Romantics Anonymous | Film Review

This is an absolutely wonderful film. It just made me smile all the way through it.

Romantics Anonymous is a film about Jean-René, the boss of a small chocolate factory which is about to go bankrupt, and Angélique, a gifted chocolate maker he has just hired as a sales rep. They are both highly emotional and shy. They fall in love but neither of them have the emotional capacity to handle it. Will they work out their differences and live happily ever after? Maybe. And will Angélique get over her shyness and save the Chocolate Mill with her talent for making chocolate? There are a few false starts, especially when Angélique gets stood up by Jean- René. They love each other but can they make it work?

Romantics Anonymous is a very smart film. It has a good premise and the plot does not let you down. This film is the perfect anecdote to depression or a bad day. It is just brilliant. Well-written, well-acted, a little gem of a film. Even if you don’t like French films, or subtitles; watch it.

Five stars. I would definitely watch this again.

 

Hunger Games Actors Before They Were Famous

Photographer Tyler Shields worked with the Hunger Games actors before they became famous. We have the photographs and the low-down on what they were like even though super busy Tyler is preparing for the opening of “Mouthful” which takes place at Ace Gallery, LA’s largest private gallery (the size of a City block) just down the street from LACMA. His opening nights are I N S A N E.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Josh Hutcherson: The first time I shot Josh he was 16, he busted his head open in my bathroom, so our relationship started off on a good foot! We created a real ruckus – full speed running down a street firing a gun. I don’t know anyone who I’ve shot who loved the shoot more than he did.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Leven: She is a delight to work with and always delivers! I’ve shot her in Wall Mart in New Mexico, we’ve broken into buildings together, she’s smashed cake in my face, I introduced her to her ex-fiance! Our relationship runs deep!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kalia with Tyler Shields

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kalia: the 1st time I met her her mom was there – because she was 15. He mom told me she had a Black Belt in Taekwondo and she could do these amazing high kicks – if you could see those kicks! She was really game for it. To be 15 and able to do things like that and deliver what she can – you’ve got to be amazing.

 

Adele Tops Rich List

 It is that time of year again, when we found out who has become extraordinarily successful and wealthy. Us next please!

ADELE TOPS YOUNG MUSICIANS WEALTH CHART WITH £20 MILLION FORTUNE IN THE SUNDAY TIMES RICH LIST – OUT ON APRIL 29
 
WOMAN IN BLACK STAR DANIEL RADCLIFFE IS BRITAIN’S RICHEST YOUNG ACTOR – WORTH £54 MILLION
 
JESSIE J, WITH £5 MILLION FORTUNE, JOINS
YOUNG MUSICIANS RICH LIST TOP 20
 
ROSIE HUNTINGTON-WHITELEY – WORTH £5 MILLION
STRIDES OUT WITH THE CATWALK MILLIONAIRES
 
JLS QUARTET STRIKE GOLD WITH £5 MILLION EACH
 
Actors, models and musicians dominate the Young Rich List of British millionaires aged 30 and under to be included in The Sunday Times Rich List 2012 published on Sunday, April 29. Sixty young millionaires will appear alongside the 1,000 richest people in Britain and the 250 wealthiest in Ireland in the definitive annual guide to wealth to be published in an extra 104-page magazine free with The Sunday Times. The richest young sportsmen will appear in The Sunday Times Sport Rich List 2012 published on May 6. Additional guides to wealth will appear at thesundaytimes.co.uk/richlist from April 29, with the Richest 2,000 people in Britain available from May 13.
Outside sport, more than half the wealthiest young people in Britain are entertainers. Actor Daniel Radcliffe, aged 22, who starred in eight Harry Potter films, heads the Young Entertainers Rich List with a £54m fortune. Radcliffe has increased his wealth by £6m in a year, helped by the success of his latest movie, the gothic thriller The Woman in Black. Twilight star Robert Pattinson has added £8m in a year to his fortune and is now worth £40m.
The young entertainer who has made the biggest gain in the last year is pop diva Adele, who has more than trebled her wealth after the phenomenal worldwide success of her second album 21. The 23-year-old songstress, from Tottenham, north London, is now worth £20m, an increase of £14m on her wealth in 2011, which puts her £8m ahead of the fortunes of Cheryl Cole, Leona Lewis and Katie Melua, who are in equal second place – each worth £12m, in the Young Music Millionaires Top 20 to be published in The Sunday Times Rich List 2012 on April 29.
The five newcomers in The Young Music Millionaires Top 20, each worth £5m, are all four members of JLS and Jessie J, 24, who has sold close to 1m copies of her album Who You Are and is a mentor on the BBC TV talent show The Voice UK. Jessie J, who has an endorsement deal with Pretty Polly tights, is one of a number of young actors and musicians who add to their wealth by modelling.
Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, worth £5m, is the latest model to join Britain’s Young Rich List. Now 25, Huntington-Whiteley, who grew up on a Devon farm, has been signed to the American lingerie brand Victoria’s Secret since 2006. Based in Los Angles she is branching out into films, with a part in Transformers: Dark of the Moon last year.
 
THE SUNDAY TIMES RICH LIST 2012 – THE RICHEST YOUNG MUSICIANS
Aged 30 and under

 

Young
music rank
2012
Name
2012 wealth
2011 wealth
1
Adele
£20m
£6m
2=
Cheryl Cole (Girls Aloud)
£12m
£12m
2=
Leona Lewis
£12m
£12m
2=
Katie Melua
£12m
£12m
5
Joss Stone
£10m
£9m
6=
Charlotte Church
£8m
£8m
6=
Craig David
£8m
£8m
6=
Paolo Nutini
£8m
£7m
9
Florence Welch
£7m
£5m
10=
Lily Allen
£6m
£6m
10=
Natasha Bedingfield
£6m
£6m
10=
Duffy
£6m
£6m
10=
James Morrison
£6m
£5m
14=
Nadine Coyle (Girls Aloud)
£5m
£5m
14=
Taio Cruz
£5m
£5m
14=
Jonathan (JB) Gill (JLS)
£5m
New
14=
Sarah Harding (Girls Aloud)
£5m
£5m
14=
Marvin Humes (JLS)
£5m
New
14=
Jessie J
£5m
New
14=
Aston Merrygold (JLS)
£5m
New
14=
Nicola Roberts (Girls Aloud)
£5m
£5m
14=
Kimberley Walsh (Girls Aloud)
£5m
£5m
14=
Oritsé Williams (JLS)
£5m
New
 
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THE SUNDAY TIMES RICH LIST 2012 – THE RICHEST YOUNG ACTORS
Aged 30 and under

 

Young
actor
rank
2012
Name
2012 wealth
2011 wealth
1
Daniel Radcliffe
£54m
£48m
2
Robert Pattinson
£40m
£32m
3
Keira Knightley
£30m
£30m
4
Kiera Chaplin
£28m
£28m
5
Emma Watson
£26m
£24m
6
Rupert Grint
£24m
£24m
7
8=
Lily Cole
Sarah Harding
£8m
£5m
£6m
£5m
8=
Rosie Huntington-Whiteley
£5m
New
8=
Kimberley Walsh
£5m
£5m
 
 
 
THE SUNDAY TIMES RICH LIST 2012 – THE RICHEST IN MODELLING
Aged 30 and under

 

Modelling rank
2012
Name
2012 wealth
2011 wealth
1
Keira Knightley (Chanel)
£30m
£30m
2
Kiera Chaplin
£28m
£28m
3
Emma Watson
£26m
£24m
4
Natalia Vodianova
£16m
£15m
5
Coleen Rooney (Littlewoods)
£13m
£12m
6
Cheryl Cole (L’Oreal)
£12m
£12m
7
Lily Cole
£8m
£6m
8
9=
Lily Allen (Chanel)
Sarah Harding (Ultimo)
£6m
£5m
£6m
£5m
9=
Rosie Huntington-Whiteley
£5m
New
9=
Jessie J (Pretty Polly)
£5m
New
The Sunday Times Rich List 2012 is compiled by Philip Beresford, the leading authority on British wealth, and edited by Ian Coxon.
The Sunday Times Rich List 2012 to be published on April 29

Frost Loves | New Girl & Zooey Deschanel

The last episode of New Girl that I watched had the truest relationship between women I have seen on TV for as long as I remember. I laughed in recognition of how a women really insults another women, in a subtle way that men think is a complement. How sometimes we just don’t get along because we think we have nothing in common, but really, we are more like each other than we will ever know. Dessert person or not.

Some of the press has been quite unfair to Jess, Zooey Deschanel’s character, for being ditzy and different. And I am not quite sure why. It is an actress in a lead role with her own TV show. She is not playing someone’s girlfriend or mother. She may be a kooky and different, but I have friends like Jess. She’s an endearing character who, granted, can be a bit annoying sometimes. But she cares about people, she is loyal to her friends, she is a good person. So to all of the people who think she is a bad role model I say; screw ’em.

Channel 4 revealed that New Girl has topped the 4oD chart for a second month, with an increase in VoD views to an impressive 3.3m.

Channel 4’s archive and catch up content attracted 45 million views throughout February, across all platforms on which 4oD is available, bringing total YTD views to 93 million.

The main 4oD platform, 4oD on Channel 4.com, drew 4.3 million average monthly unique users.

Does it Work? | Chlorella

 

I am an actress and since nearly every film and TV show is now filmed on HD I am always looking for ways to make sure my skin looks perfect. Here is the first of my ‘Does it Work?’ reviews on beauty and health products. We tell you whether or not it actually works.

 

Chlorella: The new Crème De La Mer?

 

I have to be honest here, I have never tried Crème De Lar Mer, but I do know it works because some of my rich friends told me. So when I was sent Chlorella to review and they said it was the new Crème De Lar Mer I got excited about finding something that works for a fraction of the price. Sun Chlorella ‘A’ also has a celebrity fan club, Miranda Kerr describes her beauty regime as such “To keep my skin in check I always eat lots of greens and take Chlorella supplements and drink lots of water”. Victoria Beckham, Fergie and Sadie Frost are also fans.

 

But did it work for me? Yes, my skin did become clearer and I felt better. One of my friends said I was ‘glowing’. I also felt like I had more energy. My nails even seem to stop splitting. So I am converted. It actually did make me healthier and improve my skin.

Sun Chlorella ‘A’ is a single-celled green algae . It is entirely natural and balanced and is packed with vitamins. It also has the iron equivalent of nine cups of spinach. If you can afford £21.95 per month I would definitely include this in your beauty regime.

 

Available from www.sunchlorella.co.uk or www.victoriahealth.com

MAD MEN SEASON FIVE PREVIEW

Well, here we are. After an agonizing seventeen months off the air, Don Draper and his fellow advertising companions of Madison Avenue are set to return to our screens the end of this month as Mad Men enters its fifth season. For a show notorious for its dense plotting and ruthlessly addictive storyline, the wait has been agonizing to say the least. After slow but steady word of mouth building on BBC Four the new season has been bought up by Sky and being marketed to much larger audience more aware of the show’s presence since it suddenly burst onto the TV radar back at 2007. For those who have yet to dip into its stylised world of intrigue and glamour they have quite some catching up to do.

Mad Men takes place primarily in New York City at the outset of the 1960’s as the country enters what was to be arguably its most turbulent decade. The action centres on the fictional advertising agency Sterling Cooper and its head executive Donald Draper (Jon Hamm), a walking enigma of man who appears to optimise the smooth, fast talking family man with both hands wrapped firmly around the American Dream. But Don is hiding some devastating secrets and his supposedly pristine life is not the Eden it appears. In fact it isn’t for anybody; seemingly all of Draper’s family, co-workers and acquaintances are hiding something from one another (and in some cases themselves as well) and in the world of advertising where a single image substitute’s reality, their infidelities, debauchery and outright deceptions mark them out against a world which is rapidly changing around them and shedding their preset ideals. To recap recent events very quickly, Don has just managed turned the tide of his bitter divorce to Betty (January Jones), his alcoholism and the agencies failing fortunes. He also takes the surprisingly brash decision to propose to his secretary Megan (Jessica Pare) who seems to be the light at the end of the tunnel. But tough times still lie ahead for the agency, the war in Vietnam is escalating and one of Don’s spurned lovers ominously warns him, ‘You only like the beginning of things.’

The world portrayed in the show initially feels like something out of a science fiction drama given the startling contrasts to today’s attitude to social mores. The civil rights movement was just taking off and chauvinism was a firm fixture in the office place. It’s an environment where the men in charge have carte blanche to harass and insult the women that work alongside them. One of the dark joys of the show is seeing these narrow-minded views slowly torpedoed one by one as history changing events foreshadow major plot points; for example Don and his striking yet distant wife Betty facing major revelations about their marriage whilst the Cuban Missile Crisis threatens to engulf them and all around. None of the characters have a chance to be complacent; the world is moving too fast around them. However if the world doesn’t catch up with them first, their frighteningly extravagant lifestyles will. The naivety of the time period also means that all of the major characters smoke and drink to an almost comical degree; the air never seems to be free of smoke whilst a baby shower with flowing martinis provokes laughs and gasps aplenty. Thankfully the substance abuse is not easily dismissed and is shown to have a steadily detrimental effect upon these men who find that they are not as invulnerable as they think.

Draper is a fascinating character; a man who struggles to keep barriers between the lives and worlds he inhabits and is drawn to self-destructive behaviour like a moth to flame. With a main character with so many reasons to potentially dislike them, you better have an extremely charismatic leading man. Thank heavens then for Jon Hamm in what is destined to become an iconic performance; he will have to work very hard to emerge from Drapper’s shadow. His features convey the look of a traditional film or television star of the period yet he lays it with hint of both danger and vulnerability that is utterly compulsive. It’s a role that requires extreme confidence, notably in scenes where Drapper simply dominates sales pitches and board room meetings and Hamm grabs it with both hands and makes it a tour-de-force.

Of course very great T.V. drama needs support for its lead to bounce off of and Mad Men is bursting at the seams with fascinating characters. Listing them all would go on for a considerably long time but I would like to focus on two supporting characters, one of whom arguably stands next to Don as the show’s co-lead. First up is Peter Campbell (Vincent Kartheiser), Don’s astonishingly ambitious and (initially) spineless understudy with a huge sense of entitlement and the need to prove to both his own distant family and his new needy wife and her parents. Both baby-faced and predatory in equal measure, Kartheiser is a joy to behold in the role. He masterfully flits between Pete’s bitter resentment and his comically naive grasp of shifting office politics. It’s in these scenes that we’re reminded that for all of the intense dramatics, the show walks a fine line of humour both subtle and broad. One of Pete’s permanent series storylines is established in the opening episode where he embarks on a fool hardy one night stand with new secretary Peggy Olsen (Elisabeth Moss), who enters Sterling Cooper at the bottom rung and rapidly becomes a vital part of Don’s inner sanctum, both professional and personal. Moss’ performance is simply stunning throughout the series. She conveys the rift between traditional values and bright new ideals without ever falling into cliché or being preachy as we follow her journey and watch her character change and not necessarily for the best. Her initial ‘fish out of water’ scenes are amusing but the dramatics are where the true fireworks fly. The scenes where she butts heads with Pete and later Don are astonishing, most noticeably in the season four episode ‘The Suitcase’ where they gradually reveal themselves to one another over a hectic night and change their relationship permanently. It’s a staggeringly well written episode with both performers at the top of their game.

Mad Men is shined to within an inch of its life. The majority of scenes are filmed in interior Californian studios doubling for New York (presumably primarily for budgetary reasons) though they convince seamlessly whilst also reflecting the claustrophobic underlying theme of many of the storylines. Costume design and soundtrack choices are also impeccable firmly establishing the show as evidence for contemporary American television drama being on a par with feature film production. Mad Men has certainly built up enough hype to rival most major blockbusters and anticipation for the new season is at fever pitch. Personally I cannot recall another show where each season has been better than the one that preceded it so my fingers are crossed that Season Five can deliver the goods. I’ll certainly be waiting, suit cleanly pressed and tumbler of whiskey firmly in hand.

Mad Men Season Five Starts on Sky Atlantic on March 27th

Suits Season One Finale | Review

SPOILER ALERT

You wait your entire life for a good legal drama and two come at once. [The Good Wife is the other one, in case you were wondering] It is hard to believe that it is already the season finale of Suits, how time flies. Harvey and Mike’s legal shenanigans have kept me entertained for weeks.

In the last episode Harvey found his conscious and vowed to get someone he had [accidentally] falsely imprisoned for murder back out of prison. He is intent on proving Clifford Danner’s innocence because he’s come across new evidence that might absolve the wrongly convicted man. He also refused to turn in his own corrupt mentor, and was only saved by the women in his life.

He has to go up against everyone, including his own firm Pearson & Harden as the powers that be are not too happy on him representing a convicted murderer, especially since his victim went to a private school where many of the firm’s clients send their children. As they lose a client the stakes are raised.

Mike goes to work to help save the day yet again. Will they manage it? It will be tough as their every turn is blocked, and the stakes are raised higher; if they lose, their client will get life imprisonment, instead of the four years he has left.

It is fun finding out, but somewhere else in the episode something happens that can completely destroy Mike’s career, and possibly affect Harvey’s too, as old lies rise to the surface. Another good episode. I cannot wait for the next season.

Suits SERIES FINALE S1 E12/12

Tuesday 3rd April, 9pm

Theatre Collection present Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Theatre Collection present Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Adapted and directed by Victor Sobchak
 
Crime and Punishment was always going to be an ambitious undertaking, especially with limited stage space and the necessary shortening of the literary epic for the stage. However there is a great deal to like about this production.

 The story itself has always fascinated me, offering psychological insight into the nature of morality, and the many forms of punishment that exist, reaching far beyond simple incarceration. Seeing the play in 2012 also makes me question whether criminals today may be so plagued by guilt and unable to enjoy ill-gotten gains.

 We follow Raskolnikov (played with impressive intensity by Shaban Arifi) an anti hero and our central character. Pressured by the poverty surrounding him, he feels forced to kill and rob a woman who by all accounts is morally bankrupt. In the course of this crime he is interrupted by her sister, whom he also kills.

 The punishment he brings on himself for these heinous acts – despite intermittently justifying them to himself and, at times, others – is enthralling to witness. With money the motivating factor, both for himself and his mother and sister, it is symbolic that he finds himself unable to use the money at all, becoming a miserable and tortured shadow of himself.

 With these issues as the subject, set in Nineteenth Century St Petersburg, the portrayal was always going to be bleak, and while at times the intensive, tortured performances were hard to watch, they felt true to the novel. The use of space, lighting and music was particularly impressive and I really did feel swept away – albeit bleakly – in the performance.

 This won’t be a play for everyone and I wonder if people who haven’t read the novel would get as much from it as I did, but overall I would highly commend such an ambitious and largely successful undertaking.

By Meredith Ettridge

Stars Shaban Arifi and Lucia Edwards.