Maggie Grace graced us with her glandulars for the first time onscreen in Californication , and the second episode of Shameless brought us a twofer of TV nudity from Emmy Rossum and Emma Greenwell . Plus, model-turned-actress Lili Simmons had us screaming for more after her nude d
Nude on Blu-ray Virginie Ledoyen and Lea Seydoux are bringing French full frontal to Farewell, My Queen (2012). Lea had a great catfight in Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol (2011), but now she’s showing off her kitty alongside Virginie as a lesbo-in-waiting. Also on Blu-ray, it’s the dong-awaited release of Ashley Hinshaw ’s nude debut in About Cherry (2012), a role that nabbed her a spot on Mr. Skin’s Top Ten Nude Scenes of 2012 . Finally, the Liam Neeson helmed action flick Taken 2 (2012) doesn’t have any nudity, but you’ll still be taken with the sight of Maggie Grace bouncing around in a wet bikini. See pics after the jump!
The big news coming out of last night’s world premiere of Breaking Dawn Part 2 ? Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart posed together on the red carpet. But while that probable couple is making all the headlines today, they weren’t the only ones to show up for the event. Far from it, in fact. One of Hollywood’s most buzzed-about nights drew every member of the cast, along with celebrities such as Ashley Tisdale , Molly Simms… and Shar Jackson. From Taylor Lautner signing autographs (above), to an actress showing the world her bra and another donning some pink hair, click through Breaking Dawn 2 premiere pictures below.
If you don’t have a whiny, teenaged kid, then watch this latest trailer for Taken 2 . Although Maggie Grace , as Kim, is ostensibly playing a woman in her 20s, she’s behaving just like a 15-year-old! Even under life or death circumstances, adolescents can behave as if they are stuck in their own little personal pool of molasses, and it’s up to Dad — or Mom — to gnash some teeth, raise the voice and light a fire under the kid’s reluctant ass. Enter Liam Neeson , as as retired no-nonsense CIA operative Bryan Mills. The man knows how to wield the tough love while brandishing a gun, and after a fog-burning “C’mon! Kim! Move!” his little girl is maneuvering that Mercedes Benz taxi around Istanbul, or wherever the hell they are, like she’s Ryan Gosling in Drive . Now that’s good parenting! Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.
The sci-fi action flick Lockout , directed by first-timers James Mather and Stephen St. Leger from a script they wrote with Luc Besson, features a scene in which characters somehow skydive out of orbit through the stratosphere to land, neatly and not even a little on fire, on an urban road. It isn’t a sequence of events I’d ever have dreamed I needed to see on-screen, but boy, was I glad to. Gleefully preposterous, Lockout is packed with moments like that — its very setup, involving a maximum-security prison in space that the inmates take over, is a metaphorical out-of-orbit parachute jump. Anchored by a smirky Guy Pearce channeling John McClane via Snake Plissken, Lockout is derivative and ridiculous and a good time, provided you can turn off higher brain functions along with any other part of you that might want to lodge a complaint about liberal borrowing from better movies. Pearce’s is always a welcome face to see on-screen, but in Lockout he gets the rare opportunity to be funny. And he is, in the style of a deadpan, wisecracking ’80s action hero — his character, Snow, is an agent who’s falsely accused of murder along with something about the selling of state secrets. He’s scheduled to spend a few decades in stasis on the experimental space jail MS One, the costs of which are being defrayed by a long-distance interstellar exploration company test-driving its cryosleep technology on a population no one’s concerned about, even if it sometimes causes brain damage. Before Snow can be put under and ferried out to the big penitentiary in the sky, MS One crumbles with surprising ease after psychotic prisoner Hydell (Joseph Gilgun, hamming it up with a heavy Scottish accent that’s almost incomprehensible) gets hold of a weapon. The other inmates are woken up and hostages are taken, one of them Emilie Warnock (Maggie Grace), the president’s daughter, who was there on a humanitarian mission. Who can possibly rescue her? Who? “We can send in one man,” suggests a higher-up named Shaw (Lennie James), a laugh line though not a joke. (A little later in the film, a declaration that “He’s my brother!” gets the same effect.) Lockout has no pretensions about being anything other than over-the-top hokum, but to its credit, it’s neither winking nor smarmily self-aware — it’s a straight-faced B-movie. And once all its players are in orbit, it becomes a brisk pursuit through the hallways and tunnels of MS One, as Snow sets out to save the target he’s been assigned while also trying to track down his old partner Mace (Tim Plester) by getting the location in which he stashed a briefcase, the contents of which could clear his name. Pearce is fun to watch, his character drawling out one-liners while demonstrating a cartoon-worthy near-indestructibility, a combo laid out in a nicely staged opening sequence in which he’s being roughly interrogated and each punch he takes knocks his face out of the frame, only to return a little more bruised, bloodied and snarky. Grace can’t keep up, though it’s hard to say whether the problem belongs to her or her dialogue — Emilie’s regulation flirty/angry banter with Snow upon meeting him involves her responding to every work out of his mouth with “You’re a selfish dick!” or “asshole” or “obnoxious.” (The film’s approach to putting the rescued princess in her place has a needlessly mean edge — at one point, Snow sucker punches her in the face as part of a disguise to make her look tough.) Peter Stormare summons up some restrained weirdness as Langral, the government guy who doesn’t trust Snow, and Vincent Regan is Alex, the self-appointed boss of the hijacked MS One. Besson, who also served as Lockout ‘s executive producer, leaves a few recognizable fingerprints on the film: Shot in Belgrade, it has his rootless, international feel, and when Emilie gets her hair cropped and dyed black as a disguise, she instantly transforms into one of his signature steely waifs. But the overwhelming inspiration is John Carpenter’s Escape From New York — sometimes Lockout seems to be paying tribute to it, other times just ripping it off. The world of Lockout is a similarly dystopian future in which the White House is now an armored bunker and crime has gotten bad enough to necessitate a 500,000-capacity multinational space jail, and the film shares an underlying disillusionment with social structures, with Emilie, in this case, getting taunted for acting high-minded in the face of the obvious special care she’s being given because of who her father is. But Lockout doesn’t actually have anything more ambitious on its mind than being entertainment, and while Mather and St. Leger are sometimes overly hurried (an early set piece involving a chase through a hotel, onto a road and down to the subway might be impressive if it weren’t so visually garbled), they manage just fine once the film makes it to MS-One. Lockout ‘s a weightless bit of galactic debris that fills an hour and a half just fine — you may not believe a man can parachute out of space, but wouldn’t you like to see him try? Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
The first American trailer for the sci-fi thriller Lockout makes eminently clear what the hard-boiled European original elided a bit: This is as close to an Escape From New York remake as any of us are likely to get. Snake Plissken in space! Except now he’s called Snow. And he has two eyes, both belonging to Guy Pearce in full wisecracking action-hero mode. He’s the best! But a loose cannon. And Maggie Grace is the president’s daughter. Held hostage in a prison riot. In a prison orbiting Earth. Before it plunges to Earth. Naturally. Whatever! It looks all right.
NBC’s Heroes and ABC’s Lost , two sci-fi dramas that ended their runs in 2010, are the TV shows with the most illegal downloads in 2010, according to TorrentFreak.com. Lost went off the air after wrapping up its sprawling, enigmatic storyline while Heroes was cancelled due to poor ratings. Ironically, Heroes, like the third most-pirated show, Showtime’s skin-filled crime drama Dexter , was downloaded by more people who watched it according to the Nielsen ratings . If NBC had been counting illegal downloads instead of legitimate TV viewers, Heroes may still be on the air. But the question of why so many people downloaded episodes of Heroes and Lost is easy to answer with one look at MrSkin.com. Heroes boasted some of the hottest babes of the 2000’s, like twice-nude Ali Larter and sexy but sadly skinless Kristen Bell and Hayden Panettiere . Lost had more island-stranded beauties than plot twists, including Evangeline Lilly , Maggie Grace , Yoon-jin Kim , Elizabeth Mitchell , Sonya Walger , and Bai Ling . But why bother with an illegal download when you can see every one of these actresses nude or sexy at MrSkin.com without risking prosecution by the FBI?
‘Lost’ and ‘Taken’ actress will play a ‘vegetarian’ vampire who turns on the Cullens. By Kara Warner Maggie Grace Photo: Katy Winn/ Getty Images With production set to begin very soon, “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn, Part 1” continues to add members to its already-crowded cast. Last month we learned that “The Pacific” actor Rami Malek had joined the “Dawn” ranks in the role of Egyptian vampire Benjamin. On Monday (September 27), it was reported that “Lost” and “Taken” actress Maggie Grace has signed on to play “vegetarian” vampire Irina. A rep from Summit Entertainment confirmed the casting to MTV News, and the original story appeared first on Deadline.com . So who is Irina? Those familiar with Stephenie Meyer’s source material will recall that she is a member of the Denali coven, one of the only other “vegetarian” vampire covens and allies with the Cullens — that is, until Irina blames the family for the death of her former lover, Laurent, and vengefully reveals a Cullen family secret to the Volturi. The other “Dawn” newbie, Benjamin, is a member of the Egyptian coven who comes to help Bella and the Cullens battle the Volturi. Benjamin is a young vamp blessed with the special ability of controlling the elements (
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God bless Dwayne Johnson for the way he’s broken free from his albatross-like WWE persona, but the admittedly talented actor might be making a big mistake with his latest screen credit. To wit: How can anyone but “The Rock” actually star in Faster ?