totalfilm:

First full trailer for Resident Evil: Retribution: watch now
Resident Evil: Retribution has released a first full trailer in which Milla Jovovich’s ass-kicking heroine Alice, finds herself back in the clutches of the nefarious Umbrella Corporation.The trailer begins with Alice living in some kind of suburban fantasy-land, only for her family home to fall under attack from a horde of marauding zombies. It soon transpires that this newfound domestic bliss is an illusion generated by Umbrella, who are holding our heroine captive…

totalfilm:

First full trailer for Resident Evil: Retribution: watch now

Resident Evil: Retribution has released a first full trailer in which Milla Jovovich’s ass-kicking heroine Alice, finds herself back in the clutches of the nefarious Umbrella Corporation.

The trailer begins with Alice living in some kind of suburban fantasy-land, only for her family home to fall under attack from a horde of marauding zombies. It soon transpires that this newfound domestic bliss is an illusion generated by Umbrella, who are holding our heroine captive…

gq:

How Greg Louganis Inspired Prometheus
From the outtakes of our June 2012 interview with Michael Fassbender:

Greg Louganis dominated the world of competitive diving in the 1980s, winning four Olympic gold medals, but even though he became one of those rare athletes whose fame at the time transcended their specific sport, he is still perhaps an unlikely reference for a thirtysomething actor raised in Ireland. Michael Fassbender can only explain it like this: sometimes when he is reading a script over and over, things just appear in his head. “A bubble comes out,” he says. “A lot of what I do would be intuition. For some reason I got this visual image of Greg Louganis walking toward the end of a high diving block.” Once the notion had entered his mind, it would not leave. “And I’ve learned to recognize those gut instincts and go with them more often than not. Time and experience allows you to recognize that they’re things you should pay attention to.”
It is not as though Fassbender knew a huge amount about Louganis. He remembers as a child seeing Louganis on TV at the Olympics, and that his mother Adele said Louganis was amazing, and Fassbender remembered that Louganis banged his head on the board once or twice. But that’s about it. As we speak, Fassbender even has to Google Louganis’s name on his iPhone to check whether Louganis is alive or dead. But there was something about the way Louganis walked as he took those last few steps before taking a dive that had stuck in the young Fassbender’s head and it was that which had resurfaced as he read the Prometheus script and mused on how one should best convey the movements of someone who is not human but wishes to appear so. “This economy of movement,” he says. “Total efficiency. If you’re going to move your hand, it’s for a reason. I thought it would suit the character of a robot—everything is totally relaxed, until you need to pick something up and move it over here.”
Louganis, incidentally, is very much alive. “I am stunned, I truly am,” he says when told of this surprising turn of events. “I’m like really really flattered stunned, amazed. I think it’s awesome.” He says that it took other people to point out to him that his physical movement as he prepared to dive was so specific. “I did what I did but I wasn’t fully aware of what I was doing,” he says. “It’s meditation in motion. You watch predatory animals, like a game cat, going after its prey, there’s no excess energy expended. It’s that kind of focus. There’s no excess. Everything is going toward what your goal is.” Of course it’s hard not to notice that the athlete who Fassbender has instinctively chosen as an inspiration for his latest character turns out to be someone who talks about his path to the moment of performance in a way that is strikingly similar to how Fassbender describes what he himself does. “You do the training,” says Louganis, “but once you get there you have to let all of that go and trust your body to do what it was trained to do. Because there’s no thought. There’s just doing it.”

gq:

How Greg Louganis Inspired Prometheus

From the outtakes of our June 2012 interview with Michael Fassbender:

Greg Louganis dominated the world of competitive diving in the 1980s, winning four Olympic gold medals, but even though he became one of those rare athletes whose fame at the time transcended their specific sport, he is still perhaps an unlikely reference for a thirtysomething actor raised in Ireland. Michael Fassbender can only explain it like this: sometimes when he is reading a script over and over, things just appear in his head. “A bubble comes out,” he says. “A lot of what I do would be intuition. For some reason I got this visual image of Greg Louganis walking toward the end of a high diving block.” Once the notion had entered his mind, it would not leave. “And I’ve learned to recognize those gut instincts and go with them more often than not. Time and experience allows you to recognize that they’re things you should pay attention to.”

It is not as though Fassbender knew a huge amount about Louganis. He remembers as a child seeing Louganis on TV at the Olympics, and that his mother Adele said Louganis was amazing, and Fassbender remembered that Louganis banged his head on the board once or twice. But that’s about it. As we speak, Fassbender even has to Google Louganis’s name on his iPhone to check whether Louganis is alive or dead. But there was something about the way Louganis walked as he took those last few steps before taking a dive that had stuck in the young Fassbender’s head and it was that which had resurfaced as he read the Prometheus script and mused on how one should best convey the movements of someone who is not human but wishes to appear so. “This economy of movement,” he says. “Total efficiency. If you’re going to move your hand, it’s for a reason. I thought it would suit the character of a robot—everything is totally relaxed, until you need to pick something up and move it over here.”

Louganis, incidentally, is very much alive. “I am stunned, I truly am,” he says when told of this surprising turn of events. “I’m like really really flattered stunned, amazed. I think it’s awesome.” He says that it took other people to point out to him that his physical movement as he prepared to dive was so specific. “I did what I did but I wasn’t fully aware of what I was doing,” he says. “It’s meditation in motion. You watch predatory animals, like a game cat, going after its prey, there’s no excess energy expended. It’s that kind of focus. There’s no excess. Everything is going toward what your goal is.” Of course it’s hard not to notice that the athlete who Fassbender has instinctively chosen as an inspiration for his latest character turns out to be someone who talks about his path to the moment of performance in a way that is strikingly similar to how Fassbender describes what he himself does. “You do the training,” says Louganis, “but once you get there you have to let all of that go and trust your body to do what it was trained to do. Because there’s no thought. There’s just doing it.”

gq:

Like Father, Like Spy
It was just a favor to dear old dad. But the next thing Nathan Nicholson knew, he was jet-setting around the world under cover and selling state secrets to the Russians. You know what they say: Like father, like spy.

gq:

Like Father, Like Spy

It was just a favor to dear old dad. But the next thing Nathan Nicholson knew, he was jet-setting around the world under cover and selling state secrets to the Russians. You know what they say: Like father, like spy.

brainstark:

Django Unchained (2012) | How do you like the bounty hunting business?

brainstark:

Django Unchained (2012) | How do you like the bounty hunting business?

(via everythingdjango)

Django Unchained: Jonah Hill Joins Quentin Tarantino’s ‘Django Unchained’

everythingdjango:

The Weinstein Company has set Jonah Hill to play a role in Django Unchained, which is in production. I’m trying to find out who he’ll be playing, but am told it won’t be Scotty Harmony, the kid who loses Django’s slave wife Broomhilda (Kerry Washington) to Calvin Candie, a charming but utterly…

(Source: deadline.com)

Robert Pattinson Argued With Adele

Robert Pattinson once picked an argument with singer Adele about fame.

The Twilight star butted heads with the Grammy winner after they began chatting about the downsides to life in the spotlight, with the actor insisting he has always felt uncomfortable in public.

He tells Movieline, “I think I was pretty similar before. Like I would be one of those people who was desperate to go to a party and then they go to the party and just stand in the corner with the people they came with and refuse to acknowledge that anyone else is there. So I don’t really miss anything.

“And you kind of, you have all these fantasies: ‘If I wasn’t famous I’d meet all these random people in the street all the time.’ But you don’t meet random people in the street. Most of the time you’re trying to avoid everybody even if you’re not famous.”

The actor admits he should have kept his mouth shut when he began arguing his opinions with fellow Brit Adele.

He adds, “Actually I had this argument with Adele, which is probably the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever said. I was saying, ‘You know, you can really just like reach for it,’ and she was like, ‘You do realise I am like the biggest-selling female artist ever?’ And I just for some reason just decided to get into an argument with her. Then (I found myself) waking up and kind of really, really regretting every word I said.”

Simon Pegg Reveals Tom Cruise’s Ice Suit Secret

Simon Pegg has revealed the secret to Tom Cruise’s toned body - the Top Gun star stays in shape with the help of an ice suit.

The Shaun of the Dead actor was stunned to see Cruise relaxing in the cooling contraption, which soothed his aching muscles during breaks on the set of their 2011 blockbuster Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol.

Pegg tells ShortList magazine, “He had this special suit. You put it around the muscles that you’ve been working out and it ices everything. I mean, he’s 49 now, and he was working out so intensively that it was important for him to be able to actually move the next day. So we’d be in the make-up chairs and he’d have this little jacket thing on that would go ‘pffft’ every now and then to ice his muscles.”

The Brit was keen to exercise with the Hollywood star, but admits he changed his mind when he realised how hard Cruise works to keep fit.

He recalls, “One day I was like, ‘I want to do your regime.’ So he explained it to me and I think my reaction when he’d finished telling me exactly what it takes was, ‘F**k that, Tom.’”

Robin Gibb’s Former Lover Not Invited To Funeral

The mother of Robin Gibb’s love-child is not welcome his funeral today (08.06.12), according to sources close to his wife Dwina.

The mother of Robin Gibb’s love-child has not been invited to his funeral today (08.06.12).

The legendary Bee Gees singer - who passed away from kidney failure last month after fighting cancer and pneumonia and suffering from a serious bowel condition - fathered a daughter, Snow Robin, with housekeeper Claire Yang three years ago but his wife Dwina has told friends she would be unhappy if Claire attended today’s service, though she hasn’t been banned outright.

A friend told the Daily Mirror newspaper: ”Dwina has said that she would loathe her to be there but there won’t be any scene whatsoever if she came along to pay her respects.”

Robin had a long affair with Essex-born Claire, who was asked to leave the Gibbs’ 12th century mansion by Dwina, 59, after she got pregnant.

Meanwhile, fans of the 62-year-old singer can pay their final respects when his glass-sided carriage is drawn by four horses through his local town of Thame in Oxfordshire, South East England today.

In a statement, his family said: ”At his wish, he will say a final goodbye to fans and his home town of Thame, Oxon, prior to the funeral”.

Dwina will read a poem she has composed especially for his funeral, while their 29-year-old son RJ has revealed that the hit ‘I Started A Joke’ will be played at the church along with the track ‘Don’t Cry Alone’ - one of Robin’e final compositions from his Titanic Requiem, which premiered only weeks before his death.

A memorial service for the star is expected to follow later in the year, possibly at St Paul’s Cathedral.

Slash Works Hard To Be Good

Slash insists being dubbed a guitar master is ”bulls**t” because he is only a good musician because he works so hard at it.

Slash insists calling him a guitar master is ”bulls**t”.

The former Guns N’ Roses star is renowned for his musicianship but he insists it is down to hard work, rather than natural expertise and he can always improve his skills.

He said: ”That whole guitar master stuff, that’s bulls**t - I have been working and working on it, and it will never end. It’s a work in progress, but I have a great time doing it.”

Slash - who picked up the Icon Award at last night’s (07.06.12) Kerrang! Awards fuelled by Relentless Energy Drink in London - loves performing live and says he has more fun doing so as he is getting older because he is a much more accomplished musician.

He added to BANG Showbiz: ”Live is predominantly what I got into this for. I love to write songs and I love recording them, but its all a means to an end and that is performing live.

”Playing live now, when it comes down to it not much has changed over the last 20 years, but I’m a little bit more coherent these days, and I’m a little bit of a better guitar player, so I guess it’s a little more fun.”

Cheryl Cole - Cheryl Cole’s New Album Is Her ‘Best Work’ Yet

Cheryl Cole thinks her new album ‘A Million Lights’ is her ”best work” yet, despite only having written two songs on the track list.

Cheryl Cole writes songs she will never release.

The ‘Call My Name’ singer - who divorced husband Ashley Cole two years ago following allegations he had cheated on her - has written just two of the tracks on her upcoming album ‘A Million Lights’ but insists she frequently pens her own material, though the personal nature of the lyrics means she doesn’t want other people to hear them.

She explained: ”Every record I’ve made, there are songs I’ve written that I haven’t put out because… well, I don’t want to. I write for my own pleasure sometimes.”

And the 28-year-old beauty insisted that she still has creative input on all her work, even if she doesn’t do the writing herself.

She told the BBC: ”But you have to connect with something you’re singing about. I’m not going to sing about a subject I’ve not got any feeling for.”

The ‘Parachute’ hitmaker is thrilled with her new album, though she admits it has been a long wait for fans.

Cheryl - who took an 18 month break from music after the split - said: ”It’s been a long time coming. But I think it’s the best work I’ve done”.

She added that the recording process was ”the most fun I’ve ever had”.

‘A Million Lights’ will be released on June 18.