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REVIEW: Hathaway’s A Dream But ‘Les Misérables’ Doesn’t Sing

As a faithful rendering of a justly beloved musical, Les Misérables  will more than satisfy the show’s legions of fans. Even so, director Tom Hooper and the producers have taken a number of artistic liberties with this lavish bigscreen interpretation. The squalor and upheaval of early 19th-century France are conveyed with a vividness that would have made Victor Hugo proud, heightened by the raw, hungry intensity of the actors’ live on-camera vocals.  Yet for all its expected highs, the adaptation has been managed with more gusto than grace; at the end of the day, this impassioned epic too often topples beneath the weight of its own grandiosity. The Universal release will nonetheless be a major worldwide draw through the holidays and beyond, spelling a happy commercial ending for a project that has been in development for roughly a quarter-century. Since its 1985 London premiere, the Cameron Mackintosh-produced tuner (adapted from Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schoenberg’s French production) has became one of the longest-running acts in legit history, outpaced only by The Phantom of the Opera and Cats.   Les Misérables  has aged far more gracefully than those two ’80s-spawned perennials, owing largely to the lush emotionalism of Schoenberg’s score, the timeless sentiments articulated in Herbert Kretzmer’s lyrics, and the socially conscious themes, arguably more relevant than ever, set forth in Hugo’s much-filmed masterwork. In an intuitive yet bold scripting decision, scribes William Nicholson, Boublil, Schoenberg and Kretzmer have fully retained the show’s sung-through structure, with only minimal spoken dialogue to break the flow of wall-to-wall music. Not for nothing is “Do You Hear the People Sing?” the piece’s signature anthem; song is the characters’ natural idiom and the story’s lifeblood, and the filmmakers grasp this idea firmly enough to give the music its proper due. Even with some of the lyrics skillfully truncated, this mighty score remains the engine that propels the narrative forward. In visual terms, Hooper adopts a maximalist approach, attacking the material with a vigor and dynamism that suggest his Oscar-winning direction on The King’s Speech was just a warm-up. At every turn, one senses the filmmaker trying to honor the material and also transcend it, to deliver the most vibrant, atmospheric, physically imposing and emotionally shattering reading of the show imaginable. Yet the effect of this mammoth 158-minute production can be as enervating as it is exhilarating; blending gritty realism and pure artifice, shifting from solos of almost prayerful stillness to brassy, clunkily cut-together ensemble numbers, it’s an experience whose many dazzling parts seem strangely at odds. The film’s ambition is immediately apparent in a muscular opening setpiece that hints at the scope of Eve Stewart’s production design: In 1815 Toulon, France, a chain gang labors to tow a ship into port. Among the inmates is Jean Valjean ( Hugh Jackman ), overpunished for having stolen a loaf of bread nearly 20 years earlier, now being released on parole by Javert ( Russell Crowe ), the prison guard who will persecute him for years to come. With his scraggly beard, sunburnt skin and air of wild-eyed desperation, Valjean looks every inch a man condemned but, through the aid of a kind bishop (Colm Wilkinson, who originated the role of Valjean in 1985), vows in his soul-searching number “What Have I Done?” to become a man of virtue. In this and other sequences, Hooper (again working with Speech d.p. Danny Cohen) opts to bring the camera close to his downtrodden characters and hold it there. It’s a gesture at once compassionate and calculated, and it’s never more effective than when it touches the face of Fantine (Anne Hathaway ), a poor, unwed mother ejected from Valjean’s factory into the gutters. Hathaway’s turn is brief but galvanic. Her rendition of “I Dreamed a Dream,” captured in a single take, represents the picture’s high point, an extraordinary distillation of anguish, defiance and barely flickering hope in which the lyrics seem to choke forth like barely suppressed howls of grief. Hathaway has been ripe for a full-blown tuner showcase ever since she gamely sang a duet with Jackman at the Oscars in 2009, and she fulfills that promise here with a solo as musically adept as it is powerfully felt. This sequence fully reveals the advantages of Hooper’s decision to have the thesps sing directly on-camera, with minimal dubbing and tweaking in post. As carefully calibrated with the orchestrations (by Anne Dudley and Stephen Metcalfe) in Simon Hayes’ excellent sound mix, the vocals sound intense, ragged and clenched with feeling, in a way that at times suggests neorealist opera. A few beats and notes may be missed here and there, but always in a way that serves the immediacy of the moment and the truth of the emotions being expressed, giving clear voice to the drama’s underlying anger and advocacy on behalf of the poor, marginalized and misunderstood. Hathaway’s exit leaves a hole in the picture, which undergoes a tricky tonal shift as Valjean rescues Fantine’s young daughter, Cosette (Isabelle Allen), from her cruel guardians, the Thenardiers. Inhabited with witchy, twitchy comic abandon by Sacha Baron Cohen and Helena Bonham Carter, not terribly far removed from the grotesques they played in “Sweeney Todd,” these innkeepers amusingly send up their venal, disreputable and utterly unsanitary lifestyle in “Master of the House,” a memorably grotesque number that also marks the point, barely halfway through, when Les Misérables  starts to splutter. As it shifts from one dynamically slanted camera angle to another via Melanie Ann Oliver and Chris Dickens’ busy editing, the picture seems reluctant to slow down and let the viewer simply take in the performances. That hectic, cluttered quality becomes more pronounced as the story lurches ahead to the 1832 Paris student uprisings, where the erection of a barricade precipitates and complicates any number of subplots. These include Javert’s ongoing pursuit of Valjean, their frequent run-ins seeming even more coincidental than usual in this movie context; the blossoming romance between Cosette (now played by Amanda Seyfried ) and young revolutionary leader Marius ( Eddie Redmayne ); and the noble suffering of Eponine ( Samantha Barks ), whose unrequited love for Marius is heartbreakingly exalted in “On My Own.” As the characters’ voices and stories converge in the magisterial medley “One Day More,” the frequent crosscutting provides a reasonable visual equivalent of the nimble revolving sets used onstage. Yet even on this broader canvas, the visual space seems to constrict rather than expand, and the sense of a sweeping panorama remains elusive. From there, the film proceeds through an ungainly pileup of gun-waving mayhem before unleashing a powerful surge of emotion in the suitably grand finale. Devotees of the stage show will nonetheless be largely contented to see it realized on such an enormous scale and inhabited by well-known actors who also happen to possess strong vocal chops. The revelation here is Redmayne, who brings a youthful spark to the potentially milquetoast role of Marius, and who reveals an exceptionally smooth, full-bodied singing voice, particularly in his mournful solo “Empty Chairs at Empty Tables.” Jackman’s extensive legit resume made him no-brainer casting for Valjean, and he embodies this sinner-turned-saint with the requisite fire and gravitas. Whether he’s comforting the dying Fantine or sweetly serenading the sleeping Cosette (in the moving “Suddenly,” a song written expressly for the screen), Jackman projects a stirring warmth and nobility. He’s less at home with the higher register of Valjean’s daunting two-octave range; there’s more strain than soul in his performance of “Bring Him Home,” usually one of the show’s peak moments. Crowe reveals a thinner, less forceful singing voice than those of his co-stars, robbing the morally blinkered Javert of some dramatic stature, although his screen presence compensates. Barks, a film newcomer wisely retained from past stagings, more than holds her own; Seyfried (who previously flexed her musical muscles in Mamma Mia!) croons ever so sweetly as the lovely, passive Cosette; Aaron Tveit cuts a dashing figure as the impulsive student revolutionary Enjolras; and young Daniel Huttlestone makes a delightful impression as the street urchin Gavroche, bringing an impish streak of energy to the proceedings. More on Les Mis:  Jackman, Hathaway & Co-Stars Are Masters Of The House At ‘Les Misérables’ Premiere Early Reaction: Oscar Race Heats Up As NYC Screening Of ‘Les Miserables’ Prompts Cheers & Tears Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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REVIEW: Hathaway’s A Dream But ‘Les Misérables’ Doesn’t Sing

The Mystery Of Maya: Jessica Chastain Never Met The Agent She Plays In ‘Zero Dark Thirty’

Maya is staying undercover. At a press conference for Zero Dark Thirty , the film’s star Jessica Chastain , who plays the resourceful and indefatigable CIA agent who tracks down Osama bin Laden said that she never met the agent who inspired her role. “I never met Maya because she’s an undercover CIA agent — it would not have been a good thing to do,” said Chastain , who said that she based her performance on the research she was given by the film’s screenwriter, investigative journalist Mark Boal . That research included reading Lawrence Wright’s The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and The Road to 9/11 and immersing herself in the surroundings of her onscreen job. “I had the props person print out all of the photographs of the terrorists and I hung them in my room at the hotel,” she said. (The production shot in Jordan and India.)  “So even when I’d come home from the set, they were always around me.” Given the unavailability of Maya, Chastain said, “I had to approach [the role] like any other character I’ve played,” explained, adding that when it came to “questions that I couldn’t answer through the research, I had to use my imagination, [director] Kathryn [Bigelow]’s imagination and Mark’s to create a character that went along the lines that respected the real woman.” The actress, who’s currently starring on Broadway in the period piece The Heiress, said that the fearless, intelligent and extremely independent character she plays in Zero Dark Thirty “represents this generation of woman, and that was really exciting.” Chastain has generated strong Oscar buzz for her intense, flinty portrayal of the always-analytical Maya, and she explained that her character’s emotional reserve was, in many ways, antithetical to the work that she does. Describing herself as a “smiley,” “very sensitive and very emotional girl,”  the red-headed beauty said that “as an actor, you spend your whole life trying to be emotional and keeping yourself emotionally open.  So, to find [Maya’s] humanity within that arc was a great feat that would have been impossible without Kathryn and Mark’s leadership.” Boal also refused to talk about the real-life inspirations for his characters saying that “many of them are still working and we take protecting their identities very seriously.” Of Maya, he said only: “I want to emphasize that it’s a character in a film, but based on a real person.” Bigelow, who also participated in the press conference, took pains to explain that the hero of Zero Dark Thirty is a woman thanks to history not a feminist agenda. “It’s extraordinary that women were pivotal, but it’s also that those were the facts. That’s the hand we were dealt. And that’s how we chose to deal with the story,” Bigelow said. “The most important element of it was keeping the truth of the story. That’s what drove me. That’s what motivated me.” Related Stories: ‘Zero Dark Thirty’: Strong Women, Ambiguous Ethics Drive Bigelow’s Oscar Pic ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ Takes Top National Board Of Review Honors NY Film Critics Circle Spices Up Oscar Race With ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ Best Picture Pick Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter.  Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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The Mystery Of Maya: Jessica Chastain Never Met The Agent She Plays In ‘Zero Dark Thirty’

We Need To Talk About John Travolta & Olivia Newton-John’s New Christmas Video (With Lyrics)

Hark! Christmas came early today, and in the form of a song delivered from on high by former Grease buddies and rockin’ Xmas angels John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John . In the video for the first holiday jam from their new joint album This Christmas , Travolta and O N-J hug and line-dance and drink hot cocoa while crying during It’s A Wonderful Life , which is an actual line in the song and OH MY GOD I can’t look away so just watch it now. (I took the liberty of transcribing the lyrics below. You’re welcome.) “I Think You Might Like It,” the only original tune on the duo’s new yuletide album, was penned by songwriter/Newton-John producer John Farrar , who wrote the chart-topping Grease duet “You’re The One That I Want,” along with the underappreciated power-pining ballad “Hopelessly Devoted To You” and Newton-John’s Xanadu jam “Magic.” In other words, Farrar is a proven musical maestro and it’s only a matter of time before “I Think You Might Like It” cheeses its way into your stone-cold hearts. Promoting the album on Ellen , Travolta revealed another tidbit about his personal relationship with Christmas: He really loves hot cocoa. “It represents winter wonderlands, it represents Christmas,” he said, which explains why he COLLECTS HOT COCOA POWDER FROM DIFFERENT COUNTRIES . “I’ve collected various types of cocoa from around the world,” he said, offering up a sniff of Brazilian cocoa powder to demonstrate the “hint of cinnamon and pepper” that differentiates it from cocoa from Germany, Australia and so on. (Travolta will donate his artist proceeds to the Jett Travolta Foundation, named after his late son, while Newton-John’s portion will go to her own Olivia Newton-John Cancer & Wellness Centre , so I’ll allow him this not strange at all hot cocoa fixation.) Now, the video. Prepare yourself for three glorious minutes of, in order: – John Travolta flying his airplane home to Newton-John, because he’s a pilot – John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John toe-tapping in unison with their thumbs in their belt loops – A John Travolta soul patch. A JOHN TRAVOLTA SOUL PATCH! – Olivia Newton-John “driving” with “Christmas presents” propped oh-so-naturally in the passenger seat – More line-dancing – THIS: – John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John singin’ about “makin’ love all night” and cryin’ while his actual IRL wife Kelly Preston walks into what looks like the lobby of an Alamo Rent-a-Car with a baby on her hip and whoa , DEEP THOUGHT: Is this song really about polygamy? Is the “it” in question that she might like his “special” holiday package, WINK WINK?? Discuss . – Troops coming home from deployment for the holidays, because of course – More line-dancing – The saddest happy pity hug of all time Everybody now! Sing along all month-long! Your friends and family and everyone within earshot will love you for it, trust me. **Some lyrics are incomplete because I couldn’t make them out through JT & ON-J’s cheer-tastic warbling. So help a sister out in the comments. “I Think You Might Like It” Here comes my hometown So good to get my wheels down I’m comin’ home toni-i-i-ight Here comes that magical smell of Christmas Eve There’s nothin’ you can do-oo But wearing your heart on your sleeve My mind is go-in’ A little crazy knowin’ You’re comin’ home toni-i-i-ight I can’t help smilin’ to strangers on my street I’m singing to myself, tripping over my own feet I’m comin’ ho-ome CHORUS: I’ve got a little plan for you, I think you might like it Let’s do the little dance we do, I think you might like it The we’re gonna hide away, makin’ love all night We can cry tomorrow watching It’s a Wonderful Life ( Line-dancing interlude ) Ooooo-ooo-oooh, I think you might like it Oh baby I kinda like So many gonna (unintelligible) You’re comin’ home toni-i-i-ight Your mama sings sweetly, “Do You Hear What I Hear?” But in a little while she’ll be swinging from a chandelier No stopping Aunt Louise Ticklin’ the ivories I’m comin’ home toni-i-i-ight Whole town’s gonna be there It will be a squeeze You’d better put your sleigh in a holdin’ pattern, Santa please I’m comin’ ho-ome CHORUS: I’ve got a little plan for you, I think you might like it Let’s do the little dance we do, I think you might like it Then we’re gonna hide away, makin’ love all night We can cry tomorrow watching It’s A Wonderful Life I’ve got a little plan for you ( I like it ) Let’s do the little dance we do ( I like it ) Then we’re gonna hide away, making love all night Unison: And we can cry tomorrow watching It’s a Wonderful Life Let’s do the little dance we do I think you mi-ight like it (Spoken): I like it MERRY CHRISTMAS, WORLD! Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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We Need To Talk About John Travolta & Olivia Newton-John’s New Christmas Video (With Lyrics)

Jackman, Hathaway & Co-Stars Are Masters Of The House At London ‘Les Misérables’ Premiere

Fans stormed London’s Leicester Square to join the revolution on Wednesday night: the world premiere of   Les Misérables . The barricades were up, not to hold back National Guardsmen but to restrain fans who who turned up to salute the movie’s lead  Hugh Jackman , Londoner (and the movie’s Marius), Eddie Redmayne  and the rest of the main cast.  Lovely Ladies Anne Hathaway , Amanda Seyfried and   Samantha Barks ,who has played Eponine both on stage and, now, on screen, were all smiles as they stalked the red carpet, the dark days of their Parisian revolt a distant dream. Master of the House, director Tom Hooper , accompanied comrade and legendary theater producer Sir Cameron MacKintoshto the premiere, as well as Russell Crowe , who portrays the saga’s relentless Inspector Javert. The cast confirmed that the movie’s multi-camera, live-recorded singing made filming more laborious than usual, at times resulting in dozens of takes. Some malfunctioning mechanical butterflies didn’t help either. Redmayne said that while he and Amanda Seyfried were filming their “A Heart Full of Love” duet, “Tom became obsessed with the stunt butterflies. There were moments where Amanda and I would do these incredibly intense takes of newfound love, and Tom would say, ‘Yeah, it was great, but the butterflies…'” Barks recalled enduring many sodden takes of singing ” On My Own ” in the rain. “There was a big rain machine which followed me around for a lot of the film. Sometimes I’d arrive on set and they’d have to hose me down,” she recalled. “After the rain, you get so cold, your teeth start to chatter and they say, ‘We’re picking up on a weird sound, what’s that?’ So I’d chatter, ‘It’s my teeth!’” When Hooper wasn’t preoccupied with the butterflies, he devoted plenty of attention to the rain machine, presumably from his eternally dry director’s chair, “The geek in me enjoyed having to come up with the solution of how to do silent rain” so it wouldn’t interfere with the live singing,  the director explained, adding: “By the end the rain was quiet.”  Hooper said it took “six months of researching to do rain with with no noise” and after finally achieving “our dream,” as he put it, “we had to put the rain sound back in during the sound mixing.” After their near-freezing stint on the red carpet, all guests stepped inside the warm sanctuary of the Leicester Square Odeon for the movie, after which Hooper invited everybody to drink with him in North London, at Camden’s Roundhouse until late. Related Stories:  Early Reaction: Oscar Race Heats Up As NYC Screening Of ‘Les Miserables’ Prompts Cheers & Tears Handicapping The Performances Of ‘Les Misérables’ — Who Will Dazzle In the Movie Musical? Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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Jackman, Hathaway & Co-Stars Are Masters Of The House At London ‘Les Misérables’ Premiere

Mel Gibson and Jodie Foster play poker for a good cause – Hollywood.TV

http://www.youtube.com/v/SyM4Z8bFu-k?version=3&f=user_uploads&app=youtube_gdata

Hollywood.TV is your source for all the latest celebrity news, gossip and videos of your favorite stars! bit.ly – Click to Subscribe! Facebook.com – Become a Fan! Twitter.com – Follow Us! Robert Downey Jr., Mel Gibson and Jodie Foster are just a few of the stars who stepped out for the Mending Kids International “Four Kings & an Ace” Celebrity Poker tournament at the London Hotel Saturday. They were all there to raise money for the charity, a California- based nonprofit that provides pediatric surgeries to children in developing countries. The stars took time to talk about the great cause of “Mending Kids International” and their holiday plans before the tournament kicked off. Hollywood.TV is one of the top celebrity news providers in the world. Since 2008, Hollywood.TV has been bringing all the latest celebrity news, interviews, gossip, and candid videos to viewers all over the world. HTV is on the job 24/7, and at all the best festivals from Sundance to Coachella, as well as on the streets every day to cover the hottest celebs in Hollywood, New York, and Miami. Hollywood.TV is currently the third most viewed reporter channel on www.youtube.com YouTube with almost 400 million views, and our footage is seen worldwide! Tune in daily for all the latest Hollywood news on www.hollywood.tv and http like us on Facebook!

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Mel Gibson and Jodie Foster play poker for a good cause – Hollywood.TV

Rita Ora and Rob Kardashian: It’s Over!

It’s all over for Rita Ora and Rob Kardashian . Describing the split as “really sad,” a source tells The Sun that the reality star and singer “really liked each other, but with him living in LA and her over in London, it was becoming impossible to maintain a relationship.” And if an anonymous quote isn’t enough confirmation for you, there’s this: Rob has unfollowed Rita on Twitter!!! The couple had been dating for over a year, but it never sounded like Ora received full approval for E!’s most famous family. In August, well aware of her brother’s status, Kim Kardashian Tweeted: “When out to dinner w my brother Rob Kardashian every gorgeous persian/armenian girl stares at Rob! I think that’s what he needs in his life!” Consider yourself lucky, Rita. You could have actually been a part of this publicity-generating nonsense. UPDATE : Rob has seemingly made the basis for their split clear, Tweeting this morning: “She cheated on me with nearly 20 dudes while we were together, I wonder how many she will sleep with now that we apart… How can a woman who is so busy trying to start her own career have time to be with so many dudes all while in a relationship?” Poor guy.

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Rita Ora and Rob Kardashian: It’s Over!

Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart: A Work in Progress

Yes, Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart are most definitely back together, a new report confirms. But that doesn’t mean all things Robsten are rosy and bright these days. A source tells Us Weekly that the pair spend Thanksgiving with Robert’s family in London, but Pattinson is still hesitant to fully commit to the relationship. “Rob is at a point where he sometimes ignores her,” the tabloid alleges. “He’ll go out and won’t respond to her calls or texts right away. Things will be strained for a while.” How is Stewart reacting to these changes in moods? Says the same source: “She knows she has to go along with it. She is working hard at the relationship.” But this is the real question: How will the couple survive when Stewart wrecks Ben Affleck’s marriage ? It could be tough to bounce back from that one.

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Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart: A Work in Progress

Elsewhere In The World: Japanese Airline To Begin Offering KFC To Passengers During Flight

Japanese Airline Offers Kentucky Fried Chicken To Passengers During Flight Would you like to fly the friendly skies while enjoying a fried chicken dinner and a side of watermelon ? Well if you fly Japan Airlines next month, you’ll get your chance. via Fox News Japan Airlines is partnering with KFC to take fried chicken to great new heights –and just in time for the holidays. Japan Airlines announced that meals of a drumstick, chicken breast, flat bread, coleslaw and “special mayonnaise” will be served to passengers on select trips out of Narita Airport from Dec. 1 through Feb. 28. “Air Kentucky”, as the airline is calling it, will be served in packaging made exclusively for the airline during the second meal on flights to the cities of New York, San Diego, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles, London, Frankfurt and Paris. We actually think this is a great idea. Hopefully the airlines in the United States will follow suit soon… Photo Credit: Japan Airlines

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Elsewhere In The World: Japanese Airline To Begin Offering KFC To Passengers During Flight

Racism Across The Pond: British Police Officer Says…”All Black People Look Like Monkeys And Live In Mud Huts”

This shady son of a beyotch just looks like his lips spew out racist remarks allll day long! According to International Business Times: A police officer has appeared before magistrates in London for telling a colleague that black people “look like moneys”. PC Costas Dakoutros said that PC Kevin Hughes, of Brentwood, Essex, made the comments while they were on patrol after seeing three black men standing on the pavement. Prosecutor Kate Wilkinson told Westminster magistrates court how Hughes turned to Dakoutros and said: “Look at them, they look like f*****g monkeys.” She said: “PC Dakoutros looked shocked and said ‘You can’t say that’.” Hughes replied: “No, but it’s true.” Wilkinson continued: “He began to deliberate that they [black people] were closely related to chimpanzees and then said they were more closely related to Neanderthals.” Another colleague, who was also in the car at the time, is alleged to have heard Hughes say: “Black people hadn’t evolved and lived in mud huts in Africa.” Following the shift, Dakoutros wrote an email to himself detailing events, which read: “Kevin looked at three IC3 (black) males and stated they looked like monkeys.” Hughes denied the charge and said he was commenting on the way one man was walking. Wilkinson said: “[Hughes] said he didn’t recall seeing three black males but said he saw someone with a certain gait who walked like a monkey and he had said to PC Dakoutros something about a monkey.” Word??? Just imagine what kind of isht they’ve said that was not heard. And y’all thought it was bad here in the U.S. SMH.

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Racism Across The Pond: British Police Officer Says…”All Black People Look Like Monkeys And Live In Mud Huts”

Cruise Suri Together In London

Suri is currently based in New York City with her mom, Tom#39;s ex, Katie Holmes. And as for Katie, Us Weekly reported she spent the holiday in Toledo, Ohio – her hometown. T om Cruise and Suri Cruise spent their Thanksgiving holiday together in London, according to multiple reports. A family member picked up the 6-year-old school girl in her home base of New York City, for her dad, according to Us Weekly. Tom has been busy in London shooting the sci-fi action film “All You Need Is Kill,” wit

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Cruise Suri Together In London