Who are some of the Celebrities who use Scientology and Dianetics to help them live happy and successful lives?
Michelle Monaghan keeps Hollywood guessing






"It's important to keep Hollywood guessing", she says over coffee at a downtown restaurant.




Jake Gyllenhaal & Duncan Jones - "Source Code" photocall in Rome, movie clips














Scenes from "Source Code", directed by Duncan Jones, starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Michelle Monaghan and Vera Farmiga
Jake Gyllenhaal and Duncan Jones "Source Code" photocall in Madrid, Spain














"Source Code" Spoilers - Jake Gyllenhaal Interviews

"Source Code" *SPOILERS*:
Where Does The Source Code Take Place?
So the Source Code is a government computer program that allows Gyllenhaal's Captain Colter Stevens to jump into another man's body — a guy named Sean Fentressis, who died in a terrorist train bombing — to experience the final eight minutes of his life in an attempt to prevent the terrorist from detonating a second bomb. But is what Gyllenhaal experiences just a computer simulation? Or is it actually real?
"The idea is that it's a simulator, but it actually opens up access to a parallel reality", Jones explained. "It literally creates new realities where things can happen in very different ways. Every time Colter is sent into the Source Code, they're creating a new reality where a new terrorist event occurs. So in a sense, every time Colter fails, they actually created a new terrorist event."
Why'd They Make The Terrorist a Lone Gunman?

According to Jones, though, the choice of the terrorist was another chance for "Source Code" to play with audience expectations. "That was the fun of the script," he said.

What About the Paradox at the End?
As the plot wraps up, Colter, who we've learned is being held at the Source Code facility, ends up not only preventing the second bombing but also the original one on the train. He permanently ends up in Fentressis' body, and no terrorist event ever comes to pass. That sets up a classic time-travel paradox of which Jones was well aware.



While the movie hardly qualifies as a blockbuster — it grossed $15 million over its opening weekend — Gyllenhaal sees a lot of room for a sequel.
"I think it'd be fascinating if Sean Fentressis is somebody that [the government] wanted to find," he said. "Because it opens up a number of stories that are fascinating to me. To me, there really is no ending to this movie — and that's what's so cool about it." Source: www.mtv.com

-Yes! I would often do six or seven pages of script in that pod by myself. I’d play a whole scene out, then director Duncan Jones would let me go right back in. So it wasn’t about gathering pieces, it was more like theatre. I felt very empowered as an actor, as you would on stage.

-To free up the actor’s instrument, you have to give yourself permission to feel you don’t have to hit a mark or the same result and you’ll get somewhere fascinating if you just let yourself go free. Every actor is different. Some actors like to know they have to hit a bull’s eye – but I’m not one of those actors.
-I hear you were responsible for bringing Jones on board.

-Did the theatre vibe you felt while working on Source Code also extend to your fellow actors?

Watch the video: Jake Gyllenhaal’s surprise appearance on Weekend Update. Andy Samberg co-stars in the skit as Nicolas Cage.
Reese Witherspoon & Robert Pattinson on ‘Water For Elephants’ - Access Hollywood









Reese Witherspoon and Robert Pattinson chat with Access’ Shaun Robinson about playing lovers in their upcoming film, “Water For Elephants”. How was their on-set chemistry? Plus, the duo reminisces about working with each other in the 2004 movie, “Vanity Fair” where Robert played Reese’s son. Source: www.accesshollywood.com
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)