Trailer: Kevin Kline Plays Errol Flynn in “The Last of Robin Hood”

Posted on July 10, 2014 at 8:00 am

Errol Flynn became one of the greatest movie stars of all time, specializing in swashbucklers like “Captain Blood” and “The AdveBeverly Aadland and Errol Flynn pose in costume for a skit they performed on the “The Red Skelton Show” that aired on Sept. 29, 1959, two weeks before Flynn’s death. Photo by The Associated Press.ntures of Robin Hood.”  No one was better than Flynn at playing the dashing, gallant hero.

But the Tasmanian actor became almost as legendary for his off-screen debauchery as for his on-screen triumphs. Peter O’Toole plays a faded movie star who has had too many drinks and too many women, based on Flynn, in the delightful comedy, “My Favorite Year.”

In “The Last of Robin Hood,” Kevin Kline plays Flynn who, in the last year of his life, fell in love with a teenager named Beverly Aadland (he did not know she was underage).  Flynn put Aadland into his final film, “Cuban Rebel Girls.”

They were traveling together in Canada when he died.  Dakota Fanning plays Aadland, and Susan Sarandon plays her mother, who was accused of being unfit for allowing her then-15-year-old daughter to be romanced by Flynn.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=esOj4uzrU0Q

 

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Tribute: Carla Laemmle, 104-Year-Old Actress

Posted on July 9, 2014 at 8:00 am

The actress Carla Laemmle has died at age 104.  She is not widely known, but is well worth remembering for her role in film history and her incandescent spirit.  Her uncle Carl Laemmle, whose name she adopted (her given name was Rebekah Isabelle) was the founder of Universal Studios.  She first began performing in his films as a teenager.  She never had a major role, but she did deliver the first spoken line in the first horror movie talkie.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RaVChkMdOqo

The New York Times ran an obituary that can only be described as delightful.  It said that Laemmle

had a modest résumé of bit parts, mostly uncredited, in films of the 1920s and ’30s.

Those roles, according to the Internet Movie Database, included Auction Spectator, Coach Passenger and Oyster Shell. And though it was an oyster shell of spectacular proportions (see below), her credits were not the stuff of which careers are made.

But what made Ms. Laemmle a fan favorite at autograph shows and horror-film conventions in recent years was her durable, genial existence, which encapsulated nearly a century of Hollywood history.

Reared on the Universal Studios lot, she had a charmed cinematic girlhood, with the studio sets her playground and animals from Universal’s in-house zoo her de facto household pets.A wide-eyed beauty, she made her first screen appearance in “The Phantom of the Opera,” the 1925 Lon Chaney silent. After the coming of sound, she uttered the opening line of the 1931 “Dracula,” starring Bela Lugosi.

The naked abandon of Hollywood before the imposition of the Hays Code in 1930 can also be discerned without difficulty in Ms. Laemmle’s early work. (The oyster shell looms large in this.)

…  “I’m so looking forward to Universal’s 100th-anniversary party,” she told an interviewer in 2012, shortly before that event. “I’ll probably be the only one there who’s older than the studio.”

 

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Actors Tribute

Upcoming Show Business Memoirs

Posted on July 8, 2014 at 8:00 am

oprah coverMashable has a very intriguing list of upcoming show business memoirs, by everyone from Oprah Winfrey (What I Know For Sure) to rapper Ja Rule (Unruly: The Highs and Lows of Becoming a Man). I’m particularly looking forward to Yes Please, by Amy Poehler (more a series of essays than a memoir), and Not My Father’s Son: A Memoir, by Alan Cumming of “The Good Wife” and Broadway’s “Cabaret.” I’m not a fan of “Girls,” but I respect Lena Dunham and would like to read her upcoming Not That Kind of Girl: A Young Woman Tells You What She’s “Learned”. I think I’ll skip Joan Rivers’ Diary of a Mad Diva, though. I read and enjoyed her earlier memoir, but even before last week’s distasteful controversy, it seems to me she had become more sad than funny.

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Academy Originals: Hollywood Filmmakers Talk About What Inspires Them

Posted on July 3, 2014 at 7:00 am

In this short from the terrific Academy Originals series, Seth Rogen says that it is friendship that is at the center of the stories he likes to write.    “Academy Originals” is AMPAS’s first original digital series.  The initiative is a documentary-style video series which examines everything from the creative process, to the moments that changed the course of filmmaking, to the artists who are charting its future. New Academy Originals are available every Monday on Oscars.org/AcademyOriginals and YouTube.com/AcademyOriginals.  Check out the other episodes:

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Interview: “Earth to Echo” star Astro

Posted on July 2, 2014 at 8:00 am

astroBrian “Astro” Bradley plays Tuck in this week’s “Earth to Echo,” the story of three friends who discover a stranded alien and help to rescue him. Astro talked to me about being in the film and the books and music that mean the most to him.

How would you describe Tuck?

He’s ambitious, a go-getter and a guy who doesn’t settle for anything less than what he wants. Like if he wants to do something or find something out he will eventually do it or find it out. I think he is like the driving force in a group of friends in the movie.

The friends don’t have a tremendous amount in common. They are very different people. What keeps them being friends with each other?

I think they are all considered outcasts almost, not really outcast but they are not the coolest kids. They are all they have.  When you’re hanging out with your friends and only you guys really understand each other the rest of the world looks at you different but we all see each other as cool. I think that’s why we were all best friends in the movie.

Did you guys hang out together when you weren’t shooting?

Well we really didn’t have time because we shot everything to fast. We only had a week of rehearsal before we actually started filming and I think we shot the whole film in 28 days. It was everybody’s first time being a part of a major film so I think just being on set everyday was enough for us. It was just a blessing.

Your character Tuck had a conflict with his friend Alex.  What was that about?

I think that he was just scared and so he couldn’t really help Alex like he wanted to at that point in the movie. I think he was just scared because at the end of the day they are big kids but they’re still kids. They are still young.  Unfortunately he was unable to help his friend Alex at one point in the movie.  He knew he was wrong but he tried to act like he didn’t know what’s going on. Of course they dealt with it like friends would.

One of the things that make this movie so interesting and so different is that it’s got all that footage as though it’s being shot by the kids themselves, mostly by your character. Can you use a movie camera?

I shot one scene I don’t know if they kept it in the movie but they let me hold the camera for one scene. We were in a van driving away from construction workers and the camera was very really heavy.  You have to give respect to guys like Dave Green. our director and the Director of Photography, Maxime Alexandre.  They really have to hold the camera it’s like a million pounds and I don’t know if I could do that all day.

So tell me how you first found out about this movie.

My agent at Williams Morris Entertainment sent it to me. They sent me a bunch of scripts, the first role I ever had was on “Person of Interest” and this is my second role ever.  This was playful, it was cool, it didn’t seem too serious. It seemed very natural and organic and I liked it and I recorded my audition take in my living room, sent it out to the “Earth to Echo” staff. They flew me out to California to audition in front of the director, Dave Green, and I got it.

I don’t remember exactly which lines we did but we filmed it in my living room. I actually got all my roles so far that way. I have this wall in my living room that I’m going to call the Movie Wall or something because I auditioned for all these roles in front of the same exact wall. It’s this white wall in my living room, it’s weird, it’s crazy but I got three roles because of this wall so…

That’s a pretty lucky wall.

Exactly.

I have never taken acting class or anything like that but that’s pretty much as far as we went with it. Like I said it was a very natural script so there wasn’t much preparing that had to be done. I think even when you watch the film now it seems very natural, like it’s just very normal because we didn’t have to try hard. We were just having fun. The only hard scenes were like when Munch had to cry, that was probably hard for him bring those tears out but other than that it was very easy to do because we were just being everyday kids.

I would think that the hard part would probably be interacting with Echo.

No that wasn’t hard for us because we had Echo like when we actually talking to him and he’s in our hands. He was actually being controlled by a wire.

What do you think about how it came out?

I’ve seen it many times and it’s amazing! It’s amazing! I’m glad to be a part of it. I think it’s an exciting movie; it’s a family-friendly movie. You can take your kids out to see it. And anybody could see it whether you’re older or you’re younger.

You’re also a rapper, right?

Acting is still something I’m still trying out. I’m still learning about it and seeing how it works. My main focus is my music but the acting is fun as well.  My favorite rapper is Jay-Z.  Right now I am working on the EP.  I’m just taking my time with it. I have the first single and everything ready but I’m not rushing anything I just want to put it out when the times is right. But as far as my influences, I listen to Biggie, Jay-Z, Nas, Wu-Tang, Snoop Dogg, only legends because I want to be better than those guys so that’s all I listen to right now.  I’m a 90s baby so that’s all I really listen to.

I don’t express myself through acting because you have to play like somebody else. I think eventually you do express yourself in acting but you’ve got to get a certain type of role.  But I haven’t gotten that deep into acting yet where I’m really like “let me really get into this character.” For now it’s just fun.  For now it’s just fun with acting. But music is life. I’ve been doing that since I was a baby I can’t explain my love for music especially like hip hop music. Music is just the greatest thing in the world.

 

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