Play PC games on your Mac? TUAW tests CrossOver
Moviefone
Posts with tag AbbieCornish

Bond Girl Rumor #467: Bollywood's Shilpa Shetty

The way I see it, it's still way too early in the game to start taking most Bond 22 rumors very seriously -- just ask Abbie Cornish. Since there isn't much for fans to do between now and November 2008, we might as well enjoy a little speculation. The Metro UK is reporting that "unnamed sources" (we all know what that means) have confirmed that Bollywood star Shilpa Shetty is in the running to star as the next Bond Girl. According to Metro's source, 'Shilpa is having secret talks with the top brass who are working on the next movie. She has a huge following in Bollywood, as well as a number of fans in the Western world – especially in Britain – so she will be great for box office sales.'

Shetty began her career in 1993 and has appeared in over 50 films, although the actress has had her fare share of controversy over the years. There has been talk of links to organized crime and obscenity charges. In the last year alone, the award-winning actress has been at the center of not one, but two major scandals. The first was for her appearance on UK Celebrity Big Brother; when a housemate was accused of racist behavior after making offensive comments about Indians on the show. Shetty got the last laugh though, and won the show with 63% of the audience votes. And how can we forget the maelstrom that ensued after Richard Gere kissed Shetty on stage at an AIDS-awareness event.

Since Bond producer Barbara Broccoli and company were still looking at locations a few weeks ago, it doesn't seem likely that they are remotely close to casting Shetty, or anyone else for that matter. While Shetty certainly has the look of a Bond Girl, I'm betting that this is just another rumor that will eventually fall by the wayside. Not to mention, if political groups were burning effigies after a kiss from "The American Gigolo," could you imagine what would happen once Bond was through with her?

Abbie Cornish's Agent Refutes Bond Girl Rumors

Abbie Cornish's agent has come out and publicly refuted the story that's been circulating that Cornish has sewn up the leading lady role in the next Bond film. This sounds like a complete non-story to me, since we pretty much knew that already. Last time I checked, major casting deals aren't usually announced through the Rose Byrne Tribune. "I can tell you that information is not accurate," agent Belinda Maxwell told the Sydney Morning Herald, clearly speaking to the idea a deal is completely locked up. The only other quote from Maxwell is a reiteration of that first, careful statement: "Well, I can reiterate that that's not accurate information." In other words, she's choosing to stay within the bounds of the obvious -- that her client hasn't signed on any dotted line. I'm a van Houtenite, not a Cornite, so any news that puts distance between Cornish and this part is good news to me.

In other Bond news, Commanderbond.net is linking to some details on the upcoming fourth Young Bond novel, which will be titled Hurricane Gold. This one is set in and around Mexico, and has the young hero finding himself on an island that's a "safe haven for criminals." The name of the Bond Girl in this one will be Precious Stone, which sounds kind of lame to me. Couldn't they have come up with something better? Anyway, the book is set to be published in September of this year, but I'm not sure if that's U.K. or worldwide. Stay tuned to Cinematical as we continue to report on all things Bond-related.

Cate Blanchett's 'Elizabeth' Becoming a Trilogy?

This summer has brought us a string of what are being called "threequels:" Spider-Man 3, Shrek the Third, Pirates of the Caribbean: Is This Movie Seriously Still Going On? One would expect those big special effect-laden movies to spawn franchises, but now a highly unlikely candidate may be headed for trilogy status -- Elizabeth. Director Shekhar Kapur tells Entertainment Weekly in this week's issue that he always envisioned the series as a threesome. Kapur and his Queen, Cate Blanchett, have already completed work on Part 2 -- Elizabeth: The Golden Age -- and it will be in theaters on October 12th. The new film (which Monika told you is already being blasted for its historical accuracy) will focus on the Queen and her adviser (played by Geoffrey Rush) during the time leading up to the Spanish Armada. Clive Owen will play Walter Raleigh, Samantha Morton plays Mary, Queen of Scots, and up-and-comer Abbie Cornish plays Elizabeth Throckmorton.

Blanchett apparently needed a bit of coaxing to return to her Oscar-nominated role for The Golden Age. Kapur says, "It's sometimes difficult for an actor when you're so appreciated for a part, you're just afraid that you may not find the same passion the second time. But as I assured Cate: I've never seen her do anything without passion." Will he have to twist her arm for the third chapter? Depends on if it happens. The Golden Age is being released by Working Title Films, and the studio won't greenlight a third installment until they find out how Age performs at the box office. "Talk to me in November," says Working Title co-chair Tim Bevan. The original Elizabeth grossed a very respectable $30 million, and was a critical smash, nominated for seven Academy Awards including Best Picture (It won only one, for Best Makeup). Kapur feels confident he'll get his chance to bring his saga to a close. In fact, he's already hammering out the story. Says Kapur, "I want to make a film about the absolute loneliness of power. She (Elizabeth) was left with no one at the end. She outlasted everybody." Sounds pretty interesting, but if he really wants to make some cash, he should have Venom and The Sandman swing by 16th century England.

Abbie Cornish -- From Heroin Addict to Keats' Lover to Rumors of Bond

I've been a fan of Abbie Cornish for a couple years now, since I first saw her in Somersault, and have followed her career closely since then to see if she'd live up to the promise she showed in that film. I saw her last September at the Toronto International Film Festival in Candy, in which she played opposite Heath Ledger as a good middle-class girl turned heroin addict hooking for her next high, and was impressed with both her range of emotion and the chemistry she and Ledger had as the lovers tragically addicted to both heroin and each other.

Checking in with Cornish through IMDb, I was happy to see she has a slew of upcoming projects coming up with some impressive directors and co-stars. Like another of my fave young actresses, Ellen Page, Cornish is making some smart script choices and working with the right people -- plus she's just got the spunk and the talent to rise above the fray. Next up for Cornish is the just-completed The Golden Age, which reunites director Shekhar Kapur and Cate Blanchett, who once again plays Elizabeth I, this time in a storyline exploring her relationship with Sir Walter Raleigh (Clive Owen -- yum!). Cornish takes on the role of Elizabeth Throckmorton, lady-in-waiting to Elizabeth I -- and wife of Sir Walter. Sounds delish.

Continue reading Abbie Cornish -- From Heroin Addict to Keats' Lover to Rumors of Bond

Ben Whishaw In Final Talks To Play John Keats

You probably aren't familiar with him just yet, but Ben Whishaw is an actor worth taking note of. He was nominated recently for the BAFTA Rising Star award (Eva Green won it), mostly for his starring role in Perfume: The Story of a Murderer, which was one of my favorite films of last year. He's also been racking up roles in which he plays famous people (one day he could even catch up to Val Kilmer and Gary Oldman). Last year he was Keith Richards in Stoned, this year he can be seen as one of many Bob Dylans in I'm Not There and now he's in negotiations to portray the poet John Keats in Jane Campion's Bright Star.

The period romance takes place in the early 19th century, focusing on Keats' romance with Fanny Brawne, who has already been cast with Australian actress Abbie Cornish (who is rumored to also be in talks for the next Bond film.) The couple's romance only lasted a couple years before Keats' health deteriorated due to his suffering from tuberculosis. He died a year after they separated, at the age of 25. As much as we could do without another tragic, tear-jerking romance film, with Campion behind the camera this could be one of the better ones. And in addition to further boosting the careers of both Whishaw and Cornish, it could, as many Campion films are good for, garner some acting nominations for the pair as well. Next up for Whishaw is a new adaptation of Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited.

Abbie Cornish in Talks to Co-Star in Biopic of Poet John Keats

Although Jane Campion's latest project seemed to have been forgotten, much like her career, it's finally making some headway. In May of last year, Martha Fischer posted that the director's latest project, Bright Star, would deal with John Keats and his relationship with Fanny Brawne, which stretched three years until his death at the age of 25. They had met when he had moved next door to the girl, and it is said that their relationship was not a big bowl of bright peaches. By the end, all that she could write in her diary was: "Mr. Keats has left Hampstead." (That is when he left for Italy in an attempt to get well, which, obviously, didn't happen.)

Finally, the casting is starting to come together for the film, and The Hollywood Reporter has released that Abbie Cornish, the star of last year's Candy with Heath Ledger, is in talks to take on the lead role as Ms. Brawne. If the talks are successful, this will bring the actress one step closer to a solid career as a professional love interest. She's got a thing for pulling hearts, with each of her most recent features dealing with romance -- Somersault, Candy and A Good Year. From there, she can take on the world! That's the way it works right? Most big-name celebrity actresses seem to start out that way -- Julia Roberts, Sandra Bullock... Considering the rumors that Cornish might be the next Bond girl, it seems to be working already! Me, I'll just be happy to finally see another Campion movie, even if it will make me feel like I should have accomplished a lot more by the age of 25. On a side note: I wonder if they'll end the movie like Brawne ended the Keats relationship in her journal? That would be amusing.

Bond Buzz: Is Abbie Cornish Meeting With Bond 22 Producers?

I'm now convinced that we'll have a steady stream of Bond rumors until the next film finally hits theaters sometime during the 2008 holiday season, especially since the casting game is already being played. The Australian magazine New Idea has just published a piece that claims Aussie actress Abbie Cornish, most notable for the film Somersault, is flying to Singapore to meet with Bond principals about a role in the next film. A source at MGM -- who knows what kind of source -- apparently had the following to say to the paper: "Abbie is perfect because she is not familiar to film audiences, but at the same time people have become intrigued by her. She may not have enjoyed being caught up in a scandal at the time but it certainly helped her profile."

The scandal being referred is the one where Cornish allegedly broke up Reese Witherspoon's marriage to Ryan Phillippe. The paper claims that Cornish is due to meet with Bond producer Barbara Broccoli as well as MGM executives and Daniel Craig. This isn't the only Bond rumor flying around, of course. A major villain role in Bond 22 -- Vesper's Algerian boyfriend -- is also reportedly being cast, and Croatian actor Goran Visnjic, most known for his role as a doctor on the television show ER, has been talked about as an ideal choice for the role. Stay tuned to Cinematical as we waste terabytes bunking and de-bunking each new Bond rumor that comes down the pike. Also, check out our new regular Bondcast podcast, appearing every other Friday!

Phillippe Isn't Going Back to War

After what The Hollywood Reporter presents as an epic search, Boys Don't Cry director Kimberly Peirce has finally found the man on whom she will hang her return to directing -- and it's ... Ryan Phillippe. Um, ok. Has he had a massive charisma-cum-talent transplant lately of which we are unaware, or something? Because Phillippe's not the first actor of his age who would come to mind as the answer to any talent-related questions.

Clearly knowing something we do not (or else having been told "no" by everyone she really wanted), Peirce is drafting Phillippe in to star in Stop-Loss, which she co-wrote. Assuming he signs that contract, Phillippe will play "a soldier who returns home ... and is called to duty again in Iraq through the military's 'stop-loss' procedure" but refuses to return to service. Already on board as the female lead is young Abbie Cornish, one of Kim's current favorite actresses; Peirce is hoping to begin shooting in August.

Ledger's Candy (and Smack) US-Bound

ThinkFilm has picked up the North American rights to Candy (which is nice, because it gives them something to distribute that doesn't have "f*ck" in the title), an Australian film that had its world premiere at Berlin earlier this year. The movie stars Heath Ledger as a straight poet who happens to enjoy a spot of heroin now and again. Happily, he meets a young lady (the film's titular character, played by Abbie Cornish) who is in to the same sort of thing; the movie traces the ups and downs of their relationships with one another and the smack.

According to an early review in Variety, the performances (including that of the totally awesome Geoffrey Rush, in a supporting role) are uniformly good, but the film's screenplay is uneven, its tone varying so wildly as to be occasionally off-putting. Plus, there's reportedly a cold turkey scene that's not too much fun to watch. Basically, it's Trainspotting, except in Australia. And with a girl.

Cinematical Features



Take a step outside the mainstream: Cinematical Indie.

CATEGORIES
Awards (824)
Box Office (548)
Casting (3607)
Celebrities and Controversy (1779)
Columns (216)
Contests (202)
Deals (2913)
Distribution (995)
DIY/Filmmaking (1809)
Executive shifts (98)
Exhibition (599)
Fandom (4209)
Home Entertainment (1148)
Images (617)
Lists (344)
Moviefone Feedback (5)
Movie Marketing (2175)
New Releases (1706)
Newsstand (4286)
NSFW (83)
Obits (284)
Oscar Watch (493)
Politics (792)
Polls (23)
Posters (133)
RumorMonger (2111)
Scripts (1476)
Site Announcements (269)
Stars in Rewind (59)
Tech Stuff (407)
Trailers and Clips (485)
BOLDFACE NAMES
James Bond (204)
George Clooney (150)
Daniel Craig (80)
Tom Cruise (230)
Johnny Depp (144)
Peter Jackson (120)
Angelina Jolie (146)
Nicole Kidman (44)
George Lucas (169)
Michael Moore (66)
Brad Pitt (146)
Harry Potter (155)
Steven Spielberg (266)
Quentin Tarantino (141)
FEATURES
12 Days of Cinematicalmas (59)
400 Screens, 400 Blows (103)
After Image (33)
Best/Worst (36)
Bondcast (7)
Box Office Predictions (76)
Celebrities Gone Wild! (23)
Cinematical Indie (3846)
Cinematical Indie Chat (4)
Cinematical Seven (222)
Cinematical's SmartGossip! (49)
Coming Distractions (13)
Critical Thought (347)
DVD Reviews (197)
Eat My Shorts! (16)
Fan Rant (41)
Festival Reports (824)
Film Blog Group Hug (56)
Film Clips (32)
Five Days of Fire (24)
Friday Night Double Feature (24)
From the Editor's Desk (68)
Geek Report (81)
Guilty Pleasures (27)
Hold the 'Fone (426)
Indie Online (3)
Indie Seen (7)
Insert Caption (112)
Interviews (314)
Killer B's on DVD (71)
Monday Morning Poll (47)
Mr. Moviefone (8)
New in Theaters (301)
New on DVD (263)
Northern Exposures (1)
Out of the Past (13)
Podcasts (99)
Retro Cinema (77)
Review Roundup (45)
Scene Stealers (13)
Seven Days of 007 (25)
Speak No Evil by Jeffrey Sebelia (7)
Summer Movies (40)
The Geek Beat (27)
The (Mostly) Indie Film Calendar (33)
The Rocchi Review: Online Film Community Podcast (27)
The Write Stuff (25)
Theatrical Reviews (1535)
Trailer Trash (443)
Trophy Hysteric (32)
Unscripted (33)
Vintage Image of the Day (140)
Waxing Hysterical (42)
GENRES
Action (4634)
Animation (945)
Classics (935)
Comedy (4219)
Comic/Superhero/Geek (2272)
Documentary (1256)
Drama (5437)
Family Films (1083)
Foreign Language (1410)
Games and Game Movies (279)
Gay & Lesbian (219)
Horror (2089)
Independent (2976)
Music & Musicals (850)
Noir (184)
Mystery & Suspense (762)
Religious (94)
Remakes and Sequels (3434)
Romance (1117)
Sci-Fi & Fantasy (2881)
Shorts (257)
Sports (259)
Thrillers (1717)
War (228)
Western (64)
FESTIVALS
Oxford Film Festival (1)
AFI Dallas (45)
Austin (23)
Berlin (89)
Cannes (276)
Chicago (18)
ComicCon (88)
Fantastic Fest (63)
Gen Art (8)
New York (52)
Other Festivals (287)
Philadelphia Film Festival (13)
San Francisco International Film Festival (28)
Seattle (64)
ShoWest (3)
Slamdance (20)
Sundance (596)
SXSW (274)
Telluride (61)
Toronto International Film Festival (340)
Tribeca (258)
Venice Film Festival (10)
WonderCon (1)
Friday Night Double Feature (0)
DISTRIBUTORS
Roadside Attractions (5)
20th Century Fox (569)
Artisan (1)
Disney (540)
Dreamworks (274)
Fine Line (4)
Focus Features (143)
Fox Atomic (16)
Fox Searchlight (167)
HBO Films (31)
IFC (108)
Lionsgate Films (350)
Magnolia (101)
Miramax (65)
MGM (181)
New Line (369)
Newmarket (17)
New Yorker (5)
Picturehouse (9)
Paramount (570)
Paramount Vantage (40)
Paramount Vantage (11)
Paramount Classics (48)
Samuel Goldwyn Films (7)
Sony (479)
Sony Classics (135)
ThinkFilm (105)
United Artists (37)
Universal (632)
Warner Brothers (887)
Warner Independent Pictures (92)
The Weinstein Co. (438)
Wellspring (6)

RESOURCES

RSS NEWSFEEDS

Powered by Blogsmith

Featured Stories

Sponsored Links

Recent Theatrical Reviews

Cinematical Interviews

Most Commented On (60 days)

Weblogs, Inc. Network

Other Weblogs Inc. Network blogs you might be interested in: