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Brad Pitt ‘Babels’ on in Palm Springs

Brad Pitt ‘Babels’ on in Palm Springs

Brad Pitt is back in the states after filming scenes for his new film The Case of Benjamin Button with Cate Blanchett. He attended the 18th annual Palm Springs International Film Festival Awards Gala earlier tonight at the Palm Springs Convention Center in California. Brad stands alongside director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu along with cast members from the film Babel, Adriana Barraza and Rinko Kikuchi.

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JJ Links Around The Web

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  • Is Taylor Lautner gearing up for Max Steel? - PopSugar
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  • Drake and Chris Brown share the cover of Vibe - LaineyGossip
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  • More women come forward about alleged affairs with Tiger Woods - Dlisted
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1,106 Comments

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Isabelle II @ 01/07/2007 at 9:34 pm

Wentworth sucks a$$
Who are his fan base? Do you that the haters are behind the numbers?

VOTE FOR BRAD [please]

http://www.hellomagazine.com/vote/mostattractiveman/index.html

http://www.usatoday.com/life/people/2006-10-19-brad-pitt-family_x.htm

The family man

By Donna Freydkin, USA TODAY

For Pitt, career comes a distant second to family.
“I still value the work I do, but at the same time I value more getting home to the kids. It somehow makes my work mean more, because I know somewhere down the road my kids will see it,” Pitt told the London Mirror this month.

The actor doesn’t grant many interviews these days (and declined to be interviewed for this story), largely shuns the Hollywood party circuit and hits the red carpet only to promote his movies or raise awareness of the causes he champions. He has never discussed his split in January 2005 from his wife, Jennifer Aniston, or his relationship with Angelina Jolie. The scandal could have demolished a lesser star.

After playing cat-and-mouse with the media while promoting Mr. & Mrs. Smith, Pitt and Jolie officially emerged as a couple, announcing her pregnancy in January and welcoming daughter Shiloh, now 4 months, in May. Since then, the couple have tried to keep a fairly low profile.

Jolie, says Smith writer Simon Kinberg, is “more internal and reserved,” while Pitt is “ebullient and open. They’re both very smart, curious, generous people.”

Pitt, who is adopting Maddox, 5, and Zahara, 1, spends most of his free time with his multicultural brood. They visited him on the Ocean’s set in the Los Angeles area and hung out in his trailer.

“He’s fantastic with his kids,” producer Jerry Weintraub says. “He’s totally involved. He takes them around; he takes them every place he goes.”

Indeed, if Pitt is seen out in public, chances are he’s holding Zahara, racing toy cars in Paris with Maddox or taking the boy for a motorized rickshaw ride in Pune, India, where the couple is shooting A Mighty Heart. Like other parents, Pitt told Esquire, he grapples with sleepless nights and diaper rash.

His parenting philosophies are simple: “I try not to stifle them. If it’s not hurting anyone, I want them to be able to explore,” he told the magazine. “At night, before they go to bed, I feel it’s really important to have that time to sit and talk to them. I really like that last minute before they fade off.”

He has become an advocate for adoption. “Now that I have two adopted kids, I cannot imagine life without them,” he said in Esquire. “They’re as much of my blood as any natural born, and I’m theirs.”

Because he can’t go out in public without starting a riot, Pitt has found more solitary ways to let off steam. He rides dirtbikes and motorcycles and flies a plane. He reads books about architecture, including Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things by William McDonough, listens to Jack White’s new band, The Raconteurs, and watches Run’s House on MTV.

But that doesn’t mean the scrutiny doesn’t get to him. “The only other artist I’ve been around that had the same affect with the press was Presley, and Elvis, unlike Brad, hid from the press,” Weintraub says. “Brad at least tries to lead as much of a normal life as he can. But he knows that whatever he does is a headline. His best way to deal with it is to put a motorcycle helmet on, so they can’t see his face. Now he’s a pilot, so he can get up in the air and get away from it.”

542
Amaya Says:

January 7th, 2007 at 5:49 pm
Rayna, hunnybunny, Missouri Fan and Estelle I’ve finished “Without You”
Here’s the last chapter…
http://intothegray.blogspot.com/2007/01/end.html

AMAYA: Thank you, thank you! I hope you won’t ever stop writing your beautiful stories and I hope you continue to share them with us. You are such a talented writer!

Isabelle II @ 01/07/2007 at 9:37 pm

764 ntt

++++

me too!

http://www.usatoday.com/life/people/2006-10-19-brad-pitt-main_x.htm

The golden boy

By Donna Freydkin, USA TODAY

These days, it’s good to be Brad.

To pay the bills, he stars in and produces films, some artsy (Running With Scissors, which he produced, opens today; Babel, in which he stars, is out Oct. 27) and some slick (Ocean’s Thirteen just wrapped filming).

To give back, he helps with Hurricane Katrina rebuilding efforts and speaks out about global warming and poverty.

And at the end of the day, he goes home to Angelina Jolie and children Maddox, 5, Zahara, 1, and Shiloh, 4 months.

The actor, 42, once dismissed as a hunk with chiseled abs, has emerged as one of Hollywood’s most compelling leading men.

“I saw him go from this gawky kid to this unbelievably very solid, confident guy,” says celebrity photographer Annie Leibovitz, who shot Pitt years ago and saw him recently during a shoot with Jolie. “I feel like he has an inner life now. Not that the other fellow wasn’t attractive — he was very attractive — but he was a kid. I just think he has grown up.”

Those close to Pitt say he’s riding high, at work and at home.

“I saw Brad two weeks ago,” says pal George Clooney. “He’s in such great spirits. He’s a really smart man who has grown into someone I’m really impressed by all the time. He’s a good friend. And what an amazing dad.”

Though Pitt’s looks still wow the ladies, his appeal now is more than skin deep.

“People love him,” says Entertainment Tonight’s Leonard Maltin. “He’s in a great place and seems to be doing everything right.”

Contributing: William Keck

African Girl @ 01/07/2007 at 9:39 pm

Message for MO FAN
Please, please, please don’t let these idiots stop you from posting.

By the way, I’ve started also started voting.

Gussie,

Thanks bunches. The videos really should help the hater(s?) pain.

HAPPY HAPPY HAPPY LIBERATION DAY BRADLEY.

Missouri Fan, I’m voting baby. You too, always provided video links when things turned ugly.

Press Man @ 01/07/2007 at 9:42 pm

From the Glare of Flashbulbs, a Serious Actor Steps Forward

Brad Pitt in “Babel,” a performance that is drawing Oscar consideration.

By CARYN JAMES

WHILE the world was shouting Brangelina and Brad Pitt was dodging paparazzi, he also pulled off this unlikely feat: He was involved in two of the past year’s best films. In one he is a silent partner, a producer of Martin Scorsese ’s “Departed.” For the other — his supporting role in Alejandro González Iñárritu’s wrenching political fable “Babel” — he has become the subject of Oscar chatter and a studio campaign. Plenty of Oscar promotions exist only to massage stars’ egos, but here is a campaign that actually makes sense.

In “Babel” Mr. Pitt delivers the most mature, complex performance of his career as a distraught husband whose wife has been shot on a tour bus near an isolated Moroccan village. With little more than half an hour on screen he restores seriousness to a career that started off like a dream combination of stardom and artistry, only to veer into the realm of the truly silly.

First came the dazzling years, as a golden-haired romantic rebel in films from the early 90s that remain surprisingly moving today: “A River Runs Through It,” “Interview With the Vampire” and “Legends of the Fall.” Maybe he began to overcompensate for all the flowing locks and backlighting, because then there were some ugly-guy years (or as close as he could come) in gritty, misbegotten movies like “Fight Club” and “Snatch.”

He has indulged a weakness for lumbering epics like “Seven Years in Tibet” and “Troy” and made clunkers like “Meet Joe Black” ; the post-Rat-Pack hit “Ocean’s Eleven” wasn’t really his film.

Then came “Mr. and Mrs. Smith” with Angelina Jolie ; someone with a lot to answer for coined the word Brangelina, and Brad Pitt entered the relentless-gossip phase of his career. It takes extraordinary work to break through all that celebrity noise, but “Babel” goes beyond the easy reminder “Oh, yeah, he used to be able to act.” His performance seems more controlled and powerful with each viewing.

“Babel,” with its four interlocking stories, offers political themes unusual in Mr. Pitt’s career: how the personal and political blend; how children are especially vulnerable to the crossfire. Mr. Pitt’s character, Richard, and his wife, Susan ( Cate Blanchett ), have left their own children in California in the care of a sympathetic Mexican nanny, who unwittingly and heartbreakingly endangers them. Susan is accidentally shot by Moroccan children playing with their father’s rifle, but the act is assumed to be terrorism and provokes a minor international incident.

Apart from the film’s political heft, there are conspicuous, superficial differences from Mr. Pitt’s earlier movies. With dark blond, graying hair and beard and creases around his eyes, he is made up and photographed to look like a handsome but definitely middle-age man. (He is, after all, 43.) And the awards-bait clip leaps out: it’s the moment near the end of the film when Richard talks to his small son on the phone, hears that the boy has been harmlessly bitten by a crab at school and barely holds back sobs.

Awards voters are suckers for tears, but it is this character’s control, not his sobbing, that makes the scene poignant. Throughout the film Mr. Pitt displays Richard’s suppressed anger, fear and urgency as he struggles to get help for his gravely injured wife. The look of anguish on his face as he sees the tour bus drive away, abandoning them in a remote village, is every bit as eloquent as a stifled sob.

And there is tenderness as he holds his wife and whispers to her as she lies on the dirt floor of a villager’s house. Because Mr. Pitt seems unaware of his looks or his effect on screen, we believe he is an ordinary man blindly fighting for his family’s survival.

The supporting actor category is crowded this year — the cast of “The Departed” alone could eat up all five slots — but “Babel” is a genuine ensemble piece, so Mr. Pitt has to be positioned in that category. His only Oscar nomination so far was also as supporting actor, for Terry Gilliam ’s 1995 dystopian fantasy “12 Monkeys,” a film whose whimsical approach seems more strained than ever. As an inmate in an asylum, where he meets a time traveler played by Bruce Willis , Mr. Pitt gives the kind of twitchy performance that often gets award attention: wild-eyed, full of tics and jerking hand gestures. It’s a perfectly fine job in a role without depth.

That performance wasn’t nearly as good as his work the same year in David Fincher ’s dark murder mystery, “Seven,” as a young detective who is working with Morgan Freeman ’s character and married to Gwyneth Paltrow ’s. Mr. Pitt seems to rise to the level of good co-stars, and here his restraint matches Mr. Freeman’s. He never grandstands, even when his character learns that his wife has been killed. In fact there is an unlikely line running from “Seven” through “Babel”: in both he is exceptional as a husband trying to keep his emotions in check while confronting a tragedy.

Mr. Fincher didn’t do him any favors later when directing him in the nonsensical “Fight Club” (1999), as the founder of a secret club who turns out to be the imaginary alter ego of Edward Norton ’s wimpy character. Mr. Pitt is currently working with Mr. Fincher again on the more intriguing “Curious Case of Benjamin Button,” with Ms. Blanchett, based on F. Scott Fitzgerald ’s story about a man who ages in reverse. Several Internet sites have already run a photo of Mr. Pitt in a bald cap for that movie.

You can’t blame him for working against his looks at times. He was just a pretty face and hunky body in the brief role that got him noticed, as the boy toy Geena Davis ’s character picks up in “Thelma and Louise” (1991) because she likes the way he looks walking away in jeans. Even then he displayed the nonchalant appeal that has served him so well, along with another trick that hasn’t: the persistent mannerism of licking his lower lip, especially in the middle of a serious speech.

Even now his pal George Clooney (who recently tied the Pitt record for two wins as People magazine’s Sexiest Man Alive) teases him on talk shows, calling him Pretty Boy Pitt. Trying to escape some kind of pretty-face curse might even account for his part as another grimy boxer in Guy Ritchie ’s “Snatch” (2000), this time as a British Gypsy with an accent so indecipherable that another character comments on it.

But escape shouldn’t have been necessary because those golden-boy roles were braced by emotional truth. In “A River Runs Through It” (1992), Robert Redford ’s enduring, lyrical story of two Montana brothers, Mr. Pitt is the charming rebel who breaks every rule and dies as a result. In “Legends of the Fall” (1994), Edward Zwick ’s guilty-pleasure soap opera about three Montana brothers, he is the charming rebel who breaks every rule and survives. Both films rely on the audience’s ability to embrace him as the other characters do: a man of effortless charm, more attuned to nature than society, so true to himself that all things are forgiven.

And in Neil Jordan ’s lush “Interview With the Vampire” (1994), Mr. Pitt plays a vampire with a conscience who tells a story running from 18th-century New Orleans to the present. He steals the film from Tom Cruise , who was then the bigger star. Mr. Pitt’s romantic aura may have obscured the strength of those performances, but they are worth rediscovering.

He learned the hard way that good looks aren’t enough to carry a movie, especially a big-budget epic. As an Austrian adventurer befriended by the young Dalai Lama in “Seven Years in Tibet” (1997) and more recently as Achilles in “Troy” (2004), he is chewed up by the films’ gigantic machinery.

In “Troy,” when his mother ( Julie Christie ) says that going to battle will be his death but will ensure him everlasting glory, he turns his head in profile and poses, presumably to be thoughtful, or to glance toward the future or toward Sparta, who knows? Whether it’s his fault or that of the director, Wolfgansen , what we see on screen is less a performance than a modeling assignment.

“Mr. and Mrs. Smith” was commercial fluff too, but it changed his life. This story of professional assassins married to and hired to kill each other is still a better idea than it is a movie, but it was a smashstrongly denied at the time — Pitt-Jolie romance certainly added heat that wasn’t evident on screen.

It’s not as if he had been a little mouse during his marriage to Jennifer Aniston , but his fame vaulted into a different sphere when he became half of a world-traveling, child-adopting, Africa-saving couple, a team shrewd at manipulating its own image. Whether some fresh seriousness and maturity drew him to this new life or the new relationship made him more serious and mature only he can say.

But social activism, including architectural projects to help rebuild New Orleans, don’t automatically translate into great movie roles. “Ocean’s Thirteen” is scheduled to arrive in June, and we can only hope it’s more like the fun “Ocean’s Eleven” than the unwatchable “Ocean’s Twelve.” He goes back to the Old West, but without the golden glow, as a dark-haired Jesse James in “The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford,” a film that had been scheduled for release last fall but has been postponed, probably until next fall.

With “Babel” and “The Departed” (which he produced through his company, Plan B), it will be hard to outdo 2006, though. If his stardom helped get attention for “Babel,” that alone would have meant a lot. To get such a heartfelt, down-to-earth performance from someone who spends so much time on Planet Celebrity is more than anyone could have hoped for.

HAPPY LIBERATION DAY TO YOU,
HAPPY LIBERATION DAY TO YOU,
HAPPY LIBERATION FROM THE CHIN
HAPPY LIBERATION TO YOU.

Next time lets try harmony!

Oh yay! new page, I can sing again.

HAPPY LIBERATION DAY TO YOU,
HAPPY LIBERATION DAY TO YOU,
HAPPY LIBERATION FROM THE CHIN
HAPPY LIBERATION DAY TO YOU…

Isabelle II @ 01/07/2007 at 9:47 pm

785
Sheri Says:

January 7th, 2007 at 9:43 pm
HAPPY LIBERATION DAY TO YOU,
HAPPY LIBERATION DAY TO YOU,
HAPPY LIBERATION FROM THE CHIN
HAPPY LIBERATION TO YOU.

++++++++++++
VOTE for BRADLEY [please]

http://www.hellomagazine.com/vote/mostattractiveman/index.html

You know, I notice when people post under different names, they always have this ‘test’ thing before they post again. Just to make sure the name that shows is the right one? ;)

Sorry if this was already post @ 01/07/2007 at 9:47 pm

786
ntt Says:
January 7th, 2007 at 9:44 pm

that is getting really lame and annoying. The triangle is finally over now lets get over it, okay? Ridiculous!

to add to my #788 post, if you go back, around 10:30 this morning Shittygal had her first post as ‘test’, then half an hour later, boom, her long post came out. Let’s wait to see if ‘not again’ is going to show up again with a real post next or not. They are so twisted, the don’t even know who they are any more. Like idol, like fans.

Isabelle II @ 01/07/2007 at 9:53 pm

790
Sheri Says:

January 7th, 2007 at 9:47 pm
voted
+++++

Thanx I hope my singing wasn’t off key :lol:

792
Isabelle II Says:
January 7th, 2007 at 9:53 pm
************************************

I have been voting since yesterday but got busy earlier today. I will vote until I go to bed. Oh, and you have perfect pitch!

Ohhh, Ouch, Ahhh, Ohhh, the pain. Make them stop with this good BAMZS’ news.

I see it is time for me to sing again.

HAPPY LIBERATION DAY TO YOU,
HAPPY LIBERATION DAY TO YOU,
HAPPY LIBERATION DAY FROM CHIN
HAPPY LIBERATION DAY TO YOU…..

Maybe not again! is trying to figure out if she is using the name not exactly. Such a bozo this person is.

Andrómeda @ 01/07/2007 at 9:57 pm

Ok, I´m voting again…although I don´t believe in polls.

I think the haters will eventually disappear: they don´t have anything to talk about you know who…

I saw that about ritzygal too, she does the test post & then proceed with the snarky post. I guess ritzygal want to make sure Jared did no ban her e-mail address from this site. Or to make sure her post is “not awaiting moderation”. Could it be notagai/notexactly be ritzygal herself? I will not be surprise a bit.

Ok voted again! Don’t really believe in them myself, but it’s fun. And can’t have WM beat out Brad! Actually it’s been a bit quiet on the hater front. Nice isn’t it!

not again! @ 01/07/2007 at 10:01 pm

798
**!!!** Says:

January 7th, 2007 at 9:55 pm
===================
Aww you missed me.

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