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Angelina Jolie is The Sexiest Movie Star

Angelina Jolie is The Sexiest Movie Star

Angelina Jolie tops Empire Magazine’s Top 100 Sexiest Movie Stars. They say her sexiest moment was “beating the hell out of Brad Pitt in Mr. and Mrs. Smith and then banging the hell out of him by way of apology.”

And here’s what Empire had to say: “Jolie seems to have been precision built to turn cinema audiences into drooling wrecks. The pneumatic figure, the feline eyes, the lips that could have been stung by several hives of bees. Simply unimprovable.”

As for partner Brad Pitt, he came in at #7. We learn his high school nickname was “Pitt bull” and here’s what Empire had to say about the stud: “So empirically good-looking that you’d have to hate him if he wasn’t clearly such a nice guy with it. The eyes, the smile, the rippling six-pack despite being the wrong side of 40 – he’s the man men dream of being and women dream their man could be.”

And to save you some clicking, here’s the top ten: 1. Angelina Jolie 2. Natalie Portman 3. Daniel Craig 4. Jessica Alba 5. Johnny Depp 6. Eva Green 7. Brad Pitt 8. Scarlett Johansson 9. Keira Knightley 10. Gerard Butler

JJ Links Around The Web

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  • More women come forward about alleged affairs with Tiger Woods - Dlisted
Apega/WENN

1,318 Comments

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no longer a lurker @ 12/07/2007 at 3:45 am

tita, have to go.

guli, hello & good night to you.

WEDDING PEACH @ 12/07/2007 at 3:46 am

Wooo!! Pretty and very well-deserved: Hot Lips Jolie.

the real tita @ 12/07/2007 at 3:48 am

goodnight to everyone too! see you tomorrow.

Whoop!!! Just as I was logging of here comes
# 202 no longer a lurker ….How have you been, long time no hear?

Have you watched AOJJ, it is awesome…JMHO of course :-)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KC77lF6bb_8

never see it before @ 12/07/2007 at 4:04 am

Did you guys see this picture of Angie,I have never seen this before.

http://www.angelinajolie.ppg.br/uploaded_images/AngelinaJolie02-703513.jpg

It is from 13 November.

#80 Janice loved your “miserable disposition” - so true! LOL

the real tita @ 12/07/2007 at 2:28 am #158: Or maybe ask sam why they don’t pay to have her on top of the polls. It seems the idol is too stingy to let go of her money bags so she only buys low rent awards like best legs or best hair.
+++++++

LOL, so true. please add Glad award bought by her gay publicist Huvane.

♥♥♥a fan♥♥♥ @ 12/07/2007 at 4:49 am

Oscar race looks wide open this year

By CHRISTY LEMIRE, AP Movie Writer
Thu Dec 6, 4:00 PM ET

LOS ANGELES - There’s no Helen Mirren this time around, no Forest Whitaker.

Unlike last year, when clear front-runners already had emerged in key categories, this awards season looks wide open.

About a dozen films could be considered viable nominees for best picture at the Academy Awards, and Wednesday’s selection of “No Country for Old Men” as the year’s best by the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures doesn’t make the outlook much clearer. The Coen brothers’ beautifully brutal depiction of lawmen, guns and money along the Rio Grande has earned rave reviews and packed theaters in limited release, but it was expected to be a favorite even before it came out.

“I think that there are so many diverse genres, that there are so many strong performances, so many strong films,” said Annie Schulhof, president of the National Board of Review, which consists of film historians, students and educators. “This was very challenging to our group this year. Sometimes a film speaks to you and that’s what you stay with — that’s what `No Country for Old Men’ did.

“I think the race is wide open,” she added. “I would not call this a mediocre year at all.”

The competition for best actor is even more crowded. Hollywood typically offers stronger roles for men than women, but there were so many powerful, memorable ones this year that performances that might have seemed like obvious leads are spilling over into the supporting-actor category. That’s certainly true with “No Country,” in which Josh Brolin, Javier Bardem and Tommy Lee Jones share nearly equal screen time and are all essential to the story’s progression.

Miramax, which released the film, is pushing Brolin for best actor — his character is the one who finds the suitcase of cash left after a botched drug deal. Bardem, as the eccentric killer seeking the money, is the catalyst for much of the action, while Jones, as the Texas sheriff chasing both men, serves as the movie’s moral center and is the inspiration for the title.

“I agree it’s very difficult to separate them and decide who’s in best actor, who’s in best supporting actor, but we get guided by the academy on that and that’s the way they vote,” said Miramax President Daniel Battsek. “It’s doubly complicated by the fact that in both Josh and Tommy Lee’s case, they have other movies in which they will be, I think, quite possibly up for consideration in either supporting or base actor.”

Brolin could be a supporting-actor candidate for playing a corrupt cop in “American Gangster,” while Jones stars as a father investigating the death of his soldier son in “In the Valley of Elah.”

Other actors with nomination potential in a couple of categories are Philip Seymour Hoffman for “Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead” or “The Savages” (best actor) and “Charlie Wilson’s War” (supporting); Russell Crowe for “3:10 to Yuma” (best actor) and “American Gangster” (supporting); and Casey Affleck for “Gone Baby Gone” (best actor) and “The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford” (supporting).

“Last year we had distinct front-runners in Helen Mirren (`The Queen’), Forest Whitaker (`The Last King of Scotland’) and `The Departed’ for best picture, simply because everyone in the industry was saying that Marty Scorsese was so overdue,” said Tom O’Neil, columnist for the awards Web site TheEnvelope.com. “The only cliffhanger was the fact that `The Departed’ wasn’t the typical Oscar-profile picture, being a kind of action thriller. This year it’s totally up for grabs.”

But O’Neil added that one film could emerge as an Academy Awards favorite over the next few weeks: “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street,” Tim Burton’s screen version of the blood-soaked Stephen Sondheim musical starring Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter. Oscar nominations aren’t scheduled to be announced until Jan. 22, but before that, on Thursday, the Golden Globe nominations should give the awards race a more defined shape.

“I think with the Johnny Depp cool factor and Tim Burton, it could have huge cult breakout status around Christmas. I could see a `Sweeney Todd’ bandwagon taking off and giving us a `Silence of the Lambs’-type sweep,” he said. “`The Departed’ was evidence of the fact they’re not as squeamish as they used to be. I think they are tougher and grittier and trying to be cool, and that means taking `No Country for Old Men’ seriously as a best-picture nominee.

“`Atonement’ is out front now,” he said of the sweeping, historical romance starring Keira Knightley and James McAvoy, the kind of movie Oscar voters traditionally have loved. “But I think it’s vulnerable.”

A breakdown of possible nominees, both locks and longshots, in the top categories:

BEST PICTURE: “American Gangster,” “Atonement,” “Charlie Wilson’s War,” “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly,” “Gone Baby Gone,” “Into the Wild,” “Juno,” “The Kite Runner,” “Michael Clayton,” “No Country for Old Men,” “Ratatouille,” “Sweeney Todd,” “There Will Be Blood.”

BEST DIRECTOR: Ridley Scott (”American Gangster”), Joe Wright (”Atonement”), Sidney Lumet (”Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead”), Julian Schnabel (”The Diving Bell and the Butterfly”), Ben Affleck (”Gone Baby Gone”), Sean Penn (”Into the Wild”), Marc Forster (”The Kite Runner”), Tony Gilroy (”Michael Clayton”), Joel and Ethan Coen (”No Country for Old Men”), Tim Burton (”Sweeney Todd”), Paul Thomas Anderson (”There Will Be Blood”).

BEST ACTOR: Russell Crowe (”3:10 to Yuma”), Denzel Washington (”American Gangster”), Brad Pitt (”The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford”), James McAvoy (”Atonement”), Philip Seymour Hoffman (”Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead” or “The Savages”), Tom Hanks (”Charlie Wilson’s War”), Mathieu Amalric (”The Diving Bell and the Butterfly”), Viggo Mortensen (”Eastern Promises”), Casey Affleck (”Gone Baby Gone”), John Cusack (”Grace is Gone”), Richard Gere (”The Hoax”), Tommy Lee Jones (”In the Valley of Elah”), Emile Hirsch (”Into the Wild”), Ryan Gosling (”Lars and the Real Girl”), George Clooney (”Michael Clayton”), Josh Brolin (”No Country for Old Men”), Johnny Depp (”Sweeney Todd”), Daniel Day-Lewis (”There Will Be Blood”).

BEST ACTRESS: Keira Knightley (”Atonement”), Julie Christie (”Away From Her”), Amy Adams (”Enchanted”), Ellen Page (”Juno”), Marion Cotillard (”La Vie en Rose”), Tang Wei (”Lust, Caution”), Angelina Jolie (”A Mighty Heart”), Laura Linney (”The Savages”), Helena Bonham Carter (”Sweeney Todd”), Halle Berry (”Things We Lost in the Fire”).

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR: Ben Foster (”3:10 to Yuma”), Josh Brolin (”American Gangster”), Russell Crowe (”American Gangster”), Casey Affleck (”The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford”), Philip Seymour Hoffman (”Charlie Wilson’s War”), Max von Sydow (”The Diving Bell and the Butterfly”), John Travolta (”Hairspray”), J.K. Simmons (”Juno”), Tom Wilkinson (”Michael Clayton”), Javier Bardem (”No Country for Old Men”), Tommy Lee Jones (”No Country for Old Men”), Paul Dano (”There Will Be Blood”), Robert Downey Jr. (”Zodiac”).

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Saoirse Ronan (”Atonement”), Olympia Dukakis (”Away From Her”), Julia Roberts (”Charlie Wilson’s War”), Amy Ryan (”Gone Baby Gone”), Cate Blanchett (”I’m Not There”), Catherine Keener (”Into the Wild”), Allison Janney (”Juno”), Tilda Swinton (”Michael Clayton”).

http://us.f613.mail.yahoo.com/ym/ShowFolder?YY=6272&y5beta=yes&y5beta=yes&inc=25&order=down&sort=date&pos=0&view=a&head=b&box=Inbox

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071206/ap_en_ot/film_oscar_preview

Oscar race looks wide open this year

By CHRISTY LEMIRE, AP Movie Writer
Thu Dec 6, 4:00 PM ET

LOS ANGELES - There’s no Helen Mirren this time around, no Forest Whitaker.
NEW YORK - Grammy night was shaping up as high drama after Kanye West and Amy Winehouse — two of music’s most gifted and volatile performers — were nominated for a leading eight and six trophies respectively.

Other top nominees at the Los Angeles announcement included the Foo Fighters, whose five nominations included mentions for album and record of the year; Justin Timberlake, who also got five, including record of the year for “What Goes Around Comes Around”; Rihanna, who received four nominations, including record of the year for her ubiquitous “Umbrella” anthem; and jazz legend Herbie Hancock, who surprisingly made it into the album of the year category for his Joni Mitchell tribute album.

“It’s not a category you normally find a jazz artist,” said a shocked Hancock.

Jay-Z, rapper-producer Timbaland and singer-songwriter Ne-Yo also received five nominations each. Bruce Springsteen, whose absence from the best album category was noteworthy, received four nominations, along with Akon, Chris Daughtry, Feist, Tim McGraw, Akon, Dierks Bentley and John Newton.

But the king and queen of the day were West and Winehouse, who both experienced tremendous highs and crushing lows in 2007.

West’s “Graduation” album, which was nominated for album of the year, marked a coronation for the rapper-producer when it was released in September, selling almost one million copies in its first week and crushing 50 Cent in a much hyped sales battle. West also had two big hits this year, “Stronger” and “Good Life.”

West, well known for his angry outbursts when snubbed at awards shows, most recently lashed out at the MTV Video Music Awards. But his year turned tragic last month when his mother and manager, Donda West, died at 58 after undergoing plastic surgery.

This is the third time West has dominated Grammy nominations: in 2004, he received 10 for his debut album, “The College Dropout,” and a year later got eight for “Late Registration.” But he lost each time in the major categories, including best album.

Winehouse also had a tumultuous 2007, for different reasons. The British singer was already known for her pot-smoking, hard-drinking ways when she released her stunning soul album “Back to Black” earlier this year. The album’s top hit, “Rehab,” a defiant anti-treatment anthem, earned her nods for record and single of the year.

Her hard-living past seemed behind her — until reports of even harder partying became more frequent and she canceled tour dates because of “health concerns.” Just this week, Winehouse was photographed outside her London home walking barefoot, clad in only a red bra and jeans, looking distressed.

Comedian George Lopez joked about her reputation when he announced one of her nominations at the announcement ceremony: “Could somebody wake her up this afternoon around six (o’clock) and tell her?”

Still, the Recording Academy looked past all her drama to nominate her in key categories, including best new artist. In a statement, Winehouse said: “I’m grateful to have my music recognized with these nominations — this is a true validation from people I respect and admire.”

Besides West and Winehouse, the other nominees for best album included the Foo Fighters, for “Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace,” Vince Gill’s four-disc set “These Days,” — and Hancock’s tribute to Mitchell, “River: The Joni Letters.”

“It’s amazing, we had no idea. When you get acknowledged for what you do, it feels pretty good,” said Dave Grohl of the Foo Fighters.

Record of the year candidates were “Rehab”; Beyonce’s “Irreplaceable,” the Foo Fighters’ “The Pretender,” Rihanna’s “Umbrella” and “What Goes Around Comes Around” by Justin Timberlake.

For song of the year, given to the songwriter, the nominees once again included “Rehab,” Corrine Bailey Rae’s sweet-sounding “Like A Star,” Carrie Underwood’s revenge anthem “Before He Cheats,” The Plain White T’s “Hey There Delilah” and “Umbrella.”

In the best new artist category, Winehouse was competing against Feist, perhaps best known these days for her iPod commercial; the rock group Paramore; country singer Taylor Swift; and soul singer Ledesi.

“This is the best day ever. I’m freaking out,” said Swift, who turns 18 in less than a week. “I really didn’t think it was going to happen. I was about to cry.”

The Grammys will celebrate their 50th year when the awards are announced on Feb. 10. The broadcast is to be carried live on CBS.

correction

Oscar race looks wide open this year

By CHRISTY LEMIRE, AP Movie Writer
Thu Dec 6, 4:00 PM ET

LOS ANGELES - There’s no Helen Mirren this time around, no Forest Whitaker.

Unlike last year, when clear front-runners already had emerged in key categories, this awards season looks wide open.

About a dozen films could be considered viable nominees for best picture at the Academy Awards, and Wednesday’s selection of “No Country for Old Men” as the year’s best by the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures doesn’t make the outlook much clearer. The Coen brothers’ beautifully brutal depiction of lawmen, guns and money along the Rio Grande has earned rave reviews and packed theaters in limited release, but it was expected to be a favorite even before it came out.

“I think that there are so many diverse genres, that there are so many strong performances, so many strong films,” said Annie Schulhof, president of the National Board of Review, which consists of film historians, students and educators. “This was very challenging to our group this year. Sometimes a film speaks to you and that’s what you stay with — that’s what `No Country for Old Men’ did.

“I think the race is wide open,” she added. “I would not call this a mediocre year at all.”

The competition for best actor is even more crowded. Hollywood typically offers stronger roles for men than women, but there were so many powerful, memorable ones this year that performances that might have seemed like obvious leads are spilling over into the supporting-actor category. That’s certainly true with “No Country,” in which Josh Brolin, Javier Bardem and Tommy Lee Jones share nearly equal screen time and are all essential to the story’s progression.

Miramax, which released the film, is pushing Brolin for best actor — his character is the one who finds the suitcase of cash left after a botched drug deal. Bardem, as the eccentric killer seeking the money, is the catalyst for much of the action, while Jones, as the Texas sheriff chasing both men, serves as the movie’s moral center and is the inspiration for the title.

“I agree it’s very difficult to separate them and decide who’s in best actor, who’s in best supporting actor, but we get guided by the academy on that and that’s the way they vote,” said Miramax President Daniel Battsek. “It’s doubly complicated by the fact that in both Josh and Tommy Lee’s case, they have other movies in which they will be, I think, quite possibly up for consideration in either supporting or base actor.”

Brolin could be a supporting-actor candidate for playing a corrupt cop in “American Gangster,” while Jones stars as a father investigating the death of his soldier son in “In the Valley of Elah.”

Other actors with nomination potential in a couple of categories are Philip Seymour Hoffman for “Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead” or “The Savages” (best actor) and “Charlie Wilson’s War” (supporting); Russell Crowe for “3:10 to Yuma” (best actor) and “American Gangster” (supporting); and Casey Affleck for “Gone Baby Gone” (best actor) and “The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford” (supporting).

“Last year we had distinct front-runners in Helen Mirren (`The Queen’), Forest Whitaker (`The Last King of Scotland’) and `The Departed’ for best picture, simply because everyone in the industry was saying that Marty Scorsese was so overdue,” said Tom O’Neil, columnist for the awards Web site TheEnvelope.com. “The only cliffhanger was the fact that `The Departed’ wasn’t the typical Oscar-profile picture, being a kind of action thriller. This year it’s totally up for grabs.”

But O’Neil added that one film could emerge as an Academy Awards favorite over the next few weeks: “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street,” Tim Burton’s screen version of the blood-soaked Stephen Sondheim musical starring Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter. Oscar nominations aren’t scheduled to be announced until Jan. 22, but before that, on Thursday, the Golden Globe nominations should give the awards race a more defined shape.

“I think with the Johnny Depp cool factor and Tim Burton, it could have huge cult breakout status around Christmas. I could see a `Sweeney Todd’ bandwagon taking off and giving us a `Silence of the Lambs’-type sweep,” he said. “`The Departed’ was evidence of the fact they’re not as squeamish as they used to be. I think they are tougher and grittier and trying to be cool, and that means taking `No Country for Old Men’ seriously as a best-picture nominee.

“`Atonement’ is out front now,” he said of the sweeping, historical romance starring Keira Knightley and James McAvoy, the kind of movie Oscar voters traditionally have loved. “But I think it’s vulnerable.”

A breakdown of possible nominees, both locks and longshots, in the top categories:

BEST PICTURE: “American Gangster,” “Atonement,” “Charlie Wilson’s War,” “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly,” “Gone Baby Gone,” “Into the Wild,” “Juno,” “The Kite Runner,” “Michael Clayton,” “No Country for Old Men,” “Ratatouille,” “Sweeney Todd,” “There Will Be Blood.”

BEST DIRECTOR: Ridley Scott (”American Gangster”), Joe Wright (”Atonement”), Sidney Lumet (”Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead”), Julian Schnabel (”The Diving Bell and the Butterfly”), Ben Affleck (”Gone Baby Gone”), Sean Penn (”Into the Wild”), Marc Forster (”The Kite Runner”), Tony Gilroy (”Michael Clayton”), Joel and Ethan Coen (”No Country for Old Men”), Tim Burton (”Sweeney Todd”), Paul Thomas Anderson (”There Will Be Blood”).

BEST ACTOR: Russell Crowe (”3:10 to Yuma”), Denzel Washington (”American Gangster”), Brad Pitt (”The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford”), James McAvoy (”Atonement”), Philip Seymour Hoffman (”Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead” or “The Savages”), Tom Hanks (”Charlie Wilson’s War”), Mathieu Amalric (”The Diving Bell and the Butterfly”), Viggo Mortensen (”Eastern Promises”), Casey Affleck (”Gone Baby Gone”), John Cusack (”Grace is Gone”), Richard Gere (”The Hoax”), Tommy Lee Jones (”In the Valley of Elah”), Emile Hirsch (”Into the Wild”), Ryan Gosling (”Lars and the Real Girl”), George Clooney (”Michael Clayton”), Josh Brolin (”No Country for Old Men”), Johnny Depp (”Sweeney Todd”), Daniel Day-Lewis (”There Will Be Blood”).

BEST ACTRESS: Keira Knightley (”Atonement”), Julie Christie (”Away From Her”), Amy Adams (”Enchanted”), Ellen Page (”Juno”), Marion Cotillard (”La Vie en Rose”), Tang Wei (”Lust, Caution”), Angelina Jolie (”A Mighty Heart”), Laura Linney (”The Savages”), Helena Bonham Carter (”Sweeney Todd”), Halle Berry (”Things We Lost in the Fire”).

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR: Ben Foster (”3:10 to Yuma”), Josh Brolin (”American Gangster”), Russell Crowe (”American Gangster”), Casey Affleck (”The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford”), Philip Seymour Hoffman (”Charlie Wilson’s War”), Max von Sydow (”The Diving Bell and the Butterfly”), John Travolta (”Hairspray”), J.K. Simmons (”Juno”), Tom Wilkinson (”Michael Clayton”), Javier Bardem (”No Country for Old Men”), Tommy Lee Jones (”No Country for Old Men”), Paul Dano (”There Will Be Blood”), Robert Downey Jr. (”Zodiac”).

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Saoirse Ronan (”Atonement”), Olympia Dukakis (”Away From Her”), Julia Roberts (”Charlie Wilson’s War”), Amy Ryan (”Gone Baby Gone”), Cate Blanchett (”I’m Not There”), Catherine Keener (”Into the Wild”), Allison Janney (”Juno”), Tilda Swinton (”Michael Clayton”).

mistake on the first one posted number 211 it about grammy award

Did you see those picture of Brad and Angelina in airport in London when they went for premiere?wow each of them had their own bag!not even put their clothes in one bag.brad looked so pissed at that time,you need to go and watch them again.brad was not happy at all.I wonder why???

and now there is story which is telling Brad also got so pissed when LK asked him about Angie.I again wonder why??and that picture of Brad and angie and Mad oh it wasn’t good at all.Angie looked so uncomfortable around Brad.

all these things just point to something bad.I hope I’m wrong but look at all these events in this way,I know brad told about wanting more kids but we all know brad told this kind of things even when he knew his relationships were over with his exes.BTW maybe now things changed with him,who knows??we shall wait and see.

we should wait until next year and after award season,If something is going to happen,it will happen that time,If nothing happens at that time,so it means things are not in the way as it was in past for brad.he told the truth and he talked from his heart.we should wait and see.

lol @ 12/07/2007 at 5:01 am

seems Cate blanchett is locked for GG and Oscar for best supporting actress.

but about Best actress:I think Angie is also locked for getting nominee at least for both.

about best actor oh well I guess brad has a very hard job among all these actors,by the way I still think he can be among five top best actor,really If GC gets nominee for Micheal clayton,I can make every one sure,he just gets to this place with WB`s power,no way his acting is not even closed to Brad in Jess James.

but well we should see what will happen,just one week before GG`s nominee.not too much.

Angelina Jolie, pffft! Eve Mendes BLOWS HER AWAY!

What is address to Natalie Portman?
Who give me her address it fulfilment your (wish).

meaningless list @ 12/07/2007 at 5:42 am

This was chosen by editors not by people. This poll is totally meaningless. Make your own survey’s up, they have equal relevance.

does anyone know @ 12/07/2007 at 5:46 am

If Angelina is so popular why did MIGHTY HEART bomb?

think positive! @ 12/07/2007 at 5:47 am

Angie and Brad just have IT @ 12/07/2007 at 1:18 am
—————————————————————————-
That is so true!!

Brad and Angie are the ultimate SEX symbols of their generation. They just exclude it with their presence without having to look polished all the time.

No matter how many male bimbos and starlets will come and go Brad and Angie will remain a reference about sexuality for decades. Like Marilyn Monroe, Marlon Brando and James Dean. They are legendary. All of them are dead but people still remember them about their sex appeal and their great talent and charisma. That what will happen with Brad and Angie too.

As you said very wisely either you have it or you don’t. Brad and Angie certainly do!!

oh @ 12/07/2007 at 5:16 am

oh!!!when will you give it a rest?If they ever break up,I’m sure they will anounce it.

think positive! @ 12/07/2007 at 5:50 am

I see some poor troll is trying so hard to distract us from all thr good stuff by repeating the same sh*t over and over.LOL!!

Keep ingoring folks. It drives them crazy!! LMAO!!!

Ananda @ 12/07/2007 at 5:40 am marek @ 12/07/2007 at 5:41 am meaningless list @ 12/07/2007 at 5:42 am does anyone know @ 12/07/2007 at 5:46 am

Isn’t it funny how all of you posted right after another?seems more like (reply) poster from England or (samantha) poster from Australia are here at the same time. :roll: :lol:

who are you fooling?at least If you want to say you are not the same poster,you shouldn’t post one minutes after your first post. :lol:

it s bomb(DID YOU SEE THE DVD NUMBERS,THEY WERE GREAT) because is a about a sensible topic and it wasnt a comercial MOVIE that why BEOWULF DIDNT BOMB,
SHE STILL ONE OF BEST ,MOST PAID AND LOVING ACTRESS

if reese is so popular why rendition bomb?
if tom cruise is the nr 1 actor why lions of lamb bomb?
if johnny deep is so popular why libertine bomb?

not so suprise what will be the next name looser, the jen angry fan

oh=Ananda=meaningless list=does anyone know

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