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Showing posts with label Holmes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holmes. Show all posts

Thursday, August 25, 2011

A Minute With: Katie Holmes on "Don't Be Afraid of the Dark" (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – It sounds like a latter-day version of "The Odd Couple" -- petite, American actress Katie Holmes (Mrs. Tom Cruise) paired with portly Mexican writer/director Guillermo del Toro, a gothic horror film devotee known for "Hellboy" and "Blade" franchises.

But their new film together, "Don't Be Afraid of the Dark" which hits theaters on Friday, is anything but a comedy in the vein of "The Odd Couple."

Rather it is a serious scare-fest that also stars Guy Pearce and Bailee Madison and an army of evil little creatures who invade an old house and terrorize its occupants.

Holmes and del Toro recently sat down with Reuters to talk about the film, what scares them (and Tom), and why people get a kick from being afraid in movie theaters.

Q: Katie, are you a big horror fan?

Holmes: "Yes, I like classic horror films. But I'm not a big slasher, gory type of horror film fan."

Q: So I assume if this was full of slashing, you would have been be a little less eager.

Holmes: "Right, and I don't think it would have Guillermo's name on it."

Del Toro: "No. The movies I've tried to produce, write and direct, I'm very proud to say as far as I can remember I've never written a female victim, a scream queen or a part like that. I always try to create very strong female characters, in many cases stronger than the guys. Certainly in 'Don't Be Afraid.'"

Q: What's the secret to a really effective horror film?

Del Toro: "I think characters, good characters. The scares of course are necessary but it's the human characters."

Holmes: "I agree. You have to be able to relate to the people and relate to the world and be invested in them. And then, suddenly as an audience member, you are those people going through it -- and what would you do?"

Q: So what scares you?

Holmes: "People who like to take the wind out of your sail because there's a lot more they're doing. If they're doing that to your face then they're doing more. So that scares me more than, like, a monster."

Del Toro: (laughs) "Politicians -- a lot. They are so deranged, especially these days. And human pettiness. Oh my God that's scary. It's so horrifying. I've seen a UFO, and I've heard ghosts twice -- once in New Zealand and once in Mexico, but those are not the scariest things. The scary things are real things like every day."

Q: Katie, has Tom seen this?

Holmes: "Oh yes. He saw it before I did, like a year before."

Q: So what did he think?

Holmes: (laughs) "Well, he had to watch another movie afterwards in order to go to sleep because he was so scared. I'm not sure what he watched. (laughs) Maybe 'The Sound of Music'?"

Del Toro: "I think it was that Adam Sandler comedy, '(You)Don't Mess With The Zohan'."

Q: You have to protect your character's daughter in the movie. Does having your own daughter affect the way you approach a role like this?

Holmes: "I think being a mom myself, when I read my character and I saw the journey she takes and how we see her make sacrifices for her child -- I think I didn't understand that until I became a mom.

"Just how much you love this person. You will do anything for that person, and you have strength you didn't know that you had, which is what I like about my character. So I think that being a mom definitely gave me much more insight to this character."

Q: But you might not feel that way about sacrifice when Suri becomes a teenager.

Holmes: (Laughs) "I don't know. I think she's pretty special."

Q: Why is it that people loved to be scared so much? Do you like to be scared at movies?

Holmes: "I do and I like to be affected when I watch a film. And when you watch a scary movie and it's well done it does take you on that roller coaster and you do feel exhausted after but in a great way. I think it's more than entertainment. It's a relief and it's a release, and it's what entertainment and performance is and screenwriting and storytelling is supposed to do. We're supposed to identify and feel something from it."

Del Toro: "I think we live in a regimented world where we don't experience a lot of the emotions we need almost at a mammalian level, and you need a release for this thing. So a horror movie or a roller coaster, you scream and you get the thrill of that in a regular situation."

(Editing by Mike Collett-White)


Yahoo! News

Monday, June 27, 2011

Katie Holmes Braves the "Don't Be Afraid of the Dark" Premiere Solo (Fashion Wire Daily)

Los Angeles – Katie Holmes flew solo to the premiere of her upcoming horror flick "Don't Be Afraid of the Dark" on Sunday, June 26, but she had a surrogate daughter to giggle with on the red carpet. It was the closing night of the 2011 Los Angeles Film Festival, held downtown at the Regal Cinemas L. A. Live outpost, but Holmes' husband Tom Cruise was far away, in Miami shooting the new musical "Rock of Ages," so wasn't along for the gala. Holmes left Suri, their five-year-old fashionista at home, but her on-screen daughter, 11-year-old Bailee Madison, excitedly joined her for the festivities.

"Don't Be Afraid of the Dark" is a remake of the 1973 television movie of the same name, that starred Kim Darby and Jim Hutton, in which a wife is terrorized by mysterious creatures living in her house. As screenwriter Guillermo del Toro, who is best known for his beautiful, scary Oscar-winning film "Pan's Labyrinth," and first-time director Troy Nixey have re-imagined it, this time out it is the child of the house who is visited by those creepy critters.

Del Toro and Nixey, along with producer Mark Johnson, LAFF director Rebecca Yeldham, actors Meaghan Martin, soap-star heartthrob Jordi Vilasuso and del Toro's favorite, star Ron Perlman from the "Hellboy" films that del Toro created, all took the party later into the night once the scary thriller had unspooled. The Closing Night Gala party rocked Club Nokia as the annual film festival celebrated ten successful days of movie madness and the movies that took home the organization's top prizes. Those included "Familiar Ground" as Best Narrative Feature and "Attack the Block," which took home the Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature.

And while no festival best-of awards went to Katie Holmes or "Don't Be Afraid of the Dark," that didn't stop her from drawing a big crowd of fans outside the premiere. She even stopped to sign a few autographs before slipping away, presumably headed home to tuck her little girl into bed.


Yahoo! News

Friday, June 17, 2011

Women in Film honors Annette Bening, Katie Holmes (AP)

By SANDY COHEN, AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen, Ap Entertainment Writer – Fri Jun 17, 5:34 am ET

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. – Annette Bening, Katie Holmes, CBS President Nina Tassler, director Pamela Fryman and cinematographer Reed Morano have been recognized as leaders in their fields by Women in Film.

The nonprofit group honored the women Thursday at its annual Crystal and Lucy awards ceremony in Beverly Hills.

In accepting her award, Bening said she is "entering into a new phase" and "beginning again" and hinted at some interesting projects in the coming year. Holmes thanked her parents, who were in the audience, and husband Tom Cruise, "whose commitment to his work and family inspires me daily."

Tassler oversees primetime, daytime and late-night programming at CBS. Fryman is a director of "How I Met Your Mother." Morano's credits include 2008's "Frozen River."

Elizabeth Taylor was also recognized for her humanitarian efforts. Her granddaughter Naomi Wilding accepted the award.

Women in Film President Cathy Shulman dedicated the evening to Laura Ziskin, the "Spider Man" producer and Stand Up To Cancer co-founder producer who died earlier this week of breast cancer.

"Bridesmaids" star Melissa McCarthy sang and danced as host of the fundraising event at the Beverly Hilton hotel, where Martin Sheen, Geena Davis, Neil Patrick Harris, Elle Fanning and Jenna Elfman were among the celebrity guests.

Women in Film was established in 1973 to help women succeed in the entertainment industry by providing scholarships, classes and other services and support.

___

Online:

www.wif.org


Yahoo! News

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Katie Holmes vs. Louise Redknapp – who wore it best?

Katie Holmes was first to wear this contrast-lapel Stella McCartney tuxedo jacket last week when she attended the premiere for The Decision in NYC. Mrs Tom Cruise added skinny black trousers and cute polka dot heels. She left her silky locks loose and her make up sleek.

Louise Redknapp chose the same jacket for the Nintendo 3DS launch the other night, adding black city shorts, a jersey top and platform court shoes. With fresh make up and sunkissed hair, Louise was positively glowing.

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Louise scores a goal with this look, totes wins

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