Bernard-Henri Lévy presented Glory To The Heroes at the United Nations
In the second instalment with Bernard-Henri Lévy, the director of Glory To The Heroes, The Will To See and Slava Ukraini, all co-directed with Marc Roussel and with Gilles Hertzog as special advisor, we discussed the past informing the present and the urgent need to not drop the case for support of Ukraine by going back to show the reality of war again “without any special effects, without any Hollywoodisation, with little editing.”
Bernard-Henri Lévy: “My problem, my default probably, is that I have memory. Because I love history, I reflect about history …”
It is the summer of 2023 and the first images in Glory To The Heroes remind us of the deluge. They are from the city of Kherson in June, a town under water, because the nearby Kakhovka dam was blown up...
In the second instalment with Bernard-Henri Lévy, the director of Glory To The Heroes, The Will To See and Slava Ukraini, all co-directed with Marc Roussel and with Gilles Hertzog as special advisor, we discussed the past informing the present and the urgent need to not drop the case for support of Ukraine by going back to show the reality of war again “without any special effects, without any Hollywoodisation, with little editing.”
Bernard-Henri Lévy: “My problem, my default probably, is that I have memory. Because I love history, I reflect about history …”
It is the summer of 2023 and the first images in Glory To The Heroes remind us of the deluge. They are from the city of Kherson in June, a town under water, because the nearby Kakhovka dam was blown up...
- 12/8/2023
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Bernard-Henri Lévy on Glory To The Heroes and Slava Ukraini composer Slava Vakarchuk: “He’s not only the Ukrainian Bono or the Ukrainian Sting - he’s of course that - but he is also one of the embodiments of the soul of Ukraine.”
From not in Paris, Bernard-Henri Lévy joined me on Zoom for an in-depth conversation on Glory To The Heroes (L'Ukraine Au Cœur), as NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg held a press conference in Brussels, briefing the media on the Foreign Ministers meeting, which started with announcing their continued support for Ukraine.
Bernard-Henri Lévy with Anne-Katrin Titze on the summer of 2023 filmic diary Glory To The Heroes: “The point of view of a writer and a philosopher who traveled to the frontline.”
“In homage to a lost generation of Ukrainians who died so that Ukraine will live” reads the dedication in Bernard-Henri Lévy’s third volume,...
From not in Paris, Bernard-Henri Lévy joined me on Zoom for an in-depth conversation on Glory To The Heroes (L'Ukraine Au Cœur), as NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg held a press conference in Brussels, briefing the media on the Foreign Ministers meeting, which started with announcing their continued support for Ukraine.
Bernard-Henri Lévy with Anne-Katrin Titze on the summer of 2023 filmic diary Glory To The Heroes: “The point of view of a writer and a philosopher who traveled to the frontline.”
“In homage to a lost generation of Ukrainians who died so that Ukraine will live” reads the dedication in Bernard-Henri Lévy’s third volume,...
- 12/6/2023
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
“In homage to a lost generation of Ukrainians who died so that Ukraine will live” reads the dedication in Bernard-Henri Lévy’s third volume, Glory To The Heroes (L'Ukraine Au Cœur), again co-directed with Marc Roussel, produced by Emily Hamilton, and with Gilles Hertzog as special advisor. Following The Will To See (Une Autre Idée Du Monde) and Slava Ukraini, this documentary also chronicles the war in the shape of a filmic diary. The score at the start by Slava Vakarchuk is reminiscent of a whistling Western tune, simultaneously hopeful, melancholic, and foreboding.
It is the summer of 2023 and the first images remind us of the deluge. They are from the city of Kherson in June, a town under water, because the nearby Kakhovka dam was blown up on the sixth of that month by the Russian military, committing urbicide and ecocide. Lévy calls it the “Flooded Earth...
It is the summer of 2023 and the first images remind us of the deluge. They are from the city of Kherson in June, a town under water, because the nearby Kakhovka dam was blown up on the sixth of that month by the Russian military, committing urbicide and ecocide. Lévy calls it the “Flooded Earth...
- 12/4/2023
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
A birthday ritual at her daughter’s preschool gave Cindy Chupack the inspiration to write her first children’s picture book.
When her daughter Olivia was a toddler, Chupack, a veteran TV and film writer and two-time Emmy winner, was invited to read a special picture book to the preschool class to celebrate Olivia’s birthday. As she turned the pages, Chupack quietly struggled with lines like “You were in my tummy” and other references that did not reflect her experience of starting a family through adoption.
“I remember wanting to have something that would address all the different ways that families are formed,” Chupack told Variety of the spark that led her to write “We Waited for You: Now We’re a Family,” with illustrator Emily Hamilton. “I wanted something that would be validating to parents who have gone through a lot to get their child.”
Chupack drew on...
When her daughter Olivia was a toddler, Chupack, a veteran TV and film writer and two-time Emmy winner, was invited to read a special picture book to the preschool class to celebrate Olivia’s birthday. As she turned the pages, Chupack quietly struggled with lines like “You were in my tummy” and other references that did not reflect her experience of starting a family through adoption.
“I remember wanting to have something that would address all the different ways that families are formed,” Chupack told Variety of the spark that led her to write “We Waited for You: Now We’re a Family,” with illustrator Emily Hamilton. “I wanted something that would be validating to parents who have gone through a lot to get their child.”
Chupack drew on...
- 5/12/2023
- by Cynthia Littleton
- Variety Film + TV
Bernard-Henri Lévy with Sergiy Kyslytsya (Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Ukraine and Permanent Representative of Ukraine to the United Nations) and Nicolas de Rivière (Ambassador Permanent Representative of France to the United Nations) with Ukrainian soldiers at the Slava Ukraini première Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
In the second instalment with Bernard-Henri Lévy we discuss war films, including Rémy Ourdan’s The Siege, André Malraux’s Espoir: Sierra de Teruel, and Terre d’Espagne by Joris Ivens; Chernobyl, quoting a line by Emmanuelle Riva in Alain Resnais’s Hiroshima Mon Amour, screenplay by Marguerite Duras, and chapters five, nine, and twelve of Slava Ukraini, co-directed with Marc Roussel (produced by François Margolin with associate producer Emily Hamilton and advisor Gilles Hertzog).
Bernard-Henri Lévy with Nicolas de Rivière and Sergiy Kyslytsya at the United Nations Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
At the United Nations in New York inside the Eocsoc Chamber on the evening of May 4, Nicolas de Rivière,...
In the second instalment with Bernard-Henri Lévy we discuss war films, including Rémy Ourdan’s The Siege, André Malraux’s Espoir: Sierra de Teruel, and Terre d’Espagne by Joris Ivens; Chernobyl, quoting a line by Emmanuelle Riva in Alain Resnais’s Hiroshima Mon Amour, screenplay by Marguerite Duras, and chapters five, nine, and twelve of Slava Ukraini, co-directed with Marc Roussel (produced by François Margolin with associate producer Emily Hamilton and advisor Gilles Hertzog).
Bernard-Henri Lévy with Nicolas de Rivière and Sergiy Kyslytsya at the United Nations Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
At the United Nations in New York inside the Eocsoc Chamber on the evening of May 4, Nicolas de Rivière,...
- 5/8/2023
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Bernard-Henri Lévy on a young girl in Slava Ukraini saying she read Alexandre Dumas’ The Three Musketeers and Queen Margot: “She lived in a bunker, a basement, underground. The only thing which kept her connected was a book, literature.”
Last year when I spoke with Bernard-Henri Lévy on The Will To See (Une Autre Idée Du Monde), co-directed with Marc Roussel, he moved up our scheduled time to meet so we could watch the final French presidential debate between Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen. When we met last week for a conversation on Slava Ukraini, again co-directed with Marc Roussel (produced by François Margolin with associate producer Emily Hamilton and advisor Gilles Hertzog) it was the afternoon of President Joe Biden’s early morning announcement that he will be running for re-election, and four days before Roy Wood Jr. (executive producer of Cj Hunt’s documentary The Neutral Ground...
Last year when I spoke with Bernard-Henri Lévy on The Will To See (Une Autre Idée Du Monde), co-directed with Marc Roussel, he moved up our scheduled time to meet so we could watch the final French presidential debate between Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen. When we met last week for a conversation on Slava Ukraini, again co-directed with Marc Roussel (produced by François Margolin with associate producer Emily Hamilton and advisor Gilles Hertzog) it was the afternoon of President Joe Biden’s early morning announcement that he will be running for re-election, and four days before Roy Wood Jr. (executive producer of Cj Hunt’s documentary The Neutral Ground...
- 5/1/2023
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Volodymyr Zelensky meets with Bernard-Henri Lévy just days before he is elected President of Ukraine Photo: Yann Revol, courtesy Cohen Media Group
Bernard-Henri Lévy on Wednesday, April 20 moved up our scheduled time to meet from 3:00pm (New York time) to 2:30pm so he could watch from the start the final French presidential debate between Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen. The election is today, Sunday April 24.
In The Will To See (Une Autre Idée Du Monde), co-directed with Marc Roussel, produced by Kristina Larsen, and executive produced by Emily Hamilton, Bernard-Henri Lévy takes us up close to many of the never-ending crises around the world.
Bernard-Henri Lévy: “I was in Ukraine a few days ago. Before that I was in the area of Odessa, Mykolaiv, I continue to go.” Photo: Cohen Media Group
This must-see documentary, shot by Olivier Jacquin and Roussel is dedicated to Paris Match Managing...
Bernard-Henri Lévy on Wednesday, April 20 moved up our scheduled time to meet from 3:00pm (New York time) to 2:30pm so he could watch from the start the final French presidential debate between Emmanuel Macron and Marine Le Pen. The election is today, Sunday April 24.
In The Will To See (Une Autre Idée Du Monde), co-directed with Marc Roussel, produced by Kristina Larsen, and executive produced by Emily Hamilton, Bernard-Henri Lévy takes us up close to many of the never-ending crises around the world.
Bernard-Henri Lévy: “I was in Ukraine a few days ago. Before that I was in the area of Odessa, Mykolaiv, I continue to go.” Photo: Cohen Media Group
This must-see documentary, shot by Olivier Jacquin and Roussel is dedicated to Paris Match Managing...
- 4/24/2022
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Blu-ray & DVD Release Date: Oct. 9, 2012
Price: DVD $29.98, Blu-ray/DVD Combo Pack $39.99
Studio: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
John Cusack is Edgar Allen Poe in The Raven
John Cusack (Hot Tub Time Machine) stars as Edgar Allen Poe in the 2012 mystery thriller film The Raven, which revolves around the troubled writer’s investigation into a string of grisly murders seemingly inspired by his most macabre works.
The film is set in Baltimore, 1849, where police detective Emmett Fields (Luke Evans, Immortals), while investigating a horrific double murder, discovers that the killer’s methods mirror the twisted writings of Edgar Allan Poe. Suspecting Poe at first, Fields ultimately enlists his help to stop future attacks. The stakes are raised as the gruesome slayings continue, the hunt intensifies, and Poe’s own love, Emily Hamilton (Alice Eve, The Decoy Bride), becomes a target for the killer.
Directed by James McTeigue (Ninja Assassin), the R-rated...
Price: DVD $29.98, Blu-ray/DVD Combo Pack $39.99
Studio: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
John Cusack is Edgar Allen Poe in The Raven
John Cusack (Hot Tub Time Machine) stars as Edgar Allen Poe in the 2012 mystery thriller film The Raven, which revolves around the troubled writer’s investigation into a string of grisly murders seemingly inspired by his most macabre works.
The film is set in Baltimore, 1849, where police detective Emmett Fields (Luke Evans, Immortals), while investigating a horrific double murder, discovers that the killer’s methods mirror the twisted writings of Edgar Allan Poe. Suspecting Poe at first, Fields ultimately enlists his help to stop future attacks. The stakes are raised as the gruesome slayings continue, the hunt intensifies, and Poe’s own love, Emily Hamilton (Alice Eve, The Decoy Bride), becomes a target for the killer.
Directed by James McTeigue (Ninja Assassin), the R-rated...
- 7/18/2012
- by Laurence
- Disc Dish
New 'The Raven' movie delivered Ok mystery,action,thrills & more. Relativity Media released their new thriller flick "The Raven" into theaters this weekend. I just checked it out,and I thought it was jut ok as it was sort of slow-moving for my taste. However,there were moments where it did liven up quite a bit,and I enjoyed that. The movie stars: John Cusack, Luke Evans, Alice Eve, Brendan Gleeson,and Oliver Jackson-Cohen. In the new flick,an extremely crazy man takes Edgar Allen Poe's (John Cusack) fictional murder books to heart,and starts using the plotlines to carry out real murders in the exact same way. A young detective Fields recognizes the killer is using Edgar's work to plot his murders,so he recruits Edgar to work with him on trying to locate the killer. Unfortunately,the murders escalate into a deadly game of cat and mouse,...
- 4/29/2012
- by Andre
- OnTheFlix
Now that you've seen it, what did you think? Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary... Arriving in theaters this weekend is James McTeigue's The Raven, his new dark thriller about poet Edgar Allan Poe on a hunt to stop a murderer who is following his words. John Cusack plays Poe the poet, along with Luke Evans as Detective Fields, and Alice Eve as Emily Hamilton. So how is this dark, moody thriller? Has McTeigue been able to live up to his past V for Vendetta legacy? Is John Cusack any good playing the legendary poet? If you've seen it, leave a comment below with your thoughts on The Raven. Note: I haven't had the chance to see The Raven yet, as I've been at CinemaCon all week. I would love to see it and will do my best to catch it once I return...
- 4/27/2012
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
If one imagines a 5th rate combination of B-movies Sherlock Holmes and From Hell, you’d end up with The Raven. James McTeigue‘s is a competently made picture that is also lifeless, uneven and laughable; the kind of mess that gets worse as the minutes dwindle down. The premise and opening draws intrigue, but McTeigue’s latest continually devolves in to a dreadful experience.
Set in the foggy streets of Baltimore, the 20th Century icon and drunk Edgar Allan Poe (John Cusack) is a down-and-out writer. His return to Baltimore is quiet and depressive, with no one appreciative of his intellect and his writings. The only character who does appreciate his talents is the most dangerous fanboy in recent memory: a serial killer. The killer starts taking pages from Poe, having his murders replicate the violence in the author’s writings. This is not something the drunken Poe would...
Set in the foggy streets of Baltimore, the 20th Century icon and drunk Edgar Allan Poe (John Cusack) is a down-and-out writer. His return to Baltimore is quiet and depressive, with no one appreciative of his intellect and his writings. The only character who does appreciate his talents is the most dangerous fanboy in recent memory: a serial killer. The killer starts taking pages from Poe, having his murders replicate the violence in the author’s writings. This is not something the drunken Poe would...
- 4/27/2012
- by jpraup@gmail.com (thefilmstage.com)
- The Film Stage
The Raven
Directed by: James McTeigue
Cast: John Cusack, Alice Eve, Luke Evans, Brendan Gleeson
Running Time: 1 hr 51 mins
Rating: R
Release Date: April 27, 2012
Plot: After his writing inspires the tactics of a madman, author Edgar Allan Poe (Cusack) is hired by a police officer (Evans) to catch the meticulous killer.
Who’S It For? This horror movie’s got gore, and then on top of that some references to Poe. The happiest viewers will be those who came for the former, as opposed to those interested in experiencing the works of the latter. This movie is for Saw fans, but also aims to let down people who read books at the same time.
Expectations: Was the usage of Poe going to provide a good horror story? How much of this movie was actually going to reference Poe’s famous title poem? How much would this movie make me miss...
Directed by: James McTeigue
Cast: John Cusack, Alice Eve, Luke Evans, Brendan Gleeson
Running Time: 1 hr 51 mins
Rating: R
Release Date: April 27, 2012
Plot: After his writing inspires the tactics of a madman, author Edgar Allan Poe (Cusack) is hired by a police officer (Evans) to catch the meticulous killer.
Who’S It For? This horror movie’s got gore, and then on top of that some references to Poe. The happiest viewers will be those who came for the former, as opposed to those interested in experiencing the works of the latter. This movie is for Saw fans, but also aims to let down people who read books at the same time.
Expectations: Was the usage of Poe going to provide a good horror story? How much of this movie was actually going to reference Poe’s famous title poem? How much would this movie make me miss...
- 4/27/2012
- by Nick Allen
- The Scorecard Review
“The Raven” imagines the mysterious final days of Edgar Allen Poe as an action-mystery straight from the pages of the Gothic author’s most macabre stories. Director James McTeigue’s film takes this gimmicky bit of revisionist history and weaves it into a bland, forgettable movie. There are a few instances of gore that might momentarily sate horror fans, like an early near-decapitation, but very little makes “The Raven” stand out. It is a thoroughly uninteresting film. Poe (John Cusack), who you first meet in the least imaginative way possible—emerging from heavy Baltimore fog (to poke at a dead cat)—is a gloomy drunk with no money, friends, or prospects. Despite being an antagonistic lovelorn mess who burns every bridge behind him and who never met a drink he didn’t like, Cusack’s Poe is kind of hunky. At least hunky enough to score the affection of Emily Hamilton...
- 4/27/2012
- by Brent McKnight
- Beyond Hollywood
Alice Eve takes on the role of Edgar Allen Poe's love interest, Emily Hamilton, in the chilling new thriller The Raven. Playing a damsel in distress came with quite a few challenges for the actress, from heavy dresses and corsets to being buried alive, and we sat down her at a recent press day to hear all about them. While chatting about her character's dramatic circumstances, Alice even mentioned a real fear of hers that was brought to the surface while filming. She also revealed how she and leading man John Cusack collaborated to come up with one of their romantic scenes in the movie. Check out our interview here and catch The Raven in theaters today.
- 4/27/2012
- by PopSugar
- Popsugar.com
Directed by: James McTeigue
Written by: Ben Livingston, Hannah Shakespeare
Featuring: John Cusack, Alice Eve, Luke Evans, Brendan Gleeson
From a script written by Hannah Shakespeare (her last gig was on the TV series The Bionic Woman. Yup.) and actor Ben Livingston, this insipid film should carry the tagline “Poe for Stupid People Who Like The New Sherlock Holmes Movies.”
Because that’s what it is — it’s a film about Poe for people who have no idea who Edgar Allan Poe actually was and who have never read anything by him. People who adore his stories and poems, and the body of films and art inspired by Poe’s work, will be aghast at this by-the-rote semi-action/adventure about a loveable rogue named Poe who dashes about 1849 Baltimore romancing ladies, getting into bar fights and generally being an endearing, Han-Solo-ish lout. John Cusack wavers in and out of a...
Written by: Ben Livingston, Hannah Shakespeare
Featuring: John Cusack, Alice Eve, Luke Evans, Brendan Gleeson
From a script written by Hannah Shakespeare (her last gig was on the TV series The Bionic Woman. Yup.) and actor Ben Livingston, this insipid film should carry the tagline “Poe for Stupid People Who Like The New Sherlock Holmes Movies.”
Because that’s what it is — it’s a film about Poe for people who have no idea who Edgar Allan Poe actually was and who have never read anything by him. People who adore his stories and poems, and the body of films and art inspired by Poe’s work, will be aghast at this by-the-rote semi-action/adventure about a loveable rogue named Poe who dashes about 1849 Baltimore romancing ladies, getting into bar fights and generally being an endearing, Han-Solo-ish lout. John Cusack wavers in and out of a...
- 4/27/2012
- by Superheidi
- Planet Fury
Alice Eve is involved in a number of upcoming genre films, including Men in Black 3, Star Trek 2, and The Raven. During a recent press junket for The Raven, Alice Eve talked about her attraction to genre films, her love of Edgar Allan Poe, and working with John Cusack.
I noticed that you’ve been attached to a number of genre films recently. Are you drawn to those types of movies more than a drama or romantic comedy?
Alice Eve: I did this movie called She’s Out of My League, and I’m very proud of it, but I made a decision that I wanted to play women that are a little more three dimensional. Interestingly, those kinds of women do exist in genre films. They seem to be allowed to have vulnerability, strength, spirit, and intelligence.
What was it about The Raven that made you interested in joining the cast?...
I noticed that you’ve been attached to a number of genre films recently. Are you drawn to those types of movies more than a drama or romantic comedy?
Alice Eve: I did this movie called She’s Out of My League, and I’m very proud of it, but I made a decision that I wanted to play women that are a little more three dimensional. Interestingly, those kinds of women do exist in genre films. They seem to be allowed to have vulnerability, strength, spirit, and intelligence.
What was it about The Raven that made you interested in joining the cast?...
- 4/26/2012
- by Jonathan James
- DailyDead
John Cusack and Alice Eve sat down with Shock Till You Drop to discuss The Raven, a new thriller from director James McTeigue (V for Vendetta) that finds Cusack playing Edgar Allan Poe.
The author is caught up in a murder mystery in which a killer is taking a cue from Poe's oeuvre. Eve, meanwhile, is Emily Hamilton, Poe's girlfriend.
The film opens in theaters this Friday, April 27th from Relativity and also stars Luke Evans and Brendan Gleeson. After the jump, you'll find our chat with Cusack and Eve as they discuss their parts, the film and the works of Poe.
Read more...
The author is caught up in a murder mystery in which a killer is taking a cue from Poe's oeuvre. Eve, meanwhile, is Emily Hamilton, Poe's girlfriend.
The film opens in theaters this Friday, April 27th from Relativity and also stars Luke Evans and Brendan Gleeson. After the jump, you'll find our chat with Cusack and Eve as they discuss their parts, the film and the works of Poe.
Read more...
- 4/24/2012
- shocktillyoudrop.com
I will be seeing The Raven this afternoon and to this point I have only heard a few rumblings as to its quality and those rumblings I don't think Relativity wants me to repeat here, which should give you some kind of sign as to what I've heard. That said, I'm a fan of director James McTeigue in that I liked V for vendetta, though I did absolutely loathe Ninja Assassin. So where will The Raven fall? Somewhere in the middle? As for the reason behind this post, Relativity sent over the following video which they are calling "Murderous Visions" and the plurality of the title tells me we can expect more. The gist of the video is to pair footage from the upcoming film with "A Tell Tale Heart," the Edgar Allan Poe story of Marie Roget. In this case we see the film's co-star Alice Eve who plays Emily Hamilton in the film,...
- 4/18/2012
- by Brad Brevet
- Rope of Silicon
Alice Eve had to face her fears in the April 27-due "The Raven," including one scene that sees her character, Emily Hamilton, buried alive in a coffin.
"I definitely was claustrophobic," Alice told Access at the film's La junket about the scene in her new movie, opposite John Cusack. "When they first put me in the coffin and they nailed the lid down, all the air went out of the coffin and I panicked... and then I had to learn there's only so much oxygen in a confined space and you have to sip the air...
"Which is ...
Copyright 2012 by NBC Universal, Inc. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
"I definitely was claustrophobic," Alice told Access at the film's La junket about the scene in her new movie, opposite John Cusack. "When they first put me in the coffin and they nailed the lid down, all the air went out of the coffin and I panicked... and then I had to learn there's only so much oxygen in a confined space and you have to sip the air...
"Which is ...
Copyright 2012 by NBC Universal, Inc. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
- 4/16/2012
- by nobody@accesshollywood.com (AccessHollywood.com Editorial Staff)
- Access Hollywood
Roles in 'The Raven' and 'Men in Black 3' make her One to Watch in 2012.
By Kara Warner
Alice Eve in "The Raven"
Photo: Rogue Pictures
Alice Eve has been flirting with crossing over into the big time for a while now. The British actress has been stealing scenes and impressing co-stars left and right from her first big feature "Starter for 10," to "She's Out of My League," "Sex and the City 2" and last year's stint on "Entourage."
Soon, you can see Eve in two of the year's most highly anticipated films — "The Raven" and "Men in Black 3" — and as such, she is one of MTV Movies' Ones to Watch in 2012.
We recently caught up with Eve to talk about her plans for 2012 and what she loves about her upcoming roles:
MTV: What are you most looking forward to this year?
Alice Eve: Apart from the fact...
By Kara Warner
Alice Eve in "The Raven"
Photo: Rogue Pictures
Alice Eve has been flirting with crossing over into the big time for a while now. The British actress has been stealing scenes and impressing co-stars left and right from her first big feature "Starter for 10," to "She's Out of My League," "Sex and the City 2" and last year's stint on "Entourage."
Soon, you can see Eve in two of the year's most highly anticipated films — "The Raven" and "Men in Black 3" — and as such, she is one of MTV Movies' Ones to Watch in 2012.
We recently caught up with Eve to talk about her plans for 2012 and what she loves about her upcoming roles:
MTV: What are you most looking forward to this year?
Alice Eve: Apart from the fact...
- 1/10/2012
- MTV Movie News
Roles in 'The Raven' and 'Men in Black 3' make her One to Watch in 2012.
By Kara Warner
Alice Eve in "The Raven"
Photo: Rogue Pictures
Alice Eve has been flirting with crossing over into the big time for a while now. The British actress has been stealing scenes and impressing co-stars left and right from her first big feature "Starter for 10," to "She's Out of My League," "Sex and the City 2" and last year's stint on "Entourage."
Soon, you can see Eve in two of the year's most highly anticipated films — "The Raven" and "Men in Black 3" — and as such, she is one of MTV Movies' Ones to Watch in 2012.
We recently caught up with Eve to talk about her plans for 2012 and what she loves about her upcoming roles:
MTV: What are you most looking forward to this year?
Alice Eve: Apart from the fact...
By Kara Warner
Alice Eve in "The Raven"
Photo: Rogue Pictures
Alice Eve has been flirting with crossing over into the big time for a while now. The British actress has been stealing scenes and impressing co-stars left and right from her first big feature "Starter for 10," to "She's Out of My League," "Sex and the City 2" and last year's stint on "Entourage."
Soon, you can see Eve in two of the year's most highly anticipated films — "The Raven" and "Men in Black 3" — and as such, she is one of MTV Movies' Ones to Watch in 2012.
We recently caught up with Eve to talk about her plans for 2012 and what she loves about her upcoming roles:
MTV: What are you most looking forward to this year?
Alice Eve: Apart from the fact...
- 1/10/2012
- MTV Music News
Jason Paul Collum is the genre director of several films and was featured as Bachelor of the Month in Instinct magazine. He is mentored by legendary scream queen Brinke Stevens who starred in two of his more popular efforts October Moon and its sequel November Son. Both of these films were refreshingly different films in the genre as they were gay psychological horror thrillers. We had the chance to ask him a few questions about his career and these films. Here is what he had to say:
For horror fans who may be unfamiliar with you, who is Jason Paul Collum and what is he all about?
I'm a guy with my hands in a lot of pots. I write, direct, produce and very occasionally act (a loose term) in mostly low-budget, independent films. I've worked on projects with budgets as low as $500 and as high as $150,000. I even worked...
For horror fans who may be unfamiliar with you, who is Jason Paul Collum and what is he all about?
I'm a guy with my hands in a lot of pots. I write, direct, produce and very occasionally act (a loose term) in mostly low-budget, independent films. I've worked on projects with budgets as low as $500 and as high as $150,000. I even worked...
- 9/7/2010
- by Troy
- Big Daddy Horror Reviews - Interviews
Actress Frances Reid was best known for her starring role as Alice Horton in the daytime soap opera Days of Our Lives for the past 45 years. She was also featured as Emily Hamilton, the older wife of Rock Hudson’s character in John Frankenheimer’s 1966 film Seconds before he was rejuvenated as a much younger man, and was the wife of David Wayne’s scientist character in the 1971 science fiction classic The Andromeda Strain.
Reid was born in Wichita Falls on December 9, 1914, and was raised in Berkeley, California. She studied acting at the Pasadena Community Playhouse, and began her career on the Broadway stage in the late 1930s. She performed in numerous stage productions, and was appearing on television by the late 1940s. She was seen in episodes of Lights Out, Danger, the 1959 Hallmark Hall of Fame adaptation of Berkeley Square, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, The F.B.I.,...
Reid was born in Wichita Falls on December 9, 1914, and was raised in Berkeley, California. She studied acting at the Pasadena Community Playhouse, and began her career on the Broadway stage in the late 1930s. She performed in numerous stage productions, and was appearing on television by the late 1940s. She was seen in episodes of Lights Out, Danger, the 1959 Hallmark Hall of Fame adaptation of Berkeley Square, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, The F.B.I.,...
- 2/12/2010
- by Harris Lentz
- FamousMonsters of Filmland
Di Neil Manson (Andrew Lancel) and DC Grace Dasari (Amita Dhiri) continue working together on an investigation involving Dr Julia Bickham (Emily Hamilton), a psychiatrist that Neil knows from a previous case. The investigation leads them to a man called Stephen Fairfax (Jonathan Slinger), who used to be under Julia's care. Realising that Stephen's a man on the edge, it soon dawns on Neil (more)...
- 8/14/2009
- by By Kris Green
- Digital Spy
Di Neil Manson (Andrew Lancel) and DC Grace Dasari (Amita Dhiri) investigate an attack on Rebecca Sands's (Ruth Gemmell) live-in nanny Clara Novak (Noeleen Comiskey). As the case builds, Neil's stunned when he realises that their neighbour is Julia Bickham (Emily Hamilton), a psychiatrist who he worked with on a previous case which ended in tragedy. After speaking with Julia, Neil returns to (more)...
- 8/6/2009
- by By Kris Green
- Digital Spy
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.