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Jolie earned her pass to the red carpet with a Spirit Award nomination Tuesday for her turn in the real-life tale A Mighty Heart.
Fellow Oscar winners Cate Blanchett, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Marisa Tomei likewise pulled in nominations from the independent-film-honoring show. The unveiling of the nods represented one of the first rounds in Hollywood’s annual trophy-distribution tournament.
I’m Not There, the trippy Bob Dylan biopic featuring several stars riffing on the music legend, led all Spirit Award contenders with four nominations, including ones for Blanchett, costar Marcus Carl Franklin and director Todd Haynes. The film was assured of going home with at least one mantelpiece when it was outright named the first recipient of the Robert Altman Award, honoring the ensemble comprised of a film’s director, cast and casting director.
One of five films nominated for Best Feature, I’m Not There will vie for top honors against: the Jolie-led A Mighty Heart, about journalist Mariane Pearl’s search for her Wall Street Journal reporter husband who was abducted and beheaded by terrorists; The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, the true story of the paralyzed magazine editor who dictated a book with his unparalyzed left eye; Juno, the quirky comedy about a teenage pregnancy; and Paranoid Park, Gus Van Sant’s skateboard murder drama.
Blanchett is nominated in the Best Supporting Female category, while her counterpart Franklin is in the Best Supporting Male race. Hoffman is in the Best Male Lead field for the sibling comedy-drama The Savages. Like Blanchett, Tomei is a Best Supporting Female nom, up for the crime thriller Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead.
Jolie, considered an Oscar contender, is the biggest name in the Best Female Lead race. Her competition: Sienna Miller, up for Interview; Ellen Page, the young star of Juno; Parker Posey, for Broken English; and Tang Wei, for Ang Lee’s NC-17-rated Lust, Caution.
In the Best Male Lead category, Hoffman will square off against Don Cheadle, for jawing on the radio in Talk to Me; Frank Langella, for authoring a writer in Starting Out in the Evening; Tony Leung, for Lust, Caution; and Pedro Castaneda, for the Spanish-language farmworker drama August Evening. None are currently considered locks for Oscar nominations.
In addition to Franklin, the Best Supporting Male field shapes up like this: Talk to Me’s Chiwetel Ejiofor; Great World of Sound’s Kene Holliday; The Namesake’s Irrfan Khan; and Rescue Dawn’s Steve Zahn. In something of a surprise, Holliday’s old Matlock boss, Andy Griffith, who drew some of the best reviews of his long career for Waitress, was stiffed a tip.
Griffith wasn’t the only Waitress staffer shut out—star Keri Russell likewise drew a blank. Its late writer-director, Adrienne Shelly, was nominated as a screenwriter but not as a director, and her film, which has grossed an indie-best $19.1 million, was passed over for Best Feature.
The Best Supporting Female category is dotted with some of the biggest names. In addition to Blanchett and Tomei, Jennifer Jason Leigh is up for the comedy Margot at the Wedding. Also in contention: Rocket Science’s Anna Kendrick and Four Sheets to the Wind’s Tamara Podemski.
The director’s race pits Haynes against Tamara Jenkins (The Savages), Jason Reitman (Juno), Julian Schnabel (The Diving Bell and the Butterfly) and Gus Van Sant (Paranoid Park). Van Sant was a favorite at Cannes; Schnabel is an early Oscar favorite.
Actress turned multihyphenate Julie Delpy scored a nod for Best First Feature for her, well, first feature, 2 Days in Paris.
For the purposes of the Spirit Awards, an independent film is a film that costs less than $20 million to produce. To put it another way: Transformers wasn’t snubbed; it wasn’t eligible.
The 2008 Spirit Awards are set to be presented in Santa Monica, California, on Feb. 23, the day before the 80th Annual Academy Awards.
This time, Angelina Jolie has been voted one of the world’s ‘yummiest mummies’ in a poll held be British newspaper ‘The Sun.’ Jolie has three adopted children and one biological daughter with actor Brad Pitt.
On March 10, 2002, Jolie adopted her first child, seven-month-old Maddox Chivan Jolie-Pitt. A six-month-old girl from Ethiopia, Zahara was adopted on July 6, 2005. On May 27, 2006, Jolie gave birth to a daughter, Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt, in Swakopmund, Namibia by a scheduled caesarean section. Shiloh, according to a long-standing translation from the Bible, has come to mean “the peaceful one”.
Number two in the poll gets the new mother Myleene Klass was also made the list. Katie Homes, who has a daughter with Tom Cruise, landed in third place. Holmes was followed by the ‘Spice Girls’ Emma Bunton, who recently gave birth to a baby boy.
Britney Spears came in fifth place with another Spice Girl, Victoria Beckham, following in sixth place.
It was Angelina Jolie the mom, the actress and the artist who made the decision to take on the role of Grendel’s mother in the new feature film “Beowulf.”
“I’ve got kids and I thought ‘that’s so great. That’s so bizarre. I am going to be this crazy reptilian person and creature.’ I was very excited. She is one of those fun characters. She’s evil. She’s temptation. She is just one of those fun characters to play,” Jolie says during an interview at the Four Seasons Hotel.
Jolie, dressed in gray slacks and a white blouse, is seated in a charcoal-colored chair situated just below a sign that spells out “Beowulf” in huge blood-red letters. Her less-than-zero size body is turned at a slight angle, legs crossed much in the way she was seen in numerous scenes of “Mr. and Mrs. Smith.”
The movie, based on one of the oldest stories in English-language history, includes a battle between the great hero Beowulf and the creature known only as Grendel’s mother that went on for eight days. The story has been changed for the movie: Grendel’s mother is a little more temptress than warrior.
The actress in Jolie wanted the opportunity to work in the unusual filmmaking style. Director Robert Zemeckis created the film using a motion capture computer program. The actors worked in an empty room wearing nothing but body suits covered with hundreds of yellow dots. Those dots were used to record the information needed to make the animated version of the actor’s performance.
The role also gives the 32-year-old Jolie another diverse film credit on a resume that already includes “Lara Croft: Tomb Raider,” “Shark Tale” and “A Mighty Heart.”
Jolie says that she was excited about the opportunity to work with Zemeckis, the man behind such films as “Back to the Future” and “The Polar Express.” In fact, she was so excited about the opportunity, Jolie was agreeable to anything that was tossed her way.
“I was told I was going to play a lizard. Then I was brought into a room with Bob and all these pictures. He showed me this picture of a woman half painted gold and then a lizard,” Jolie says.
Who wouldn’t want to play a role that at times is a green, slimy creature who lives in the water and at other times looks like a Victoria’s Secret model who forgot to dress for work?
The character in the animated film is a lizard-like shape shifter who takes on a revealing human form when she tries to seduce Beowulf. That Grendel’s mother has such a perfect form shows the power of computers.
“I was three months pregnant when they filmed me,” Jolie says. She pauses, flashes a coy smile and then adds, “Actually, they did map my body before I got pregnant.”
As to how her onscreen body looks, Jolie shows she knows exactly how to feed interviewers what they want to hear. With a slight smile, she almost purrs, “I liked my tail.”
She’s OK with the image now. There were moments when she worked on the film that she had a few doubts.
“I got a little shy,” Jolie says. “I didn’t expect it to feel as real.”
She felt exposed at times because of the digital animation process and having to wear the body suit.
But one would think she would be used to the exposure. Jolie’s public life with Brad Pitt is documented by armies of paparazzi and journalists. She brushes off a question about being such a public figure with “I try not to think about my public life and focus on my private life and that is just the best way to live.”
Jolie worked only a few days on “Beowulf,” but that doesn’t mean the shoot was not demanding.
She had to wear a harness to pretend to swim and fly. Zemeckis even had the actress learn Old English to use when talking with Grendel.
Despite the fact that what is seen on screen is just a computer-generated version of Jolie’s movements, she praised Zemeckis for treating the movie like a piece of art rather than just another business project.
“I think the nice thing for all of us these days is that we all do films and it has become such a business. Or so much of it, there are these projects where people just want to rush through it. You lose touch with the artistic process and the fun of it,” Jolie says. “And Bob is a real artist. And he loves it so much. And he is so enthusiastic and so original. And so you remember that you are a creative person and you have fun with everybody else.
There are many words that come to mind when describing Angelina Jolie, but “shy” isn’t one of them.
And yet that’s how she says she felt when watching her digitally animated character in “Beowulf.”
She’s half lizard, half woman and mostly naked sometimes.
Jolie says when she saw how much her character looked like her, she says she got “shy” and called home to warn Brad Pitt about what he’d be seeing. “Beowulf” opens Friday.
Angelina Jolie has dismissed rumors that she and beau Brad Pitt will soon be on diaper duty again.
Jolie laughed off rumors that she and Brad were expecting their second biological child, but is not ruling out adding to the family sometime in the future.
“No, there’s always a rumor but not at this moment. But at some point we will (have another child),” she told MTV News.
The couple are already parents to four kids - Maddox, Pax, Zahara and Shiloh.
Jolie adopted Maddox in March 2002 while still married to actor Billy Bob Thornton, however when the two split she got custody. She later revealed that Pitt had been the one to encourage her to adopt Zahara in July 2005.
After Pitt and she got together, the actor adopted both the children, and Jolie requested their names be officially changed to ‘Jolie-Pitt’ in January 2006.
Next came the couple’s first biological child Shiloh, who was born in Namibia in May 2006. Jolie then added a second son to the family by adopting Pax Thien in March this year.
ANGELINA Jolie may have taken on some extreme roles in the past, but seeing herself for the first time as a naked, gold, reptilian seductress in the new computer-animated movie, Beowulf, still took her by surprise.
“I got a little shy,” she laughs.
“I didn’t expect ourselves to come out as much, or it to feel as real.
“So I called home and explained the kind of fun movie that I had done - and that this digital animation was, in fact, a little different than what we were expecting.
“I was really surprised that I felt that exposed.”
Beowulf is an action-packed blockbuster, created on computer graphic imagery (CGI), based on a mythical, centuries-old tale.
It chronicles the exploits of the mighty warrior Beowulf (Ray Winstone), who kills the demon Grendel, only to incur the hellish wrath of the beast’s ruthlessly seductive mother, played by Jolie.
All actors had to have their bodies “mapped” so they could be recreated in CGI as animated fantasy characters and creatures.
Three months pregnant during the two-and-a-half days she spent on this film - which included having her body mapped for computer-generated imaging - Jolie hugely enjoyed her demonic role in this tale of vikings, power and lust.
“I’ve got kids and I thought: ‘This is so great - I am going to be this crazy, reptilian person and creature’,” she says.
“I was very excited. She is one of those fun characters. She’s evil. She’s temptation. She is just one of those fun characters to play.”
The actress in Jolie wanted the opportunity to work in the unusual and up-and-coming film-making style of CGI.
Director Robert Zemeckis created the film using a motion-capture computer program.
The actors worked in an empty room, wearing nothing but body suits covered with hundredsof yellow dots.
Those dots were used to record the information needed to make the animated version of the actor’s performance.
The role also gives 32-year-old Jolie another diverse film credit, on a resume that already includes Lara Croft: Tomb Raider, Shark Tale and A Mighty Heart.
Jolie says she was excited about the opportunity to work with Zemeckis, the man behind such films as Back To The Future and the first full-length CGI film, The Polar Express.
In fact, she was so excited about the opportunity that Jolie was agreeable to anything that was tossed her way.
“I was told I was going to play a lizard. Then I was brought into a room with Bob and all these pictures. He showed me this picture of a woman, half-painted gold and then a lizard,” Jolie says.
Who wouldn’t want to play a role that, at times, is a green, slimy creature who lives in the water _ and at other times looks like a Victoria’s Secret model, who forgot to dress for work?
The character in the animated film is a lizard-like shape-shifter, which takes on a revealing human form when she tries to seduce Beowulf.