Tag Archives: vincent-gallo

Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem Expecting

Congratulations are in order for Spanish super-couple Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem, who are expecting their first child together. The pair’s rep confirmed this morning that the actress is four-and-a-half months along. The Oscar winners were married in July and should expect their ridiculously good-looking baby to arrive in early February. [ TVG uide ]

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Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem Expecting

Essential Killing: Dear Vincent Gallo, Why Do You Torment Me So?

Oh, Vincent Gallo! There’s no escaping you. You follow me from continent to continent, from festival to festival. Last week, in Venice, I saw your strange little picture Promises Written in Water (also playing here in Toronto), and while I wasn’t wowed, I couldn’t quite dismiss it, either. But while in Venice, I missed Polish filmmaker Jerzy Skolimowski’s Essential Killing, which netted you the Best Actor award there — in fact, you’ve got pretty much the only role, aside from Emmanuelle Seigner, who appears very late in the picture. So today in Toronto, I decided to check out Essential Killing. I needed to see for myself if you really deserved that award, you scalawag, you.

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Essential Killing: Dear Vincent Gallo, Why Do You Torment Me So?

Angelina Jolie And Johnny Depp Have ‘Incredible Chemistry,’ ‘Tourist’ Director Says

‘Johnny and Angie just got along so well,’ Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck tells MTV News. By Kara Warner Angelina Jolie and Johnny Depp in “The Tourist” Photo: Sony Pictures What does an up-and-coming director do after winning the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film? If you’re the talented Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck, you do not go to Disneyland; you go out and secure the talents of megawatt actors Johnny Depp and Angelina Jolie for your next feature. The already heavily-hyped film in question is “The Tourist,” loosely based on the French thriller “Anthony Zimmer.” When MTV News caught up with von Donnersmarck, we talked international intrigue, the challenges of shooting in Venice and why everyone falls in love with Johnny Depp (including his co-star Paul Bettany , who confessed his feelings to us last month). MTV : Given the story’s twists and turns, what can you reveal about the plot? Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck : I can see already that you were trying to wrangle some information out of Paul. [Incredibly enough, the busy director somehow found time to read our Bettany interview.] It’s a love story, that’s for sure. Imagine a woman who is just so elegant and sophisticated and educated and has lived in that world and now, through a whole set of circumstances, suddenly falls in love with a guy who is not any of those things, and it just somehow confuses her whole world because that was not meant to happen. She had it all worked out, she had this grand master plan, and neither he nor she had thought it possible that they would fall in love with each other. I have to keep the real details a secret otherwise you won’t have any fun seeing it. MTV : Is the film a remake of “Anthony Zimmer” or an interpretation? Von Donnersmarck : I’d say, in a way, the film is inspired by a whole set of films. There’s a lot of “Anthony Zimmer” in it, which is the French screenplay that they optioned the rights for, there’s a lot of “North by Northwest,” “To Catch a Thief,” “The Thomas Crown Affair,” the “Thin Man” series, “The Pink Panther” — there’s just a whole sweep of films that we used as inspiration and, certainly, there’s quite a few films that informed the film. MTV : How did you assemble such a spectacular cast? Von Donnersmarck : I think if you create a part in the screenplay and what you describe to actors where they can show some of their acting muscle, then great actors will be attracted to those parts and will be game for it. I think what people forget often when they talk about such great stars as Angelina and Johnny, they forget that what they are, really, are actors. They’re actors with a capital “A,” but they’re much more actors than they are stars, and I think that these parts were just right for them as actors. They can really show what they can do. Angelina is so charming and delicate and feminine and strong and everything at the same time that I think when I talked to her about that part and when we worked on the screenplay together, she saw that she could really be able to do something with that part, and the same for Johnny. He shows so much of his own complexity in this part. He’s so winning, so charming, so funny, like he is in real life. I think in many ways, this part is quite close to who he is in real life. He is the most funny and charming person you’ll have ever met. MTV : Well, we already know Paul fell in love with him … Von Donnersmarck : It’s impossible not to. Everybody does. Same with Angelina. She is so much fun. Also, Johnny and Angie just got along so well, that was something I could sense straight from the first meeting that we had, the three of us. Believe it or not, Angie and Johnny had never met. Through all the years that they’ve been king and queen of Hollywood, they had never actually physically met, so I was the first person to ever bring them together. So if nothing else, that was a really historical moment. They just got along so well from the first moment they met that I knew it was going to be a lot of fun making this film. I probably have hours worth of bloopers where they were just laughing because they had so much fun inventing stuff on the fly and letting their incredible creativity run free. MTV : How difficult was shooting in Venice? Von Donnersmarck : It was difficult, and that’s why most films they do all the interior stuff in studio and go to Venice for maybe three weeks to shoot all the exteriors. We really shot the entirety of the picture — except the scenes that take place in Paris — we shot them in Venice. There’s a chance that we would have captured more of Venice than has been captured before; that was certainly our aim. When Angie and I first talked about it, we said, “Let’s really make Venice a character. Let’s have it be about Johnny’s character, about her character, but also about Venice. Let’s really shoot it there.” Luckily, our producer was game for this, Graham King, so before we knew it, we were all in Venice and lived there for half a year, and in some of the most fantastic places along the Grand Canal, and I never set foot in a car or a truck for half a year. MTV : Going from “The Lives of Others” to this film, was there any added pressure in having such big-name actors attached? Von Donnersmarck : I always feel, at the end of the day, the director is one of those many people hiding behind the cameras. I think the spotlight always should be on the actors. The actors I had on “The Lives of Others” were, maybe not so known so much in America, but in Europe and in Germany they were very well-known. I don’t feel that it was that different in that aspect. It was very different genre-wise and just the feel of the film, but that was part of the fun for me. I feel it’s more fun to try out something completely different, and after you’ve done something more heavy, to do something light and breezy, it was almost a kind of self-therapy there. MTV : What do you think will resonate most with audiences? Von Donnersmarck : I think that they’ll love just seeing a world where somehow everything is beautiful, not so much in a way that seems unrealistic. All of the things we show in the film could happen like they do in the film and could look the way they do, but even if there’s a scene with 500 extras, every single extra will have been designed and sculpted by the most fantastic designers that Hollywood and Italy have to offer, so I hope people will feel transported into a world that is as beautiful as it could be, that’s what I was aiming for. Most of all, I just hope they will be transformed by — as I was on the set — by the incredible chemistry and the joy and love between our marvelous actors, between Angie and Johnny, and Paul and Timothy Dalton and Steven Berkhoff, all the incredible actors that we had. From the saucy Jessica Alba in “Little Fockers” to James Franco’s grueling journey in “127 Hours,” the MTV Movies team is delving into the hottest flicks of fall 2010. Check back daily for exclusive clips, photos and interviews with the films’ biggest stars. Check out everything we’ve got on “The Tourist.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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Angelina Jolie And Johnny Depp Have ‘Incredible Chemistry,’ ‘Tourist’ Director Says

Lady Gaga To Perform At John Lennon Tribute Show

Perry Farrell, Iggy Pop, RZA also join Yoko Ono’s We Are Plastic Ono Band in Los Angeles next month. By Gil Kaufman Lady Gaga Photo: Stephen Lovekin/ Getty Images There’s no word yet if she’s going to take a seat at the signature white piano again, but Lady Gaga has signed on to perform at one of the John Lennon tribute concerts taking place in Los Angeles in October. According to Yoko Ono’s website , Gaga will join a star-studded list for a pair of We Are Plastic Ono Band shows at the Orpheum Theater on October 1 and 2 that will include performances by Lennon’s widow Ono, Jane’s Addiction singer Perry Farrell, Wu-Tang Clan’s RZA, experimental solo artist Tune-Yards, punk icon Iggy Pop and Lennon’s youngest son, Sean. The shows will pay tribute to Lennon on what would have been the ex-Beatle’s 70th birthday. Gaga is slated to take the stage on the second night on a bill that also features married Sonic Youth duo Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore. Among the other acts listed on the poster promoting the show: Cornelius, actress Carrie Fisher, director/actor Vincent Gallo, Harper Simon, Mike Watt, Nels Cline, Yuka Honda and Haruomi Hosono. Though her name stands out on the bill, Gaga’s inclusion is not that unusual. She performed “Imagine,” Lennon’s signature song of hope, at last October’s Human Rights Campaign gathering in Washington, D.C., where she tweaked the song’s lyrics a bit to make references to the 1998 murder of gay college student Matthew Shepard. The shows are just one of the ways Ono is celebrating what would have been a milestone birthday for Lennon. EMI will reissue spiffed-up versions of Lennon’s solo albums on October 5, along with some previously unreleased home recordings. Related Photos The Evolution Of: Lady Gaga Related Artists Lady Gaga John Lennon

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Lady Gaga To Perform At John Lennon Tribute Show

Essential Killing Trailer: What Do Vincent Gallo, the Taliban and a Chainsaw Have in Common?

Honestly, Essential Killing sounds so insane on paper that it doesn’t even need a trailer to compel your viewing. “The film follows the story of Mohammed, who is captured by the US military in Afghanistan and transported to a secret military black site,” explain the preliminary production notes . “When the army convoy he is riding in plummets off a steep hill, Mohammed finds himself suddenly free and on the run behind enemy lines. A hostile, snow-blanketed forest, gradually reveals to be somewhere in the wilds of Eastern Europe. Relentlessly pursued by the military, Mohammed must constantly confront the need to kill in order to survive.” Oh, and it’s directed by the Polish great Jerzy Skolimowski. And Vincent Gallo plays Mohammed. Click through for a look.

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Essential Killing Trailer: What Do Vincent Gallo, the Taliban and a Chainsaw Have in Common?

REVIEW: Hypnotic, Stop-Motion Metropia Misses the Bigger Picture

Dark and queer enough to catch your attention but lacking the story power to hold it, Metropia is an aesthetic in search of an author. The first animated feature from Swedish director Tarik Saleh, Metropia posits a familiar scenario — middle-class male malaise — in a near-future Europe made exotic by its fall into dystopian ruin. The allusions made by the opening titles to the environmental and financial crises that have ostensibly brought Europe together (the countries have been literally connected by an inter-continental subway system) are a little misleading: As they attempt to build a paranoid allegory around the monolithic potential of the European Union, Saleh and writer Fredrik Edin move further and further into the experience of a call-center employee named Roger (voiced by Vincent Gallo). Ultimately this approach shrinks the scope of a setting that seems designed for bigger things.

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REVIEW: Hypnotic, Stop-Motion Metropia Misses the Bigger Picture

Do You Recognize Any of the Names in the Directors’ Fortnight Sidebar at Cannes?

Last year at Cannes, the Directors’ Fortnight sidebar opened with a film by a director you may have heard of…some up-and-comer named Francis Ford Coppola? This year is a little different; the lineup was announced today , and it’s teeming with new faces. (Among those missing: Vincent Gallo, who we’ve heard is still seeking money to complete Promises Written in Water .) Still, you may recognize a few.

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Do You Recognize Any of the Names in the Directors’ Fortnight Sidebar at Cannes?