homeland , Season 1, featuring Morena Baccarin nude , and Boardwalk Empire , Season 2, featuring Gretchen Mol and Paz de la Huerta nude , hit Blu-ray.

See the original post:
Jessica Chastain Goes Braless for Lawless

Dressed for Success: Jessica Chastain, Colin Firth, Eddie Redmayne and Diane Kruger Among Actors on Vanity Fair Best-Dressed List

Jessica Chastain can hold her own with British royalty when it comes to fashion. The Tree of Life actresss and the Duchess of Cambridge, Kate Middleton, each adorn a cover of Vanity Fair magazine’s September Style issue, which includes the magazine’s annual International Best Dressed List. The red-headed beauty — whose cover will go to subsribers —  made the list for the first time, but joins other actors who are no strangers to the honor. Inglourious Basterds actress Diane Kruger made the list for the second time as did Best-Dressed Couple,  The King’s Speech star Colin Firth and his producer wife Livia. Chinese actress Fan Bingbing ( Shaolin),   France’s  Léa Seydoux ( Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol ) and model, actress, filmmaker and Schiaparelli muse Farida Khelfa. How to Get Ahead in Advertising  actor and  Wah-Wah director Richard E. Grant returns to the list for the first time since 2007, and  My Week with Marilyn  heartthrob Eddie Redmayne makes his debut in the Best-Dressed Men category. Jay-Z is named to the list for the first time, along with fellow musician Alicia Keys, who is back on the list for the first time since her inaugural appearance, in 2009. Actor Richard E. Grant makes a fashion comeback as well, named to the list for the first time since 2007. Colin Firth is on the list for the second year in a row, along with stylish wife Livia, in the Best-Dressed Couples category, and newcomer Eddie Redmayne is one of the Best-Dressed Men. You can see more photos of the Best-Dressed at Vanity Fair.com . Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

Original post:
Dressed for Success: Jessica Chastain, Colin Firth, Eddie Redmayne and Diane Kruger Among Actors on Vanity Fair Best-Dressed List

A Surprising Cannes Title? Madagascar 3 Animates the Croisette

Undoubtedly there will be tons of photographers and screaming fans outside as Ben Stiller, Jessica Chastain, Chris Rock, Martin Short, Jada Pinkett-Smith and David Schwimmer ascend the steps at the Palais des Festivals for the world premiere of their latest film. And it will be the best look at them that the crowd will have all night, particularly since they won’t be onscreen — the movie is Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted . The latest DreamWorks Animation effort may seem like a surprising fit for Cannes, usually perceived as the stomping grounds of the world’s great auteurs, but the festival has long embraced mass Hollywood releases on the cusp of their blockbuster rollouts. In 2005 Cannes hosted Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith and even piped over a massive sound system Darth Vader breathing along the Croisette in the hours leading up to the movie’s zany red carpet premiere. And from Shrek to Kung Fu Panda 2 , DWA has wrangled frequent Cannes premieres complete with screaming fans and all the festival trimmings. “This is my first time here in Cannes. To have my voice in Cannes is a good first step to actually being in a movie here,” Ben Stiller, who voices the lion character Alex, said to laughs Friday. Co-director Tom McGrath voiced a bit of trepidation about the likes of Madagascar (which is screening out of competition) with the likes of others in the Official Selection including the latest from David Cronenberg ( Cosmopolis ), Jacques Audiard ( Rust and Bone ), Abbas Kiarostami ( Like Someone in Love ) and Walter Salles ( On the Road ). “We went to opening night and saw our cartoon [in a montage of Cannes films] and we thought, ‘Do we deserve to be here?'” McGrath said. “But the great thing about Cannes is that it’s a festival for all kinds of films – and this is a film about traveling through Europe, so what better place?” The third installment of the Madagascar franchise finds the lion Alex (Stiller), Marty the zebra (Rock) and the rest of the gang trying to find a way to return to their beloved New York City (you may have had to see the first two installments to get that one, but just go with it). Their quest takes them through Europe, landing in Monaco of all places in the famed casino. They find a perfect cover: A traveling circus, which naturally introduces new characters to the mix. “I auditioned for this part, and I was so happy when I got the part,” said Jessica Chastain who plays a seductive jaguar in the feature. “I’m an actor who wants to do all kinds of things.” “It’s a very difficult thing to do,” McGrath said about voicing movie animation. “You have to project that you’re running in your voice when you’re sitting in a studio and you have to change emotion. That’s hard to do when you’re only behind a microphone.” Added Chastain, “I hadn’t done anything before in which I didn’t work with another actor.” Still, the group said the medium allows for the actors to take time and not feel the pressure of time when working with a large crew, allowing them to workshop their characters to a degree, which was one creative appeal for taking part in Madagascar . But there was also another. “Cash!” said Rock. “And it was a lot of fun.” Read more of Movieline’s coverage of Cannes 2012 here .

See the article here:
A Surprising Cannes Title? Madagascar 3 Animates the Croisette

India Angry Over Avengers, Burt Reynolds Gets Musical, China Eyes US Theaters: Biz Break

In this morning’s Biz Break: Indian ire rises over The Avengers , a Chinese company eyes AMC theaters, vet actors join the musical comedy How Sweet It Is , the Chinese blockbuster Flying Swords of Dragon Gate is headed to IMAX, and more. Vet Actors Join Cast in Musical Comedy How Sweet It Is Burt Reynolds ( The Dukes of Hazzard ), Joe Piscopo ( Saturday Night Live ), Paul Sorvino ( Law & Order ) and Erika Christensen ( Parenthood ) have signed on to star in the musical comedy How Sweet It Is . Written and directed by Brian Hertzlinger (with co-writer Jay Black), the film is produced by Suzanne DeLaurentiis, Steven Chase, Rick Finkelstein, Ivan Kavalsky, Keith Weiner and Matthew L. Weiner and slated for a fall release. Ben Means Joins Phase 4 Films as SVP, Global Business Development Means will be charged with expanding Phase 4’s North American business. Prior to joining Phase 4 Films, Means was General Manager of Aggregation Services at Sony DADC; Executive Vice President of Worldwide Operations at Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment; and Vice President of North American Operations at Buena Vista Home Entertainment, a division of the Walt Disney Company. Around the ‘net… Avengers Slum Scenes Ignite Indian Anger The movie’s healthy opening in India has been marred by high-profile complaints over its portrayal of urban living conditions in the city of Kolkata, The Guardian reports . AMC In Talks with China’s Wanda to Sell North America’s second largest theater chain has resumed talks with China’s Wanda over selling a “significant stake” in the company, the NY Times reports . If completed, the deal will begin a new phase in China’s push into the global film industry by sharply increasing its leverage with Hollywood. The Flying Swords of Dragon Gate Sets September IMAX Release Acquired for North American release by Indomina, The Flying Swords of Dragon Gate is the first Chinese-language film to be released in the IMAX 3D format and the fourth-highest grossing Chinese-language film of all time. Since its December release in China, the feature has earned approximately $86.5 million at the box office, of which approximately $10.6 million was generated in 61 digital IMAX theaters, Movieweb reports . Killer Joe Heads for Release with NC-17 Black comedy Killer Joe will open July 27 via LD Entertainment with an NC-17. Directed by William Friedkin the film received the NC-17 in late February despite an appeal by the filmmaker and distributor, Deadline reports .

Read more:
India Angry Over Avengers, Burt Reynolds Gets Musical, China Eyes US Theaters: Biz Break

Iron Man 3: Jessica Chastain Finally Passes on a Film

The influential , Oscar-nominated talent whose breakout year included six roles has taken to her Facebook page to officially pass on Iron Man 3 : “My schedule is jammed packed and I can’t fit anything else in. The press announced my possible attachment far too soon. I know many of you wanted me to be involved, and I’m so sorry to disappoint you. Hopefully there’ll be another Marvel film in my future. Shane Black and everyone on the IM3 team are really wonderful. I’m very excited to see the film when it comes out.” Asked for their reactions, every other young actress in Hollywood sighed in unison, ” Finally. ” [ Facebook via ComicBookMovie ]

See the article here:
Iron Man 3: Jessica Chastain Finally Passes on a Film

Oscar Index Special Edition: Predicting the 84th Academy Award Nominations

We’re a little more than half a day away from learning who and what will compete for the 84th annual Academy Awards — an elite class through which Movieline’s Institute for the Advanced Study of Kudos Forensics had combed for four months in its fail-safe, fool-proof and bracingly handsome Oscar Index . This calls for one last sweep through each of the Academy’s categories (with the exception of live-action, animated and documentary short, about which even our pointiest-headed Oscar wonk cannot speak yet with authority); check our team’s work against your own, and drop back by Movieline tomorrow morning at 8:30 a.m. ET/5:30 a.m. PT as we deliver nominations, reactions, analysis and more. [Nominees listed alphabetically by film] BEST PICTURE The Artist The Descendants The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo The Help Hugo Midnight in Paris Moneyball War Horse BEST DIRECTOR Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist Alexander Payne The Descendants David Fincher, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo Martin Scorsese Hugo Woody Allen Midnight in Paris BEST ACTRESS Rooney Mara, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo Viola Davis, The Help Meryl Streep, The Iron Lady Michelle Williams, My Week With Marilyn Tilda Swinton, We Need to Talk About Kevin BEST ACTOR Jean Dujardin, The Artist George Clooney, The Descendants Brad Pitt, Moneyball Michael Fassbender, Shame Gary Oldman, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Berenice Bejo, The Artist Shailene Woodley, The Descendants Jessica Chastain, The Help Octavia Spencer, The Help Melissa McCarthy, Bridesmaids BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Christopher Plummer, Beginners Albert Brooks, Drive Jonah Hill, Moneyball Kenneth Branagh, My Week with Marilyn Nick Nolte, Warrior BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Will Reiser, 50/50 Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist Annie Mumolo and Kristen Wiig, Bridesmaids Woody Allen, Midnight in Paris Tom McCarthy and Joe Tiboni, Win Win BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash, The Descendants Steven Zaillian, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Tate Taylor, The Help John Logan, Hugo Stan Chervin, Aaron Sorkin and Steven Zaillian, Moneyball BEST ART DIRECTION Laurence Bennett, The Artist Donald Graham Burt, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Stuart Craig, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Dante Ferretti, Hugo Maria Djurkovic, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Guillaume Schiffman, The Artist Jeff Cronenweth, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Robert Richardson, Hugo Emmanuel Lubezki, The Tree of Life Janusz Kaminski, War Horse BEST COSTUME DESIGN Mark Bridges, The Artist Michael O’Connor, Jane Eyre Sandy Powell, Hugo Jill Taylor, My Week with Marilyn Jacqueline Durran, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy BEST FILM EDITING Michel Hazanavicius and Anne-Sophie Bion, The Artist Thelma Schoonmaker, Hugo Kirk Baxter and Angus Wall, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Christopher Tellefsen, Moneyball Michael Kahn, War Horse BEST MAKEUP Albert Nobbs Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 The Iron Lady BEST ORIGINAL SCORE The Artist The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Hugo Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy War Horse BEST ORIGINAL SONG “Lay Your Head Down,” Albert Nobbs “Hello Hello” Gnomeo & Juliet “The Living Proof,” The Help “Life’s a Happy Song,” The Muppets “Man or Muppet,” The Muppets BEST SOUND EDITING The Adventures of Tintin The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Hugo Transformers: Dark of the Moon BEST SOUND MIXING Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Hugo Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides Transformers: Dark of the Moon War Horse BEST VISUAL EFFECTS Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Hugo Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides Rise of the Planet of the Apes Transformers: Dark of the Moon BEST ANIMATED FILM FEATURE Rango Puss in Boots The Adventures of Tintin Kung Fu Panda 2 Rio BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE Bill Cunningham New York Buck If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory Project Nim BEST FOREIGN-LANGUAGE FEATURE Bullhead , Belgium Footnote , Israel In Darkness , Poland Monsieur Lazhar , Canada A Separation , Iran [Top photo via Shutterstock ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

Read the original post:
Oscar Index Special Edition: Predicting the 84th Academy Award Nominations