esquire magazine Tagged Articles at Cinematical
GALLERY: Is Charlize Theron the Sexiest Woman Alive?
Filed under: Fandom », Newsstand », Images »
So I guess it's getting to that time of the year where people start shelling out their lists, checking them twice, and, in this case, rip out the pages to plaster them all over the wall. The Hollywood Reporter tells us that Esquire Magazine has officially declared Charlize Theron to be the "sexiest woman alive." Here's my problem with this: Did Esquire scour the globe, in and out of neighborhoods, whilst conducting their search? Because, surely, if you're going to claim someone is the "sexiest woman alive," then I'd hope you looked at thousands upon thousands of women. I think not -- for example, my wife wasn't interviewed. And she's pretty damn sexy. So what gives?
Since previous winners include Scarlett Johansson, Jessica Biel and Angelina Jolie, something tells me this list isn't the "sexiest woman alive;" it's more like, "the sexiest woman in Hollywood." And that's fine -- I understand how people wait all year for this list to be announced so that they can run home and snort jelly beans off the glossy cover -- but why advertise it as the "sexiest woman alive" when you're only looking at famous people? Are these the only women that count? Is that what Esquire wants us to believe? Are our mothers, sisters, friends and wives not sexy because they're not members of some elite group? During her interview with the magazine, Theron said, "I'm drawn to ambiguity." So she's the sexiest woman alive ... and she's drawn to ambiguity! Oh, and about her role in Reindeer Games: "That was a bad, bad movie. But ... I got to work with John Frankenheimer. I wasn't lying to myself -- that's why I did it." Hey, at least she's honest. That's kind of sexy.
Esquire doesn't like Soderbergh's Bubble
Filed under: Drama », New Releases », Mystery & Suspense », Theatrical Reviews », DVD Reviews », Critical Thought », Newsstand »
Director Steven Soderbergh's Bubble has been getting a lot of attention
lately, as the first feature film to try something new with its distribution: having the film available in theaters, on
DVD, and on HDNet Movies all on the same day (January 26). Personally, I think this is where film and
television are headed, but Esquire's Mike D'Angelo says that Bubble is a shaky first step in
that direction. Actually, that's not true. What he actually says is it's "the weirdest goddamn movie ever released
by a major American filmmaker."
Weirder than Batman and Robin?









