Tag Archives: elizabeth-olsen

Daniel Radcliffe ‘A Hell Of A Talent’ In ‘Kill Your Darlings’

Radcliffe’s portrayal of Allen Ginsberg in upcoming indie flick will ‘put to bed so many doubting minds,’ Ben Foster tells MTV News. By Kevin P. Sullivan Daniel Radcliffe Photo: Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images The list of characters in “Kill Your Darlings” is enough to immediately draw attention. The upcoming film counts literary icons like Allen Ginsberg, William S. Burroughs and Jack Kerouac among its players, but the young cast attached to fill out the roles is truly something to behold. The indie production made waves in Hollywood by landing Daniel Radcliffe in the role of Ginsberg. With so many people paying attention to Radcliffe’s post-“Potter” career moves, “Kill Your Darlings” became the project to watch. Radcliffe’s name joined a list of some of Hollywood’s hottest young talent, including Elizabeth Olsen , “Chronicle” star Dane DeHaan , “Boardwalk Empire” actor Jack Huston and Ben Foster . MTV News spoke with Foster about working as part of such a talented young cast and how Radcliffe will “shock” audiences come next year. “What’s most exciting about the script is that these are before they were giants. These lions of literature are still in development,” Foster said. “Working with these actors is a gas. You can’t live up to the hero. You can live up the child. That’s what we’re honoring.” Of all the cast members, it’s likely that Radcliffe has the most to prove. As only his second film role after ending the “Harry Potter” series, the film could be a crossroads of sorts for his career. Foster spoke to Radcliffe’s ability and predicted audience reactions when the film finally hits. “In terms of Daniel Radcliffe, I admire him so much. He is a tremendously courageous human, great mind,” Foster said. “He’s done some work in this film which I think is going to shock and impress and put to bed so many doubting minds. Everyone seems to be ready to cut the man down, and he’s going to prove them wrong. He’s a hell of a talent.” “Kill Your Darlings” is due out in theaters next year. For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: Daniel Radcliffe Related Photos The Evolution Of: Daniel Radcliffe

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Daniel Radcliffe ‘A Hell Of A Talent’ In ‘Kill Your Darlings’

Weekend Receipts: Why You Shouldn’t Cry For John Carter Just Yet

Everything went pretty much according to plan at the box office over the weekend: Scurrilous liberal plot The Lorax indoctrinated enough kids and families to reign over a second consecutive week, while Disney’s super-expensive sci-fi gamble John Carter settled somewhat anemically into second place. But it’s not all bad for our boy on Barsoom. Your Weekend Receipts are here. 1. Dr. Seuss’s The Lorax Gross: $39,100,000 ($121,950,000) Screens: 3,746 (PSA $10,438) Weeks: 2 (-44.3%) The year’s biggest hit to date achieved that distinction in nine days, as opposed to roughly three full weeks for the likes of Safe House and The Vow . And there was even one less hour this weekend. Summer is here! Break up The Lorax ! 2. John Carter Gross: $30,603,000 (new) Screens: 3,053 (PSA: $4,487) Weeks: 1 Right or wrong, the widely reported $250 million (at least) price tag will precede any and every conversation regarding John Carter as long as people are talking about John Carter . Which may be longer than the sluggish domestic gross implies — though not that much longer — if the rest of the world has anything to say about it: Andrew Stanton’s epic took in nearly $70 million abroad , including the fourth-highest debut ever in Russia. The takeaway remains relatively grim: No blockbuster status is foreseen, but at least the unprecedented write-down foreseen at Disney may not be that bad. Happy Monday? 3. Project X Gross: $11,550,000 ($40,125,000) Screens: 3,055 (PSA $3,781) Weeks: 2 (Change: -45.1%) Not a remarkable hold, but considering the competition both above and below it &mdash plus the long-ish tails of several of the year’s bigger releases to date — Warner Bros. will take it. The only question remaining: What’s the threshold to greenlight the sequel? 4. Silent House Gross: $7,010,000 (new) Screens: 2,124 (PSA $3,300) Weeks: 1 Here is a conversation sure to have ensued in roughly 750 theaters screening the very soft-performing Elizabeth Olsen thrller: Viewer 1: “That doesn’t look like Ryan Reynolds.” Viewer 2: “When does Denzel show up?” Viewer 1: “Are we in the right theater?” Viewer 3: “Shhhh!” [Throws popcorn] 5. Act of Valor Gross: $7,000,000 ($56,100,597) Screens: 2,952 (PSA $2,372) Weeks: 3 (Change: -48.4%) Slowly, inexorably, probably futilely, Relativity continues to push its Navy SEALs experiment toward $100 million theatrically. Look for a special St. Patrick’s Day weekend campaign pushing Act O’ Valor : “Erin go BLAM,” “Kiss me, I shot Osama bin Laden in the face,” etc. Or… not. [Figures via Box Office Mojo ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Weekend Receipts: Why You Shouldn’t Cry For John Carter Just Yet

‘Silent House’: The Reviews Are In!

‘[Elizabeth] Olsen rivets our attention, and the camera’s, so fiercely it verges on unbearable,’ Kat Murphy of MSN.com writes. By Kara Warner Elizabeth Olsen in “Silent House” Photo: Open Road Films Although based on a 2010 Uruguayan Spanish-language horror film, “Silent House” is supposedly inspired by actual events, which only adds to its creep factor. It’s not a movie for the faint of heart. Elizabeth Olsen stars as a young women who finds herself trapped in a remote cottage where she is haunted and hunted by unknown horrors. While critics seem divided over whether it is mostly good or bad — the film is currently hovering around the 50 percent Fresh mark over at Rotten Tomatoes — almost all of them had high praise for the technical construction of the film, which was uniquely done by filming the entire movie in one long, continuous shot . Read on through the “Silent House” reviews … if you dare. The Plot ” ‘Silent House’ introduces us to our soon to be harried heroine, a 20-something who’s returned with her father to their old family vacation home (in the woods and by a lake, natch) to pack it up, board it up, and say farewell to it before it goes on the market. But it’s going to take a lot of work — squatters have defaced it; rust has wrecked the plumbing; and mildew’s worked its way into the electrical system. The house is much like Sarah … she’s barely hiding lots of peeling paint, weak foundations, and broken windows to the soul. But why? We will find out, but first it is time to get scared! Dad and Sarah are soon joined by Uncle Peter who’s come to help with the tidying, a neighbor Sarah really doesn’t remember from childhood summers pops by, and a creepy little girl lurks just out of sight in convenient shadows. The players are in place, and the suspense begins. It’s just little things at first; a noise here, a falling piece of plastic sheeting there. And then Sarah’s dad is attacked, his eye bloodily gouged from his skull. Sarah tries to run — and she does escape the dwelling of doom, but she’s lured back inside by clever, insidious means. To reveal much more would be spoilery, but I will say that Silent House is the kind of movie you must suspend all disbelief for (OK, maybe some of the embarrassingly foreshadowing dialogue is diss-worthy) in order to enjoy. Just watch the girl, follow her, and get caught up in her terror. It works on a visceral level, similar to the French film of a few years back, ‘Ils.’ ” — Staci Layne, Horror.com The Technical Achievement “Like Alfred Hitchcock’s ‘Rope’ or the original movie, the conceit of the film is that it’s entirely shot in one take with only a couple obvious times where they could have easily cheated. If you weren’t informed in advance that the movie was done in one take, you may not even realize it as the camera person/DP follows the characters up and downstairs, in and out of the house in an incredibly fluid way, barely missing a beat as we go from mundane packing activities to intense horrors. [Directors] Kentis and Lau have done a terrific job creating an atmosphere of tension, keeping the viewer on the edge never knowing what to expect or in fact, what exactly is going on. This helps to make some of the more obvious jump scares work better than they might normally, something that can also be attributed to Nathan Larson’s subtle but effective score. Even so, the filmmakers sadly go for many often-used clich

‘Silent House’: The Reviews Are In!

‘[Elizabeth] Olsen rivets our attention, and the camera’s, so fiercely it verges on unbearable,’ Kat Murphy of MSN.com writes. By Kara Warner Elizabeth Olsen in “Silent House” Photo: Open Road Films Although based on a 2010 Uruguayan Spanish-language horror film, “Silent House” is supposedly inspired by actual events, which only adds to its creep factor. It’s not a movie for the faint of heart. Elizabeth Olsen stars as a young women who finds herself trapped in a remote cottage where she is haunted and hunted by unknown horrors. While critics seem divided over whether it is mostly good or bad — the film is currently hovering around the 50 percent Fresh mark over at Rotten Tomatoes — almost all of them had high praise for the technical construction of the film, which was uniquely done by filming the entire movie in one long, continuous shot . Read on through the “Silent House” reviews … if you dare. The Plot ” ‘Silent House’ introduces us to our soon to be harried heroine, a 20-something who’s returned with her father to their old family vacation home (in the woods and by a lake, natch) to pack it up, board it up, and say farewell to it before it goes on the market. But it’s going to take a lot of work — squatters have defaced it; rust has wrecked the plumbing; and mildew’s worked its way into the electrical system. The house is much like Sarah … she’s barely hiding lots of peeling paint, weak foundations, and broken windows to the soul. But why? We will find out, but first it is time to get scared! Dad and Sarah are soon joined by Uncle Peter who’s come to help with the tidying, a neighbor Sarah really doesn’t remember from childhood summers pops by, and a creepy little girl lurks just out of sight in convenient shadows. The players are in place, and the suspense begins. It’s just little things at first; a noise here, a falling piece of plastic sheeting there. And then Sarah’s dad is attacked, his eye bloodily gouged from his skull. Sarah tries to run — and she does escape the dwelling of doom, but she’s lured back inside by clever, insidious means. To reveal much more would be spoilery, but I will say that Silent House is the kind of movie you must suspend all disbelief for (OK, maybe some of the embarrassingly foreshadowing dialogue is diss-worthy) in order to enjoy. Just watch the girl, follow her, and get caught up in her terror. It works on a visceral level, similar to the French film of a few years back, ‘Ils.’ ” — Staci Layne, Horror.com The Technical Achievement “Like Alfred Hitchcock’s ‘Rope’ or the original movie, the conceit of the film is that it’s entirely shot in one take with only a couple obvious times where they could have easily cheated. If you weren’t informed in advance that the movie was done in one take, you may not even realize it as the camera person/DP follows the characters up and downstairs, in and out of the house in an incredibly fluid way, barely missing a beat as we go from mundane packing activities to intense horrors. [Directors] Kentis and Lau have done a terrific job creating an atmosphere of tension, keeping the viewer on the edge never knowing what to expect or in fact, what exactly is going on. This helps to make some of the more obvious jump scares work better than they might normally, something that can also be attributed to Nathan Larson’s subtle but effective score. Even so, the filmmakers sadly go for many often-used clich

REVIEW: There’s Some Spooky Stuff in Silent House, But It’s Mostly Just Arthouse Wigwaggery

Silent House is not just a horror film but a Very Important Piece of Social Commentary, as you’ll see when you get to the movie’s third-act twist. In other words, it’s not asking you to watch a terrified woman’s face for some 90 minutes — in sort-of real time, no less — without an allegedly good reason. This is good-for-you, arthouse-style horror. Which doesn’t mean it’s necessarily any good. The gimmick goes like this: A young woman named Sarah (Elizabeth Olsen) is shown rattling around her family’s lake house in a series of long takes designed to give the effect of real time. We see her wandering by the water as if lost in a dream; coming back to the house to greet her father, John (Adam Trese), who’s fixing up the joint with an eye toward selling it; being puzzled when a mysterious dark-haired beauty around her own age, Sophia (played by Julia Taylor Ross), shows up at the front door, reminding her of all the fun times the two had as kids — Sarah can’t seem to remember a thing. But she does tell Sophia, in an extremely obvious bit of horror-helper dialogue, “The phone lines aren’t set up and our cells don’t work out here” — information that will later, of course, prove useful for someone to know. Other stuff happens: For instance, Uncle Peter (Eric Sheffer Stevens), who’s helping his brother and Sarah fix up the house, eyes her with somewhat inappropriate lasciviousness and says, “Look at you — I can’t get over how grown-up you are.” Then Uncle Peter takes off, and Sarah and her dad are left to wander the inky shadows of the old homestead, their faces illuminated only by the camping lanterns they carry around. Minutes later — or is it hours? — Sarah hears a noise upstairs. Dad goes up to investigate, and all seems well until there’s an ominous thunk . Much of the rest of the picture is an extended study of Sarah’s face, which is more often than not twisted into a mask of fear and dread. It takes forever for things to start happening in Silent House . And when they do, you wish they wouldn’t. The picture is a remake of the Uruguayan film La Casa Muda , directed by Gustavo Hernández, which made a mild splash at Cannes a few years back on the basis of the one-shot gimmick. Chris Kentis — who also made the 2003 shark-sadism drama Open Water — and Laura Lau have done the refashioning here, and whatever the movie’s flaws may be, there are stretches that are suitably suspenseful and atmospheric. That’s thanks in part to the picture’s sound design: When we hear footsteps treading perilously close to Sarah, we can tell the wearer is shod in heavy boots with rubbery soles; the sound of a discarded bottle rolling across an uneven wood floor is hollow and mournful; now and then the house groans ever so slightly, as if in denial of the horrors it’s hiding within. But then there’s the music, courtesy of Nathan Larson, which isn’t really music, but more of a low, migrainey hum. And poor Elizabeth Olsen: Her face is luminous and compelling by itself — she doesn’t have to do much. But she has too many unbroken minutes to fill in Silent House : One second she’s grimacing, the next she’s practically biting her wrist to keep from screaming, the next she’s back to grimacing again. Please! There’s only so much an actress can do to fill up these endless long takes. In the end, Silent House just comes off as a highly accomplished bit of arthouse wigwaggery — and a reminder that judicious editing, and not languorous love from the camera, is the actor’s truest friend. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: There’s Some Spooky Stuff in Silent House, But It’s Mostly Just Arthouse Wigwaggery

The CW Casts Carrie Bradshaw!

The CW has tracked down its Carrie Bradshaw. Relatively unknown actress AnnaSophia Robb ( Soul Surfer , Charlie and the Chocolate Factor ) has landed this highly sought after role. She’ll portray a teenage version of the character Sarah Jessica Parker made famous on The Carrie Diaries , an upcoming pilot based on Candance Bushnell’s prequel of a novel. The series will follow around Carrie during her high school days in New York City and be set in the 1980s. It had originally been pitched as a movie – with Blake Lively, Selena Gomez and Elizabeth Olsen in key roles – but The CW swept in a few weeks ago and purchased the television script rights. What do you think of Robb as Carrie Bradshaw?

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The CW Casts Carrie Bradshaw!

2012 Film Independent Spirit Awards — Winners List (Updated)

Movieline’s backstage at the Film Independent Spirit Awards, where Seth Rogen is hosting (and absolutely killing it) at the annual celebration of indie filmmaking, held in a tent on the beach in Santa Monica. Want the irreverent, no holds-barred celeb-skewering monologue that Billy Crystal most certainly will not deliver tomorrow night? Stay tuned for clips of Rogen to hit the airwaves tonight. Meanwhile, follow along on Twitter (at @movieline ) and check back here to see this year’s winners updated as they happen! Winners highlighted in bold below as they happen. BEST SUPPORTING MALE Albert Brooks Drive John Hawkes Martha Marcy May Marlene Christopher Plummer Beginners John C. Reilly Cedar Rapids Corey Stoll Midnight in Paris BEST FIRST SCREENPLAY Mike Cahill, Brit Marling Another Earth J.C. Chandor Margin Call Patrick DeWitt Terri Phil Johnston Cedar Rapids Will Reiser 50/50 BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY Joel Hodge Bellflower Benjamin Kasulke The Off Hours Darius Khondji Midnight in Paris Guillaume Schiffman The Artist Jeffrey Waldron The Dynamiter BEST SUPPORTING FEMALE Jessica Chastain Take Shelter Anjelica Huston 50/50 Janet McTeer Albert Nobbs Harmony Santana Gun Hill Road Shailene Woodley The Descendants JOHN CASSAVETES AWARD Bellflower Circumstance Hello Lonesome Pariah The Dynamiter BEST MALE LEAD Demián Bichir A Better Life Jean Dujardin The Artist Ryan Gosling Drive Woody Harrelson Rampart Michael Shannon Take Shelter BEST DOCUMENTARY An African Election Bill Cunningham New York The Interrupters The Redemption of General Butt Naked We Were Here BEST SCREENPLAY Joseph Cedar Footnote Michel Hazanavicius The Artist Tom McCarthy Win Win Mike Mills Beginners Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon, Jim Rash The Descendants BEST INTERNATIONAL FILM A Separation (Iran) Melancholia (Denmark/Sweden/France/Germany) Shame (UK) The Kid With a Bike (Belgium/France/Italy) Tyrannosaur (UK) ROBERT ALTMAN AWARD Margin Call BEST FIRST FEATURE Another Earth In the Family Margin Call Martha Marcy May Marlene Natural Selection BEST DIRECTOR Michel Hazanavicius The Artist Mike Mills Beginners Jeff Nichols Take Shelter Alexander Payne The Descendants Nicolas Winding Refn Drive BEST FEMALE LEAD Lauren Ambrose Think of Me Rachael Harris Natural Selection Adepero Oduye Pariah Elizabeth Olsen Martha Marcy May Marlene Michelle Williams My Week with Marilyn BEST FEATURE 50/50 Beginners Drive Take Shelter The Artist The Descendants

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2012 Film Independent Spirit Awards — Winners List (Updated)

Last Fast Ride: Celebrity Nudity on DVD and Blu-ray 2.21.12 [PICS]

We’re living on the edge this week on DVD and Blu-ray, with the illicit kicks of Weeds , Season 7 (like Rachel Germiane ‘s “skiing” scene, above), brainwashed wobblers from Elizabeth Olsen in Martha Martha Marcy May Marlene ( 2011), and party girl Anna Friel giving us a see-through turn-on in London Boulevard (2011). Rounding out this heart-stopping thrill ride is legendary punk performer Marian Anderson in Last Fast Ride: The Life, Love and Death of a Punk Goddess (2011), a rock doc that chronicles her wild, weird, frequently undressed life. Also nude on DVD, the French beat Showtime at their own skin-showing game with a European TV version of The Borgias , this one known simply as Borgia . More after the jump!

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Last Fast Ride: Celebrity Nudity on DVD and Blu-ray 2.21.12 [PICS]

Coco Exposes Her Puffs on Twitter [PIC]

Sometimes celebrities “accidentally” tweet naked pictures of themselves (we’re looking at you, Tori Spelling and AnnaLynne McCord ), but Nicole “Coco” Austin is not that kind of girl. No, considering someone else took this topless TwitPic of Ice-T’s main squeeze, there’s no way that Coco was unaware of it…even if she declined to mention the mammaries in her tweet: “1am in LA and my sis, Kristy keeps flashing the camera while me and my nephew,baby Austin,try to sleep..Man, this is a spoiled baby” Wait, so when Coco and her sister babysit, they flash each other before snuggling up naked next to the baby? Where were these topless angels when we were kids (or high school seniors, whatever)? See more of those lovely Coco Puffs in the 2002 flick Angel Blade right here at MrSkin.com!

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Coco Exposes Her Puffs on Twitter [PIC]

Rosie Huntington-Whitely Tides Us Over ‘Til Spring with See-Through Pic [PIC]

Don’t believe the hype machine when it tells you The Descendant s star Shailene Woodley goes topless in the new issue of Vs . Magazine. Sure, technically she’s got no shirt on, but when your back is to the camera we don’t call that “topless” here at Skin Central, we just call it “boring.” No, the real find from this multi-cover issue (which also features covered-sexy shots from Julianne Moore , Elizabeth Olsen , and Helena Christensen ) comes from Transformers: Dark of the Moon (2011) star Rosie-Huntington Whitely , who shows us the dark of her boob through a sheer black nightie. It’s not as good as the topless pics of Rosie that were unearthed last fall, but as long as everything’s coming up Rosie (and we’re coming up looking at her), we’ve got no complaints. Check out more from Victoria’s Secret uber-hottie Rosie Huntington-Whitely right here at MrSkin.com!

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Rosie Huntington-Whitely Tides Us Over ‘Til Spring with See-Through Pic [PIC]