Showing posts with label Russell Crowe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Russell Crowe. Show all posts

Friday, May 21, 2010

Gerard Butler to Sing Again Onscreen?


The latest rumor swirling around the remake of A Star Is Born is that the male lead may go to Gerard Butler.  Nick Cassavetes is confirmed to direct, but previously Russell Crowe had been buzzed about with Beyonce for the leads.  Russell Crowe does have more of that older man vibe, but man it would be great to have Gerry sing again in a movie, something he hasn't done since Phantom of the Opera.  I'd also like to see him stretch himself dramatically.  Action flicks and Rom Coms are all very well, but where's the guy who excelled in Dear Frankie?

Thursday, March 11, 2010

New Robin Hood Trailer


Now, I'm getting really excited.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Robin Hood Trailer



First pics, and now the trailer!

New Pics from Robin Hood!






Our first look at Cate Blanchett as Maid Marian, joining Russell Crowe as Robin Hood in Ridley Scott's remake.  Russell looks in Maximus form.  Via the Courier Mail, which has a few more pics from the set.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Sneak Peak at the set of Robin Hood



Tonight ET will air a segment from the set of Robin Hood with Russell Crowe and Cate Blanchett. This Robin Hood production has finally settled into a more traditional Robin Hood storyline, but still, Russell and Cate together? Count me there!

Ridley Scott said that they filmed a battle scene for Robin Hood in the same valley they had used for Gladiator, so it was like coming full circle.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Maximus Hood - back to fighting trim



USA Today has a first look picture of Russell Crowe in Robin Hood, with a haircut and physique very much like his look in Gladiator. He's lost the weight he gained for Body of Lies, and I guess that long hairdo he sported in State of Play which I thought was for Robin Hood was jettisoned.

Producer Brian Grazer compared Crowe to his Gladiator look and says about the film:

Grazer says Robin Hood's story was ripe for revisiting.

"Oddly, it's a metaphor for today," Grazer says. "He's trying to create equality in a world where there are a lot of injustices. He's a crusader for the people, trying to reclaim some of the ill-gotten gains of the wealthy. That's a universal theme."
Even Helen Mirren in State of Play seems to be thinking "Get a grip and pull yourself together. You look like a slob!"

Below Russell last week in NYC, and chubby hubby Crowe last October:

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Vanessa Redgrave is Russell Crowe's Robin Hood



Whatever they're calling Ridley Scott and Russell Crowe's Nottingham, now Robin Hood - Vanessa Redgrave will class up the place by playing Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine. Cate Blanchett is Maid Marian.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Cate Blanchett is Maid Marian



Russell Crowe has found a worthy match. The film Nottingham, which is now evidently getting a title change to the more traditional Robin Hood, originally had Sienna Miller attached to play Maid Marian. There were rumors the stick thin Sienna Miller made the presently portly Russell Crowe look even wider and older. I'm not sure Cate Blanchett is any less thin, but she's certainly a better acting match for Russell Crowe, and a stronger personality. Variety has the skinny:

Cate Blanchett will play Maid Marian alongside Russell Crowe's Robin Hood in the Ridley Scott-directed drama for Universal Pictures.

The picture, which had been called "Nottingham" but is undergoing a title change, begins production in early April.

Crowe plays Robin of Loxley in an origin story of Robin Hood that hews close to historical facts of the period. Abandoned as a child, he finds community with the common people of Nottingham. Robin's abandonment and trust issues hamper his ability to fall in love. He meets his match in Marian, a strong, independent woman.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Trouble in Nottingham?


Page Six reports:

RUSSELL Crowe is throwing his considerable weight around the pre-production of "Nottingham," telling producers to get a new director, demanding script rewrites and, now, forcing Sienna Miller out of the flick.

Miller, who was to play Maid Marian, left the movie yesterday after being "put on hold" while shooting was pushed back from February to April.

An insider said, "It is a mess. Russell never lost the weight he put on for 'Body of Evidence' - and so the love scenes between him and Sienna would have been laughable. He's so old and fat and she's so young and gorgeous. It's just . . . gross."

Word in Hollywood is that producers are "looking for an older, plumper actress to play the role so [Crowe] doesn't look like a paunchy grandpa. Someone in her late 30s or early 40s." A rep for Miller - who's said to be "fine" and "about to sign onto two other movies" - declined to comment.

Crowe, who plays both the Sheriff of Nottingham and Robin Hood, is trying to lose the lard. One producer who said Crowe has to shed 35 pounds cracked, "We can't have Robin Hood looking more like Friar Tuck."

The Oscar-winner has demanded serious script rewrites. "Originally the movie was about a love triangle between Maid Marian, Robin Hood and the Sheriff of Nottingham," our tipster said. "It is now all about Russell's Robin Hood. Literally, 40 pages of script were redone and now are just devoted to him and his massive ego. It's amazing."

Despite studio denials, we hear Crowe is trying to get director Ridley Scott fired. Calls were made to several prominent directors over the holidays to find a replacement. "All of this was done behind Ridley's back," the insider said. "He has no idea."

A studio rep acknowledged that Miller was "released" but flatly denied "these rumors" and said, " 'Nottingham' is moving ahead with Russell Crowe and Ridley Scott."

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Who's Robin Hood in Russell Crowe's Nottingham?


Russell Crowe is playing the Sheriff of Nottingham in Ridley Scott's movie Nottingham. And now we have word on Robin Hood -- and it's Russell, too!!

The news comes straight from the helmer himself, with Scott revealing “He’s playing both!” exclusively to MTV News during an interview for his new film “Body of Lies,” which co-stars Crowe. While Scott held additional details close to his chest — saying they would take too long to describe — he did exclaim that Crowe’s dual roles would be “a good old clever adjustment of characters. One becomes the other. It changes.”

Meanwhile, Russell joked to Leno that with the long locks he's growing for the movie that he's playing Maid Marian:
'It's like walking around with a dead Koala on your back,' he tells Extra.

Ain't It Cool accompanied the Robin Hood casting announcement with this cool clip:

Saturday, June 21, 2008

Bale rumored for Robin Hood


You can't always trust the British press, but there's a rumor out that Christian Bale and Russell Crowe might have a repeat of their 3:10 to Yuma matchup in Nottingham.

Christian Bale, soon to be seen as the caped crusader in The Dark Knight, is in talks about donning the jolly Lincoln Green outfit of Robin Hood, where he will be part of a menage a trois between Russell Crowe's Sheriff of Nottingham and Sienna Miller's Maid Marian.

Nothing is signed for Bale, but director Ridley Scott is exceedingly keen to cast him.

Costume fittings begin next week, so he'll be either in or out by then. Vanessa Redgrave and William Hurt are also in discussions about being in the film, which is called Nottingham.

Please, God, let this rumor be true. Bale and Crowe were amazing playing against each other in 3:10 to Yuma!

Thursday, June 19, 2008

New Sheriff in Town


How did I not hear about this project before? Yesterday, it was announced that Sienna Miller (Alfie) had signed on to play Maid Marion in Ridley Scott's upcoming Nottingham. Russell Crowe had already been slated to play not Robin Hood, but in a rethinking of the legend, the good Sheriff of Nottingham. The film will have a love triangle not between Robin Hood, Maid Marion and King John, but with the Sheriff of Nottingham. I've been digging for a little more on the story and found this quote from producer Brian Grazer:

‘Nottingham’ is the ‘Gladiator’ version of Robin Hood,” super-producer Brian Grazer told MTV News about the upcoming twisted tale from the “American Gangster” tag team. “I think it will have the same propulsion that ‘Gladiator’ had - the same adrenaline hits.”

Told from the Sheriff’s point of view, the new movie centers around a familiar - yet very different - set of characters, director Ridley Scott said, revealing that his story begins when a legend first walks into history.

“Richard the Lionheart is on his return from the Crusades [when] he took an arrow in his neck and died,” Scott said of the flick’s set-up. “His brother, John, [becomes king.]”

John, known in his own life as John Lackland (because as the youngest son he didn’t get any inheritance) “was actually pretty smart,” Scott insisted. “[But] he got a bad rap because he introduced taxation. So he’s the bad guy in this.”

Meanwhile, “You’ve got the returning Nottingham who is the right hand man of Richard and witnesses Richard taking the arrow,” Scott revealed. “And so he comes back to England to carry forward Richard’s dream about England.”

The Sheriff, then, strives to do right while caught in the middle of two wrongs – on one side a corrupt and unpopular King who orders him to arrest outlaws, on the other the outlaw himself who threatens to rouse the public in popular anarchy.

Ridley Scott and Russell Crowe have been powerful partners before in films like Gladiator and American Gangster. Not so much in The Good Year, but it looked like they had fun in France drinking wine! Fingers crossed that Nottingham is one of their better film partnerships.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

3:10 to Yuma - mini-review

I finally watched this excellent film on DVD last night. I used to have a major thing for Russell Crowe from his Gladiator days, but he lost his luster with me a bit after the whole phone throwing incident. One can't deny, however, that he is an excellent actor, and this is one of his best roles. He's perfect in a Western, although we can all forget the horrible Quick and the Dead with Sharon Stone. Yes, I did sit all the way through that travesty back in the day that I would watch anything Russell did. Well, we can all thank Sharon Stone for one thing, she brought Russell Crowe to American audiences for the first time, and to the attention of Hollywood.

This is the kind of matchup dreams are made of -- two of the most excellent intense actors of our time, Christian Bale and Russell Crowe, mano a mano in the same movie. Christian Bale plays a down on his luck rancher, a veteran of the Civil War missing a leg who has lost the respect of his teenage son and his wife. Russell Crowe plays Ben Wade, robber and leader of a band of cutthroats, but he's not a simple man -- he draws and seems to relish having an intelligent conversation with Christian Bale's character.

Christian Bale's rancher is deep in debt and through a series of fateful events, he ends up taking Crowe's Ben Wade with a group of men as prisoner to the 3:10 train to Yuma to his trial and certain hanging. Peter Fonda plays a crusty old Pinkerton detective, and it was fun seeing him in this movie. Bale's son tags along to Yuma, and Ben Wade realizes it's because of the boy's hero worship of him. The son gets to see Wade in action when the party is attacked by Apaaches along the way. The son's worship of outlaws like Wade from dime novels is part of the reason that Bale's character took this job taking Wade as a prisoner to justice, and he is trying to redeem himself in his son's eyes.

At the end of the journey, the two men are alone in a hotel room within earshot of the train whistle. Outside they are surrounded by men who either want to rescue Wade or kill him. The two actors have a fascinating conversation in that room where they reveal secrets to each other. Christian Bale reveals that he has never been a hero, and his leg was shot off by one of his own men. "Try telling your son that!" Wade tells about how he was abandoned by his mother. They reach a level of respect for each other as they dash out to meet that 3:10 train. I won't spoil the ending, but Crowe's character is not a simple killer, and he seems to surprise even himself. This is a film that is staying with me, and I keep thinking about it, which I didn't expect from a Western. It harkens back to the old Westerns which were morality plays. I have never seen the original film from the 50's, but from the reviews I've read, this film surpasses the first one with these two superior actors. I give 3:10 to Yuma four stars. Simply excellent, and two of the best parts ever for these two actors. In another year, they would have been nominated for Oscars for this film, in my opinion.