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Ask Away: The Best of 2011’s Movieline Interviews

Another year, another couple hundred entries in the ever-deepening conversational archive known as The Movieline Interview . They’re the collective backbone of our site, and in 2011, it was at its strongest. Look back with us now at the highlights, including the luminary likes of Michelle Williams, Seth Rogen, Kristen Wiig, Jason Segel, Jodie Foster, Paul Giamatti, and a certain honey badger of a director. Kristen Wiig (March 11) Do you feel that [Wiig’s infamous SNL character] Gilly is polarizing? I feel it’s a character that people either love or they don’t particularly like. Uh… yeah, probably. I mean, the first time that I did it, my mom, the next day was like, “Oh, I did not like that. That new character you did, I did not like her!” [Laughs] When you thought of that character, did you figure some people wouldn’t embrace her? No. I mean, I think that before I do anything. But someone who doesn’t like Gilly can love Penelope. It’s not you — it’s just your recurring characters are different. I don’t think about it at all. If you’re creating anything at all, it’s really dangerous to care about what people think. Paul Giamatti and Alex Shaffer (March 15) So we are tossing around the idea of doing a “Movies You Had No Idea Paul Giamatti Is In” post. Giamatti : Oh? Big Momma’s House was surprising to me. Giamatti : Not to me! I remember being in that! I guess so. I mean, there are a lot of people out there in the world who know I was in that movie. A lot of people recognize me for that. Shaffer : I remember your story from when you were in Ohio and you were in a bad neighborhood and they told you that you couldn’t walk around… Giamatti : It was in Cleveland, they said, “Don’t leave the set, don’t walk around this neighborhood.” I was like, “Enh.” So I walked around. You know, it was a predominantly black neighborhood, and everybody had seen Big Momma’s House. So I was fine. Everybody was like, “Oh my God, don’t…” And [in the neighborhood] it was just like “[you’re the guy from] Big Momma’s House!” Amy Ryan (March 18) [On the previous season of The Office ] Are you prepared for America’s scorn? What’s that? Taking away Michael Scott… Ohhh! [Laughs] I thought that was the name of a new show! I thought it was a new reality show! I was going to ask what you had coming up… other than America’s Scorn . America’s Scorn actually comes out at Christmas. It’s a Christmas release, yes. It’s me and Vin Diesel. If you starred in a movie with Vin Diesel called America’s Scorn , I would see this movie. I trained for three years for my action sequences. And your character’s name is Melanie Scorn. Melanie Scorn, right! And she just got out of prison, and she and Vin Diesel are on the run. Exactly! Right, they were married and they went their separate ways. But! They still work together. OK, seriously, what do you have coming up? [Laughing] I think America’s Scorn might be my best bet, I don’t have anything coming up, sorry. So… I think I’m actually going to have to look into America’s Scorn . OK, we’re going with that for reporting on your next project. America’s Scorn it is… [Still laughing] It’s the end of the day, we’re both losing our minds. Michelle Williams (March 30) [On getting used to the locations in Meek’s Cutoff ] When I first got there, I thought, ‘I… I… I can’t stay here. I have to turn around and go home. I can’t live here.’ But I’ve come to love it. If you look hard enough, you can see variation in the landscape where you think it’s actually completely barren and nothing lives out there. You spend a little time, you look a little closer, and you see what’s actually inherent to the land. But at first it felt like we’d been sent to Mars. You know! The desert does crazy things to people’s minds! Mirages! Carlos Castañeda! Peyote! It’s the desert! Wes Bentley (May 3) Are there big films or opportunities that you feel your addiction led you to miss out on? Oh, yeah. Definitely. I definitely did. I had a lot of opportunities. When you’re in that state you miss meetings, you don’t pay attention to what people are asking you to do, which could be great things. I also feared it; I think I feared my success and what I thought were the expectations of me — which was actually just people believing in you, you know? So your addiction can make you believe certain things are happening that aren’t. It also can make you miss things that actually are happening. Your mind is all twisted. I missed a lot of opportunities. I regret how I acted and behaved in those choices, or if I hurt people especially, but I don’t regret where I’m at now. I’ve never been happier, and I could only be here by having made some terrible choices, unfortunately. Jodie Foster (May 4) Knowing him as well as you do, do you think that Mel Gibson really would be OK with never acting again, as he recently said? I think it probably sounded more glib than it was; it’s a conversation he and I have had many times, and I say it all the time. You know, I’ve worked for 45 years as an actor and it’s a long time to do one job and there are a lot of other ways to tell stories.Would I be OK if I never acted again? Who would I be? Would I be somebody new? We ask ourselves these questions all the time. He was a kid, too, when he started. There are times when I really put it aside, and as I say to him, ‘Look, there’s only one reason for you to act, there’s only one motivation, and that’s because it moves you.’ And honestly, you shouldn’t do it for any other reason. Because you don’t need to — he doesn’t need to, he doesn’t need that identity. And he doesn’t need the extra inhuman stress of being a celebrity. Paul Feig (July 5) [On Bridesmaids ‘ success] It got me out of movie jail, which I at least had one foot in. You’re proud of all your babies that you make, but I’m a realist and I know the business. If you make babies and they don’t make money, people don’t want to make more babies with you. So, at least I get a few more shots. J.K. Simmons (Aug. 3) It seems like you’re in a pretty sweet spot in your career right now with four movies in various stages of production, your work on The Closer , a steady stream of voice roles. Do you remember the moment when you felt like you had really established yourself as an actor ? I’m still not sure that I have. [Laughs] Unless your name is Clooney or Pitt or Hanks, I think it’s hard to feel completely like you’re established or where you want to be. This script, which I am eternally grateful for, came to me but only after it bounced off a couple other guys first who didn’t want to do it or couldn’t schedule it. I’d love to be more established. I’d love to never have to audition for the rest of my life and have every good script in Hollywood come my way. At the same time, when I look back twenty years and remember that I was struggling to pay my rent for a crappy apartment in Hell’s Kitchen and doing regional theater for a subsistence wage, and now I’m able to live in a big, fancy house and send my kids to private school — there’s always somebody who is better off and worse off than you are. That’s an important perspective to keep in mind I guess. Jessica Chastain (Aug. 29) [On the fine line of awards campaigning] “I’m never going to take out an ad. I know, famous last words — never say never — but I really can’t imagine ever in my life doing something like that. To me, it’s not a short sprint. I want to be a career actor. The most important thing to me is that people like the films. If they like the films and they like the performances, it means that I get work with other great actors and make other great films. So it’s not about an award. Of course it’s nice that there’s awards buzz around the films because it means they get more attention. But I’m not the person who’s going to… I mean, I’m not outgoing. I’m very shy. I was never the girl in high school who was wanting to be in office or something — who would campaign for myself to become student-body president. [Laughs] I’m just not that person.”

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Ask Away: The Best of 2011’s Movieline Interviews

Weekend Receipts: 50/50’s the Strongest Newcomer in a Dolphin-Safe Weekend

Last week’s box office roundup featured three movies that garnered $20 million, which makes this week’s tally feel like an unassuming, but pleasant showing. Yes, Moneyball and Dolphin Tale are still garnering identical figures at the top of the leaderboard, but 50/50 earned back its whole budget in just its first three days at the multiplex. If Contagion stirred up a moviegoer fever, then 50/50 is a mildly throbbing tumor of success.

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Weekend Receipts: 50/50’s the Strongest Newcomer in a Dolphin-Safe Weekend

See Michelle Williams Skinny Dip As Marilyn Monroe in New My Week With Marilyn Photo

Another still from Simon Curtis’s drama My Week with Marilyn has surfaced, this time showing Michelle Williams swimming as the iconic bombshell. Click through to see the latest, semi-scandalous photo and hang around for more Buzz Break.

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See Michelle Williams Skinny Dip As Marilyn Monroe in New My Week With Marilyn Photo

Virtual Newsstand: Movieline.com, September 2011

Every month at Movieline, we collect the best interviews, smartest features, and most compelling reviews we’ve produced, and curate them in one easy-to-use table of contents called the Virtual Newsstand, which pays tribute to our print magazine history. Here’s the Virtual Newsstand for September 2011.

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Virtual Newsstand: Movieline.com, September 2011

Anjelica Huston on 50/50, Discovering Her Grandfather’s Films, and Oprah’s Oscar Grudge

Anjelica Huston is renowned Hollywood royalty, but in the new movie 50/50 , she’s just right as a Seattle mother whose son (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) is diagnosed with cancer and whose husband is a longtime sufferer of Alzheimer’s disease. For the woman who’s played everything from Maerose Prizzi to Morticia Addams, the role is yet another departure that always feels like a perfect — and revealing — fit. We caught up with the dynastic actress to discuss the real-life pain behind her performance in 50/50 , the fun of discovering her grandfather Walter Huston’s work, and the problem with winning an Oscar over Oprah Winfrey.

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Anjelica Huston on 50/50, Discovering Her Grandfather’s Films, and Oprah’s Oscar Grudge

VIDEO: Seth Rogen Mock Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s Failing Sex Life in Red Band Clip From 50/50

50/50 is shaping up to be the sweetest, funniest comedy of the fall — and, as a new red band clip featuring stars Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Seth Rogen proves, it may also be the sexually frankest. Would you like to learn how to do it froggy-style? Allow Mr. Rogen to curate. NSFW video ahead!

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VIDEO: Seth Rogen Mock Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s Failing Sex Life in Red Band Clip From 50/50

VIDEO: Seth Rogen Mock Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s Failing Sex Life in Red Band Clip From 50/50

50/50 is shaping up to be the sweetest, funniest comedy of the fall — and, as a new red band clip featuring stars Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Seth Rogen proves, it may also be the sexually frankest. Would you like to learn how to do it froggy-style? Allow Mr. Rogen to curate. NSFW video ahead!

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VIDEO: Seth Rogen Mock Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s Failing Sex Life in Red Band Clip From 50/50

New 50/50 Poster Previews Joseph Gordon Levitt’s Baldness

You might remember a recent cancer comedy called Funny People , but I’m in favor of forgetting it and looking forward to the new Seth Rogen/Joseph Gordon-Levitt tumor laugher 50/50 . It comes out Sept. 30, but for now, we may gaze into the sheared follicles on JGL’ s head. The grimness and tweeness should combine into an agreeable mixture I’ll call (500) Days of Mysterious Skin .

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New 50/50 Poster Previews Joseph Gordon Levitt’s Baldness

REVIEW: Seth Rogen Meets Brit Fizz in Smart, Saucy Alien Tale Paul

Maybe it’s a Canadian thing. Like his countryman, Kiefer Sutherland, Seth Rogen has a voice that’s 10 years older than he is — a combination of world-weariness and exuberance, an instrument that he’s mastered for specific comic shadings. Sutherland wrings anger and shock from the premature gray in his, and by the time 24 ended, he’d physically caught up with the age emanating from his larynx. In the likable, misfits-on-the road comedy Paul , Rogen’s soulful rustiness is used for the sound of the intergalactic traveler. With it, he lays a claim to being one of the premier vocal talents of his generation.

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REVIEW: Seth Rogen Meets Brit Fizz in Smart, Saucy Alien Tale Paul

George Lucas Doesn’t Believe in 2012 and 6 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

Also in this Friday edition of The Broadsheet: A Star is Born gets born again with an unlikely duo… Russell Brand is ready to Rock … Taco Bell doesn’t like potential kiddie porn… and more ahead.

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George Lucas Doesn’t Believe in 2012 and 6 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today