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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
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Posted
Haha.... it sorta resembles the hats he wore for Gatsby. :p If you look at the pic Nanda posted on the previous page, looks so similar to that lol :heart:

In fact, I remember reading a tweet here (don't remember who posted, sorry) that Leo was in a shop in NOLA buying some hats... maybe this is one of them ;).

Soo has this tweet been posted yet?? Apparently Django will be filming in LA
olv‏@olv

Django Unchained, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, is filming near the Bayou Barn at 7145 Barataria Blvd in Crown Point, LA this week.

I think LA is of Louisiana, not Los Angeles.

Thanks kat by the tweet and wijn for the article.

Posted

^Ohhh lolll makes sense :laugh: Cause Bayou barn sounds like a place in Louisiana more than L.A.... :laugh:

Well I guess we know leo will be filming this week in Louisiana :p

Posted
Haha.... it sorta resembles the hats he wore for Gatsby. :p If you look at the pic Nanda posted on the previous page, looks so similar to that lol :heart:

In fact, I remember reading a tweet here (don't remember who posted, sorry) that Leo was in a shop in NOLA buying some hats... maybe this is one of them ;).

Hmmmm.... If so then it seems he's been influenced by Gatsby's style a bit lol :p

Posted

^^ I really hope so!! :laugh:

Titanic 3D rules the waves over a wet Easter weekend

James Cameron re-release emerges top at the UK box office ahead of The Hunger Games, Mirror Mirror and The Pirates!

A combination of wet weather and the Easter holiday created a box-office bonanza for UK cinemas at the weekend, with the 3D re-release of Titanic emerging top of a highly competitive heap. With an impressive Friday-Sunday total of £2.86m including £97,000 in previews, the James Cameron epic went on to pull in a further £1.03m on bank holiday Monday, yielding a holiday weekend haul of £3.88m. This compares with a debut weekend of £4.81m for Titanic back in January 1998, and an opening weekend of £1.53m (including £228,000 in previews) for recent 3D re-release, Star Wars: Episode I. The Lion King 3D kicked off its run with £2.75m last October, on its way to a gross so far of £12.37m.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/filmblog/20...-easter-weekend

Posted
^Ohhh lolll makes sense :laugh: Cause Bayou barn sounds like a place in Louisiana more than L.A.... :laugh:

Well I guess we know leo will be filming this week in Louisiana :p

LOL :laugh:

Hmmmm.... If so then it seems he's been influenced by Gatsby's style a bit lol :p

Well, he looks lush... that's for sure :laugh:.

Titanic 3D rules the waves over a wet Easter weekend

James Cameron re-release emerges top at the UK box office ahead of The Hunger Games, Mirror Mirror and The Pirates!

That's great, Wijn... thanks.

Curious, anyone think Leo will have time for Cochella?

I'm rooting for him to go anywhere, where we can see photos... because it seems that it will not happen on Django's set <_<.

Posted

That's the worst article about Leo I've ever read in my whole life...sometimes I cant believe I still find this kind of news...shame on! :yuckky:

Sorry for the translation girls...

Titanic 3-d "won a series of outreach events and, of course, a premiere ceremony, held in London in late March. It was to celebrate the centenary of the maiden voyage of the RMS Titanic, remember the commercial success of the production - the movie amended incredible fifteen weeks at the top of U.S. box office - and taking advantage of the treadmill, toast the 100th anniversary of Paramount Pictures.

The guests? The stars, of course! That is Kate Winslet. She is pale. Hunger, probably. They say today is bad when you hear the first notes of "My Heart Will Go On." It makes sense. You there in the corner is James Cameron. He has swallowed the failure of "Avatar" at the Oscars? Bill nearly 3 billion and to be defeated "War on Terror" does not seem a good record. Missing boy. It's Leonardo DiCaprio. Where is he?

To general astonishment, the actor ignored not only the party reestreia the movie, like shied away from interviews and any new promotional material planned. According to someone close, who granted an interview to U.S. Weekly, DiCaprio recognizes the importance of the Titanic in her career, but now finds himself on another level. "It took a long time for him to let go of the character and get where he is today," says the source.

Leonardo DiCaprio has every right to reject invitations. Premieres even seem unpleasant. Pics. Smiles. Staying between the character and personality. However, the story of "is relevant, but I'm above it" definitely not glue.

One last quick the actor's filmography reveals a dozen films worse than Titanic. "The Beach" is one of the scripts most hampered the past 20 years. "Romeo and Juliet" disappoints in every way. Previous work to hit are equally bad. A relayof weak median performances and titles. Even the recent and strong partnership with Scorsese is difficult to draw something. Because even in the dismal "Gangs of New York," "The Aviator" and "Shutter Island" he was able to stand out. In "The Departed," Martin only good movie in the past decade, Leo goes well, but it's just a name anymore. With such a career, what's wrong with being Jack Dawson?

The love story starring Kate Winslet and him is really corny. And a bit melodramatic. However, few novels have been so well worked out. James Cameron on his transatlantic scenic met a handful of actors and all effective antagonisms and biases expected in a good story - even conflict between social classes and embraced elderly were thought of waiting for death. This is all in a perfect scenario: a naval epic marked the largest Presepada seas. Here, the 3D is an optional luxury and unnecessary. Leonardo DiCaprio, a mere crew adrift at sea. It is part of the story. But he prefers to deny it. Forget the boats.

http://www.itu.com.br/cinema/noticia/para-...sao-3d-20120411

Posted

A Minute With: Martin Scorsese on time running out

Time slipping away seems to be on Martin Scorsese's mind.

[...]

Q: What about your next film, "The Wolf of Wall Street" with DiCaprio again? What will it say about our financial system?

A: "It's a reversal in values I think. Everything seems to be twisted and turned around. I thought that this country, in terms of what we were founded on, is the idea of a common good. And I don't see that when you unleash this kind of behavior. People are people, people are human and when you have the ability to do it, you go with it. And when it is unchecked, of course it is going to happen and it is not the first time ... But the problem is the reversal of values, I think, and not feeling the compassion for others and the people you have hurt."

Q: It's often noted that you work with the same actors - Keitel, Day-Lewis, De Niro, DiCaprio. Which of those did you learn the most from, or who learned the most from you?

A: "With De Niro and I, we struck out. He was really an actor, in a way, he was a working actor when I was introduced to him. And so in the '70s the pictures we made, up until the scenes we did in "Goodfellas" too, because he was only on that shoot maybe 15 days, maybe 12 days. But I think I learned the most from him.

"My mother would look at Bob and Harvey Keitel and was like, 'These are my son's friends,' she didn't think of them as major actors. 'These are my other sons.' And so I learned a lot during that period from how one could shape an actor or shape a performance, I should say. And I just applied it over the years to as many people as possible, with very good results, of course with Ellen Burstyn and Kristofferson, Daniel Day-Lewis, Paul Newman, Tom Cruise, it goes on like that. And all the actresses, I think there have been 12 to 14 Oscar nominations for the actresses in my movies, and two of them have won, including Cate Blanchett.

"And then finding someone like Leo DiCaprio, who really liked my movies before we met, and being able to discover with him, it's another generation, you see. I guess we go so far, but he's got what's inside (pats his chest), and we agree with that. A heart."

Q: You've spent nearly 50 years making movies, and Hollywood is tough. How have you not become cynical? Any regrets?

A: "No I don't think they are regrets. I think you just have to be realistic as to what the elements of the situation are at this given time. In the '70s it was one way, by the early '80s it became something else, and then it was disappointing, greatly. Somehow by the late '80s I seemed to fall back into a situation where I was able to make more pictures, but during the '80s it was great struggling. And the industry had changed completely.

"I was very lucky for example, from 'Gangs of New York' on, to be involved with Leo DiCaprio, as I was with De Niro in the 70s, because with De Niro, with his stature as an actor, we were able to do some very difficult, thematic subject matter. And the same thing with Leo.

"But you do have to be aware, and you just have to utilize what is there. If this is gone, don't complain about it. Move on. If something's gone, move on and take advantage of what is there. That could be a 70mm epic or that could be the Internet."

----------

Awwww :wub:

Full article here: http://in.reuters.com/article/2012/04/11/m...E83A0HO20120411

Thank you so much Pami and Nanda :grouphug:

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