Jodie Foster

Rupert Everett: 'Hollywood is Like Al Qaeda'

Rupert Everett, Russell Brand and Colin Firth at the St Trinian's premiere in London, Dec. 10.
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Rupert Everett, Russell Brand and Colin Firth at the St Trinian's premiere in London, Dec. 10.

Rupert Everett isn't too happy with his treatment as an actor in Hollywood.

In an interview with Britain’s The Times, the 48-year-old actor compared Tinseltown to Al Qaeda.

“Hollywood is a place that pretends it’s very liberal but it’s not remotely,” he told the paper.

Mr. Everett told the interviewer that being an openly gay actor has cost him “tons” of starring roles over the years. He also believes that the only reason he was hired to be the voice of Prince Charming in the Shrek franchise is because it’s animated.

Asked whether Jodie Foster’s recent acknowledgement of her lesbian life partner in an acceptance speech indicates a growing tolerance towards homosexuality in the American arm of the film industry, the Importance of Being Earnest star said: “It’s the opposite. She is 45 and she just couldn’t be bothered any more. After a certain age you can be gay [in Hollywood]. Before that it’s not only not good, it’s impossible.”  read more »

Jodie Foster Likes Rubber Chicken, Media Call Her a Lesbian

Sherry Lansing and Jodie Foster.
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Sherry Lansing and Jodie Foster.


This year’s Golden Globe nominees were announced today. And while Joe Wright’s historical romance Atonement cleaned house, garnering 7 nods in this round, there was still room enough for Jodie Foster. After learning of her best actress nomination for her role in Neil Jordan’s The Brave One today, Ms. Foster, 45, apparently reacted with glee. “I can’t wait to have some rubber chicken and listen to the unscripted banter with all of those fine actresses,” she said, according to the AP.

Of course, the operative word here is neither rubber nor chicken; it just has to be actresses. That’s because today is also when CNN.com decided to out the heretofore cagey actress, calling her a lesbian. In the segment, “Jodie Foster thanks gay partner,” (which you can view here), the news outlet’s entertainment correspondent, Kiki King, drew this conclusion from a recent speech Ms. Foster delivered. On Dec. 4, the star of the forthcoming Nim’s Island was given the Sherry Lansing Leadership Award. During her thank-you routine, Ms. Foster acknowledged “my beautiful Cydney, who sticks with me through all the rotten and the bliss.” She was almost certainly referring to her “best friend,” Cydney Bernard.

 

Jodie Foster, Neil Jordan Merge Brilliantly for Tale of Hell

A knockout who will actually knock you out.
Warner Bros. Pictures
A knockout who will actually knock you out.

Neil Jordan’s The Brave One demonstrates once and for all that nobody but nobody can mess around with Jodie Foster and get away with it.  read more »

Do Hollywood Women Matter Yet? Or Just Michelle, Sandra, Jodie and Barbra

January, 2006: Sara Vilkomerson, New York Observer:
"It used to be that starlets opened movies, but those days are over.... Besides Walk the Line, projects with mainstream A-list actresses mostly landed with a resounding thud—or not at all—in 2005.... After the disaster that was 2005 for women, selling the world the next Julia Roberts might be even trickier. The franchise films will continue to sell big—and how many Narnias and X-Men do we have to look forward to?—while the romantic comedy genre languishes without a go-to leading lady, for now. Will it be Rachel? Will it be Reese? Or Keira? Will Dakota Fanning please report to puberty, stat?
September 3, 2006, Lynn Hirschberg, New York Times Magazine:
"In 2005, there was not a single female-driven drama that was a financial blockbuster.... Even romantic comedies, long a showcase for actresses, are being replaced by male-driven comedies like "The 40-Year-Old Virgin" and "Wedding Crashers."
August 28, 2006, Eduardo Porter and Geraldine Fabrikant, New York Times:
In one study....[l]ooking across a sample of more than 2,000 movies exhibited between 1985 and 1996, they found that only seven actors and actresses—Tom Hanks, Michelle Pfeiffer, Sandra Bullock, Jodie Foster, Jim Carrey, Barbra Streisand and Robin Williams—had a positive impact on the box office, mostly in the first few weeks of a film's release.

Slicker Spike Breaks the Bank

Good cop: Denzel Washington in <i>Inside Man</i>.
David Lee
Good cop: Denzel Washington in Inside Man.

Spike Lee’s bank-heist thriller Inside Man has two things going for it: better actors than usu  read more »

Slicker Spike Breaks the Bank

Spike Lee’s bank-heist thriller Inside Man has two things going for it: better actors than usual a  read more »

Blue-Eyed Cillian Murphy Is Delightful Hero(ine) in Pluto

Cillian Murphy, all dolled up in <i>Breakfast on Pluto</i>.
Patrick Redmond
Cillian Murphy, all dolled up in Breakfast on Pluto.

Neil Jordan’s Breakfast on Pluto, from a screenplay by Mr.  read more »

Something Pissy In The Air

True, The Transom doesn't fly much, but it sure spends time with frequent travelers. And having seen the half-great, half-horrible Jodie Foster vehicle "Flightplan" (also known as "Fly Hard") on a whim last night, it's hard not to think that the Association of Professional Flight Attendants and Transport Union Local 556, who are livid about the film's flight attendant depiction, aren't suffering from long-term oxygen deprivation. Please. Those sky bitches should be lucky to be shown as anything other than pyschotic cowgals of the air, unfortunate wranglers of drunks and anxious white people and handsy pilots and a million terroristy-looking folks though they may be. Sure, The Transom literally wouldn't do their job for a million dollars a year— but have you experienced the jarring transition between the Admiral's Lounge and the actual plane recently? At last, flight attendants have shed the reputation of being ditzy air mattresses— only to take a role as the most icky expression of the American superego. — Choire Sicha
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The Spring's Shopping Spree: Couture Sperm and Crochet

A good friend called me this week to cluck about her eggs-and it had nothing to do with Easter.  read more »