Tag Archives: morgan freeman

Brooke Shields nude

Brooke Shields is a girl that nowadays is an absolute MILF and so you know that when she was younger she was probably incredibly hot and here she is swimming fully nude Continue reading

Morgan Freeman nude

Morgan Freeman back in the day was an absolutely beautiful actress, in the 1980s she was a chick that you wouldn’t have kicked out of bed Continue reading

Morgan Freeman nude

Morgan Freeman back in the day was an absolutely beautiful actress, in the 1980s she was a chick that you wouldn’t have kicked out of bed Continue reading

Morgan Freeman spotted at Spago restaurant

http://www.youtube.com/v/grZxeM7dGoY?version=3&f=user_uploads&app=youtube_gdata

Facebook.com – Become a Fan! Twitter.com – Follow Us! Morgan Freeman was spotted leaving Beverly Hills’ Spago restaurant and was asked a very interesting question… Morgan had to think about it!

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Morgan Freeman spotted at Spago restaurant

REVIEW: Rachel Weisz Shines Through the Contemplative Dankness of The Deep Blue Sea

There are so few filmmakers willing to tackle the romantic melodrama these days that Terence Davies’s The Deep Blue Sea is welcome just for its sheer novelty. An adaptation of Terence Rattigan’s 1952 play, the picture opens with an attempted suicide and ends with an uneasy kind of redemption. It’s a love story with a great deal of furious, elegant handwriting packed between the lines, an exploration of immutable class distinctions and emotional and sexual repression in postwar England. And Rachel Weisz, as a woman who risks everything for the love of the wrong man, carries the mood and subtext of the material safely tucked in her dressing-gown pocket – she’s vulnerable and self-motivated in all the right measures. But there’s such a thing as having too much reverence for your material, and although Davies is an extraordinarily gifted and principled director, The Deep Blue Sea may suffer for that reverence. Weisz plays Hester Collyer, the wife of an esteemed judge, Sir William (Simon Russell Beale). Her life is clearly comfortable, though not altogether happy, which is made clear by a scene in which her mother-in-law (played by Barbara Jefford) excoriates her for even believing in the notion of passion. And when we first see her, she’s a person who no longer wishes to live, a limp, drained figure in a murky, crowded bedroom: That’s the drab flat she shares with Freddie Page (Tom Hiddleston, of War Horse , not to mention that he also plays Loki in Thor and the upcoming Avengers ), the shallow if occasionally charming former RAF pilot who drew her away from her husband like a magnet. The story of how and why Hester made the choices she did is told in flashback, but her present – a present that, in the days when it was a glimmering future, was supposed to bring her so much happiness – is a muted kind of hell. After her suicide attempt, Freddie, deciding she’s too much of an emotional mess (and blaming her for it), decides to leave her. Hester is seized with a desperation to get him back. Davies captures the milieu of ’50s Great Britain perfectly, as you’d expect from the director of Distant Voices, Still Lives – postwar England is his home turf, emotionally and physically, though his eyes and ears are also well-attuned when it comes to period details of eras before his own time. (His 2000 adaptation of The House of Mirth , starring an almost painfully radiant Gillian Anderson, gets Edith Wharton in a piercingly direct way.) Here, with his DP Florian Hoffmeister, he captures the dank optimism of 1950s London, a place where no one seems to be happy but everyone is working so hard at being cheerful that the murky illusion is almost believable. There’s rubble on the street corners, remnants of all-too-recent bombings that pedestrians now pass by without a glance. Gathering places like pubs can be cozy or oppressive, depending on the circumstances – their dark paneling and dim lighting can offer a place to hide from the world, though hiding from oneself is a different story. That’s a lot of subterranean social and psychological meaning to capture with a camera, and Davies does so beautifully. Yet the pacing of The Deep Blue Sea is somehow at odds with both the movie’s imagery and its performances. The actors are all marvelous here: Beale’s character starts out as an unlikable lump and gradually emerges as a thoughtful man with deep and ardent feelings – if Weisz’s Hester is the emotional compass of the movie, William is the figure most sensitized to her wavering needle. Hiddleston has the right mix of boyish eagerness and brainless, spineless schoolboy cruelty – his scrubbed-clean aura is really a kind of menace. And Weisz is superb here, giving a performance that’s so dappled with shadows and light that you almost can’t tell which is which. Her Hester is a creature of great refinement, the finest that civilization has to offer – no wonder she’s scrabbling to get back to something raw and real, something that looks, feels and smells more like nature. The thing she moves toward is, of course, the wrong thing. But this is a tragedy with a medium-happy ending, after all. And as beautifully made as The Deep Blue Sea is, it too has a passion problem, and not because Davies’ approach isn’t heartfelt enough. In fact, it may be too heartfelt. The picture moves like a contemplative, stately march, but the problem isn’t its slowness. It’s that Davies puts too much space between nearly every line – every dramatic work is constructed of dialogue and the breaths in between, but not every unspoken ellipses has to be swollen and pregnant with meaning. Davies may be, like his heroine, the man who loves too much, and the movie groans under the weight of all that lavish attention. This is a different world, again, from Anatole Litvak’s 1955 version of the same material, starring Vivien Leigh and Kenneth More. That movie has a crispness, an almost rakish detachment, that makes its subnotes of repression and self-flagellation even more potent. It’s not a better movie, exactly – simply a reminder of what different directors and performers can bring to the same words, ideas and feelings. Comparing the two only reminds us that there’s no such thing as perfect adaptation. If there is, it lies in that elusive patch of green between the devil and the you-know-what. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Rachel Weisz Shines Through the Contemplative Dankness of The Deep Blue Sea

VIDEO: How Deep is Morgan Freeman? Let Us Count the Ways

The team at NextMovie today offers this stirring mash-up of deep thoughts proffered by Morgan Freeman — or at least characters played by Morgan Freeman. Even the guy in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves! Incredible. Not bad! Honestly, though? Needs more Fast Black. [ NextMovie ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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VIDEO: How Deep is Morgan Freeman? Let Us Count the Ways

Morgan Freeman and E’Dena Hines: It’s Over?

Morgan Freeman has reportedly dumped his step-granddaughter, E’Dena Hines, for another young girlfriend named Ellie, according to tabloid reports. The story of the 74-year-old reportedly dating E’Dena Hines a few years ago. Hines, now 29, was even said to be a teen when they were first involved. That’s … probably not even true. But it was never denied, and the rumor stuck. However, it seems that the Academy Award winner has moved on from pursuing his own step-granddaughter to relationship to a younger Filipino woman. “Morgan rang in the New Year by planting a passionate kiss on his new gal Ellie, who’s an accountant in Los Angeles,” a source said. Friends believe the relationship could be serious because Morgan also invited Ellie’s mom and sister. “Morgan was having a great time,” the source says. “They kept kissing. They’re definitely an item.” Sure they are. Good to know.

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Morgan Freeman and E’Dena Hines: It’s Over?

Golden Globe Awards 2012: List of Winners!

Did the 2012 Golden Globe winners go according to plan? Or were there any big surprises? Are the Oscar favorites more or less cemented right now? The Help, The Artist, The Descendants and Hugo proved they are early Oscar leaders, with each film taking home some hardware Sunday evening. The Artist ’s wins for Best Score and Best Actor for Jean Dujardin kept the critical favorite squarely in the driver’s seat as an early Oscar favorite. After winning Best Actor for The Descendants , George Clooney is the man to beat for the honor at the Oscars. That film was also the best drama. Best Motion Picture, Comedy or Musical went to The Artist , while Meryl Streep won Best Actress (shocker) as Margaret Thatcher in The Iron Lady . The Cecil B. DeMille Award for lifetime achievement went to Morgan Freeman (above), who received the honor from Sidney Poitier and Helen Mirren. On the TV side, Homeland, Modern Family and Downton Abbey were the big winners. Kicking off the night was a Ricky Gervais monologue that went after stars such as Justin Bieber and Kim Kardashian this year. So … there’s that. Here’s the list of Golden Globe winners for 2012: FILM Best Motion Picture, Drama The Descendants Best Motion Picture, Comedy or Musical The Artist Best Actress, Motion Picture Drama Meryl Streep, The Iron Lady Best Actor, Motion Picture Drama George Clooney, The Descendants Best Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture Christopher Plummer, Beginners Best Actress in a Comedy or Musical Michelle Williams, My Week with Marilyn Best Animated Film The Adventures of Tintin Best Screenplay Woody Allen, Midnight in Paris Best Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture Octavia Spencer, The Help Best Director Martin Scorsese, Hugo Best Actor in a Comedy or Musical Jean Dujardin, The Artist Best Foreign Film A Separation Best Song Masterpiece, W.E. Best Score Ludovic Bource, The Artist TELEVISION TV Series, Drama Homeland TV Series, Comedy Modern Family TV Movie or Miniseries Downton Abbey Actor in a TV Series, Drama Kelsey Grammer, Boss Actress in a TV Series, Drama Claire Danes, Homeland Actor, TV Series Comedy Matt LeBlanc, Episodes Actress in a TV Series, Comedy Laura Dern, Enlightened Actor in a Miniseries or TV Movie Idris Elba, Luther Actress in a Miniseries or TV Movie Kate Winslet, Mildred Pierce Supporting Actress in a Series, Miniseries, or TV Movie Jessica Lange, American Horror Story Supporting Actor in a Series, Miniseries or TV Movie Peter Dinklage, Game of Thrones

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Golden Globe Awards 2012: List of Winners!

People’s Choice Awards Face-Off: Morgan Freeman vs. Neil Patrick Harris

Morgan Freeman and Neil Patrick Harris were both among the People’s Choice Awards winners last night, as the pictures below make abundantly clear. Who was the best dressed of the two, talented actors, however? The How I Met Your Mother star wore his signature suit, while the Hollywood icon went a more casual route, with suit pants and jacket sans tie. Hey, when you win an award for your icon status, you do what you want! Vote for your favorite style star in THG’s Fashion Face-Off below …

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People’s Choice Awards Face-Off: Morgan Freeman vs. Neil Patrick Harris

Jermaine Hopkins, Lean on Me Star, Arrested in Major Marijuana Sting

Jermaine “Huggy” Hopkins and Sam Hurd should get together. Hopkins, the teenage star who went toe-to-toe with Morgan Freeman in the inspirational 1989 movie Lean on Me , has been busted for selling pot in Phoenix. We’re not talking personal-use quantities of the herb, either. According to local Fox affiliate KSAZ, Hopkins was swept up in a drug sting conducted by undercover detectives from the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office. The actor engaged them in a drug deal involving 200 pounds of marijuana he had in his SUV, along with $100,000 cash. Cops then took him into custody . Officer Christopher Hegstrom says Jermaine Hopkins was booked into jail on two felony counts of possessing, transporting and trying to sell marijuana. A subsequent search of his apartment in nearby Avondale, Ariz., also turned up another 100 pounds, its value was estimated at approximately $50,000. Hopkins actually lives in North Carolina but for whatever reason, made Arizona his place of “business.” Now it looks he may be a resident for a long time. Hey, at least the weather’s nice this time of year.

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Jermaine Hopkins, Lean on Me Star, Arrested in Major Marijuana Sting