Tag Archives: trauma

INTERVIEW: Matthias Schoenaerts Says Falling For Marion Cotillard In ‘Rust And Bone’ Was Not Exactly A Challenge

If you haven’t yet heard of Matthias Schoenaerts , a.k.a. the Belgian Brando, you’re going to start running out of excuses. The son of actor Julien Schoenaerts, Matthias is already a sex-symbol in his native Belgium. He made his on-screen debut alongside his father in the Oscar-nominated Daens and broke Flemish box-office records in Erik Van Looy’s Loft . But he really burst forth onto the world cinema stage last year with his gripping turn as the lead in Michael Roskam’s Academy Award nominated cow-hormone crime-epic Bullhead . Injecting testosterone into his thigh with all the flair of a young Robert De Niro , Schoenaerts tempered his young thug’s animalistic rage with an innate vulnerability that’s earned him comparisons to Ryan Gosling and Tom Hardy. His reward: getting to star opposite perennial candidate for Most Beautiful Woman Alive Marion Cotillard in Rust and Bone , renowned director Jacques Audiard’s follow up to A Prophet . Audiard’s films — from the smoldering romance in Read My Lips to the frustrated aspirations of The Beat That My Heart Skipped — paint the underworld as an intrinsically human place where criminals can’t help but dream in the face of the harsh world in which they live. So, who better to play Audiard’s latest brute with a heart of gold than Schoenaerts? And as the end result proves, the two are a match made in heaven. Rust and Bone , which is generating awards buzz, including Golden Globe nominations for Cotillard and the film in the Foreign Language category and populating 2012 best-film lists , charts the unlikely romance between an impoverished beachside bouncer moonlighting as an underground fighter and an orca trainer whose life is thrown into disarray after a tragic tango with the aforementioned killer whales. What could otherwise come across as improbable melodrama feels palpably real and poignant in the hands of Audiard, Cotillard and Schoenaerts. Which is to say, break out the handkerchiefs and don’t look back. Movieline caught up with Schoenaerts by phone as he packed for a trip to Antwerp. He talked about the joys of working with Audiard and Cotillard, beefing up on junk food, and why his dream role could just as easily be a character who works at McDonalds. Movieline: I became a fan of yours after Bullhead, and I love Jacques Audiard’s films, so I was elated to find you two working together. What brought you to this role? Schoenaerts: What attracted me was that it was a hard character to tackle because he’s very ambiguous. There’s a lot about this guy and it was a challenge to portray him in the richest way possible and not make him this one-dimensional thug. The screenplay to me was raw, it was gritty, it was very poetic, it was touching. It was human. At the same time, it was set against the backdrop of the economic crisis, which is the reality for a lot of people nowadays. That’s what I like about Jacques. His screenplays have a very naturalistic feel to them but at the same time, they’re really genre films. You prepare really intensely for your roles. For instance, you ate over 3,000 cans of tuna to beef up for Bullhead . What did you do for this one? Of course, there was the physical preparation, which required me to start boxing. I had to gain weight again, and I had to grow a belly. So, for a couple of months, I was boxing everyday, doing MMA training and doing some weightlifting. I was also eating a lot of junk food to get this body that looked strong but not really fit and a bit unhealthy because the guy is poor so he doesn’t have the means to feed himself properly. After that, I worked a lot with Jacques.  We explored scenes, improvised and got to know each other. I’m curious how he works because his movies are so naturalistic.  Did you guys talk a lot about the characters, or did he just give you the broad strokes and let you run with it? [Talking] is something that we do upfront, but once we’re on set, it’s all about being instinctive and intuitive and not to have too many preconceived ideas on a scene. It’s just, “We’re here in the moment, let’s bring the scene to life. Let’s make it real and vivid.” He’s all about that. He’s really an actor’s director. He’s with you all the time and he’s really generous because he respects actors a lot. I think it’s because he worked in theater for many years. He’s really working with you, he’s challenging you and he wants you to challenge him. It’s fabulous. Was there a lot of improvisation on set? No. There’s room for improvisation but, how shall I say, it’s not a way of working. Everything was scripted and of course once in a while things happen, so you just go with it. But improvisation is certainly not a method on set. You probably can’t improvise fights like that without suffering serious head trauma. Oh, yeah. There’s also a lot of rehearsing. It takes a lot of preparation to do it. There’s a stunt team that really choreographed everything and lined everything up and we rehearsed over and over again. Well, those fights looked brutal. But what I really love about your work–in this and Bullhead –is how you bring an inherent gentleness to such tough characters. Is that the key to approaching tough guys — going against the grain? It’s not going against the grain! It’s being human. Being human is being a lot of things at the same time. Your appearance shouldn’t define who you are, and that’s what I like, the contrast between people looking like the opposite of what they truly are deep inside. How was it working with the actor who plays your son. They say it can be hard to work with children, but you guys had great chemistry. It was intense. He was a very particular kid and pretty young, so we rehearsed a lot with the kid. We worked quite a lot up front. All of sudden, this kid really opened up and somehow got attached to me, and I got attached to him. From there on, it became a very natural thing. And Marion Cotillard? That looked pretty natural, too. It was that same natural connection that happened on set. We had something very genuine going on. She’s obviously extremely talented and very generous. We really had a ball. It was intense. It was not an easy film to make for many reasons, but we enjoyed every second. So, what was the hardest part of making the film? I think it’s always a matter of finding the right balance between all the elements of the story, and the characters and the relationship being portrayed. Especially for this relationship between these two people, it’s a very thin line to fall back into a sentimental portrayal or something that becomes vulgar. That’s probably the biggest challenge. It’s a very much a melodrama, but it doesn’t feel sentimental at all. For example, I love that line where she’s giving you that intense talk about how to have a proper relationship, you take it all in and then respond, pardon my rough French translation, “let’s get it on.” ( Laughs ) Well, actually that was NOT scripted, that was something I made up on set. Really? I knew it! I feel like I’ve told several girls that in my life. ( Laughs ) Yeah. Do you do that at all—go back to a catalog of past loves and use it for a role? Somehow on a subconscious level or sometimes on a conscious level, of course you go back to experiences you have had and sometimes they might help you a little or not. So, do you ever go back to past bar fights and use those for inspiration? No, no! Not at all. That’s not me. Of course, of course. But I love that line when you put her first boyfriend down. Was that improvised? That was scripted. At the same time, it had to be very menacing without being a menace. It had to be a very genuine question, which was kind of menacing but we didn’t want it to be played as menace. Well, I congratulate you for making me feel empathy for a bouncer. I like underdogs, I like anti-heroes — people that have a hard time overcoming things in life. What attracted me to those two characters, they have everything against them and they have to come from really far to get somewhere. I’m just looking for touching characters. When I read [a script], I want it to speak to me. I want it to touch me on a human and profound level. That could be a car mechanic, it could be someone who works at McDonalds, it could be a pianist, it could be so many things. To me, it’s not about a certain type of character. To me, all people are to some extent the same. So, it’s all about the screenplay and the specifics of the character within that screenplay. It seems to be working for you. I hope we get to see you in more movies in the States. Do you have any dream directors you’d like to work with? I don’t know. I could say, P.T. Anderson , David Lynch , Michael Mann , Gus Van Sant . There’s so many, and I’m forgetting a lot. The guy who directed Blue Valentine ! [ Derek Cianfrance ] There are so many. Michael Mann would be lucky to have you– I’ll send a letter to his agent right now. Yeah, thanks! Okay, my last question, I have to ask… the love scenes with Marion — and without her legs. How did you guys pull that off? They just do it with green socks on her legs and paint it over digitally. There must be a lot of choreography to get it right then—keep your leg here, move your arm there. Probably a lot less sensuous than it looks. Yeah, of course, because then it makes shadow. There are a lot of technicalities, but once you’re doing it, you just go with it. I assume falling in love with Marion Cotillard is not one of the more challenging tasks you’ve faced. Exactly. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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INTERVIEW: Matthias Schoenaerts Says Falling For Marion Cotillard In ‘Rust And Bone’ Was Not Exactly A Challenge

Teacher Arrested For “Weird Science” And Giving Brains: Lindsey Trimble Popped For Sex With Student! [Video]

Lindsey doesn’t care…evidence is the smirk in her mugshot. youtube

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Teacher Arrested For “Weird Science” And Giving Brains: Lindsey Trimble Popped For Sex With Student! [Video]

Evelyn Lozada Says Her Bangin’ Daughter Helped Her Get Over “Dome-Checka” Ochostinko

We are fam-i-ly… Evelyn Lozada Says Her Daughter Shaniece Helped Her Get Over Chad Johnson Divorce Via RadarOnline You can’t keep a strong woman down, and that couldn’t be more true than for Evelyn Lozada, who has emerged more confident than ever following her painful high-profile divorce from serial cheater Chad ‘Ochocinco’ Johnson last summer. “I am absolutely back on the road to recovery now, I had a month-and-a-half where I was just dark, I wasn’t tweeting, I went away,” the Basketball Wives star told RadarOnline.com in an exclusive interview at the launch of her collaboration with animal rights titans PETA for their ‘I’d Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur’ ad campaign. “I probably didn’t comb my hair for a month, I needed to turn off from the world, it was a very tough period for me. I am on the way to recovery now though. Ev give most of the credit to her recovery to her daughter Shaniece. Evelyn said that following the traumatic split she was lucky to be forced to have to put her best foot forward by her love for her 19-year-old daughter. “I needed to continue to live life. It is something that happened and it is unfortunate, both sides of our family obviously were affected because we had just gotten married and for me I thought it was the start of my new life,” she explained, “But sadly, it took a turn in a whole other direction that I obviously didn’t expect for it to go in, so it was tough, but I have good friends and family.” “My daughter was my rock through the whole thing,” explained Lozada referring to the night she was viciously assaulted by the NFL star. “She is 19 so it was important to be strong for her and make sure she knew that this happened, and I want to be an example for her and let her know that domestic abuse is never something you should tolerate — don’t care who he is, how much money he has or how fine he is — I feel like I need to be an example for her and my 13-year-old stepdaughter, who was there and I still love.” The Puerto Rock reality “star” also spoke on her ex-hubby’s newest tattoo… While Chad and Evelyn haven’t had any direct contact since their divorce, he made a very public and permanent statement of his love by getting a tattoo of her inked on his calf. “I actually thought it was pretty funny! He was going to get a tattoo after we got married, we talked about it, it was supposed to be a picture of both of us on his back, Chad is already tatted and when I saw that I thought she looked just like me,” Evelyn told Radar. “He has my name on my arm too, so it’s not the first tattoo he has of me. “Chad is very odd! I think that is one of the things I found appealing about him, he is different and he dresses weird,” said Lozada, explaining why she wasn’t surprised by Johnson’s extreme move. “He was trying to make a statement because we can’t talk to each other.” When you’ve got a forehead full of stitches and bruises it’s good to have someone that motivates you to stay positive. These two always seem more like sisters and friends than mother and daughter, hopefully Shaniece learned something from her mom’s ordeal.

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Evelyn Lozada Says Her Bangin’ Daughter Helped Her Get Over “Dome-Checka” Ochostinko

Peter Jackson’s ‘Hobbit’ Will Be The Only Hobbit In Theaters: Biz Break

Warner Bros. won its lawsuit against mock-buster Age of the Hobbits . Also in Tuesday’s news round-up, Amy Adams will be feted for The Master ; Tim Buckley feature is heading to U.S. theaters; Disney will adapt Dolphin pic for a feature; and Gus Van Sant is lending his name for the U.S. release of acclaimed Laurence Anyways . Warner Bros. Triumphs in Hobbit Mock-buster Case A federal judge granted Warner Bros., MGM and others a restraining order against mock-buster Age of The Hobbits , saying the victory over Global Asylum’s “cynical business model.” Global had planned a to release a parallel pic, Age of the Hobbit against Peter Jackson’s The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey , Deadline reports . Amy Adams to Receive Santa Barbara International Film Festival’s Cinema Vanguard Award The three-time Oscar-nominated actress will be presented the events’s prize January 31st. Adams is a contender for Best Supporting Actress for her role as the wife of a cult leader in Paul Thomas Anderson’s The Master , THR reports . Greetings From Tim Buckley Heads to U.S. Theaters Directed by Dan Algrant, the Toronto Film Festival feature explores two generations of musicians, Tim and Jeff Buckley. Penn Badgley plays Jeff Buckley as a young musician who rehearses his public singing debut at a Brooklyn tribute to his father and struggling to come to terms with his legacy with the help of an unlikely woman at the show. While they discover each other and New York City, the film also explores Tim’s (Mr. Rosenfield) 1960s heyday, as he drives cross-country with a girlfriend and finds himself on the verge of stardom. Tribeca Film will distribute the pic with Focus World, a subsidiary of Focus Features. Disney to Adapt Dolphin Boy Feature The studio secured rights to the Israeli documentary, which revolves around a teenager from an Arab village in northern Israel who is traumatized from a violent attack and slowly recovers with the help of dolphins. The Bucket List writer Justin Zackham will write the script for Disney, Variety reports . Gus Van Sant Joins Xavier Dolan’s Laurence Anyways in U.S. Release Van Sant’s Promised Land is gathering some Oscar buzz, but he’ll lend his name as executive producer to acclaimed young Quebecois filmmaker Xavier Dolan’s third Cannes title, Laurence Anyways as it heads out to U.S. screens in 2013. Set in the ’90s, Laurence Anyways is the tale of a young couple and the difficult decisions they must face after the man decides to start living his life as a woman. 

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Peter Jackson’s ‘Hobbit’ Will Be The Only Hobbit In Theaters: Biz Break

Natalia Vodianova is a Wet Babe of the Day

Natalia Vodianova has been in the model game a long fucking time…I’m sure I’ve seen her topless at some point in time or another – cuz that’s what hot models do…especially when they are communist….because if they are old enough….like NATALIA VODIANOVA is…they remember what waiting in line for bread is…at that post traumatic stress leads to easy convincing…. Here she is all wet and lovely…and I like it.

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Natalia Vodianova is a Wet Babe of the Day

REVIEW: ‘The Impossible’ Ties A Teary Bow On True Tsunami Tragedy

There’s a question that  The Impossible , the new film from Juan Antonio Bayona ( The Orphanage ), demands be asked, and that is — is it easier for audiences to relate to tragedy when it’s filtered through white characters? This is not a new issue. The movies have a long tradition of approaching stories about people of color, both at home and abroad, through the experiences of Caucasian protagonists, a habit that speaks to both (probably not unfounded) ideas about audience preferences and prejudices and the linked reality of what most of our movie stars still look like.  The Impossible is set during the 2004 tsunami that hit South East Asia the day after Christmas, killing over 230,000 people and devastating Indonesia, India, Thailand and other countries, but it’s about how one expat family on holiday weathers the tragedy, an uplifting tale of survival and endurance amidst the ruin. On one hand, yes, it feels undeniably strange and selective to approach the worst tsunami in history by way of vacationing foreigners, with representatives of the local Thai population limited to those who come to their aid. The film begins with the family — Henry (Ewan McGregor) and Maria (Naomi Watts), and their sons Lucas (Tom Holland), Simon (Oaklee Pendergast) and Thomas (Samuel Joslin) — arriving on a turbulent flight, and ends with their worse for the wear departure on another one, and the relief that accompanies that trip to safety comes with an awareness that many of the other people left behind do not have a home elsewhere to go back to. On the other hand,  The Impossible , which was written by Sergio G. Sánchez, is based on the true story of a Spanish family (transformed here into a British one) who were some of the many visitors to the area whose trip abroad turned into a nightmare. Their experiences aren’t unworthy of being dramatized simply because they’re not representative of the underreported norm, and the film recreates the horrifying saga in ways that are startlingly visceral, including a masterful sequence in which the first wave arrives like a monster in a horror flick. This story being told doesn’t mean that others are silenced, and  The Impossible benefits from taking a limited perspective on an awful larger incident rather than try for something more panoramic. What may be a more relevant question for  The Impossible is what its aims are as a movie. It’s a thoroughly and effectively sappy effort about a family searching for one another after an incredible catastrophe in the trappings of traumatic gore film — or vice versa, but either way the two halves sit uneasily beside one another on screen. As in  The Orphanage , Bayona demonstrates he has a talent for the disturbing or flat out frightening and a taste for the sentimental, and it’s perhaps because this is a film about a real and recent disaster that both feel amplified, the shock and suffering turned up to apologize for or counterbalance the unabashed drippiness that follows. From a pure filmmaking perspective, it’s the first half that really impresses and perturbs, as Henry, Maria and the kids arrive from Japan to spend their holidays in a gorgeous beachside resort in Khao Lak. They film themselves on Christmas morning opening presents on the veranda, they release a paper lantern on the beach at night, and they sit poolside getting sunburns with other Western tourists and talking about their careers while the boys frolic in the water. The tsunami takes them completely by surprise, as it did almost everyone affected, rumbling from the horizon and taking out everything in its path. We stay with Maria as she’s swept away in the chaotic mass of water, the camera sticking with her as she clutches a tree and howls in pain and upset, then cutting over to Lucas as he’s pulled in the current, the two trying to reach each other in a world suddenly upended. It’s a tour de force sequence, and one that manages to outdo a similar one in  Hereafter with little effort. But it’s what follows that’s enough to evoke a physical reaction, as Maria trudges through the wreckage, too stunned to notice the tattered muscles exposed in the gaping wound in her leg. The suffering Watts portrays — she climbs, dripping blood and crying in pain, into a tree and in a later scene coughs up what looks like lung tissue — looks all too agonizingly real, and enabling that requires a committed and deeply believable bit of acting. But watching her ordeal is enough to make you feel shaky, and almost as troubling are the sequences that follow in which Henry trudges through the splintered remains of their hotel, looking for the rest of his family, either alive or dead. The Impossible drops you into the experience of living through the tsunami in specific, achingly realized detail, then pulls back to provide a happier ending. After so much anguish, the need to balance it out with something positive is understandable, but it’s difficult not to be aware of just how much Bayona is yanking on heartstrings as he arranges for near misses and hospital misunderstandings, teary phone calls and kindly old women (Geraldine Chaplin!) providing companionship to forlorn children. Any glimpses of good amidst the destruction are welcome, but after that jarring, unforgettably immediate account of the tsunami, the latter half of  The Impossible is so disappointingly movie -ish, tying a bow on the events after portraying them too vividly to allow them to be wrapped so neatly. It wrings out tears with an industrious efficiency that leaves you feeling manhandled after the exhilarating, terrifying footage that’s unfolded before. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: ‘The Impossible’ Ties A Teary Bow On True Tsunami Tragedy

Ivy League Freaks: Harvard University Approves Campus Wide Freaky-Deaky Sex Club For Students Called “Harvard College Munch”

Harvard University, home to the best and the brightest, now has an official club for the nastiest. Harvard University Approves Harvard College Munch Via HuffPo : Harvard College Munch for the BDSM set will be approved as a student organization on Friday, the Crimson reported. The expected go-ahead by the Committee on Student Life will entitle Munch to meet for lunch or dinner on campus, promote gatherings on school grounds and apply for grants from the school’s Drug and Alcohol Peer Advisors organization, the paper said. Once an informal gathering for like-minded individuals to discuss their proclivities in the bedroom without fear of being judged, Munch now has “institutional support” to provide reassurance for its members, its anonymous founder “Michael” said in the story. One member told the Observer that she had been hit with a riding crop, a belt and canes in a private Munch get-together. “Floggers are my favorite,” she said. There is historical precedent. The Iowa State University student government funded a bondage club in 2003, calling it a triumph for diversity, one publication reported. Now S&M clubs are increasingly popular at elite institutions as “50 Shades Of Grey” climbed the bestseller list, the Observer said. Columbia, Tufts, MIT and Yale have them, though the story did not say whether they were officially recognized. Assault cases from within some groups have sprung up as well, the paper said. But one Munch member told the Crimson that the club could provide a haven for those who engage in BDSM (bondage, discipline, sadism and masochism) after they have been scarred by sexual abuse or other trauma. Harvard spokesperson Jeff Neal told The Huffington Post that the college does not endorse the views or activities of any independent student organization. Harvard’s color is crimson. Looks like some students want to wear that color even when not wearing clothes. Gawker

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Ivy League Freaks: Harvard University Approves Campus Wide Freaky-Deaky Sex Club For Students Called “Harvard College Munch”

NY Veterans Screen Powerful ‘Happy New Year’ About G.I. Suicide

Post-traumatic stress syndrome and the epidemic of suicide among Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans are not exactly popular subjects with the military community — or  civilians, for that matter — but first-time filmmaker K. Lorrel Manning and actor/producer Michael Cuomo have made a tough, honest film that should spark plenty of debate over these issues.  On Monday evening, the duo’s movie Happy New Year  premiered in New York with a pair of special Veterans Week screenings and a reception at the Disney Screening Room on Park Avenue.   Movieline Managing Director Gerry Byrne, producer Fred Zollo and Help USA Chairman Maria Cuomo Cole hosted the event, which was attended by veterans, active duty personnel and their families. Michael Cuomo gives a searing performance in Happy New Year as a physically and emotionally scarred veteran who returns from combat in Iraq to find that an even tougher battle — to regain his health, his dignity and his sense of self — awaits him with little help from the government that sent him to war. After the screening, Manning told the crowd that a chance encounter with  Purple Hearts, Nina Berman’s book of photos of wounded Iraq war vets, inspired the film.  The director also explained that he wanted Happy New Year to be “an apolitical film” that would convince “other veterans to be okay with saying, ‘I’m not okay.'” The movie opens Dec. 7 in New York and Manning and Cuomo say they intend to eventually expand to other cities theatrically and via video on demand. Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter .  Follow Movieline on Twitter.  

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NY Veterans Screen Powerful ‘Happy New Year’ About G.I. Suicide

Florida Crazies: School Bus Monitor Caught On Camera Choking An Austic Boy For Wetting His Pants! [Video]

Why the hell are grown azz people always torturing these kids nowadays?! Florida School Bus Monitor Caught Choking An Austic Boy Via NYDailyNews A Florida bus monitor is facing child abuse charges for choking and tormenting an autistic boy who wet his pants during a trip home from school last month. Broward County school-bus assistant Darryl Blue was caught on surveillance camera on Oct. 9 yanking on teen Moises Mancebo’s protective harness from behind, causing the boy to howl in pain, south Florida’s Sun Sentinel newspaper reported. In the video, the boy repeatedly wails, “Ow, you’re hurting me,” and reaches behind his head to try to stop Blue. “Don’t put your hands on me,” Blue says at one point. The assault, which officials say took place during the entire 45-minute ride from the boy’s Fort Lauderdale school to his home in Deerfield Beach, left bruises and scrapes on Mancebo’s neck, his mother said. The Westglades middle schooler rides a bus for special needs children and wears the harness to keep him safe. What a piece of isht THIS guy is… His mother said he was traumatized by the incident and no longer wants to go to school. “He can’t sleep, he’s acting out, he’s afraid, he’s afraid of me,” Bertis Paulino told the Sun Sentinel. “Sometimes I come up to him and he (raises his arms in fear) like I’m going to hit him.” Paulino said she also wants the bus driver to be charged. In the video, driver Chelsi Edwards can be heard scolding the boy for wetting his pants and cackling while Blue allegedly abused him. Blue was charged with aggravated child abuse, the Sun Sentinel reported. He was arrested on Wednesday and released from the Broward County Jail on Thursday after paying $7,500 bond. Ok, so the boy wet his pants. He didn’t pee ON anyone, didn’t appear to be causing a problem, but even if he WAS there was definitely a better way to handle the situation. Hit the flip side to watch the shocking video.

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Florida Crazies: School Bus Monitor Caught On Camera Choking An Austic Boy For Wetting His Pants! [Video]

Epitome Of A Bad Mother: Atlanta Mom Leaves Her Two Small Kids Home Alone With Oven Open For Heat!!!

She ran out for three hours to charge her cell phone and luckily, an on-duty security guard came through the back door she left OPEN and found her 2 and 6-year old children sleeping in bed. According to The Daily Mail : A 22-year-old mother of two from Atlanta was arrested after police said she left her children alone in a cold, dark apartment with only the oven on to keep them warm while she went out to charge her cell phone. A security guard at an apartment complex on Confederate Court was making his rounds at around 11pm Tuesday when he noticed the back door to a unit ajar. He entered the apartment to investigate and discovered Shantonia Heard’s two young children, ages six and two, lying on the bed in a rear bedroom. According to the official, the home had no electricity or heat, and dog feces from the family’s pit bull puppy were littering the floor. In the kitchen, the gas oven was left on with the door open. The guard called police and told them that the kids were on their own for ‘a couple of hours’ before officers arrived on the scene. Paramedics who were called to the apartment complex examined the kids and determined that both were unharmed and in good health. An hour later, the children’s mother returned home to be greeted by investigators who were still at the apartment. Heard told police that she stepped out to charge her cell phone at a cousin’s nearby home, Fox 2 Now reported The 22-year-old mother was arrested and charged with cruelty to children, but during a hearing on Wednesday, her charge was downgraded to a misdemeanor reckless conduct, and she was granted a $5,000 signature bond, according to Atlanta Journal Constitution. Her two kids were taken into the custody of Division of Family and Children Services. The family dog was placed with Fulton County Animal Control, where it will remain until Heard is released from jail. Heard’s neighbors were outraged to hear about the young mother’s alleged actions. ‘You’re supposed to know better,’ Marquita Crudup, who lives with her six-year-old son in the apartment above Heard, told WXIA-TV. ‘I would be worried about the house burning down…. I just don’t understand.’ Heard’s family say this is all a misunderstand. One of her cousins told 11Alive that the 22-year-old was only gone a few minutes and did not want to wake the children. SMH. We’ve got too many questions, (like why the fawk do you have a puppy and no electricity on?), so we’ll let you ask them for us below! Images via facebook

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Epitome Of A Bad Mother: Atlanta Mom Leaves Her Two Small Kids Home Alone With Oven Open For Heat!!!