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Angelina Jolie Covers Germany’s Comopolitan

Angelina Jolie Covers Germany’s Comopolitan

Angelina Jolie takes the January 2009 cover of Germany’s Comopolitan. Interview highlights as follows:

On finding time for her family, acting career and commitment as a UN ambassador: “Well, I do take my time outs. And most of all I do receive support from Brad [Pitt]. We are a good team. That is important to me and gives me strength… I cannot sit quietly while others die of hunger and children. My commitment for the United Nations I do not want to abandon. The play has no greater priority. In February, I still turn a movie, then I suppose one years off.”

On surviving each day without a nervous breakdown: “I’m very disciplined. I have a balanced diet and among other things I do Pilates. If I’m fit I feel more comfortable and I do have a lot more energy.”

On playing the role of a mother in Changeling, whose son disappears without a trace: “Just the idea of such a possibility made me go completely crazy. Initially, I wanted to cancel it. But the strength and self abandonment of this woman made be accept the role.”

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Photo: WENN

975 Comments

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African Girl @ 12/22/2008 at 2:29 pm
No Julia/Lester…you just admitted you are a sociopath and we all know no sociopaths are delusional, seeing things where there isn’t, so You thinking AJ is a sociopath is all part of your psychosis.

That’s hilarious!! An Angie fan just described herself and all the other fans. Too funny…that made my day!!

“The Houston Film Critics Society has named The Curious Case of Benjamin Button as the best motion picture of 2008 but split its awards list among 10 films in 14 categories.”

WOW! like Houston, as in Houston, Texas!!?!?!? Thats like the cultural center of the world!!!! WOW!! AMAZING!

anoble @ 12/22/2008 at 2:15 pm Thanks for the new thread Jared

bringing this over from the previous thread because it is a great video
anoble @ 12/22/2008 at 12:25 pm

Here’s a great new video - warning, it will bring tears to your eyes.

Angelina and Marcheline
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZLVS1PYWiME
____________

Fabulous video, anoble! Hi to you! And, hi to all the other Jolie-Pitt fans. I hope all of you have a blessed holiday season.

giagirl
gagadumbassgirl. If you go to awardsdaily.com they list all the critics award along with the Broadcast critics association, SAG, Golden Globes and individual cities and film Associations. BP and AJ are nominated for each. However, rest assured the dog movie will be nominated for a Razzie and Whiny X worst actress of the year. Gagag on, with your dumb self.

Whats with the german structured english???? Thats almost as annoying as madges fake english accent.

Dude can morph lke no other.

This cover + interview is OLD, cobbled from previous interviews.

This is ridiculous that mags/tabloids can do this.

Still, Angelina is the hottest and coolest chick on the planet.
She doesn’t exercise separately, cuz really, she “dual-exercises” with BRAD.

That’s all the “pilates and yoga” she needs :-)

giagirl @ 12/22/2008 at 4:17 pm

It does not change the fact that the site was not as big until it started doing these drawings of Brad and Angelina. The artist did one of Angelina floating in the clouds and the site and that picture was talked about everywhere.

New BLIND ITEM @ 12/22/2008 at 4:37 pm

Monday, December 22, 2008
NY Daily News Blind Item

Which Oscar-winning actress always must be a drain on hotel maids? The now-taken beauty always asked her former flames to perform a golden shower during romantic interludes, and we hear she had a few takers

love them @ 12/22/2008 at 4:40 pm

Katie why don’t you take your own advice?? Do you see me wasting my time on the Ho’s sites-NO!!!! If you think your time is so precious WTF are you doing on here?? And posting more than once! Why don’t YOU GET A FUC*ING life?????
Sad, looney….. just like the ho………

Hens sure do not like the admiration society of BP and AJ. Too bad hens. BP and AJ have fans. Deal with it. Go support ole girl in her booty call marathons. That blind item sounds like Whiny X, minus the Oscar. Never gonna happen.

bdj @ 12/22/2008 at 4:40 pm Hens sure do not like the admiration society of BP and AJ. Too bad hens. BP and AJ have fans. Deal with it. Go support ole girl in her booty call marathons. That blind item sounds like Whiny X, minus the Oscar. Never gonna happen.
———————————————————————————————–

Too bad Angie will never thank you for all your support. Because in reality shes laughing her way to the bank while all of you loons spend countless hours banshing Jen for her. What a bunch of tools….

http://www.australia.to/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2478:best-movies-of-2008-with-dan-hudak&catid=1:latest

Oh wow a Best top ten from Australia and no Australia on the list

2. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

Based on the F. Scott Fitzgerald short story, Brad Pitt’s title character is born an old man and ages backward toward infancy, leading to a fascinating series of revelations as he discovers death, sex, war, heartbreak and love with Cate Blanchett’s Daisy. Director David Fincher’s film opens nationwide Christmas Day.

1. The Dark Knight

The late Heath Ledger (Joker) gave the best supporting performance of 2008 in the best and most popular ($530 million box office) movie of the year. With pitch-perfect direction by Christopher Nolan and a tireless story, “The Dark Knight” is the best superhero movie ever made and a legitimate Oscar contender. It will be re-released in theaters in January, but if you prefer movies at home, it is currently available on DVD.

Nah that would be NOLIPS WHINY X. The girl does not like her fans and will not even come over to greet them at Premieres. NOLIPS is a self-absorbed,mediocre actress trying to sell the dog movie on the backs of others. JMO.

Because “love them” I find this highly amusing. Much the same as one would observe a freak show at a circus, or professional wrestling. It’s human nature at its most bizarre and off-center. I’d pay money for this kind of entertainment. What I find particularly amusing are individuals that use the term “ho.” You know, people would have much more respect for you if you learned to speak English properly. (”WTF”? Really? Is that a word?) I’ll bet you sit there and actually believe that Brad and “Ang” are reading this and thinking “wow, that “love them” is a true fan!! I think we should hire her to look after our third world nation of children!! Maybe she could wipe our asses for us. You’re a pathetic oxygen thief. Go away.

I am finally seeing the Oprah interview of Brad on TV. It was quite good. He looked great.

Angie-jo is a HO! @ 12/22/2008 at 4:51 pm

She is a ho, she needs to STFU and go away and raise her 234958432 kids with the thing that is a shell of Brad Pitt. Im so sick of her! JA is wayy better, funnier and prettier than her!!

shes gourgues!

Katie @ 12/22/2008 at 4:49 pm
Just Jared aim to please. Now wander over to Female First and Dlist to read some real nutjobs. Anybody wishing harm on children, racist comments and smearing on a couple living their lives are truly deranged. We are just having fun but you know that.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gM8349uLbw3Qgl6VK-mkF7yGYTvgD9580KPO0

Glad to see Brad Pitt getting raves for his performance except for one lone bitter hen. Check out BB this Christmas!!!!

Review: `Button’ dazzles visually, emotionally

By CHRISTY LEMIRE – 12 minutes ago

It’s the damnedest thing. You look into the elderly man’s blue eyes behind a pair of old-fashioned spectacles, look at the sweet smile ringed by wrinkles, and you know that’s Brad Pitt under there.

****But the special effects are so dazzling, and Pitt’s performance is so gracefully convincing, that you can’t help but be wowed over and over again by “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.”****

Director David Fincher has always proven himself a virtuoso visual stylist — to the point of seeming like a shameless showoff at times — with films like “Fight Club,” “Panic Room” and “Zodiac.” Here, he’s truly outdone himself: He’s made a grand, old-fashioned epic that takes mind-boggling advantage of the most modern moviemaking technology.

Fincher’s film, based on an F. Scott Fitzgerald short story about a man who ages in reverse, is rambling and gorgeous — perhaps a bit overlong and gooey in the midsection — but one that leaves you with a lingering wistfulness.

It’s just so achingly sad: Pitt, as the title character, is doomed from the start. He can travel the world and live a life that’s adventurous and full, but he can never truly be with the woman he loves, Daisy (Cate Blanchett), whom he meets when she’s just a little girl (played by Elle Fanning) and he’s a boy trapped in an old man’s body.

Eric Roth’s script may seem naggingly similar to that of “Forrest Gump” — which he also wrote — but it seems more concerned with the transformational power of true love than the gimmickry of an unusual existence.

Born with the looks and decrepitude of an 80-year-old man, Benjamin is left on the doorstep of a New Orleans old-folks home at the end of World War I. Despite the newborn’s startling appearance, the kindly Queenie (a lovely Taraji P. Henson), who works there, feels immediately drawn to him and raises the baby as her own.

He feels comfortable among the home’s residents, even though he’s getting physically younger as they die off one by one. There’s a playful innocence to Pitt’s performance in these early scenes, and a sweetness that he’ll maintain for the rest of the film.

Benjamin goes to work for a drunk tugboat captain (played by a raucous Jared Harris, functioning in the Lt. Dan role, if you’d like to continue the “Gump” analogy), which takes him to Russia and the film’s most exciting segment. There, he embarks on an unexpected affair with the wealthy wife of a spy. Tilda Swinton brings smarts and smoldering sensuality to the role — she shakes the picture up — but she also helps define Benjamin as he grows, internally, into a young man just beginning to understand his own prowess.

It’s all preparation for Daisy, anyway — for the romance they will fleetingly find in the middle of their lives. Blanchett is fiery as the headstrong ballerina who doesn’t immediately realize she’s ready for Benjamin, but the way she softens toward him gives the film both a zest and a feeling of melancholy — because we know it can’t last.

Daisy has been telling his story, and theirs, through a present-day framing device as she lies dying in a New Orleans hospital bed. Hurricane Katrina is on the way, and she has to tell the tale to her daughter (Julia Ormond) before it’s too late.

But neither Benjamin nor Daisy questions the complexity of their situation: They merely make the most of it, in ways big and small, for as long as they possibly can.

“The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,” a Paramount Pictures release, is rated PG-13 for brief war violence, sexual content, language and smoking. Running time: 167 minutes. Three and a half stars out of four.

cry me a river @ 12/22/2008 at 4:57 pm

Angelina is with Brad =HOT

jen is with peeboy

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gM8349uLbw3Qgl6VK-mkF7yGYTvgD9580KPO0

But the special effects are so dazzling, and Pitt’s performance is so gracefully convincing, that you can’t help but be wowed over and over again by “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.”

Director David Fincher has always proven himself a virtuoso visual stylist — to the point of seeming like a shameless showoff at times — with films like “Fight Club,” “Panic Room” and “Zodiac.” Here, he’s truly outdone himself: He’s made a grand, old-fashioned epic that takes mind-boggling advantage of the most modern moviemaking technology.

Fincher’s film, based on an F. Scott Fitzgerald short story about a man who ages in reverse, is rambling and gorgeous — perhaps a bit overlong and gooey in the midsection — but one that leaves you with a lingering wistfulness.

It’s just so achingly sad: Pitt, as the title character, is doomed from the start. He can travel the world and live a life that’s adventurous and full, but he can never truly be with the woman he loves, Daisy (Cate Blanchett), whom he meets when she’s just a little girl (played by Elle Fanning) and he’s a boy trapped in an old man’s body.

Eric Roth’s script may seem naggingly similar to that of “Forrest Gump” — which he also wrote — but it seems more concerned with the transformational power of true love than the gimmickry of an unusual existence.

Born with the looks and decrepitude of an 80-year-old man, Benjamin is left on the doorstep of a New Orleans old-folks home at the end of World War I. Despite the newborn’s startling appearance, the kindly Queenie (a lovely Taraji P. Henson), who works there, feels immediately drawn to him and raises the baby as her own.

He feels comfortable among the home’s residents, even though he’s getting physically younger as they die off one by one. There’s a playful innocence to Pitt’s performance in these early scenes, and a sweetness that he’ll maintain for the rest of the film.

Benjamin goes to work for a drunk tugboat captain (played by a raucous Jared Harris, functioning in the Lt. Dan role, if you’d like to continue the “Gump” analogy), which takes him to Russia and the film’s most exciting segment. There, he embarks on an unexpected affair with the wealthy wife of a spy. Tilda Swinton brings smarts and smoldering sensuality to the role — she shakes the picture up — but she also helps define Benjamin as he grows, internally, into a young man just beginning to understand his own prowess.

It’s all preparation for Daisy, anyway — for the romance they will fleetingly find in the middle of their lives. Blanchett is fiery as the headstrong ballerina who doesn’t immediately realize she’s ready for Benjamin, but the way she softens toward him gives the film both a zest and a feeling of melancholy — because we know it can’t last.

Daisy has been telling his story, and theirs, through a present-day framing device as she lies dying in a New Orleans hospital bed. Hurricane Katrina is on the way, and she has to tell the tale to her daughter (Julia Ormond) before it’s too late.

But neither Benjamin nor Daisy questions the complexity of their situation: They merely make the most of it, in ways big and small, for as long as they possibly can.

“The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,” a Paramount Pictures release, is rated PG-13 for brief war violence, sexual content, language and smoking. Running time: 167 minutes. Three and a half stars out of four.

google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gM8349uLbw3Qgl6VK-mkF7yGYTvgD9580KPO0
Great review.

But the special effects are so dazzling, and Pitt’s performance is so gracefully convincing, that you can’t help but be wowed over and over again by “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.”

Director David Fincher has always proven himself a virtuoso visual stylist — to the point of seeming like a shameless showoff at times — with films like “Fight Club,” “Panic Room” and “Zodiac.” Here, he’s truly outdone himself: He’s made a grand, old-fashioned epic that takes mind-boggling advantage of the most modern moviemaking technology.

Fincher’s film, based on an F. Scott Fitzgerald short story about a man who ages in reverse, is rambling and gorgeous — perhaps a bit overlong and gooey in the midsection — but one that leaves you with a lingering wistfulness.

It’s just so achingly sad: Pitt, as the title character, is doomed from the start. He can travel the world and live a life that’s adventurous and full, but he can never truly be with the woman he loves, Daisy (Cate Blanchett), whom he meets when she’s just a little girl (played by Elle Fanning) and he’s a boy trapped in an old man’s body.

Love her @ 12/22/2008 at 2:04 pm Miss you Angelina I love the way she’s handled the attention seeker with class and silelnce.I have so much respect for her.
***********

She has to keep her trap shut ’cause she knows the truth when she hears it…

bdj @ 12/22/2008 at 4:52 pm

It seems hating and writing disgusting remarks is ok. It is even normal for a person like Katie. Being a fan of Brad and Angelina is what weird or freaky. This is why I totally disregard what these type of people write.

love them @ 12/22/2008 at 5:01 pm

Katie, WTF- are you a HO TOO?????? WTF is your problem you oxygen sucking ho!!!! Yeah, you stupid twit- I think B&A unlike the ho have time to go on gossip sites and read about themselves! You are as stupid as you sound. Your life must be a bottomless pit like your soul- on a site of people you say you don’t like! WTF HO!!!!!!!
Katie the ho
Katie the ho Katie the ho- oh sorry you probably never leave you house and have never had a man give you a 2nd look so you have no chance to be a ho. Guess your life is on your computer with a t.v. tray loaded with fast food so you don’t have to leave the gossip sites spreading your hate. Sorry for your sorry life ho……………….

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