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Posted By Taly on October 27th, 2009

Air America beta radio has mentioned last friday an unauthorized documentary about Leonardo DiCaprio’s life.You’re probably wondering, “What is this, the 90s?” In a way, yes. All of the footage featured in “Hangin’ With Leo” looks like it’s from the late 1990s, when DiCaprio was riding the wave of “Titanic” ending up on “The Beach.” If you would like [...]

 

Archive for December, 2007

Body of Lies Info Page

Posted By Marcie on December 14th, 2007

Here’s a page based on the Body of Lies.

http://www.murphsplace.com/crowe/lies/main.html

Source: murphsplace.com

Leonardo gets to work on undercover role in Morocco

Posted By Marcie on December 13th, 2007
His fans are used to seeing him immaculate on the red carpet, but as he hangs out what appears to be a pair of boxer shorts Leonardo DiCaprio was barely recognisable as he got to work on the Moroccan set of his new flick.The usually hunky-looking actor was sporting an unkempt beard and scruffy outfit for his role in political thriller Body Of Lies, in which he plays a journalist turned CIA agent charged with hunting down an Al-Qaeda leader in Jordan.

Having shot to fame in romantic epics such as Romeo and Juliet and Titanic, the former teenage pin-up has opted for more politically charged productions of late. His last movie, Blood Diamond, looked at a country torn apart by the illegal diamond trade, while his new project is set against an equally troubled backdrop – the conflict in the Middle East.

And it looks like there’s plenty more to come. While he’s not known as one of Hollywood’s most prolific leading men, a recent flurry of filming activity means the 32-year-old will be a prominent feature in cinemas throughout 2008, with five films slated for release next year.

Source: Hello Magazine

DiCaprio’s ‘Hour’ picks up award

Posted By Marcie on December 12th, 2007

Documentary to receive Diversity honor
By BYRON PERRY

Leonardo DiCaprio will be presented with the docu feature kudo for “The 11th Hour” at the Diversity Awards on Nov 18.
DiCaprio’s global warming pic will be honored in a gala ceremony at Universal Studios’ Globe Theater.

The Diversity Awards, presented by the Multicultural Motion Picture Assn., aim to celebrate “stories that have touched audiences and brought diverse issues to the fore.”

Rob Reiner, Rupert Murdoch and L.A. mayor Antonio Villaraigosa all sit on the executive committee of the awards.

Source: Variety

Top 49 Men

Posted By Marcie on December 11th, 2007

Why He’s No. 22

Leonardo DiCaprio spent much of 2007 laying low, which is certainly understandable given his searing, intense work in a pair of ’06 blockbusters (The Departed and Blood Diamond). That’s not to say he was entirely absent from theaters; the actor lent his name (and his voice) to the environmental documentary The 11th Hour, and even embarked on a worldwide tour to promote the film’s release.

Rank Last Year: — See Top 49 Men of 2006
No.22 on Top 99 Women list

Source: Askmen.com

Feature Films

Posted By Marcie on December 11th, 2007

IVCA Clarion Award Winners 2007

Supported by Jacaranda

The 11th Hour
Directed by: Leila Conners Petersen and Nadia Conners
Written by: Leila Conners Petersen, Nadia Conners and Leonardo DiCaprio
Produced by: Warner Bros

A pioneering film which explains how we impact on the world’s ecosystems and what we can do to change course in the short time left while change is still possible. Along with An Inconvenient Truth it is one of the most important statements on the threat faced by our planet and a clarion call for us all to work together for a better future.

Source: ivca.org

Leo in Times Square

Posted By Marcie on December 11th, 2007

You can view the video here:

http://www.ftp-site.net/student_content/08students/claudiacruz/leodecaprio/

An excerpt from ‘Body of Lies’

Posted By Marcie on December 11th, 2007

07:54 PM CDT on Friday, April 27, 2007

An excerpt from Body of Lies by David Ignatius. Copyright (c) 2007 by David Ignatius. With permission of the publisher, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.

It took nearly a month to find the right body. Roger Ferris had very particular requirements: He wanted a man in his thirties, physically fit, preferably blond but certainly and recognizably Caucasian. He should have no obvious signs of disease or physical trauma. And no bullet wounds, either. That would make it too complicated later. Ferris was on assignment in the Middle East most of the time, so it fell to his boss, Ed Hoffman, to manage the details. Hoffman didn’t trust his colleagues to locate a body without thinking they had to notify a congressional committee or otherwise botching the job. But you could find someone in the military who was willing to do almost anything these days, so Hoffman contacted an ambitious colonel on the J-2 staff at Special Operations Command at MacDill Air Force Base in Florida who had been helpful on other matters. He explained that he needed a favor, and an odd one at that. He required a white male, approximately six feet tall, early middle age, muscular enough to be believable as a case officer, but not so muscle-bound that he looked like a trigger-puller. The ideal candidate would be uncircumcised.

And he had to be dead.

The colonel found a body three weeks later in a morgue in south Florida. He had tapped a network of retired officers who were working private security and claimed they could get anything done. The dead man had drowned the previous day while windsurfing off the Gulf Coast near Naples. He was a lawyer on vacation from Chicago. He was physically fit, brown-haired, disease-free and in possession of a foreskin. His name was James Borden, and he was, or had been, thirty-six. The body was altogether suitable, except for one detail: it was due to be cremated at a funeral home in Highland Park, Illinois, in two days. That presented a challenge. Hoffman asked the colonel if he had ever staged a black-bag job, and the colonel said no, but he was game for anything. That was a sentiment Hoffman rarely heard at CIA.

They worked up the body snatcher’s version of a two-card monte. One corpse went into the cargo hold of the airplane in Fort Myers, and another one came off at O’Hare. The coffin was the same, but the man inside was now a seventy-eight-year-old retired insurance executive who had died of a heart attack. The colonel sent an NCO to the funeral home in Highland Park to make sure nobody decided at the last minute on a public viewing. They had prepared a cover story in case something went wrong—about how the airline had made a terrible mistake and confused two coffins in transit, but now it was too late because the other body had been cremated in Milwaukee. But they never needed to use it.

James Borden’s corpse wasn’t perfect, but it was close enough. The upper body was muscular, although the tummy had begun to sag, and he had a bald spot at the crown of his head. It turned out that he had an undescended testicle. The more Hoffman thought about these imperfections, the more he liked them. They were the real, human details that would make the larger deception believable. Perfect artifice includes mistakes.

To this corpse, Hoffman now attached a legend. He became Harry Meeker, not James Borden. They rented Harry Meeker an apartment in Alexandria and got him a home phone and a cell phone. Using the picture from Borden’s Illinois driver’s license, they obtained a Commonwealth of Virginia license, and then a passport, and then a man in Support dummied up the right stamps and visas. For the passport photo, Hoffman’s colleague Sami Azhar surfed the Web site of Borden’s law firm and got a portrait of him that had been used in the firm’s promotional mailings.

Harry Meeker’s cover job would be with the U.S. Agency for International Development, so they got him a USAID identification card. They had business cards made up, too, with Meeker’s private phone extension. It had the right prefix—712—but when you rang the number, the recording sounded hollow, not quite the voice of a real secretary but more like someone who was covering for Meeker. They gave Meeker a parking space beneath AID’s headquarters in the Reagan Building on Pennsylvania Avenue, with a reminder card for his wallet in case he forgot the number of the space. This was the easy stuff; no more than the agency usually did in building integrated cover. Now they had to make Harry Meeker a real person. Harry needed clothes. Hoffman was oblivious to fashion and wore whatever his wife picked out at Target, so he was the wrong person to go shopping. Azhar was dispatched to Nordstrom’s; that seemed to have the right upwardly mobile, northern Virginia feel. Stylish, but also safe. The mental picture they had developed of Harry Meeker was of a rising CIA officer on the staff of the Counterterrorist Center at Headquarters, a midcareer guy trying to make his bones—a guy with smarts who had some Arabic and the savvy to handle a sensitive case. They didn’t know yet exactly where the body would end up, but it would probably be somewhere along the northern frontier of Pakistan, where it could get cold. So Azhar bought a medium-weight blazer, a pair of pleated Dockers woolen slacks, a white shirt but no tie, a pair of rubber-soled shoes that would be suitable for trekking and city wear. He took the clothes to the cleaners several times until the sheen was gone, but the shoes were a problem. They looked too new, even when they had been deliberately scuffed. Shoes needed to feel as if real, sweaty feet had been in them. Azhar wore them for a week, with an extra pair of socks so that he wouldn’t get a blister.

And what of the inner life of Harry Meeker? Ferris had already decreed that he should be divorced; that was the one biographical detail anyone would assume about a CIA officer—that he had dumped his first wife, and now he screwed around. To suggest the divorce, Azhar drafted a letter from a lawyer representing Meeker’s imaginary ex-wife, “Amy,” directing him to send his alimony payments to a new address and warning him not to contact Amy in person. Was Meeker a … [expletive], or had his wife taken up with someone new? It worked either way.

Now Harry Meeker needed a girlfriend. She should be pretty; sexy, even. Everybody had seen James Bond movies, including jihadis, and people would just assume that a real American spy must be banging a hot chick. Hoffman wanted a picture of a blonde with big … [breasts] in a bikini, but Azhar said that would be too obvious, the Pamela Anderson thing. They should make her sexy, but someone who could work for the agency, too. Ferris had a clever stroke: The girlfriend should be African-American. That was just unlikely enough to be totally believable. Hoffman suggested his secretary—a cocoa-skinned beauty with a dazzling smile. He asked if she would mind posing for a picture in a low-cut blouse. Her name was Denise, which seemed about right, so when the picture was developed Hoffman asked her to write on the back, “I love you, baby. Denise,” with a little heart.

Ferris wondered about a love letter, but decided that would seem phony. People didn’t write love letters anymore; they sent e-mails. Harry Meeker wasn’t going to be carrying a computer, but Azhar suggested text messages on Meeker’s cell phone, and that seemed perfect. They sent two from “Denise’s” phone. One just said, “sweet sugar.” The other said, “baby come back. i miss u 2 much. xxoo. dee.” Sexy, not slutty. Hoffman said Harry should have a condom in his wallet, to suggest that maybe he was getting a little on the side while he was away from home.

The cell phone was a challenge. Azhar programmed Denise’s number and the headquarters number at USAID, and then added a number for an imaginary other girlfriend he called “Sheila,” and one for an imaginary friend, “Rusty,” whose number was actually Azhar’s home phone. To throw in some raw meat, Azhar called the Meeker cell phone from several different extensions at CIA, with the recognizable 482 prefix. He put some other teasers into “Received Calls” and “Dialed Numbers”—a couple of restaurants in McLean near agency Headquarters, several Pentagon numbers, one from the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad, another from the U.S. Embassy in Tbilisi. Everyone’s cell phone is a digital record of his life. You wouldn’t have to spend much time with Harry Meeker’s phone to suspect that this man was leading a secret existence.

Source: guidelive

Body of Lies: First photograph

Posted By Marcie on December 11th, 2007

Ca is not unemployed in Hollywood. Whereas its American Gangster is currently a beautiful success in rooms, Ridley Scott is making its new film entitled Body of Lies which is revealed already with a first photograph on which one sees Leonardo DiCaprio trimming a beard carefully cut. In this thriller, the actor is surrounded of Russell Crowe and Carice van Houten.

The history follows a ex-journalist become agent for the CIA which is sent to Ammam in order to work with the chief of the intelligence of Jordan to track an Al Quaida leader which must, according to certain rumours, to organize important attacks against the United States.

There is no yet date of exit.

Source: Cinema-France.Com

Helen Mirren: It’s good to be the Queen

Posted By Marcie on December 10th, 2007

Helen Mirren stands regal in a red velvet gown as a photographer snaps away. She looks every inch the imperious goddess who’s graced many a costume epic. While a makeup person goes in for touch-ups, she introduces herself to me. “When this is done, we shall take our thrones,” she says, pointing toward a balcony space that has been set up for the interview. Then, she’s whisked away for a costume change. When she reappears, her demeanor is different. Dressed in a beret, sweater and slacks, she seems looser, relaxed, almost playful. Suddenly … splat!

In a studio in Culver City, Calif., the 62-year-old Oscar winner is whacked by a cream pie. Gobs of lemon meringue coat her face, while a cadre of hair, makeup and publicity people stand by, nervous. Grounds for death by hanging, perhaps? Not for this master thespian.

Mirren’s having the time of her life, laughing with every glob of gooey confection that ingloriously lands on her head. It’s all part of the photo session — conducted with her full consent. (Look for the pictures in our Dec. 28-30 year-end issue.)

If anyone qualifies as Hollywood royalty, it’s Helen Mirren. In 2003, she was named a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire. Last year, she won an Oscar and two Golden Globes for her portrayals of two Queen Elizabeths (one of each for the movie “The Queen,” plus a Globe for TV’s “Elizabeth I”).

Clearly, it’s good to be the queen. After more than 40 years in the business, Mirren’s career is white-hot. She has four movies in the works, including one with Brad Pitt. “It is remarkable,” she says. “But it wasn’t like I was struggling and then suddenly I arrived. I just think the fact that it all came at one time, people sit up and go, ‘Where [in the world] did she come from?’

“Mirren’s latest project takes her about as far from a royal corset as she can get. In the adventure film “National Treasure: Book of Secrets,” she plays Nicolas Cage’s mother, a linguistics expert who reluctantly joins a quest to find a book of centuries-old government secrets. “I kick ass, man,” she says. It’s her first big action movie and, among other things, she had to dangle 100 feet in the air. “I’ve wanted to do it all my life.” Mirren’s roll-up-your-sleeves attitude wasn’t lost on the cast and crew. “Oh yeah, she got very physical, and she was a real sport about it,” Cage says. “It’s funny,” he adds. “We’d be on the set, and [movie studio publicists] would introduce her as ‘Dame Helen Mirren, Academy Award winner.’ And I would say, ‘Well, I’m Ghost Rider!’ And she would say, ‘Exactly!’

“It’s that total lack of pretense that makes her so disarming. For instance, she’s a big fan of reality TV: “America’s Next Top Model,” I love it! I love Tyra Banks. It’s wonderful to watch the appalling nature of females. We are so awful!” For Mirren, no topic of conversation is off-limits. Between sips of veddy British milky tea and handfuls of oatmeal raisin cookies, she let’s it rip.

On her ex-boyfriend, actor Liam Neeson: “He taught me a lot of things — Northern Ireland politics, how to make a very good colcannon, an Irish potato and cabbage stew. And he taught me about love.”

On cosmetic surgery: “I absolutely believe in it! Why feel miserable if you can change something? But breast implants are weird to me. They seem a bit like hanging a pair of oranges around your neck.” [We didn't dare ask Dame Mirren if she's had any work done.]

On gay marriage: “I think gays absolutely should have the right. For the same reason Taylor [director Hackford] and I got married — to be able to say, by law, ‘This person is important to me.’ ” Mirren and Hackford have one of the most successful and scandal-free relationships in Hollywood. They finally tied the knot in 1997, after being together since 1984. She was 52 when they wed and hadn’t seen herself as the marrying kind. “I used to say, ‘I have nothing against marriage, but to me it’s like turnips. They’re just not for me.’ And now I love being married. I love saying, ‘I’m going to see my husband tonight.’ “

Mirren can’t quite pinpoint why she was ready to seal the deal after a 13-year courtship. But Hackford is more forthcoming. “I wasn’t proud that I had two failed marriages,” he says. “But when we got together, we were both in our 40s. We had had lives and partners before that. We realized this was going to last, so we figured, what the hell!” He’s set to direct her early next year in “Love Ranch,” inspired by true events, in which she’ll play the madam of the first legalized brothel in Nevada. “It’s a great story,” Mirren says. “Legalized prostitution is not such a bad idea,” she adds. “It gets girls off the street, away from pimps and drugs.”

Insisting that she’s “a working actress, not a movie star,” Mirren chalks up her Oscar win to luck. The winning night, she says, was all a blur — except for a starstruck moment of her own. “I remember Leonardo DiCaprio kissing my hand,” she says. “It was so sweet. That was the highlight of the whole evening.” Mirren and Leo? Why not? These days, Mirren is often called “sexy and 60.” The men in her life agree.
“Her sensuality comes from her honesty,” says her husband. “She’s not hiding behind makeup or a baby- doll hairdo. She’s the real thing.” Adds “Treasure” star Cage: “I’ve had a crush on her since she was Morgana in [the 1981 movie] “Excalibur.” She looked sensational in chain mail. Oh yeah, that was good stuff!”

But Mirren claims not to give her sex appeal a second thought. “Sometimes I feel great and sometimes I feel really crappy,” she says.

“I’m just like everybody else — I’m always on a diet!”
Then Mirren laughs and mischievously breaks off a chunk of a buttery cookie. “Can’t you tell?”

——————————————————————————–

The secrets of
“National Treasure 2″

A quiz: Which item does not belong in the same category? A. Goats. B. Alligators. C. Paparazzi.

When it came to the filming of “National Treasure: Book of Secrets,” the answer is B. An alligator on the Washington, D.C., set was just an Internet rumor. There were, however, unwelcome intrusions by the other two types of aggressive beasts. During a week of shooting at Mount Rushmore, a dozen 300-pound Rocky Mountain goats invaded the set. “They’re not nice, and if you get close to their babies, they can get real mean real quick,” says costume designer Judianna Makovsky, who almost had a head-on collision with one.

And swarms of paparazzi nearly attacked the cast in London’s Primrose Hill district. Ironically, that location was meant to stand in for D.C.’s staid Georgetown district across the pond.
A ROYAL SWEEP
She won an Oscar and a Golden Globe for her role as monarch in last year’s “The Queen.”
ACTION MAMA
Mirren plays Nicolas Cage’s mother in “National Treasure: Book of Secrets,” which opens on Dec. 21.

HELEN OF JOY
After more than 40 years in the business, Mirren has kicked into high gear, with four new movies in the works.
 
Additional settings in England also doubled for settings in the U.S. capital. Surrey’s Richmond Theatre and a set at Pinewood Studios were used to represent Ford’s Theatre, where Abraham Lincoln was assassinated in 1865.

The frantic filming, which zoomed from Los Angeles to D.C. to North Dakota and on to London and Paris, brought quite a few challenges. “We were getting new pages all the time,”says a crew member. “They were tweaking rewrites and adding new characters.” (During the shooting in South Dakota, co-star Helen Mirren, who won an Oscar for her lead role in “The Queen,” was invited to meet the real Queen Elizabeth II but declined because of logistical problems.)
In Washington, filming that was being done in Lafayette Park, across the street from the White House, had to be put on hold for nearly 90 minutes when an impromptu press conference was arranged in the Rose Garden. While Secret Service agents wandered around brandishing their weapons because of security concerns, all the cast and crew — including stars Nicolas Cage and Jon Voight — were forced to stand by, waiting.

In the end, the hectic activity helped boost the cost to a reported $130 million, compared with the first movie’s estimated $100 million. Instead of leaving the production team exhausted, however, the whirlwind shoot was exhilarating, says producer Jerry Bruckheimer. “Even on a set, monotony can set in and work becomes a grind. You’re on a soundstage every day, [and] you can’t wait to leave,” he told USA WEEKEND. “Since we constantly changed locations, there was always an adventure. It helped the energy.” — Jeffrey Ressner

Source: usaweekend.com

Amy Adams Says Will Ferrell Is a ‘Fantastic Kisser’

Posted By Marcie on December 9th, 2007

She may have a “McDreamy” costar in her new film Enchanted, but Amy Adams calls funnyman Will Ferrell’s lip service fantastic.

Adams was grilled by Rachael Ray on her talk show Wednesday about the kissability of her leading men – starting with Patrick Dempsey in Enchanted.

“Is he a good kisser?” Ray asked. “He is. He’s lovely,” Adams, 33, said. And what about Will Ferrell, her costar in Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby?

“He’s a fantastic kisser!” Adams gushed. “I was not expecting that.”

She was also not ever expecting to kiss Leonardo DiCaprio, who she ended up smooching in Catch Me if You Can.

“He is so talented,” she told Ray. “Everybody asks me, “What was it like to kiss Leo?’ But that was such a different experience because I’d had all these fantasies about him from Titanic.” Her fantasies, however, didn’t include wearing braces or devouring the star like a cheeseburger, which is how she described their romantic scenes together.

Adams and Dempsey’s Enchanted – itself a Disney fairytale dropped into modern-day New York City life – is in theaters now.

Source: people.com