Inception hunk Tom Hardy admits: 'I've had sexual relations with men'

Wednesday, July 28, 2010



Hollywood heart-throb Tom Hardy has revealed he had a string of gay flings as a teenager.

The 32-year-old Inception star, who is engaged to British actress Charlotte Riley, 28, and also has a two-year-old son with a former girlfriend

But asked if he'd ever had any sexual relations with other men, the broody actor said: 'As a boy? Of course I have. I'm an actor for ****'s sake.

'I've played with everything and everyone. I love the form and the physicality, but now that I'm in my thirties, it doesn't do it for me.

'I'm done experimenting but there's plenty of stuff in a relationship with another man, especially gay men, that I need in my life.

'A lot of gay men get my thing for shoes. I have definite feminine qualities and a lot of gay men are incredibly masculine.'

London-born Tom found big-screen fame with Star Trek Nemesis, and in the 2009 hit Bronson, where he played the notoriously violent criminal Charles Bronson to critical acclaim.

In Guy Ritchie's hit Rock'n'Rolla he starred as gay gangster Handsome Bob, and had a crush on Scottish hearthrob Gerard Butler.

He then starred as Heathcliffe in a BBC remake of Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights, where he met stunning fiancée Charlotte.

In an interview with Now magazine, the former party-boy who has battled drink, drugs and crime to turn his life around, added: 'A lot of people say I seem masculine, but I don't feel it.

'I feel intrinsically feminine. I'd love to be one of the boys but I always felt a bit on the outside.

'Maybe my masculine qualities come from overcompensating because I'm not one of the boys.'

True Blood's Ryan Kwanten in Lure Magazine!

Monday, July 26, 2010


Ke$ha: I am a vegetarian!



In a recent interview with the Phoenix New Times, Ke$ha reveals that her compassion for animals includes a meat-free diet.

When asked why she adopted a vegetarian diet, the pop sensation and party girl of the year replied, "I just love animals, and I'm an advocate for animals' rights, and my family has rescued dogs from all over the world. I don't believe in animal testing. If you see me in fur, it's always fake. Sometimes you see me wearing skulls, but those are all from roadkill."

Ke$ha gets it—if you love animals, don't eat them. Maybe her animal-loving ways will rub off on Rihanna during their summer tour.

Will Smith's Daughter Willow doing Photoshoot in Paris!



She also has her own stylist! Wow!





New 90210 spoiler

Saturday, July 24, 2010



As fans gear up for the new season of “90210,” this fall, they will be tuning in week after week to find just which one of the male characters on the show will come out as gay.

Who will it be? How will it happen? When will it happen? Well, when MTV News caught up with the one and only AnnaLynne McCord at the 2010 VH1 Do Something Awards earlier this week, we tried to see if we could get the inside scoop on the grand coming out.

“Well, first of all you guys aren’t supposed to know. So, how you know, I’m not sure! I definitely can’t say more than that,” she explained on the red carpet. OK, so maybe we shouldn’t know, but we do! So dish, woman!

“We actually don’t know as a cast,” she revealed. Wait… hasn’t she seen scripts? “They won’t tell us because when this got leaked they freaked out and they’re like, ‘Alright sorry, you guys aren’t going to know.’”

That must make things very suspenseful on set, right? “So we’re all really wondering. Of course the guys are like what’s going on?” she joked. “It’s interesting because a couple of other shows have done this where they don’t tell the cast and you do your best work when you don’t know what’s coming sometimes.”

Evan Ross, the actor son of legendary entertainer Diana Ross, is coming to The CW’s ‘90210′ – and he won’t be alone for long!

Ross will appear in multiple episodes as Charlie, a well-read chap who will quickly get wrapped up in a triangle with two current members of the West Bev crowd, Fancast has learned exclusively.

If you need help envisioning the geometric shape this handsome newcomer will help form, well, let me whisper that in his first scenes Charlie makes an impression on Annie (played by Shenae Grimes) with his literary name-checking and low tolerance for superficiality.

Ross will first appear in the second episode of the CW drama’s third season, which premieres Monday, September 13, at 8/7c.

Ross’ credits include the sitcom ‘Girlfriends’ (starring his half-sister Tracee Ellis Ross), the Queen Latifah-fronted TV-movie ‘Life Support‘ (for which he earned an Image Award nom), and the feature film ‘ATL‘ (where he made his acting debut in the role of Ant).

Will Liam and Annie ever really get together on 90210? — Tracy
MICKEY: You might think that Naomi is an obstacle, since irrational jealousy and self-centeredness are kind of her thing, but after a windfall of good luck, she’ll be otherwise occupied by more materialistic pursuits. Instead, look for Annie’s eye to turn toward an older man, whose love of words appeals to her inner actress. (Here’s hoping it stays inner.)

Brynn in San Diego: How about some 90210 scoop?
Forget Liam. Annie’s found a sexy new mature man, and it’s all because of some spilled coffee. Thanks to a little run-in with a sexy stranger, Annie is going to find someone she has a lot in common with (theater geek, anyone?), but unfortunately, at least initially, Naomi’s ex will stand in the way of a little lovin’. Oh, and did we mention that this guy might just be related to Mr. Liam?

Jasmine in North Dakota: I love Annalynne McCord. Any fun stuff coming up for her?
Jen and Naomi are going to continue duking it out, only this time there are lawyers involved. And N’s eight-month pregnant sis is determined to keep her equally unstable sis away from the family funds, but luckily (?) for Naomi the court sides with her this time around.

Trailer for The Debt, Starring Sam Worthington and Helen Mirren

Tuesday, July 20, 2010



Helen Mirren and Sam Worthington star in "The Debt," the powerful story of Rachel Singer, a former Mossad agent who endeavored to capture and bring to trial a notorious Nazi war criminal—the Surgeon of Birkenau—in a secret Israeli mission that ended with his death on the streets of East Berlin. Now, 30 years later, a man claiming to be the doctor has surfaced, and Rachel must go back to Eastern Europe to uncover the truth. Overwhelmed by haunting memories of her younger self and her two fellow agents, the still-celebrated heroine must relive the trauma of those events and confront the debt she has incurred.

Facebook Founder Says The Social Network 'Emphasizes Things That Didn't Matter'

Saturday, July 17, 2010



Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz is played by actor Joseph Mazzello in the upcoming David Fincher film The Social Network, and he's the first of the website's founders to react to the trailer. On the website Quora, Moskovitz told interested parties:

"It is interesting to see my past rewritten in a way that emphasizes things that didn’t matter and leaves out things that really did. Other than that, it’s just cool to see a dramatization of history. A lot of exciting things happened in 2004, but mostly we just worked a lot and stressed out about things; the version in the trailer seems a lot more exciting, so I’m just going to choose to remember that we drank ourselves silly and had a lot of sex with coeds. I’m very curious to see how Mark turns out in the end - the plot of the book/script unabashedly attack him, but I actually felt like a lot of his positive qualities come out truthfully in the trailer (soundtrack aside)."

He has a point: as dramatizations go, depictions of one's years as drunker and more sex-fueled than they really were is not so bad. And even though Zuckerberg was probably too busy drinking and having sex to remember that whole bender accurately, many on Quora have asked the face of Facebook for his thoughts on the film, too, but he has yet to comment.

James Franco's "Howl" Poster and Trailer



A bearded, bespectacled James Franco stars as Allen Ginsberg in Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman's Howl, the story of the poet's classic work and the uproar it caused. Also featured in the film — which hits New York and San Francisco on September 24, and Los Angeles on October 1, with a national rollout to follow — are Jon Hamm, David Strathairn, Bob Balaban, Alessandro Nivola, Treat Williams, Mary-Louise Parker, and Jeff Daniels.

9 Ways 'Inception' Will Wake Up The Summer Movie Season



1. According to Nolan, Inception isn't merely the culmination of his filmmaking career thus far, but the realization of lifelong obsessions. "I've been fascinated by dreams my whole life," he explained. "I think the relationship between movies and dreams is something that's always interested me, and I liked the idea of trying to portray dreams on film. And I'd been working on the script for some time, really about ten years in the form that you've seen it in, [with] this kind of heist structure. I think really for me, the primary interest in dreams and in making this film is this notion that while you're asleep you can create an entire world that you're also experiencing without realizing that you're doing that."

Admitting he first pitched the film after finishing his 2002 film Insomnia, he said the gestation period between then and now allowed him to more fully flesh out his ideas. "Really, the pitch was very much the movie you see, although I hadn't figured out the emotional core of the story," he revealed. "I think I sort of grew into the film in a sense. I had the heist theme, I had the relationship between architecture and dreams, the idea that you would use an architect to design a dream for somebody else and all of that. All of those things were in place for several years, but it took me a long time to sort of find this idea of emotionally connecting with the story."

2. Appropriately, Nolan relied less on research and existing information about dreams for his storytelling than his own ideas what the dream world would be like. "I took the approach in writing Inception that I did when I was writing Memento which is I tend to just examine my own process of, in this case dreaming, and try and analyze how that works and how that might be changed and manipulated," he explained. "How a rule set might emerge from my own process. I think a lot of what I find you want to do with research is just confirming things you want to do, but if the research contradicts what you want to do, you tend to go ahead and do it anyway. So at a certain point I realized that if you're trying to reach an audience, being as subjective as possible and really trying to write from something genuine is the way to go."

Nolan indicated he designed the film to synthesize the world of the imagination and the imaginary worlds within movies. "When you look a the idea of being able to create a limitless world and use it almost as a playground for action and adventure and so forth, I naturally gravitate towards cinematic worlds, whether it's the Bond films and things like that," he said. "So without being too self-conscious about it or without too much intention as I was writing it, I certainly allowed my mind to wander where it would naturally and I think a lot of the tropes from different genres of movies, heist films, spy films, that kind of thing, and they therefore sort of naturally sit in that world.

3. Despite the film's focus on dreams, star Leonardo DiCaprio prefers empirical information over imagination. "It was interesting being part of this film, because I'm not a big dreamer," DiCaprio admitted. I remember fragments of my dreams, and I tried to take a traditional sort of approach to researching this project and doing preparation for it. But I realized that this is Chris Nolan's dream world, and doing that, it was basically [about] being able to sit down with Chris for two months every other day and talk about the structure of this dream world, and the rules that apply in it."

Nevertheless, given that Inception is following in the footsteps of Shutter Island, a film similarly obsessed with the world of the mind, DiCaprio copped to an appetite for characters more complex than their description and dialogue suggest. "These were characters and filmmakers and plot structures that I was compelled to do and I'm lucky to be able to do," he said. "So I jump on those opportunities. I traditionally have always tried to work with the best directors I can. These types of films that are psychologically sort of dark at times, I find extremely exciting to do because there's always something to think about. There's nothing more boring than to show up on set and say a line and know that your character means exactly what they say."

4. DiCaprio and Nolan were ironically like-minded about their execution of the film's fantastical content, even if their respective approaches to it were different. "The earliest conversations I had with Chris is how both of us have a hard time with science fiction," DiCaprio indicated. "We have a little bit of an aversion to it because it's hard for us to emotionally invest in worlds that are too far detached from what we know. That's what's interesting about Chris Nolan's science fiction worlds – they're visually deeply rooted in things that we've seen before. There are cultural references and it feels like a world that is tactile that we understand that we could jump into and it's not too much of a leap of faith to make. But emotionally as well as far as the character's journey, I took everything as if it was [real] You have to. Otherwise you're not invested in the character, you're not invested in the character's journey, and you're not going to make it believable to an audience."

5. Marion Cotillard endured a similarly challenging process trying to come up with a coherent definition of Mal, her character, to work with from one scene to the next. "I had to base my character on different kind of inspirations that I had," she said. "Usually when I start to work and to prepare for a movie, [I look for] some inspiration - different kinds of human beings. It can be someone I know, someone I don't, a girl, a boy. Usually when I start, quite right away some inspirations come. This time I was waiting and nobody came, and I thought maybe I should be inspired by the blank page."

Ultimately Cotillard said she settled on a combination of her director's own dreamy creativity, and cues from DiCaprio's character – although for the sake of spoilers, declined to reveal which ones. "I started thinking about Chris Nolan's imagination and that was my inspiration, and that didn't take the form of a human being. Then I was also very inspired by Cobb because, because, because, because..."

6. Co-star Joseph Gordon-Levitt's challenges turned out to be more physical than intellectual, but the young actor embraced them all the same – albeit to the boredom of the stunt team. Nolan revealed, "We had a stunt guy who looks exactly like Joe made up perfectly, and he stood there three weeks on-set and didn't do a thing because Joe insisted on doing absolutely everything himself, apart from one shot." Gordon-Levitt, meanwhile, described the process as an exhilarating combination of pleasure and pain. "It was just about the most fun I've ever had on a movie set," he said. "It was also probably the most pain I've ever been in on a movie set, physically - but you know, pain in a good way."

7. Inception reunited Nolan with composer Hans Zimmer, and the duo shared on of their most intimate and effective collaborations to date. "I like films where the music and the sound design, at times, are almost indistinguishable," Nolan observes. "And one of the interesting things that happened early on is the Edith Piaf song ["Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien"] was always in the script - long before Marion came on the film - and right at the beginning of our post-production process, I had to make the decision of 'do I get the sound department or do I get the music department?' What I decided to do was give it to Hans and let him run with it and see if in some way it might inform elements of the score, because we talked in early conversations about how towards the action climax of the film, there was going to be a need for the score to interweave seamlessly with this source cue, which is and extremely difficult technical thing to do."

Zimmer corroborated the unconventional nature of their work together on the film. "Chris and I have a strange way of working from the non-movie process," Zimmer observed. "After all these conversations and reading the script and more conversations, Chris went out and shot the films, [but] he wouldn't show it to me until I had written the music. Not out of meanness, or anything, it just sort of seemed an interesting idea to see if there was some synchronicity and letting me use my imagination to the fullest instead of being constricted by cuts and images. In a funny way, what I think we did was a sort of shared dreaming thing, and we did prove it's possible. Because when I finally saw the film, and when Chris had laid in all my music, I was actually surprised how well these two worlds existed together."

8. Inception has been buzzing on moviegoers' minds for more than a year, but the reason most don't know more about it is due to Nolan's dexterous and delightfully secretive marketing campaign. "It's certainly difficult to balance marketing a film and putting it out there to everybody with wanting to keep it fresh for the audience," Nolan observed. "My most enjoyable moviegoing experiences have always been going to a movie theater, sitting there and the lights go down and a film comes on the screen that you don't know everything about, and you don't know every plot turn and every character movement that's going to happen."

Nolan admitted that to a certain extent, that level of mystery manufactured its own amount of hype. "I suppose that at a point, keeping something secret does lend itself to its own degree of hype," he said. "But I don't really think of it as secrecy. I just think of it as we invite the audience to come and see it based on some of the imagery and some of the plot ideas and the premise, but we don't want to give everything away. I think too much is given away too often in movie marketing today."

9. Whether it's appropriate or ironic, Ellen Page, who plays one of the film's dream architects, is decidedly mum on making a case for seeing the film, even when asked. Prodded to provide an explanation of the film for her friends, Page demurred, "I say just please, don't ask questions and don't look at anything and just please go see it. I'm the last person to tell my friends to go see something I'm in, but this is definitely a film that I'm just so thrilled about. And I'm more thrilled about the fact that everybody seems so excited and I just feel so grateful to be in a Christopher Nolan film, let alone this film."

Page admitted that her own moviegoing motivation seems to run contrary to many of the other audience members that are her age. "Typically, I'm of the mind that I love how Chris does the quote-unquote secrecy, but I'm so young that I've been in a time when everything is on the internet. Sometimes I see a trailer and I'm thrilled to say that I've just seen the whole movie without paying for it," she said with a laugh.

"So I actually go the route of just don't ask – and don't sniff around. Just have an absolute blast and an exciting, cerebral time when you see it."

SOURCE: cinematical

Leighton Meester Teases New Season

Friday, July 16, 2010



"Gossip Girl" will go international when season four kicks off this fall. And while we know the Upper East Siders take their drama to Paris, we wondered what else fans could expect from Blair Waldorf and the crew. For one, is now the right time for Chuck (Ed Westwick) to date a new girl (Clemence Poésy)? We put that question and more to star Leighton Meester when we visited the set of her upcoming movie "Monte Carlo."



"I am a fan, which sounds ridiculous, of Chuck and Blair," Leighton told MTV News of the on-off couple she portrays with Westwick. "I love their relationship, and I really love working with Ed, which is what it probably boils down to. But yeah, I think maybe there needed to be some sort of break in their relationship and some sort of drama," she continued. "Maybe it was going too well, and then there was the downward spiral with his uncle, which was fun to play out but I hate fighting."

Chuck won't be the only one getting some action as Poésy's new character shakes things up: Former "Melrose Place" star Katie Cassidy is set to ignite Nate's (Chace Crawford) love life next season.

"I hope we cross paths, but it would be weird to have a completely different dynamic [onscreen]," Meester said of Cassidy who's also her co-star in the upcoming "Monte Carlo." "I mean, it would be really fun. I think she's coming on the show, maybe, to cause a little bit of trouble. She might not say it, but I will. I think she's very much capable of that, at least in the show. I think [Nate's] a total playboy and needs to be single and I think [Katie's character] is a bad girl, so maybe they are good for each other, actually," Meester said.

But what about Chuck and Blair? They can't really be over, right?

"I think Blair has done some healing, but not entirely," she teased. "She definitely she has a flame burning for Chuck. Who wouldn't?"

One Tree Hill spoilers via twitter



One Tree Hill: Sophia Bush was sweet enough to answer loads of fan questions at once this morning, saying "Yes Brooke/Victoria. Great Nate/Haley. Looks like no Peyton/Luke. Don't know about a baby. I think yes wedding!"

Bah! Wedding?! Baby?! This is good stuff, S!

The one topic she wouldn't comment on in 140 characters or less? "Aw c'mon guys! Can't answer the Quinn/Clay ?'s. I'm only allowed to talk about stuff you already know! You'll have to tune in for that :)"

Lucky for us, Robert Buckley was much more forthcoming in our earlier interview with him, saying: "I think it's safe to say that Clay will be coming back. I hope I'm not giving too much away by saying that." Just the fate of your character, but no biggie.

Sophia's on-and-offscreen boyfriend Austin Nichols also tweeted from the set, saying, "For those of you looking for One Tree Hill info. I can't really help. All I will say is, my lips are sore. :)" It seems Brooke and Julian are doing just fine in season eight.

Lindsay Lohan axed from new 'Machete' trailer

Thursday, July 15, 2010



Are Lindsay Lohan's DUI-related legal tussles and profane manicures affecting what's left of her once (long, long ago) promising film career?

Is that why she's not in the new teaser trailer for Robert Rodriguez's "Machete," even though she was in an earlier version? Or is the reason for the slice because she reportedly only has a brief (topless) cameo in the movie?

She is, however, on what wants to be a controversial poster for the film, which also stars Danny Trejo, Jessica Alba, Robert De Niro, Michelle Rodriguez, Steven Seagal and Don Johnson.

In a tedious LiLo pose we've (yawn) grown used to, she is seen licking a very large gun, wearing a nun's habit, with blood splattered over the image. It reads: "Lindsay Lohan as The Sister."

Huffington Post reports that in the film, Lindsay (who is not dead) goes topless -- swimming in a waterfall -- with Alicia Rachel Marek, 34, who plays her mom.

Meanwhile, the New York Daily News reports that Rodriguez is not commenting on whether or not Lohan's included in the movie's upcoming junket. But after her recent 90-day jail sentence for violating probation on 2007 DUI busts, she may not be available anyway.

Darn. We would have just loved to report about what rude comment was written on her middle fingernail.

Here's the new trailer -- without Lindsay.

'Glee' star Amber Riley sings at the All-Star game: Watch it here!

Wednesday, July 14, 2010



Amber Riley opened the show—errr, game—with a rendition of our National Anthem, which you can watch after the jump, and then added her performance of Christina Aguilera’s “Beautiful” that won her raves in Glee. Two-time Grammy winner Colbie Caillat sang during the seventh-inning stretch, belting her take on “God Bless America.” Watch Riley do her thing here:



Dentist To Give Statement Regarding Domestic Abuse, Provide Evidence Gibson Beat Girlfriend!

Tuesday, July 13, 2010



Mel Gibson can apparently stop trying to think of excuses, because the domestic abuse investigation against him is going to blow up when Oksana Grigorieva's DENTIST, Dr. Ross Shelden, gives his statement!

Sources claim that the day after Mel allegedly knocked out Oksana's teeth on January 6th, 2010, she went to the the dentist to get them repaired. Dr. Shelden took photos of her mouth, which clearly show that despite what Mel's camp have claimed, he did not knock out veneers, but an actual tooth! Another one was reportedly chipped.

Oksana swore the doctor to secrecy, which is why he has yet to come forward with the information, but now that this entire mess has blown up, he is set to be interviewed and hand over all of his evidence to the authorities!

Well it's about time!

We wonder how this hateful psycho is going to try and talk his way out of this one!

Leo DiCaprio and Ellen Page Answer Fan Questions on Moviefone's Unscripted for 'Inception'



Mega-stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Ellen Page stop by our studio to discuss their psychological thriller 'Inception' and turn our interview into a therapy session of sorts where we find out how well Ellen plays with others and what Leo's crazy dreams are all about.

For a movie that takes place in "four different stages of the human subconscious" and was like "a giant therapy session" to film, you might expect an interview to be a little "heavy." It is (in a good way)! The two co-stars give insightful and thoughtful answers to questions you may need a college degree, or to see the movie first, to understand. We suggest watching this now and then again after you've checked out the film (or completing a two-year associates program at the online university of your choice).

Ellen answers the question on everyone's mind, about what it's like to work with so many talented and intimidating actors; but what we really can't wait to see the crazy white jumpsuits that made her feel like she was in a Back Street Boys video. Just when you thought you couldn't like Leonardo DiCaprio any more, he shows his down-to-earth side, answering a question about drawing parallels between the film and life as a celebrity. With further modesty, Leo explains that even superstars get nervous, as he retells one of his vivid dreams brought on by the anxiety of the impending press junket for the film -- you'll have to let him describe in his own words.

Sit back and enjoy our 'Inception' Unscripted with Leonardo DiCaprio and Ellen Page.

Jackie Chan Wishes His 'Karate Kid' Co-Star Jaden Smith A Happy Birthday

Monday, July 12, 2010



There's no denying the powerful dynamic between original "Karate Kid" protagonists Daniel LaRusso and Mr. Miyagi, but actors Jackie Chan and Jaden Smith proved that their chemistry knows no bounds either in the recent "Karate Kid" remake.

It seems that the pair struck up something of a formidable friendship, too, as our Daily TwitPic clearly evidences. Jaden celebrated his 12th birthday yesterday, you see, and while Mr. Chan may not have been there in person to celebrate alongside his on-screen student, he was right there on Twitter to proudly mark the occasion with a behind-the-scenes photo from the set of "The Karate Kid."




Credit: MTV

'Knight and Day' reaches goal of trying to be enjoyable



Looking for some summer fun? Then "Knight and Day" is the perfect movie. While it isn't all that special or memorable, it's enjoyable, and that's all it tries to be.

"Knight and Day" follows June Havens (Cameron Diaz) and her adventures with Roy Miller (Tom Cruise) after an accidental meeting at the airport. June is your typical girl-next-door who's on her way to her sister's wedding when she literally bumps into ex-CIA agent Roy, though she has no clue at the time.

After boarding the plane, which is coincidentally full of bad guys trying to kill Roy, he shoots all the passengers except for June and they crash land on an empty field. June now is suddenly thrust into Roy's spy world of car chases, gun fights, exotic locations, witty banter, and lots, I mean lots, of action. Sounds like a bit much, doesn't it? That's because at times it is.

Though the film might not be amazing, its lead actors certainly were. Cruise was a delight to watch. He was charming, and with a string of action movies behind him, looked perfectly at home with a gun and pulling off stunts left and right in some intense action scenes. He did a great job in this role as a surprisingly polite, yet extremely deadly spy who looks great in sunglasses.

Diaz also brought a certain something to her role as June, keeping up with Cruise very well. She additionally really helped to bring the romance into the movie.

Unfortunately, the rest of the cast wasn't nearly as enjoyable to watch. In fact, they were bland, none sticking out with a particularly stunning performance.

The bottom line is: "Knight and Day" is far from perfect and definitely isn't Oscar material, but who really cares? It is what it is, which is a fun, humorous summer flick with action, mystery, comedy and even a little romance.

It is probably worth a rental once the film comes out on DVD.