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Jade Bahr

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Everything posted by Jade Bahr

  1. Sometimes I wonder which of his exes he has the "strongest" memories of or if he's that kind of guy who never sees back.
  2. @BarbieErin thx so much for sharing this story again. Hahahahahahaha, you girls literally made my day while I picture this scene
  3. ^I think this Captain Planet is some enviromental hero? So if any hero would fit for Leo it's probably this one. And you can say about marvel (at least I think it's from marvel or at least published from marvel) what you want it has a huge fandom so this movie/topic/message would reach lots of people. I also think Leo wouldn't star but only produce the movie.
  4. I mean ... what? Spill some more details, girl I think she made him also recreate one scene from Romeo and Juliet when they vacationed in Verona LOL I actually never saw Leo more "loose" as he was with Blake so if any woman could bring him to quote Titanic for her (or him) than it's probably her.
  5. ^LOL didn't even think about this but it would indeed a bit funny if he would date a girl named Rose in real life 🌹
  6. I guess you haven't seen Harry Styles in "Don't Worry Darling" and/or "The Policeman". I still can't believe how less charisma this guy has on screen nor how anybody can think he's capable to carry a movie.
  7. Thought is a fun story. Twerking Rose Bertram for DiCaprio goes wrong: "He laughed at her" Rose Bertram was spotted this week with Leonardo DiCaprio. Of course Rose wanted to impress the big celebrity, but that didn't turn out as she hoped... A photo shared by Juicechannel earlier this week showed Rose spotted with Leonardo DiCaprio. Rose was hanging out with the movie actor on a luxury boat that day. "DiCaprio laughed at her" Although Rose is already too "old" for DiCaprio according to Juicechannel followers, she still tried to impress him. According to a French juice channel, Rose was showing off her twerk moves on the boat. ā€œFor a moment, Rose went too far and wanted to twerk on DiCaprio,ā€ the channel writes on Instagram. But that went completely wrong. ā€œMission failed, she slipped with wet feet and fell to the ground. DiCaprio laughed at her and said, 'Tworking isn't for you.'" Oops... Source She's stunning
  8. @Lilja K I think the 2nd Avatar movie had actually zero story, blank characters and terrible terrible dialogs always Camerons weakness and a even worse written villain. The Sully family is moving and fighting and yelling and swimming and sinking, that's the whole movie for 3 damn long hours. Also the 3D gave me a major headache. The latest Batman with Robert Pattinson was so MUCH BETTER imo. Also the last hour with the sinking ship was basically stolen from Titanic lol ā€˜Avatar: The Way of Water’s Third Act Is Basically 'Titanic 2' and That Rules
  9. So yesterday I watched Avatar 2 in cinema (one hella long boring movie) and they showed the 25th anniversary trailer of Titanic (yay). But that wasn't even the best part. There was a group of boys sitting behind us and when the Titanic trailer was showing one of them asked if the Leo dude was still alive. His buddy was like "wtf bro Leonardo DiCaprio isn't dead where you got this from!!!???" I think the answer was because "this old movie" is coming up again. And it got even better. "Or is it the 2nd part?" one of the boys asked. It was hilarious. Then they went on how none of them never watched Titanic fully. And finally my mother lean in to tell me what a baby face Leo was. It was actually really funny/interesting to see how many reactions this short trailer made. Actually more than over 3 hours of Pandora LOL 25 YEARS OF TITANIC RELEASED ON DECEMBER 19, 1997 Source
  10. ^she also has good taste in movies... and jewellery.
  11. As much this Jordan guy hated ELVIS as much he can't wait for KOTFM lol The 90 Must-See Movies of 2023 [Updated] 1) Martin Scorsese’s ā€œKillers of the Flower Moonā€ 2) Christopher Nolan’s ā€œOppenheimerā€ 3) Wes Anderson’s ā€œAsteroid Cityā€ 4) Jonathan Glazer’s ā€œThe Zone of Interestā€ 5) David Fincher’s ā€œThe Killerā€ 6) Yorgos Lanthimos’ ā€œPoor Thingsā€ 7) Ridley Scott’s ā€œNapoleonā€ 8 ) Francis Ford Coppola’s ā€œMegalopolisā€ 9) Steve McQueen’s ā€œBlitzā€ 10) Hayao Miyazaki’s ā€œHow Do You Live?ā€ 11) Ari Aster’s ā€œDisappointment Blvdā€ 12) Michael Mann’s ā€œFerrariā€ 13) Todd Haynes’ ā€œMay/Decemberā€ 14) Woody Allen’s ā€œWASP22ā€ 15) Jeff Nichols’ ā€œThe Bikeridersā€ 16) Alexander Payne’s ā€œThe Holdoversā€ 17) Greta Gerwig’s ā€œBarbieā€ 18) Lynne Ramsay’s ā€œStone and Mattressā€ 19) Robert Eggers’ ā€œNosferatuā€ 20) Ethan Coen’s Untitled Road Movie 21) Roman Polanski’s ā€œThe Palaceā€ 22) Jean-Luc Godard’s ā€œScenarioā€ 23) Alice Rohrwacher’s ā€œLa Chimeraā€ 24) Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s ā€œKuru Otlar Üstüneā€ 25) Wes Anderson’s ā€œWonderful Story of Henry Sugarā€ 26) Yorgos Lanthimos’ ā€œANDā€ 27) Bradley Cooper’s ā€œMaestroā€ 28) Sofia Coppola’s ā€œPriscillaā€ 29) Christian Petzold’s ā€œThe Red Skyā€ 30) Richard Linklater’s ā€œHitmanā€ 31) Terrence Malick’s ā€œThe Way of the Windā€ 32) Denis Villeneuve’s ā€œDune: Part Twoā€ 33) Paolo Sorrentino’s ā€œSueā€ 34) Duke Johnson’s ā€œThe Actorā€ 35) Sean Durkin’s ā€œThe Iron Clawā€ 36) Jeremy Saulnier’s ā€œRebel Ridgeā€ 37) Pixar’s ā€œElementalā€ 38) Aki Kaurismaki’s ā€œFallen Leavesā€ 39) Joshua Oppenheimer’s ā€œThe Endā€ 40) Brandon Cronenberg’s ā€œInfinity Poolā€ 41) Luca Guadagnino’s ā€œChallengersā€ 42) Ben Affleck’s ā€œAir Jordanā€ 43) Pablo Larrain’s ā€œEl Condeā€ 44) Ti West’s ā€œMaXXXineā€ 45) Bertrand Bonello’s ā€œThe Beastā€ 46) Kitty Green’s ā€œThe Royal Hotelā€ 47) Catherine Breillat’s ā€œLast Summerā€ 48) Abdherrane Sissako’s ā€œThe Perfumed Hillā€ 49) Christopher McQuarrie’s ā€œMission: Impossible 7ā€ 50) Hirokazu Kore-eda’s ā€œMonsterā€ 51) Rose Glass’ ā€œLove Lies Bleedingā€ 52) Alex Garland’s ā€œCivil Warā€ 53) Steven Soderbergh’s ā€œMagic Mike’s Last Danceā€ 54) Brady Corbet’s ā€œThe Brutalistā€ 55) James Mangold’s ā€œIndiana Jones 5ā€ 56) Andrew Haigh’s ā€œStrangersā€ 57) Robin Campillo’s ā€œĆ‰cole de l'airā€ 58) Bruno Dumont’s ā€œThe Empireā€ 59) Michel Franco’s ā€œMemoryā€ 60) William Oldroyd’s ā€œEileenā€ 61) Radu Jude’s ā€œDo Not Expect too Much of the End of the Worldā€ 62) Taika Waittti’s ā€œNext Goal Winsā€ 63) David Michod’s ā€œWizardsā€ 64) Marielle Heller’s ā€œNightBitchā€ 65) Cory Finley’s ā€œLandscape With Invisible Handsā€ 66) Mike Mills’ ā€œUntitledā€ 67) Lisandro Alonso’s ā€œEurekaā€ 68) Justine Triet’s ā€œAnatomy of a Fallā€ 69) Jessica Hausner’s ā€œClub Zeroā€ 70) Emerald Fennell’s ā€œSaltburnā€ 71) M. Night Shyamalan’s ā€œKnock at the Cabinā€ 72) Matteo Garrone’s ā€œThe Captainā€ 73) Ken Loach’s ā€œThe Old Oakā€ 74) John Carney’s ā€œFlora and Sonā€ 75) Maiwenn’s ā€œLa Favoriteā€ 76) Nanni Moretti’s ā€œIl sol dell'avvenireā€ 77) Marco Bellocchio’s ā€œLa Conversioneā€ 78) Kirill Serebrennikov’s ā€œLimonovā€ 79) Karim Ainouz ā€œFirebrand 80) Gareth Evans’ ā€œHavocā€ 81) Ira Sachs’ ā€œPassagesā€ 82) Jane Schoenbrun’s ā€œI Saw the TV Glowā€ 83) Victor Erice’s ā€œIn Ceres Los Ojosā€ 84) Liliana Cavani’s ā€œL’ordine Del Tempsā€ 85) Joachim Lafosse’s ā€œUn Silenceā€ 86) Kantemir Balagov’s ā€œButterfly Jamā€ 87) Joe Talbot’s ā€œThe Governessā€ 88) John Woo’s ā€œSilent Nightā€ 89) Angelina Jolie’s ā€œWithout Blood 90) Todd Solondz’ ā€œLove Childā€
  12. Box Office Predictions for 2023 For the first time since the pandemic, there were plenty of reasons to celebrate at the box office in 2022 (ā€œThe Batmanā€! ā€œTop Gunā€! ā€œMinionsā€! ā€œBlack Pantherā€! ā€œAvatarā€! ā€œJurassicā€!) — there just weren’t enough of them. Ticket sales were down over 30% from 2019’s pre-COVID benchmark, forcing most theater chains to continue their precarious dance along the precipice of bankruptcy. To put it plainly: Theaters need hits like their lives depend on it, because they do. So, will 2023 supply enough blockbusters to keep the theatrical business alive? With the release calendar finally stabilizing (for now, at least!), there does appear to be a healthy assortment of options on deck throughout the year, from low-budget horror to colossal superhero epics, mid-budget comedies to adult-skewing dramas, and a movie about a bear that does cocaine. Some of these releases, however, have a much better shot at success than others. Here’s how we see things potentially working out. BIGGEST RISKS ā€œKillers of the Flower Moonā€ (Apple, Paramount) Release Date: Unannounced Thrill Factor: It’s hard to get more high-profile than director Martin Scorsese and stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert De Niro, Jesse Plemons and Brendan Fraser. And Apple, which backed the $200 million-budgeted film, enlisted Paramount Pictures to distribute ā€œKillers of the Flower Moonā€ in theaters. As the first Apple production to get an earnest theatrical rollout, the company must have faith in its commercial prospects. Chill Factor: Even with Scorsese at the helm, few genres are more challenged at the box office than Western crime dramas. And ā€œKillers of the Flower Moonā€ is one of the most expensive non-superhero films of the year. Verdict: It’s been 10 years since ā€œThe Wolf of Wall Street,ā€ Scorsese’s last commercial winner. To defy the odds, the illustrious director needs to deliver a masterpiece that wows crowds and critics. Source
  13. Totally random but I can't believe this girl is already 20.
  14. A new name has entered the field. Well not that new lol
  15. Jade Bahr replied to Legion's post in a topic in Movies
    RIP Gaspard
  16. Maybe he thinks about no one? I mean if those rumors are true Leo is using music to shut his partners out (at least while having sex) lol Sry but this rumor is still cracking me up
  17. Leo flirting with the camera lol
  18. Probably questionable but Leo is on it so whatever. Empire’s 50 Greatest Actors Of All Time List, Revealed Ever since there have been movies, there have been movie stars – and becoming one of the world’s greatest actors involves being able to be many things at once. For one, you have to be able to act – to really inhabit a character’s deepest emotions, to step into their skin so that the words on the page come across as lived and felt. Plus, you have to be able to take that technical mastery and apply it across multiple genres, from quiet character dramas to epic action-packed blockbusters. And on top of that, you have to have that thing that can’t really be learned, or taught – a charisma, a command of the camera, an energy that enlivens even the most stellar script, and makes audiences flock to the multiplex in their droves. For Empire’s February 2023 issue, we asked readers to vote for the best actors of all time – the silver-screen stars that always deliver, that have changed the game, and whose distinctive talents can never be replicated. While you’ll find those goodies exclusively in the pages of Empire magazine we can now reveal the full 50 Greatest Actors list below, as voted for by you. And the winners, in no particular order, are… Leonardo DiCaprio Notable roles: Jack Dawson (Titanic), Dom Cobb (Inception), Billy Costigan (The Departed), Jordan Belfort (The Wolf Of Wall Street), Hugh Glass (The Revenant), Rick Dalton (Once Upon A Time In Hollywood), Romeo Montague (Romeo + Juliet) Oscars won: 1 (The Revenant) Iconic line: ā€œI’m the king of the woooooorld!ā€ (Titanic) The definitive ā€˜90s teen heartthrob became an actor who’ll go to the ends of the earth (often literally) to get under his characters’ skin. The go-to guy for some of the world’s biggest directors (including Martin Scorsese and Quentin Tarantino), he’s effortless style meets undeniable substance. Full list Also to Kate Winslets iconic line.
  19. Have to post this lmao Also love this