Blog Archive
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2011
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April
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- Pictures of Rob Signing for Fans at the WFE Paris ...
- 'WFE' Berlin Premiere Videos: Part 2
- 'WFE' Paris: Rob & Cast At Press Conference
- More Videos from the WFE Premiere in Berlin
- Rob's Interview with Le Parisien- WFE Paris Premiere
- Info about the WFE Barcelona Premiere/Promo
- Scorpions History wikipedia.org
- Rob's Interview with Taff -Berlin Press Junket
- Cute Kristen Collages
- Special Message - Sticky Post
- Pics of Rob at the WFE Paris PressCon
- More HQ Pics of Rob at the WFE Paris Premiere
- Preview of Rob's Interview with Cinema Jeuxactu at...
- More FanPics and Videos of Rob Inside the Theater-...
- Rob, Reese and Christoph's Interview with Gottscha...
- WFE Paris Premiere: New *Adorable* Fan Videos
- More From The 'Water for Elephants' Paris Premiere
- New Pics of Rob at the WFE Paris Premiere
- Videos: Rob and Cast at the WFE Paris PressCon
- New Interview with Rob and Cast at the WFE Paris P...
- Rob on Le Grand Journal-Paris.
- 'WFE' Paris: Rob & Cast On Le Grand Journal
- HQ Pics of Rob at the Plaza Athenee in Paris - Apr...
- Rob Looking Sharp In A Suit Today!
- New Pic of Rob, Christoph, Reese and Francis Lawre...
- Radio 2 (UK) Hosts Talk About 'Water For Elephants'
- Rob Talks Relaxing In Southern France & More
- Black & White Hotness: More Outtakes
- Justin Bieber Wants To Further His Acting Career
- Details of Rob's WFE Paris Press Junket
- Video: Rob's Interview with Bravo - Berlin Press J...
- Rob's Old/New AnOther Man Outtakes
- Pics and Vids of Rob Inside the Theater at the WFE...
- Kristen's Old/New 2009 Nylon Outtakes
- Rob's Interview with WeltOnLine- German Press
- Rob in Ciak Magazine- Italy May 2011 Scans
- E! News: Rob wears Gucci in Berlin. Plus EW's 'Bre...
- 'WFE' Paris Premiere: Rob Leaving The Afterparty
- Pictures of Rob Leaving the WFE After-Party in Paris
- Rob's Interview with BILD During the WFE Berlin Pr...
- Videos from Inside the Theater at the WFE Paris Pr...
- Rob at the WFE Paris Premiere - April 28, 2011
- ZDF Coverage of the WFE Berlin Premiere Plus Inter...
- 'WFE' Paris Premiere: Red Carpet
- Rob at Borchardt Restaurant. After the WFE Berlin ...
- RTL Coverage of the WFE Berlin Premiere "Where is ...
- Rob in Joy Mag- Germany
- EW: Bella And Edward In Married Bliss
- Sky Movies Interview with Rob, Reese and Francis L...
- Pics of Rob Arriving in Paris -April 28th
- Has Cheryl Cole's Replacement On The UK X Factor B...
- E! News: EW Cover & Rob's Sharp Gucci Suit
- New Picture And Interview With Bild.De
- Videos of Rob Inside the Theater at the Berlin Pre...
- EW Cover-' Edward and Bella' for Breaking Dawn
- WFE Berlin Premiere Videos. Red Carpet Coverage an...
- WFE Berlin Press Conference Videos
- 'WFE' Promo: A Smiley Rob Arrives In Paris!
- Rob's Interview with Canal 13 -Argentina
- Cherie Currie Praises Kristen for JJ Portrayal
- More Fan Pics of Rob from the WFE Berlin Premiere
- MTV The Seven: Christian Slater tells Rob to "Go F...
- Set Those Alarms: EW Cover Coming Bright & Early!
- "The Kid From Twilight Will Be The Best Kisser"
- Its Great News Day! EW 'Breaking Dawn' Covers and ...
- Fan Videos from the WFE Berlin Premiere
- Rob on RTL -German TV. WFE PressCon Coverage
- Rob's Interview With BILD Berlin Press Junket- Tra...
- Rob Heading to the WFE Premiere After-Party in Berlin
- 'WFE' Berlin Premiere: Rob Hits The Afterparty
- 'WFE' Berlin Premiere: Red Carpet
- Rob On Royal Wedding, Screenplay He's Working On
- Edward & Bella Looking Gorgeous In New BD Stills!
- OK: Rob talks first auditions, people selling him out
- Bill Trangradi: (Rob) "He's Really Dreamy"
- Rob in Radio Times MagUK- New Interview
- Charlie Bewley and Bill Tangradi talk about Workin...
- WFE Berlin Premiere -April 27, 2011
- 'Breaking Dawn' Stills- People Mag Scans
- Video of Rob and Kristen Filming 'Breaking Dawn'-V...
- Rob, Christoph, and Francis Lawrence On the Roof o...
- 'WFE' Berlin: Rob On The Roof Of Hotel De Rome
- Rob Talks about Kate Middleton and the Royal Wedding
- Rob and Kristen Filming 'Breaking Dawn' -US Weekly...
- Selena Gomez Kisses Someone Who ISN'T Justin Bieber
- Kellan Lutz on Kristen "Genius. I'm so impressed w...
- 'Water for Elephants' Berlin Premiere: Photocall
- WFE Berlin PressCon/Photocall - April 27, 2011
- Rob Enjoys A Late Dinner In Berlin Ahead of Premiere
- MTV's 'The Seven' Shows Exclusive Reshoot Pics
- US Weekly Covers 'Breaking Dawn' Reshoots
- 'Water For Elephants' Reviews
- New Pics of Rob Out for Dinner in Berlin - April 2...
- Por Ti Mag: 'Bear' Already Taking Advantage Of Rob
- WFE Wrap: Costumes, Elephant Training, And Much More!
- Old/New Vid of Kristen at 'The Runaways' SXSW Prem...
- Gary Johnson, Tai's Trainer Talks about Rob, Reese...
- Fox Movie Channel Covers the WFE Premiere
- WFE: More Red Carpet Videos & Fan Pics From NY
- HQ Pics of Rob and Kristen Filming 'Breaking Dawn'...
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April
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'Water for Elephants' Reviews From Roger Ebert, Variety and THR
As I stated before I am not big on reviews - because I don't really care what critics have to say about the movies I want to see. lol So, I will just be posting some for you guys... warning for spoilers.
Roger Ebert 3 Stars
"There's something endearingly old-fashioned about a love story involving a beautiful bareback rider and a kid who runs off to join the circus. What makes "Water for Elephants" more intriguing is a third character, reminding us why Christoph Waltz deserved his supporting actor Oscar for "Inglourious Basterds" (2009). He plays the circus owner, who is married to the bareback rider and keeps her and everyone else in his iron grip.
The story, based on the best-seller by Sara Gruen, is told as a flashback by an old man named Jacob (Hal Holbrook), who lost his parents in 1931, dropped out of Cornell University's veterinary school, hit the road and hopped a train that happened, wouldn't you know, to be a circus train. Played by Robert Pattinson as a youth, he is naive and excited, and his eyes fill with wonder as he sees the beautiful Marlena (Reese Witherspoon) on her white show horse. The owner August (Waltz) is prepared to throw him off the train until he learns young Jacob knows something about veterinary medicine.
In an age of prefabricated special effects and obviously phony spectacle, it's sort of old-fashioned (and a pleasure) to see a movie made of real people and plausible sets. The production designer, Jack Fisk, has created a believable one-ring circus here, and even the train itself has a personality. (August and Jacob spend an implausible amount of time walking or running on top of it, but never mind.)
The dynamic in the story depends on August's jealousy of Marlena, and her stubborn loyalty to their marriage contract. This is where Waltz makes his contribution. Shorter than Pattinson, indeed hardly taller than Witherspoon, he rules over everyone as a hard-bitten taskmaster whose easy charm conceals a cold inner core; it's the same dynamic he used as the merciless Nazi in "Inglourious Basterds." He's much given to offering champagne toasts with a knife hidden inside.
Read the full review at the source: SunTimes-Roger Ebert
The Hollywood Reporter...Under Francis Lawrence's sleekly studied direction, everything has been smoothed out to the extent that even dire poverty does not seem entirely unappealing. Certainly the three leads never do. Looking 300 percent better than he did in his last non-”Twilight” outing, “Remember Me,” Pattinson is entirely convincing as Jacob, a Cornell veterinary school student who escapes from the ruin provoked by his parents' untimely death by almost inadvertently joining the circus.
Adding full review for those that can't read Variety's site
Variety In an extravagant gamble worthy of the fictional Benzini Brothers Circus itself, Fox gives Sara Gruen's grassroots bestseller "Water for Elephants" the glossy, big-budget treatment fans crave, counting on adult women -- plus a younger female contingent keen on seeing "Twilight" heartthrob Robert Pattinson paired with sweet-as-pie Reese Witherspoon -- to prop up a production with a cost apparently on par with a small tentpole. Unlike the story's colorful gang of roustabouts, who dismiss ticket buyers as "rubes," the filmmakers clearly value their public, crafting a splendid period swooner that delivers classic romance and an indelible insider's view of 1930s circus life.
A present-day prologue finds nursing-home escapee Jacob Jankowski (played with endearing mock surliness by Hal Holbrook) reminiscing about his tenure under the big top. Taken in by a young circus worker (Paul Schneider) and then encouraged to share his story, Jacob proceeds to explain how a family tragedy on the eve of vet-school exams spared the would-be Cornell grad a predictable life, and led to his hitching a ride with the Benzini Brothers' traveling show instead.
Transitioning smoothly back to the character's spring awakening, director Francis Lawrence suggests how robust and alive Jacob's memories have remained all these years, faithfully recreating the initial disorientation and awe the young Polish-American experienced upon first encountering the circus. Looking far more handsome than Holbrook ever did, Pattinson brings the same sullen sensitivity to 23-year-old Jacob that he has to the "Twilight" pics -- perfectly fitting for an overnight orphan so recently derailed from his intended life path.
A daisy-fresh college boy out of place among Camel (Jim Norton), Kinko (Mark Povinelli) and the other grizzled old drunks he meets aboard the Benzini Brothers boxcar, Jacob must instantly adjust to the show's elaborate caste system. The stakes, made almost instantly clear, are high: One wrong move and Jacob could be "redlighted," or thrown from the speeding train between stops. Such castoffs seldom survive, and the practice becomes an important subplot for the Depression-era story, as the show's ruthless ringleader regularly jettisons employees whose salaries he can no longer afford.
In the novel, this cruel boss is a separate character from August, the man whose porcelain-fair wife Jacob unwisely covets in the story's central love triangle. Writer Richard LaGravanese streamlines things for the sake of the film, however, eliminating Uncle Al to create a larger and more complex role for Christoph Waltz, custom tailored to the thesp's mix of menace and charm. Elegantly streamlining Jacob's immersion, LaGravanese focuses auds on his protagonist's point of view -- a strategy that comes at the expense of the book's memorable sideshow and supporting cast, while allowing us to learn the ropes and discover luminous star performer Marlena (Witherspoon, the picture of classic glamour) and her jealous husband (Waltz) through his eyes.
Whereas most contempo cinema seems to have lost the art of the character introduction, "Water for Elephants" takes care to create a certain mystique around its key personalities before revealing them onscreen, a tactic that caries through to August's game-changing acquisition of Rosie, a stubborn 73-year-old pachyderm who imbues the film with a giddy sense of wonder from the instant she appears. So intense is our connection with the creature that August's cruelty toward her becomes almost unwatchable, even though the most taxing scene is merely suggested and not seen.
Rosie also accounts for most of the pic's emotional highs, as in the story's eureka moment, which LaGravanese cleverly reconfigures to tie in with an otherwise underdeveloped subplot about the paralysis-inducing consequences of drinking contaminated Jamaican ginger extract, or "Jake." Set against the dual backdrops of the Great Depression and Prohibition, "Water for Elephants" plunges us full-bodied into the world of circus troupes, an all-but-lost slice of recent history ripe for such a spectacular reimagining.
It's an intoxicating place to be, reminiscent of Ray Bradbury's breathless dark-carnival tale "Something Wicked This Way Comes." Considering the unassuming roots of the book on which "Water for Elephants" is based, along with its misfit-focused subject, there's no small irony that the pic should attract such a first-choice roster of collaborators: From dream-cast headliners Pattinson, Witherspoon and Waltz all the way down the line to d.p. Roberto Prieto, composer James Newton Howard (whose rich orchestral score sadly lacks a clear theme) and production designer Jack Fisk, the show is strictly A-list.
The wild card here is Lawrence, who ably rises to the challenge. Despite his flashy musicvideo origins, the helmer takes an assured classical approach to his widescreen canvas, transitioning smoothly from future-looking sci-fiers "Constantine" and "I Am Legend" to this project's more nostalgia-driven demands.
and a few more compiled by RPLife
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