Brett Ratner's Tips To Making A Heist Movie
- Details
- Category: Interviews
- Created: Thursday, 10 November 2011 23:13
- Published: Thursday, 10 November 2011 23:13
- Written by Lupe Haas
Mickey Rourke may have made a comeback in Hollywood, but his appearance at a press event for IMMORTALS shows his rebellious attitude is still intact. And we got a memento from it.
Add a commentClint Eastwood may be 81-years-old, but the J. EDGAR director personally showed his younger actors Leonardo DiCaprio and Armie Hammer what it takes for a good fight scene.
Add a commentNeil Patrick Harris, Kal Penn, and John Cho boast the new Harold and Kumar movie should give stoners that extra high from the high-quality 3D.
Add a commentTOWER HEIST director Brett Ratner and star Michael Pena sit down with CineMovie's Zay Zay to hype up their new heist flick . The star and director dish on working with Ben Stiller and Eddie Murphy, and why Brett was mad at Michael for ripping off a line from TOWER HEIST and using it in another movie.
Add a commentPUSS IN BOOTS stars Antonio Banderas, Salma Hayek, Zach Galifianakis, Billy Bob Thornton, Amy Sedaris,and Constance Marie turned out for the hot Los Angeles premiere PUSS IN BOOTS Sunday.
Add a commentYou would think the actor behind Mr. Bean and Johnny English would be funny off-camera, but Rowan Atkinson says he is a serious man and you'll never catch him on a bloopers reel laughing on set. The JOHNNY ENGLISH REBORN star brought some of that serious side to the bumbling English spy sequel.
Add a commentMary Elizabeth Winstead leads the fight against an alien invader in THE THING, but she preferred not to play the character too tough or copy another action heroine who's battled Aliens (Sigourney Weaver).
Add a commentREAL STEEL director Shawn Levy went through 400 child actors before finding 12-year-old Dakota Goyo to star as Hugh Jackman's son. According to Levy, child actors lose authenticity when they are over-drilled on their lines.
Add a commentIf you've watched REAL STEEL and one of the boxing robots remind you of George Foreman, that is no accident. Boxing legend Sugar Ray Leonard and first-time boxing consultant on the film applied George Foreman's fighting skills (and grill) to one of REAL STEEL's robot.
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