Tag Archives: Kristen Stewart

WATCH: ’10 Years’ Director Jamie Linden On ‘Embracing The Chaos’ Of Channing Tatum & Co.

How do you wrangle a movie set packed with Channing Tatum and dozens of his actor friends playing high school classmates catching up, knocking a few back, reuniting with lost loves, reliving teenage hell, and experiencing the awesome-to-mortifying highlights of any class reunion? You “embrace the chaos,” says 10 Years director Jamie Linden ( Dear John ). “There were 15 28-year-old actors running rampant,” he explains in Movieline’s exclusive clip from the 10 Years DVD/Blu-ray, in stores today. “There wasn’t much of a way to keep control.” But Linden put the chaos to good use, filtering that ensemble energy into the film, which plays out over the course of one night as Jake (Tatum) comes face to face with the one that got away while his old classmates (Chris Pratt, Justin Long, Kate Mara, Oscar Isaac, Scott Porter, Brian Geraghty, Anthony Mackie, Max Minghella, Aaron Yoo, Lynn Collins, Ari Graynor) deal with their own drama. If you missed the indie pic in theaters, now’s a good time to catch up. Not only does it feature just about every single rising star of young Hollywood (in addition to the above: Jenna Dewan-Tatum , Aubrey Plaza, Nick Zano, Ron Livingston, and Rosario Dawson), it rounds out the year that marks Tatum’s graduation from heartthrob to legit thespian. Plus, there’s a lot of love between the cast evident onscreen and it features a karaoke after party in a dive bar called Pretzels, which exists in real life , and has 35-cent wing Tuesdays, so let’s all head there now mmkay? And for you Oscar Isaac fans (so, everyone): He plays guitar and sings. Prepare to swoon. Check out more behind the scenes clips on the 10 Years DVD/Blu-ray release, out today. RELATED: Jenna Dewan-Tatum on High School Reunion Indie ‘Ten Years’ And Life A Decade Ago: ‘I Was A Bit Naïve’ Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

The rest is here:
WATCH: ’10 Years’ Director Jamie Linden On ‘Embracing The Chaos’ Of Channing Tatum & Co.

Kristen Stewart Goes ‘On The Road’ & Chats Up Her Racy Role

Kristen Stewart fans have undoubtedly waved a tearful good bye to the character that introduced her to most of her legions of admirers with the final Twilight installment, which opened to massive fanfare last month. While the saga may have been her longest running (and certainly highest paying) gig to date, few know that she vested a lot of time and heart into playing free-spirit Marylou in director Walter Salles’ On The Road , which opens Friday in limited release. Stewart committed to the role before she could legally drive and stuck with the project even as she rose to super-stardom courtesy of Bella and that band of Northwest vampires that captured the hearts and minds of many a tween, teen and beyond. In the film version of one of the most celebrated works of 20th Century American literature written by Jack Kerouac, Stewart plays the unconventional and racy Marylou, the former wife and still frequent lover of Dean Moriarty, a fast-talking charismatic with an insatiable libido. Dean and best friend Sal (Sam Riley), a young writer whose life is shaken after Dean’s arrival, take to the road. Marylou frequently accompanies Sal and Dean’s travels across the country in adventures fueled by sex, drugs and the pursuit of the ” It ” — a quest for understanding and personal fulfillment. [ Editor’s Note : Movieline spoke with Stewart who shared her thoughts on her character’s “hard love,” how she grew into Marylou and how this was the “biggest experience” she’s had on a set. This interview was first published in full during AFI Fest in early November where On The Road had its U.S. premiere. It is being re-published today ahead of its theatrical roll out starting this weekend via IFC Films. M.L. will publish interviews with On The Road co-star Garrett Hedlund and director Walter Salles later this week .] So what was your road to On the Road? I was 14 or 15 when I first met Walter Salles. I spoke to him when I was 17, I think I may have shot the first Twilight, I’m not sure — possibly I was about to go do it. At first I was talking about playing another part, so it’s been a long time coming. I don’t know how I was able to get around that kind of energy, but to convey that I loved this thing in the way [Walter Salles] does and as soon as you get around that energy it passes between you, nothing really needs to be said. I got the job on the spot, and I drove away just vibrating. I was like, ‘Are you kidding me?’ Plus I was very young, I wasn’t quite old enough for the part yet. When I read the book many years ago, I found it sprawling and didn’t seem to have elements that would make it translatable to the screen — at least I remember thinking that at the time. What did you think of the book when you first read it? I was reading it for school, so I had to read it. I did independent study when I was in high school. I remember, I took so long to read the book. All I had to do was read it and write a report, it wasn’t like I had to do an intensive study of the book, and it took me months and months — I was late. But, I think my teacher was OK with it because I think ultimately the paper was good. But, people say it’s different when you read it at different ages — but for me at the time, it was fun! At that age you start realizing you have a choice in who you surround yourself with. Up until that point, you’re just around circumstantially who you’re with — your family or whatever — but at that point you can start choose your family, and I’ve got a great family by the way. But I mean just the people you decide to surround yourself with. I don’t want to sound cliché, but people should pull something out of you that would otherwise remain unseen. And when I read the book I thought, ‘Gosh, I need to find people like that.’ I’m definitely not [my character, Marylou’s] type. As I continued reading it and got older, the weight of it started to mean more. I was totally enamored by the colors and the way he wrote it and jumped over words and how it read like a song. Then when I did the movie, to play a part like Marylou — she’s very vivid. She’s very colorful and interesting and on the periphery so you don’t know how and why she can do the things that she does. By the time it came to bringing it to life, I didn’t want to play just a crazy, wild sexy girl. I wanted to apply all the whys and get to know the people behind the characters. There’s a weight to it. It’s not easy to live a life like that. That’s what makes these people kind of remarkable. It’s a give and take. There’s no way to have this without pain, but they’re not frivolous, they can feel it… Marylou’s a forward thinking progressive soul, but she’s also surrounded by this situation with her ongoing yet ever-changing situation with her ex-husband, Dean, who is still an emotional roller coaster, both for himself and her. Did you ever judge her in respect to why she’d tolerate him for so long? No, I never had done so. I always wondered how she could take it. How deep is that well? How much can you give and how much can you let be taken from you? What I found about her is that she’s very unique to her time, but nowadays she’d be something else. Her capacity to see everyone’s flaws and appreciate them is really unbelievable. Any interview we did with anyone who was involved with them [before doing the movie] always said the same thing — that she was such a wonderful woman. She’s infectiously amazing. So, no I didn’t judge her. So then, how would you describe the relationship between your character, Marylou and Dean? They really are simpatico. It’s tumultuous. It’s hard to love like that. But they’re so in love with each other. You don’t know this from reading the book, but they stayed lovers until the end of his life. He kind of raised her and she always had a place in his heart, though I think the capacity was so enormous that there were also others in that heart, but she was at the center. And the same goes the other way around. I think they helped each other grow up and they raised each other. Undoubtedly some of your Twilight fans will be curious to see you doing something outside of Bella and this may be for many their first chance. How do you hope they’ll approach seeing this film? Well, I mean you just walk into a theater [laughs]… I think if I can have anything to do with just one person that would not have otherwise read On The Road, then that would be incredible and I’m very happy to be a part of that. I think that if you have any inclination of seeing this being a Twilight fan, I have to say I don’t have much control over the things that I choose because I do need to feel compelled to do the roles that I do. I very rarely tactfully think about my career and how people are going to perceive it and I think that’s what people appreciate and if that’s not the case, then it’s kind of like — um, that’s not going to go away. It’s a false thing. I think people will really like it and if you didn’t like the book, then don’t watch the movie. You know what I mean? However anyone wants to interpret it is all good with me. People describe On the Road as a “watershed moment” in American culture in that it upended the strict conservative culture that prevailed in the 1950s in the U.S. So from your perspective as a 20-something, how do you see it as relevant culturally today? I think this is a good time to see this story visually because most people can watch it and not be shocked by it as they might have before. Back then, it would have been so shocking to see people doing drugs and having sex that they wouldn’t have seen the spirit behind it — the message behind it would have been [diluted]. Though, maybe it would have been good because it would have forced people to look. But maybe they weren’t able to yet. There’s always going to be conflicting intuitions that might not even go together, but these are people who have the strength to be OK with people disagreeing. At that stage of your life, there’s so much ahead of you — at least it feels that way. The reach is so important even if something is unbeknownst to you, but you feel compelled to find out what it is… Don’t ignore it! At that age, it’s important to have a faith in feelings you can’t articulate because at some point you need to hold onto them. And these guys found a word for that, it’s the “It” and I don’t think that’s ever going to go away. So what is that ” It “? How would you describe the It? [Laughs] Trust me, we’ve talked about that so much… It’s the pearl. It’s that thing that makes your life bounce. I think if we knew it… I honestly think it’s an individual thing, but if something is funny to you and you’re alone you can smirk at it or whatever, but suddenly if you’re with a lot of people that also find it funny, you can be hysterically laughing. There’s something about life that you can’t completely describe. It also goes along with not ignoring that burn and going, ‘OK, I’m content right now to be smart and conservative and hold onto what I’ve got.’ I just think it’s important to keep going for it. How has your experience playing Marylou or in On the Road generally influenced your life professionally or personally? You said you’ve been a part of this project for a long time, so you’ve had quite a turn at experiencing this culture even as you took on other roles including, of course, Twilight . It was the most time I’ve ever spent feeling. Twilight was a good five years and was a very indulgent creative experience. [Most projects] are usually only about five weeks, three months or six months tops. But because I was attached to On the Road so long, the build up and pressure inside by the time we go there was just bigger than anything I’ve ever felt on a set. We had four weeks of proving that we were so thankful and happy to be there because we’re all fans of the book, but we had put in the work and we knew the purpose and the weight of it and how so important it is to so many people. It’s all to Walter [Salles’] credit, but if anything, what this has taught me is that if you stop thinking and just breathe through it, you’re such a better actor. You just have to put in the initial work and then not become too analytical because you have to trust that you’ve already done it all. So it’s opened me up in a way that’s appropriate to my age. I’m just a bit less inhibited. Just being able to not think so much before you speak is good. It has helped me in that way. It’s not being less shameful, it’s just being so much more unabashedly myself. I think that all started when I was 15. I can be around people and say what I think and have a conversation with a stranger and it’s all good. Follow Brian Brooks on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

View post:
Kristen Stewart Goes ‘On The Road’ & Chats Up Her Racy Role

Emblem3 Have ‘Joy Overflowing’ After Surprise ‘X Factor’ Elimination

‘Simon has just made it pretty clear to us that he is interested in working with us after the show,’ Emblem3’s Drew Chadwick reveals to MTV News. By Chris Kim Emblem3 Photo: MTV News

Read the original here:
Emblem3 Have ‘Joy Overflowing’ After Surprise ‘X Factor’ Elimination

Kristen Stewart Turns Her ‘Focus’ To Post-‘Twilight’ Flicks

Stewart weighs in her role alongside Ben Affleck in ‘Focus’ and plans for a ‘Snow White’ sequel. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Kristen Stewart Photo: MTV News

Read more:
Kristen Stewart Turns Her ‘Focus’ To Post-‘Twilight’ Flicks

WATCH: Kristen Stewart Talks About ‘The Honor’ Of Walter Salles’ ‘On The Road’ & Her Character’s Hungry Heart

Kristen Stewart says it was director Walter Salles’  passion for On The Road   that inspired her to sign on for the film. At the New York premiere for the film, the actress, who plays free-spirited Marylou  (a character based on Beat icon Neal Cassady’s onetime wife LuAnne Henderson), Stewart told me she was impressed by the immersive research that Salles did — including a 2011 documentary called Searching for On The Road — in preparation for adapting Jack Kerouac’s novel for the screen.  “There’s an honor to this story and to the project that is not typical in our business,” Stewart said. Salles is lucky to have her riding shotgun, too.  Hollywood has been trying to turn  On the Road into a movie since the year it was published, 1957, and Stewart’s immense star power was crucial to getting the job done. RELATED: Check out Movieline’s photo gallery of Kristen Stewart and Garrett Hedlund at the On The Road screening at AFI Fest  Salles also talked to me at the premiere as did cast members Sam Riley , Garrett Hedlund and Kirsten Dunst and screenwriter Jose Rivera. It was fun to congratulate him for getting top billing on the movie poster — a rare thing indeed for writers in Hollywood. Check out my full interview below: MORE ON KRISTEN: Kristen Stewart Shares How ‘On The Road’ Helped Her Be Unabashedly Herself Kristen Stewart Talks ‘Hard Love’ In Toronto For  On The Road Kristen Stewart Tells Toronto Her Character’s Ability To ‘Love So Openly’ Was Difficult, Nude Scenes Not So Much Follow Movieline on  Twitter  .  Follow Grace Randolph on  Twitter  .

Read the original:
WATCH: Kristen Stewart Talks About ‘The Honor’ Of Walter Salles’ ‘On The Road’ & Her Character’s Hungry Heart

Kristen Stewart’s Outfit of the Day

Interesting…. which is saying a lot for Kirsten Stewart…who usually has the personality of a MONKEY SPANKER …. I mean seriously, I don’t think I’ve ever said she’s interesting…even when promoting her tits in On the Road as she tries to re-invent herself … and I love when girls re-invent themselves by showing their tits… I didn’t care about her fake relationship, her fake cheating, her fake incest with her dad….all if it was sooo boring…because she’s dull and even insane, outrageous, futuristic space dresses don’t change that fact… TO SEE THE REST OF ThE PICS TARGET=”_blank”> FOLLOW ThIS LINK

Continued here:
Kristen Stewart’s Outfit of the Day

Kristen Stewart’s Outfit of the Day

Interesting…. which is saying a lot for Kirsten Stewart…who usually has the personality of a MONKEY SPANKER …. I mean seriously, I don’t think I’ve ever said she’s interesting…even when promoting her tits in On the Road as she tries to re-invent herself … and I love when girls re-invent themselves by showing their tits… I didn’t care about her fake relationship, her fake cheating, her fake incest with her dad….all if it was sooo boring…because she’s dull and even insane, outrageous, futuristic space dresses don’t change that fact… TO SEE THE REST OF ThE PICS TARGET=”_blank”> FOLLOW ThIS LINK

Continued here:
Kristen Stewart’s Outfit of the Day

Kristen Stewart’s Sexy See Through Outfit

Now that the Twilight movies are over, Kristen Stewart must know that her 15 minutes could run out any day now, which probably explains why she’s been stepping up her game lately. Here she is going see-through for the On the Road premiere, and I hear you get to see a whole lot more of Kristen in the actual movie. Apparently, for most of it, she’s wearing nothing but a scowl. Hot. » view all 13 photos Related Articles: Kristen Stewart Does Toronto Kristen Stewart’s Golfing Short Shorts Kristen Stewart Fills Out A T-Shirt Nicely Kristen Stewart Flashes Her Angry Face Photos: WENN.com

See the article here:
Kristen Stewart’s Sexy See Through Outfit

Kristen Stewart’s Sexy See Through Outfit

Now that the Twilight movies are over, Kristen Stewart must know that her 15 minutes could run out any day now, which probably explains why she’s been stepping up her game lately. Here she is going see-through for the On the Road premiere, and I hear you get to see a whole lot more of Kristen in the actual movie. Apparently, for most of it, she’s wearing nothing but a scowl. Hot. » view all 13 photos Related Articles: Kristen Stewart Does Toronto Kristen Stewart’s Golfing Short Shorts Kristen Stewart Fills Out A T-Shirt Nicely Kristen Stewart Flashes Her Angry Face Photos: WENN.com

See the article here:
Kristen Stewart’s Sexy See Through Outfit

Dude-Where Is My Stylist? Kristen Stewart Rocks Her Trampire Twat Steez To The Premiere Of “On The Road”

What the hell is this broad wearing?!? Kristen Stewarts Wears Hideous Sheer Dress To “On The Road” Premiere According to TMZ reports : A confused Kristen Stewart must have thought she was walking the worst ever Victoria’s Secret runway show, because she showed up to the NYC premiere of “On the Road” in this bizarre retro bra and panty sheer paneled dress thing last night. Although the hot neon Christian Louboutin heels are fierce — but perhaps slightly too big — they do nothing for the unfortunate Erdem smock. While KStew is back with Robert Pattinson, she may now want to break up with her stylist and re-issue her infamous apology, “I’m deeply sorry for the hurt and embarrassment I’ve caused to those close to me and everyone this has affected.” On a positive note, at least the 22-year-old can finally say “Twilight” is no longer the worst thing she’s ever been in. Kristen looks like a crack slore in a Japanese cartoon. That is all. Check out more pics of her struggle below. Images via SplashNews

Go here to read the rest:
Dude-Where Is My Stylist? Kristen Stewart Rocks Her Trampire Twat Steez To The Premiere Of “On The Road”