Strucòn!


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monci |
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Grazie cara per questa notizia e in bocca al lupo a Brad per la sua candidatura come attore non protagonista.....FORZA BRAD!
Strucòn! ![]() ![]() |
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ningi77 |
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Ragazze, vi metto questo link:
pittimpressions.livejournal.com/ tra i video del 16/12 ce ne sono alcuni davvero carini, come i 2 di good morning america in cui la Jolie parla di quanto è bravo Brad come papà, poi ci sono quelli della premiere in cui si può vedere quello splendore del Capo date un'occhiata anche agli articoli scannerizzati, ci sono le foto della famigliola che vi ho postato di là (People: best in 2006) e quella di Brad sulla moto (Vogue) e gli articoli, soprattutto quello su Vogue sono i primi in cui la Jolie parla apertamente di lei e Brad strucon! ---------------
Vaughn:What you said about wanting to go to a hockey game... wanting me to be part of your life... I think I wasn't clear about something. That it would be nice to be in public with you, to actually get to look at you. Grab a pizza or go to a hockey game. I just... I wasn't clear that I would really like that, too. |
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monci |
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Dany grazie per il link e ho cominciato a vedere qualcosa, naturalmente ho visto quelli della premiere, ovviamente
A proposito dello splendore del Capo ti ho postato una chicca nel topic a te dedicato, Sturcòn! ![]() ![]() |
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ningi77 |
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Passo al volo e vi posto un articoletto dal Tgcom
"Bizzarro il sesso con la Jolie" Damon parla del film "The good sheperd" Mentre metà degli uomini del pianeta darebbe volentieri un braccio o una gamba per fare sesso con Angelina Jolie, Matt Damon, il suo partner di scena nel film "The Good Shepherd", ha definito il sesso con l'attrice una cosa "bizzarra". Tutta colpa di Brad Pitt, amico di Damon e legittimo consorte della Jolie. "Girare una scena d'amore con la ragazza di un tuo buon amico - ha spiegato Damon - è strano. Ci si conosce troppo bene". Nel film, il secondo girato da Robert De Niro, Damon interpreta un agente della Cia stretto tra il dovere per la professione e la necessaria vita privata. Sua moglie nel copione è la supersexy Angelina Jolie che, riguardo alle famigerate scene bollenti con l'amico-marito ha spiegato che non vi ha trovato nulla di strano, aggiungendo che nè Pitt, nè tantomeno Luciana Barroso, la moglie di Damon, ci hanno badato. "E' una delle situazioni meno minacciose che ci siano e Brad e Luciana erano assolutamente disinteressati - ha detto al "Post Chronicle" - perché entrambi sono sicuri delle rispettive relazioni. Sulla differenza tra Damon e Pitt ha concluso: "Uno è un amico, l'altro è il mio amore". Per la Jolie è stato molto più facile baciare un suo caro amico, piuttosto che interpretare la parte della rubamariti, un ruolo che, - giura lei - non le si addice per nulla. "Fa una delle cose peggiori che una donna possa fare - spiega. - Seduce un uomo e lo intrappola con un bambino. C'è qualcosa di peggio di questo?" Sembrerebbe la falsa riga della relazione che ha unito proprio Pitt e la Jolie, se Angelina, proprio qualche giorno prima, non avesso specificato che nulla era in ballo tra lei e il collega quando Pitt era ancora un uomo sposato. "C'era tra noi una strana relazione, passavamo il tempo a parlare e a dirci quello che entrambi volevamo dalla vita e realizzavamo, pian piano, che volevamo cose molto simili. Poi a lungo siamo rimasti amici, fino a quando le cose non si sono evolute in modo da permetterci di vivere insieme". "Angelina è un'attrice incredibile - ha commentato Damon - anche se non so come faccia a sopravvivere con tutto il clamore che ha intorno. Quando giravamo, a Brooklyn, io sapevo che era al lavoro perché vedevo dai 25 ai 50 fotografi assiepati ai margini del set. Eppure lei e Brad hanno questa incrdibile abilità... Una volta che sono impegnati o in privato, si lasciano tutto questo alle spalle. Io non sarei mai capace di farlo". diciamo che l'articolo richiama le interviste e gli articoli che trovate al link sopra strucòn! ---------------
Vaughn:What you said about wanting to go to a hockey game... wanting me to be part of your life... I think I wasn't clear about something. That it would be nice to be in public with you, to actually get to look at you. Grab a pizza or go to a hockey game. I just... I wasn't clear that I would really like that, too. |
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monci |
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Grazie Dany!
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ningi77 |
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Newsweek ha organizzato questo incontro tra: Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett, Forest Whitaker, Helen Mirren, Penelope Cruz e Leonardo DiCaprio
non ho capito se è un estratto dell'intervista o è tutta comunque ve la posto qui: What did your parents think when you told them you wanted to be an actor? HELEN MIRREN: My parents were very against the idea, so I trained as a teacher for three years. I was a horrible, really bad teacher. I didnt become a professional actress until I was about 22. FOREST WHITAKER: My parents really wanted me to go to West Pointsomething practical like that. Ten years into my acting career they were still trying to get me to go back to school. I wasnt making much money, and sometimes really struggling, but I was, like, No, Ma. This is what I want to do. Those were difficult conversations because I had my own doubts. It took me a long time to feel comfortable thinking, Im an actor. I can do this. Cate, is it true that your first acting job was as an extra in an Arabic boxing movie? CATE BLANCHETT: I was at university studying fine arts, and I took a year off and went traveling. I had 2,500 Australian dollars, which is nothing, and I traveled for a year on that, so I ended up in places like a bunker in Istanbul with water dripping from the ceiling. Later, I was staying in this place in Cairo. I literally had no money, and some Scottish guy who was printing money and passports in the foyer said, Do you want to earn five Egyptian dollars? It wasnt to sleep with anyone. It was to be an extra in this boxing movie, so I said, Sure. They had free falafel. MIRREN: Were all in it for the free food, actually. We are all, in our hearts, out-of-work actors. It seems every actor, no matter how successful, thinks hell never work again. Do you feel that way, Brad? BRAD PITT: Not really, no. [Laughter] You all had some surprising early jobs before you became actors. Forest was a classical tenor. Helen was a sort of carnival barker. PITT: I had a job driving strippers around. LEONARDO DICAPRIO: Really? BLANCHETT: Just last month. PITT: I love her. Yeah, my job was to drive them to bachelor parties and things. Id pick them up, and at the gig Id collect the money, play the bad Prince tapes and catch the girls clothes. It was not a wholesome atmosphere, and it got very depressing. After two months I went in to quit, and the guy said, Listen, Ive got this one last gig tonight. So I did it, and this girlId never met her beforewas in an acting class taught by a man named Roy London [a famous acting coach]. I went and checked it out, and it really set me on the path to where I am now. A stripper changed the course of your career. PITT: [Nods] Strippers changed my life. Well see that in the National Enquirer next week. PITT: [Looks toward the ceiling] I just want one week off. Just one. Leo, you made your first film, This Boys Life, at 16. What was that like? DICAPRIO: I didnt know how to conduct myself on a film set. The director, Michael Caton-Jones, really took me under his wing. He said things like, When youre rehearsing with Robert De Niro, you dont talk about what baseball cards youre collecting. MIRREN: I was like a rabbit in headlights for years on film sets, not understanding who was doing what, and how youre supposed to behave. It is a terrifying environment, really. Penelope, in Jamón, Jamón you played the daughter of a prostitute, and you became a sensation, and a sex symbol, at 17. What was that like? PENELOPE CRUZ: One day I came out on the street for a walk with my dad, and somebody screamed from a car, I love you! And a minute later, somebody else screamed, @#%$! [Laughter] Then I knew I was famous. It was unbelievable. I was 16 when I made the movie. I didnt tell my parents, and I was hiding the ***** from them. Then they took my grandmother to the premiere, and I always felt bad about that. But the movie was good, and it did a lot of good things for my career. Every role I accepted after that I was covered up to here. [Raises her hand to her neck] Leo, you became a teen idol at an early age also. DICAPRIO: I had a brief run at that on television, being thrown on the cover of teen magazines, and I was trying to work away from that. I wanted to establish myself as an actor who put a lot of thought into his characters and did good work. And then I did a movie called Titanic, and there I was, right back into that position of being looked at as another piece of cute meat. PITT: That you are. [Laughter] DICAPRIO: It was pretty disheartening to be objectified like that. I wanted to stop acting for a little bit. It changed my life in a lot of ways, but at the same time, I cant say that it didnt give me opportunities. It made me, for the first time, in control of my career. But yeah, it was weird. Brad, Hollywood wanted you to be a conventional leading man. You didnt. PITT: Acting is about discovery, for me, and these leading man *****sLeo can testify to thistheyre all the same guy. You can plug any one of us into it and you get a variation on a theme, but anyone can do it. Where is the discovery in that? BLANCHETT: So did you guys look to a relationship with a director to help champion the way out? DICAPRIO: I definitely sought out the relationship with Martin Scorsese. It was important to me to find somebody I could trust. Its a weird thing to put your performance in another persons hands. We so often sit in rooms with directors and you hear their vision about a specific project, but theres a huge difference between what they say and what actually shows up on screen. PITT: Do directors want you to [play a version] of them? DICAPRIO: Sometimes you get that feeling, yeah. MIRREN: It doesnt happen to women. You get to play their fantasy instead. But you know, [the industry] is always trying to put you in a box, and youre always having to fight your way out of it. They dont want you to grow up or grow older or change, so its great when a role comes up that allows you to take that next step. It happened with me on Prime Suspect. Suddenly I was allowed to look like a woman of the age that I was. I didnt have to have glamorous lighting. I didnt have to wear makeup. It was fabulously liberating, and its really why Im still working, because I was allowed to step forward. Forest, youve played roles that werent actually written for black actors. WHITAKER: I had moments where the directors were open enough to let me do that, yeah. In Good Morning, Vietnam, my character was written as a nerdy Jewish guy. In The Color of Money, the character was originally a Yuppie. DICAPRIO: Was it really? That character was stellar. I remember seeing you in The Color of Money at a very young age, going, Who is this guy? WHITAKER: I was a replacement. They fired somebody, and I flew in and auditioned. Thats how it happened. MIRREN: My husband [Taylor Hackford] directed what was it called? Oh, God, I forgot the name of it. Famous movie with Debra Winger? An Officer and a Gentleman. MIRREN: Thank you. The Lou Gossett Jr. role was written for a white man, and Taylor forced the studio to cast Lou. Lou won an Oscar for it, in fact. Which movie made you want to become an actor? CRUZ: Pedro Almodóvars Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! I was 13 when I saw that movie. I came out of the theater completely fascinated. I started to become obsessed with Pedro, and I decided then to become an actress. BLANCHETT: The only role I wanted to play was Lucy in Youre a Good Man, Charlie Brown. I also wanted to be Gregory Peck. PITT: I remember sneaking into Saturday Night Fever, and it had a profound effect on me. [Laughter] MIRREN: The first movie that caught my imagination was LAvventura, by Antonioni. Until then I had seen only Rock Hudson/Doris Day movies, and I wasnt into them very much. WHITAKER: When I was a kid there werent a lot of black actors working in films, so acting didnt seem like a possibility. The first actor I remember being struck by was Sidney Poitier. DICAPRIO: I tried to get an agent when I was around 7. I was a break-dancer and had a mohawk, and I was rejected. I knew I wanted to be an actor, but it wasnt until This Boys Life, when I was 16, that I started to research quality films. I remember watching James Dean in East of Eden. I said to myself, Wow, I didnt know it was possible to give a performance this good. PITT: Although you were extraordinaryon Growing Pains. DICAPRIO: Thank you, buddy. As were you. Leo, didnt you get thrown off the set of Romper Room? DICAPRIO: Yeah, when I was 3 years old. I ran up to the camera and started shaking it, saying, Look at me! Dustin Hoffman famously asked Laurence Olivier once what acting was all about, and Olivier replied, Look at me, look at me, look at me. MIRREN: I hate being looked at. BLANCHETT: I think its probably Look into me. What we perceive to be naturalism or realism has been utterly eroded by so-called reality television, where people are performing themselves. But what we do, actually, is unmask and reveal what it means to be human, and allow someone in. Its taken me a long time to allow myself to be exposed in front of a camera. PITT: Acting is really a team sport. A lot of times one actor will become the MVP, but just like in tennis, your game is elevated if youre playing with someone better. I mean, just look at the way Cate compensated for George Clooney in The Good German. [Laughter] Are there roles that you look at and think, I wish I could have played that? DICAPRIO: Tons. Burt Lancaster in Sweet Smell of Success. De Niro in Taxi Driver. CRUZ: Either of the two women in Terms of Endearment. Carmen Maura in Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown. Shirley MacLaine in The Apartment. BLANCHETT: Anything Elizabeth Taylor has ever done. MIRREN: Its not that you want to play the role; youre inspired by it. Its not as if youre sitting there going, Oh, I would have been better. [Pause] Well, sometimes you are. [Laughter] BLANCHETT: Theres a moment in A Streetcar Named Desire, where Vivien Leigh has just gone into the bathroom, and Marlon Brandos banging on the door, and she opens the door and his hand flinches. Its the most astonishing shot. This guy that Brando could have played with complete brutality, and [instead he shows] his vulnerability, in that hand. DICAPRIO: I wanted to ask everyone something: we all talk about being in the zonebecoming our characterbut there are so many technical things that happen when youre making a movie, its impossible not to realize that theres a camera there, and your character has to emote this specific emotion. Those moments where it all disappears, and youre really speaking as this other person? Im lucky if that happens more than once on a movie. PITT: I find alcohol helps. [Laughter] When youre watching a movie, are you always aware of the actors technique, or can you get lost in it the way we do? MIRREN: Completely lost. BLANCHETT: Well, I didnt get lost in Battlefield Earth. Was there a role youd wished youd played that you didnt? BLANCHETT: Ive been lucky in a way. In school I was tall and my sexuality was dubious. I was always playing men. And then my nationality has been dubious, having played Elizabeth I quite early in my film career. So I feel like I got some weird and wonderful choices. PITT: [To DiCaprio] Our sexuality has been dubious as well. [Laughter] Would you care to discuss that? PITT: No, theres been enough discussion. BLANCHETT: We have photographs. Was there a role that caused you more anxiety than others? BLANCHETT: They all scare me. But I tell myself that anxiety is just misplaced excitement. Youre constantly risking failure, so I never watch the films Im in. That way, I always feel like, OK, that worked. I had an experience on Babel which Ive never had shooting a film. I thought, God, that was a really great take. And then I saw the film, and the whole scene was played on Brad. [Laughter] Helen, do you know what Queen Elizabeth thinks of your portrayal of her? MIRREN: Of course I dont. Has she seen it? MIRREN: Im sure. Who could resist? Someone who is very close to the queen, a great historian named Robert Lacey, said he thinks she would have said, as the credits rolled, That wasnt too bad, was it? I think Ill have a gin and tonic. PITT: How did you start shaping her? Shes got this great fireplug walk, and your glasses were always halfway down the bridge of your nose. MIRREN: Obviously theres a lot of film on her, but its of her in her formal rolehardly anything behind closed doors. Playing a real character, you have to behave likea detective and see things that maybe no one else has. Shes unbelievably composed, but on the films I noticed that her thumb is always turning her wedding ring round and round and round. Theres this inner beat, this tension. When youre creating a character, do you need to find something external like that? Penelope, in Volver CRUZ: I know what youre going to ask. You wore a padded butt for your role. MIRREN: I had a padded butt in The Queen, as well. It wasnt just Penelope. CRUZ: Oh, Im so happy! Now every time someone asks me this, Im going to say, Helen had one, too. Did the butt help? CRUZ: Completely. Pedro and I didnt talk about it. Maybe a one-minute conversation. It just made me work in a different way, move in a different way. It was like finding the right shoes for the character. Youve all done some impressive accent work in your careers. Cate has done three different ones this year. Is it a hurdle to get over when youre building a character? WHITAKER: Accents help me figure out how to move, how to gesture. I think sometimes when an actors accent doesnt work, its because it isnt connected to the body. MIRREN: Until you nail the accent it is paralyzing. You cant actyou cant do anythingbecause all you can hear is your voice making the wrong sound. Whats even more difficult is what Penelope has done. I think to act in a foreign language is the most unbelievably difficult thing. I cant imagine it. Penelope, your first English-language film was The Hi-Lo Country. Was that scary? CRUZ: Oh, so scary. I didnt understand a word [director] Stephen Frears was saying. Hes very sweet, but he has a very strong accent, and I only knew my dialogue for the character. I was always going to the bathroom to cry and coming back and trying to hide it. Brad, your Irish Gypsy accent in Guy Ritchies @#%$ is so great that we cant understand a word youre saying. PITT: That was last-minute, night-before, full-panic mode. I kept trying to get the dialectI probably started a little lateand it was just too stiff. I went to Guy the day before and said, Youve got to do this part. I cant do it. And hes, like, Yeah. Right. But it occurred to me that the genius of what Benicio Del Toro had done in The Usual Suspects was that you couldnt understand what he was saying a lot of times. So about midnight, I started walking around the North End of London, working on it and working on it, and it just kept getting more and more indecipherable. Thank God it worked. BLANCHETT: I never think of accents as something thats slapped on. Its syntax and rhythm and breath. Its about when people choose to pause, what words they emphasize. You can say its accent, but its actually thought process. Its got to be organic. And I think the earlier you can start the better. Brad. [He mimics being stabbed in the heart.] MIRREN: Youre absolutely right. Its not something that you glom on the top, as if language and accent are separate. Americans are always saying, Oh, I love your accent. I dont have the bloody accent. Youve got the accent. [Laughter] No, I never say that. I say, Thank you so much. How sweet of you. Do you feel differently about your work than you did when you started acting? PITT: When I started I had this idea that the films I did defined me, and that my life would be interesting based on the characters Id chosen. I dont feel that way anymore. Im a father now. There are other things that are important to me. I was chasing something that wasnt fulfilling. I caught myself on the phone the other dayLeo has been playing some real strong men these last few yearsand I found myself saying, I want to play more of a man. I got off the phone and I thought, No. Live like a man, and the movies will follow. WHITAKER: I had to learn to not divorce my life from my work. My work is a continual process of growth for me; its an expansion of myself. In the last couple of years, Ive been taking things I learn about myself in my work and using it to be more completely there for my kids, my family, my friends. Its flowing in a complete way. It has been a bit of an awakening. DICAPRIO: Man, Ive got to get some kids, huh? I only really started enjoying acting when there was a certain level of detachment from the end result. I remember being 15 and going on 160 auditions, and not getting a single role for a year and a half. I realized I was turning into one of those Hollywood kids: Hi, Im Leo! And Im going to be reading today! Oh yeah, I had a great day at school! I love school! [Laughter] I had become a product of this system where everyone is aiming to please the director, the casting director, whomever. So I started to think about the characterthe workinstead of the result. You know, kids are always asking me what they should do to become actors. You give them the pat answers: Study your lines. Work hard. Dont give up. But what I want to tell them is, You have to not care what these people think about you. MIRREN: You were lucky to learn that at 15. Marlon Brandos great acting advice was, Dont care too much. I never understood that, because I cared so much, and still do. But what he meant was, let go of that total investment in Are they going to love me? Am I going to be good? F- that. Maybe thats what Brad is saying as well. PITT: Yeah, but it took me 800 words to say what he did in four. Youre all rich. Youre all famous. Youve all received critical acclaim. Why work? Why keep acting? DICAPRIO: I love it. Theres no other art form in the world that affects me more. Theres nothing that I walk away from feeling transformed by the way I do with cinema. Theres something so gratifying about being burned into celluloid and knowing that I can look back later in life and have stories about those experiences. Its an amazing gift. WHITAKER: Its magic. Who wouldnt want to be a part of that? CRUZ: It gives me so much happiness to know that I will never know everything about acting. That fear of not knowing will always be with me, no matter what happens. PITT: Its the love for the story, and a respect for the business. I want to be better in it, and better for it. Im still striving for that. And I believe in the power of films. BLANCHETT: Krzysztof Kieslowski said that filmmaking is a conversation with an audience. When youre connecting with other people, its utterly thrilling. I feel alive when Im acting. Its tragic, but true. I would die in a rehearsal room if I could. Helen, what keeps you acting? MIRREN: Money. [Laughter] And its incredibly good fun. Of course, there are some intense artistic reasons, but Im not going to go into them. So, yeah, fun and money. vi metto il link, c'è anche la foto e ci dovrebbero essere dei filmati ma , ahimè, io non li riesco a vedere www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16720751/site/newsweek/ ---------------
Vaughn:What you said about wanting to go to a hockey game... wanting me to be part of your life... I think I wasn't clear about something. That it would be nice to be in public with you, to actually get to look at you. Grab a pizza or go to a hockey game. I just... I wasn't clear that I would really like that, too. |
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monci |
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Grazie Dany per l'articoletto.
Io come vi ho annunciato nel topic delle foto di Brad questo articolo che ho trovato sempre sul tgcom Jolie teme di perdere Pitt Brad asfissiato dalla sua gelosia Sono la coppia più sexy di Hollywood e di recente hanno ricevuto anche il riconoscimento di "Famiglia dell'anno", ma Brad Pitt e Angelina Jolie troppo spesso vengono fotografati con il muso lungo. Avranno qualche scheletro nell'armadio? Secondo Life & Style, Angie ha il terrore di perdere il compagno. "Ha telefonato piangendo alla cognata Lisa - riferisce - chiedendole di rompere i rapporti con la Aniston". Il suo portavoce smentisce, ma... Anche ai Golden Globe, quando Babel è stato acclamato miglior film, Angelina ha scambiato calorosi abbracci con tutti i protagonisti, tranne che con Brad. Quando alla fine si sono scambiati un bacio per le foto di rito, lui guardava altrove come se fosse assorto in altri pensieri. Il loro atteggiamento ha colpito anche i giornalisti che assediavano il red carpet. La Jolie non ha degnato nessun microfono e quando Pitt si è avvicinato per rispondere si è beccato un'occhiataccia eloquente. Potrebbe essere una strategia studiata a tavolino per tutelare la privacy, ma le indiscrezioni pubblicate da Life & Style fanno pensare a ben altro. "Nelle prime due settimane di gennaio - riporta il magazine - Angie ha telefonato in lacrime alla cognata Lisa (che ha sposato il fratello di Brad, Doug) implorandola di interrompere il legame con la Aniston". La famiglia Pitt, infatti, è rimasta molto vicina a Jen anche dopo il divorzio. La Jolie, inoltre, in queste ultime settimane è sembrata molto provata. Il suo eccessivo dimagrimento potrebbe essere indice di un malessere più profondo, forse sentimentale. Anche sul versante professionale le cose non vanno alla grande, perché le è stata scelta Rachel Weisz per interpretare Ava Lord in Sin City. L'addetto stampa dell'attrice ha negato tutto, ma di certo c'è che la coppia ha deciso di trasferirsi a New Orleans per stare lontano dai riflettori. Speriamo che nella nuova casa ritrovino anche il sorriso, che non starebbe affatto male sulle loro belle facce. Ormai dirvi che l'ho trovato allucinante non dovrebbe sorprenderci, tanto ormai ci abbiamo fatto il callo alle ca*****e sparate sulla dinamica coppia. Però mi domando ma le hanno viste bene le foto scattate durante i Golden Globe? Dov'erano i musi lunghi e i sorrisi di circostanza? O sono io che ho le traveggole oppure vorrei sapera che cosa cavolo hanno fumato sti benedetti giornalisti specialisti in gossip prima di scrivere cavolate del genere?!?!?!?! ![]() ![]() |
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ningi77 |
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Quote: oddio Monci, ormai quando leggo queste cose mi viene solo sa ridere, come hai detto giustamente tu ci abbiamo fatto il callo alle ca***** che sparano Quote: o siamo in due ad avere avuto le traveggole oppure... ---------------
Vaughn:What you said about wanting to go to a hockey game... wanting me to be part of your life... I think I wasn't clear about something. That it would be nice to be in public with you, to actually get to look at you. Grab a pizza or go to a hockey game. I just... I wasn't clear that I would really like that, too. |
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Jessica70 |
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si beh ragazze avete ragione, l'articolo contrasta con le foto.... a parte però quando sono stati intervistati da quelli di "E" (come ho già commentato nell'altro post) dove l'Angelina pareva un pò musona e taciturna..... però forse dopo si è ...scongelata!!
comunque sì ne sparano sempre di grosse...chissà che prima o poi si rivelino anche vero no?? forse anche ai media non piace la dinamica coppia apro una piccola parentesi per salutare le mie ziette preferite, dovevo tornare al lavoro in questi giorni ...mezza giornata comunque...(oggi ci sono per caso) visto che avevo messo il cucciolo all'asilo nido ... però è già a casa... ha preso la bronchite ....poverino mi fa una tenerezza.... speriamo guarisca presto, sono già 5 notti che faccio praticamente in bianco e con lui in braccio appena torno ci sentiamo!!! un strucon fortissimo e grazie per essere sempre in pole position con le news sul capo!! .....ma la nostra Jen che fine ha fatto?? |
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monci |
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Oh Jess mi dispiace per il tuo cuccioletto che si è ammalato
Tesoro in bocca al lupo per Leo che guarisca al più presto Facci sapere ogni tanto come sta, oki? Per quanto riguarda l'articolo sui "musi lunghi" Quote: tesoro ti rimando al topic di Jen! ![]() ![]() |
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ningi77 |
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Ciao a tutte, mi sto riprendendo dall'influenza che palle!!!
questa volta, purtroppo, mi trovo a postare una brutta notizia Marcheline Bertrand, mother of Angelina Jolie, dies in LA Associated Press LOS ANGELES - Marcheline Bertrand, actress and mother of Angelina Jolie, has died of cancer, her daughter said Sunday. Bertrand died Saturday afternoon at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center after a 7 1/2-year battle with cancer, Jolie said in a statement released by her manager. No age was provided. Jolie, Brad Pitt and her older brother, James Haven, were at the hospital Saturday, the statement said. Bertrand, who had small roles in the movies "Lookin' to Get Out" in 1982 and "The Man Who Loved Women" in 1983, raised Jolie and her brother after divorcing their father, Oscar-winning actor Jon Voight, when Jolie was a toddler. A private funeral was planned. In lieu of flowers, the family asks donations be made to the Women's Cancer Research Institute at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. ...che dire...io spero solo che i paparazzi allentino un pò la presa... ---------------
Vaughn:What you said about wanting to go to a hockey game... wanting me to be part of your life... I think I wasn't clear about something. That it would be nice to be in public with you, to actually get to look at you. Grab a pizza or go to a hockey game. I just... I wasn't clear that I would really like that, too. |
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monci |
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Oh Dany mi dispiace che ti sia influenzata, in bocca al lupo per una prontissima guarigione, tesoro!
Si purtroppo la notizia della morte della mamma di Angelina l'ho letta lunedì e mi dispiace molto perchè la mamma è sempre la mamma e poi la Signora ha lottato per ben 7 anni contro questa malattia a cui purtroppo, nonostante i passi da gigante della tecnologia, ben poche persone sfuggono.......... ![]() ![]() |
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monci |
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Buon pomeriggio ragazze e Dany come stai? Ti sei ripresa? Spero di
Notizia recente sulla dinamica coppia che a quanto pare hanno comprato un loft a Berlino. A proposito di Berlino oggi apre il Festival omonimo del cinema e visto che il film di De Niro The Good Shepherd con Angelina e Matt Damon come protagonisti, è in lizza, prepariamoci a lustrarci ancora una volta gli occhi (dopo i golden globes) con il Capo, nel senso che spero che la dinamica coppia faccia una capatina nella capitale tedesca anche per via del recente acquisto. Nel frattempo buona lettura con l'articolo sotto riportato. Strucòn Brangelina compra casa a Berlino Mega-appartamento da 600 metri quadri Brad Pitt e Angelina Jolie hanno acquistato un "pied à terre" nel cuore di Berlino: lo annuncia l'edizione tedesca di Vanity Fair. Si tratta di un lussuoso appartamento di 600 metri quadri a due passi da Alexanderplatz, uno dei quartieri più esclusivi della capitale. Non si esclude che la coppia si trasferisca in Germania in pianta stabile: la Jolie ha infatti più volte espresso il desiderio di crescere i figli in Europa. Maddox, Zahara e Shiloh potrebbero però frequentare anche un prestigioso istituto della Ville Lumière. Brad e Angelina, infatti, hanno comprato casa anche Parigi. Intanto, però, i bambini continueranno ad andare a scuola a New Orleans, dove si sono appena trasferiti lasciando alle spalle la più chiassosa Los Angeles. Che non siano riusciti a integrarsi nella nuova città? Pare più probabile che Brangelina ultimamente abbia abbandonato i progetti umanitari per investire nel mercato immobiliare. Dopo Los Angeles e Parigi, ha messo radici in Louisiana e a Berlino. D'altra parte, i divi americani mostrano un sempre maggiore apprezzamento per la capitale tedesca, dove anche Tom Cruise ha il suo nido. Brad Pitt, che con la compagna ha visitato più volte Berlino prima dell'acquisto, si è fatto consigliare dagli amici architetti Lars Krueckeberg, Wolfraum Putz e Thomas Willemeit, che hanno progettato fra l'altro la sua villa a Los Angeles. ![]() ![]() |
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ningi77 |
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Quote: tutto a posto cara, grazie, mi sto solo trascinando un pò di raffreddore ma tutto ok Quote: tu dici che si faranno vedere??? e grazie per la news! strucon! ---------------
Vaughn:What you said about wanting to go to a hockey game... wanting me to be part of your life... I think I wasn't clear about something. That it would be nice to be in public with you, to actually get to look at you. Grab a pizza or go to a hockey game. I just... I wasn't clear that I would really like that, too. |
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monci |
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Quote: Sono contenta per te mia cara Quote: Io ci speravo ma ho letto che alla prima del film a Berlino si sono presentati il regista Robert De Niro e Matt Damon...... peccato...... ma forse visto il recente lutto che ha colpito Angelina si vede che non se la sentiva........ sarà per la prossima volta. Strucòn! ![]() ![]() |
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ningi77 |
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Ragazze ciao, ultime news...
A U.S. adoption agency representing the 31-year-old actress filed the papers at Vietnam's International Adoption Agency, said Vu Duc Long, the agency's director. "She just filed the papers this week," Long said. Jolie and her partner, Brad Pitt, have three children: 5-year-old son Maddox, adopted from Cambodia; 2-year-old daughter Zahara, adopted from Ethiopia; and another daughter, Shiloh, who was born to the couple in May. Long would not name the U.S. adoption agency working with Jolie, who applied to adopt as a single parent. Jolie and Pitt, 43, made a surprise visit to Vietnam at Thanksgiving, when they visited the Tam Binh orphanage, on the outskirts of Ho Chi Minh City. Their pictures were splashed across the front page of Vietnamese newspapers, showing the couple cruising around Ho Chi Minh City on a motorbike. Nguyen Van Trung, the director of the Tam Binh orphanage, declined to comment. He said he was awaiting the papers from the International Adoption Agency. sinceramente non so se sia una cosa ufficiale....comunque leggevo in un altro articolo che la Jolie ha avanzato richiesta singolarmente perchè le leggi del Vietnam consentono di adottare solo a single o a coppie sposate, quindi la dinamica coppia è ricorsa ad un piccolo escamotage... beh vedremo sicuramente nei prossimi giorni/settimane se questa storia dell'adozione è vera...io non mi stupirei comunque... strucon bimbe! che bello qui oggi c'è un sole stupendo...tempo di tirar fuori la bici!!!! ---------------
Vaughn:What you said about wanting to go to a hockey game... wanting me to be part of your life... I think I wasn't clear about something. That it would be nice to be in public with you, to actually get to look at you. Grab a pizza or go to a hockey game. I just... I wasn't clear that I would really like that, too. |
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monci |
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Grazie Dany avevo letto qualcosa la settimana scorsa circa l'intenzione della Jolie di adottare un nuovo bimbo/a.
Come dici tu staremo a vedere ......ah grazie perchè non sapevo dell'escamotage usato dalla Jolie circa la richiesta di adozione come non sapevo che in Vietnam si possa adottare sia che tu sia single o sposata. Questo mi dimostra che nella vita c'è sempre da imparare! Buona settimana e strucon! ![]() ![]() |
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ningi77 |
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Vi metto questa intervista sulla visita di Angelina in Chad, occhio che è un pò duretta
'I Was Transformed' Angelina Jolie discusses celebrity, refugees and her life in New Orleans By Christopher Dickey Newsweek March 11, 2007 - Angelina Jolie began traveling as a goodwill ambassador for the United Nations some six years ago. She has visited the victims of violence in Africa, Pakistan and Cambodiafirst as an observer in the background, then using her fame to draw attention to the plight of the helpless. The movie star spoke to NEWSWEEK's Christopher Dickey about her recent trip to a camp housing Darfur refugees in Chad, her response to critics of 'celebrity tourism' and why she and Brad Pitt like their current home in New Orleans. NEWSWEEK: What was your original motivation for working with the UNHCR, for doing these kinds of trips? Angelina Jolie: I started traveling about seven years ago with film. I would go to places like Cambodia and hear about the many refugees in Thailand and hear about the land mines and hear about the history....I remember sitting up for two days straight and reading everything obsessively. I read about the UNHCR and I realized it was an agency that I didn't know anything about: that they were taking care of 20 million people. ... And I remember realizing that I couldn't understand how I had not known that my whole life. When did it occur to you that you could do something about this directly? Did people approach you or I approached them. I think they thought I was a little crazy. When was this? Six years ago. I was very nervous to call the U.N. agency at the time. I [was] considered a rebel in Hollywood. At the time I was also a bit of the wild child. So first I went to Washington [to the UNHCR office] and I sat with everybody there and said, "You know, I know you don't know me. You might have heard things about me And I don't want to bring negative attention to your agency. If you could just help me, I'll pay my way." I spent the next year and a half going to, first, two camps in Africa, and then Pakistan and Cambodia. And with no cameras and with no press and had the opportunity to have this great education before I spoke at all . I was transformed in such an amazing way. But you do have photographers following you now. It took me a while to agree to do it. I guess I saw that so many times the picture comes before the knowledge and the substance and I certainly didn't want to do that to myself or the organization. And also, I really just was shy. I was shy about sitting on the floor and talking to a woman and having a camera take a picture because I thought it was making less of my conversation with her. But I was changed by the faces of the people I saw. "It is something that I am incapable of describing...those faces and that place and those people. And so I think it's justlet the people speak for themselves through the camera. And if I can draw you in a little because I'm familiar, then that's great. Because I know that at the end you're not looking at me, you're looking at them. I think it's fair to say people start out by looking at you, Angelina. As long as they end up looking at them, that's the point. Do you worry about people who say this is celebrity tourism? I don't know if anybody saying that has spent the last six years of their life going to over 30 camps and really spending time with these people. I can't care. At the end of the day, I'm sure a lot of criticism could keep a lot of people from doing this kind of work If someone had a direct criticism of my opinion on the issue, if someone had a direct criticism of the image shown because they think it hurts somebody then I will take that into consideration. But there are a lot of people that simply have an immediate gut reaction and they just don't want to combine artists with foreign policy. And hey, I understand. I get it. I know where you're coming from. And to each his own. You know, I was more shy when I first went into a camp that other field officers would not want me there. You were worried that you'd get in the way. Yeah. That's why I brought no media, it's why I sat back. That's why I just helped them load things. And if I felt that I was ever getting in the way, I wouldn't do it. Because I do care about the opinion of the aid worker, I do care about the opinion of the refugee. I care less about the opinion of the person who's never been in the field but has an opinion about celebrity. Do you still go with so few people? I can't believe you take no one with you I take no one. I [go] by myself on a commercial plane and into the field with my backpack. You still do that? Yes, I just did that on my last trip. I met the photographer there. In the camp? No, in the airport. We didn't even realize we were on the same flight. We landed at like midnight and got up at like 5 in the morning to catch the WFP [World Food Program] plane [to a town near the camp]. When you got there, what were the people saying about their situation? There are several photographs with this boy tied to a tent pole, and there's also another photograph of a group of women near some tents, and one of them has her ankles chained. The first time I saw that in the camp [it was] obviously really shocking. They are people who are traumatized by the bombing [by Sudanese government forces attacking villages in Darfur] and by war. The old woman may have had some dementia before. The reality is there are one or two aid workers for every 2,000 refugees. The same with the doctors, the therapists. The basic need there [is] to just try to keep these people safe. To keep the tents up in all the sand storms, try to get the food distributed and basic health-care needs. The [chained] woman started to beat her daughter with anything she could find. She kept hearing voices of the people yelling at her. So she feels constantly under attack. I'm no therapist, so I don't understand all the details. But when I did try to talk to her, she seemed pretty rational. But then she started aggressively telling me that I had to stop them from putting snakes on her. And for the people to stop yelling at her and for the bombs to stop dropping. And the little boy? The little boy was a normal 3-year-old [now 7] who disappeared for 48 hours after [his village was bombed]. I can only imagine what he saw. Sure he saw death. And when found, he was found in a state As a first reaction you want to remove [the rope]. But the mother, she has four other kids, she's by herself. Therapists visit him, but if [he's] left alone he will disappear or bang himself. I talked to him for like half an hour and just kind of looked at him for a long time before he touched me and there was a little boy in there who was open to a kind sound. There's a normal little kid right there, but he's got a look of fear. He's nervous to touch. And you can feel that need for safety. The mother unfortunately can't not go work for the other children and can't sit with him all day long and hold him, which is probably what would do some good. But what he needs is probably some serious therapy. [There are] lots of children like him there. Lots of victims of war. [It's a] whole other thing that you usually don't get to address because they have to be so focused on the basic needs of survival. These are the many other casualties of the kind of war that is happening in Darfur. Do you despair? Certainly, at times. The first two years I just cried constantly like a woman does. Oh, like anybody does. Yes, like anybody does, thank you. I couldn't really talk about the situation without being emotional. And I went through a period of just complete lack of hope. Just feeling like it was way too overwhelming and feeling like I wouldn't be able to make a dent. And then I went through a period of anger that smart, articulate people in power have not been able to answer these issues quickly and clearly and define ways of intervention. And that it just keeps going on. About a year ago, I got a lot of books on international law and I tried to study what was going onjust out of a curiosity about what was this bigger picture. I don't want to have to keep going back to camps, five different times, over the next 30 years of my life, [for situations] that there are no solutions for. People will look at these pictures of you in Chad and ask, What can I do? What should they do? There are great NGOs like SOS [Austria's SOS Kinderdorp] and there are great NGOs inside and under the U.N. that you could send aid to. It's important for the American people to know that a lot of people believeI certainly believethat it has been their outcry and their interest that has motivated our government. I think that the American people have paid attention to Darfura really amazing groundswell of people that really care, and are moved and emotional about the things they've seen when it is brought to their attention. Where would you take the spotlight next? I want to go back to Cambodia. I would like to understand and see what I can find out about what's happening inside Burma. You're living in New Orleans right now. Is that just because you like the city or because you wanted to bring attention to New Orleans, too? A bit of both. Brad was doing a film here and so we were going spend a month here. [We] realized it was a place we liked, we liked the people, I liked the school for the kids. They're very diverse. I liked the other parents. I feel very comfortable with them. We're happy having our children here. Brad is working on rebuilding here.... But for me, just as a mom, I love the other parents and the kids and the schools. I'm starting to work on the education here and the school system here. There's a lot of work to be done. vi metto anche il link, ci sono delle foto che fanno venire il magone....www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17540069/site/newsweek ---------------
Vaughn:What you said about wanting to go to a hockey game... wanting me to be part of your life... I think I wasn't clear about something. That it would be nice to be in public with you, to actually get to look at you. Grab a pizza or go to a hockey game. I just... I wasn't clear that I would really like that, too. |
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Jessica70 |
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grazie mille alla nostra zietta-segugio!!
riuscite a farmi un riassunto per favore?? io e l'inglese siamo due mondi separati!!! struconiiii!!! |
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monci |
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Grazie mille Dany bell'articolo
Jessica grosso modo Angelina racconta come 6 anni fa sia diventata ambasciatrice ONU, abbia visto una certa realtà che sta al di fuori della nostra quotidianità e di come queste cose l'abbiano trasformata nell'intimo. Racconta anche del suo ultimo viaggio nel Darfur (a proposito se state seguendo al lunedì la 12 stagione di E.R. ci sono stata alcune puntate bellissime e drammatiche sul Darfur con protagonista il mitico dottor Carter). L'ultima domanda riguarda la scelta di trasferirsi a New Orleans con tutta la famiglia. La spiegazione? Bè Brad ci è andata perchè ci sta girando un film e seguendolo si sono accorti che la città piace, piacciono le persone e le scuole per i bimbi. Naturalmente lascio a Dany il compito di aggiungere particolari in più visto che è lei la vera esperta nella lingua inglese! Bimbe la ricreazione è finita, torno alle mie fatture. Buona giornata e un grosso strucon! ![]() ![]() |
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