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05 Sep 10:18

15 Movies We Can't Wait to See at the Toronto Film Festival

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The Toronto Film Festival is a movie lover's smorgasbord, and an Oscar pundit's most essential stop: It's where Ben Affleck brought last year's Best Picture winner, Argo, and it's where we predicted that Jennifer Lawrence would win the Oscar the day after Silver Linings Playbook had its gangbusters world premiere. Will this year's lineup prove to be a similar awards season bellwether? Time will tell, but one thing's for sure: There is a seriously impressive-looking array of movies slotted in the TIFF lineup this year, and your Vulture editors will be checking out all of them and reporting back to you. Here are fifteen of the films we're most excited about; ten of them are Toronto world premieres, while five debuted this past week at film festivals in Venice or Telluride.

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August: Osage County
We heard your grumbling when the first trailer for this family dramedy — starring Julia Roberts and Meryl Streep — seemed to capture none of the scabrousness of the Pulitzer-winning play it's based on. But we remain hopeful: Playwright Tracy Letts adapted his own work to the screen for director John Wells, and you've got two Oscar-winning actresses in the lead roles plus two more nominees in the supporting cast (Juliette Lewis and Abigail Breslin). Toss in the Toronto Film Festival's most ubiquitous actor, Benedict Cumberbatch, and we can't help but get excited for this one.

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Under the Skin
As a director, Jonathan Glazer has adopted a pace that makes Alfonso Cuaron seem like Woody Allen: Since the one-two punch of Sexy Beast and the exquisiteBirth, Glazer has spent nine years working in commercials and music videos without a new big-screen credit to his name. Suffice it to say, then, that we're incredibly curious about Glazer's return to form in Under the Skin, not least because it stars Scarlett Johansson as a sexually rapacious alien. Yeah, you read that right.

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12 Years a Slave
Django Unchained took a more irreverent look at slavery last season, but 12 Years a Slave should act as a bracing corrective: Word out of Telluride is that the latest drama from director Steve McQueen (Shame) is his best film yet. Chiwetel Ejiofor stars as a free Northerner who's tricked and sold into Southern slavery; as the titular twelve years of servitude play out, Ejiofor must summon all his strength to survive. Michael Fassbender, Brad Pitt, and Benedict Cumberbatch (of course) fill out the supporting cast.

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Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom
Harvey Weinstein likes to tout his Nelson Mandela biopic by saying, "This is not your daddy's HBO version of Mandela," and indeed, Idris Elba's depiction of the South African political icon seems brawnier than you might expect from a movie about a freedom fighter. Will this be the film that finally makes Elba a certified A-lister? Here's hoping.

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The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby
Jessica Chastain is no slouch. The Oscar-nominated actress regularly tops our tally of the year's most prolific thespians, and The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby is further proof of her frequency: It's actually two separate films, one told from the perspective of Chastain and the other from her husband James McAvoy as their marriage begins to fall apart. They'll both be screening in Toronto as a work in progress.

Source
05 Sep 10:12

"You don’t give up on the people you love."

“You don’t give up on the people you love.”

- Chuck Bass
04 Sep 13:40

How Mutya, Keisha and Siobhan – aka the Sugababes – became MKS

Joana Morgado

desculpem mas serão Sugababes 4ever -_-

The Sugababes had instant success as one of Britain's most turbulent girl groups. Now Mutya, Keisha and Siobhán are back as MKS. Is it really all peace and love?
By: Tom Lamont



They don't like it when I call them the original Sugababes. "I hate that word, 'original'," says Mutya Buena.

"Hate it!" says Siobhán Donaghy, pulling in her shoulders.

"It makes us feel," says Keisha Buchanan, "150 years old."



What else to call them? Back in 2000 this trio debuted as the Sugababes with a bristling single, "Overload", that established them as one of the most interesting acts in millennial pop – teenagers, scowlers, minimalist dancers. The band began a piecemeal breakup almost immediately, Siobhán quitting within a year and Mutya departing in 2005. Substitutes were brought in around Keisha, who was herself replaced in 2009. A group called the Sugababes still exists, made up of new-Siobhán (Heidi Range), new-Mutya (Amelle Berrabah) and new-Keisha (Jade Ewan); an album from them is due next year. Meanwhile, the founding three have reunited to make an album of their own. A first single, "Flatline", comes out this month. They call themselves Mutya Keisha Siobhan – or MKS – now.

Well it's clearer than the alternatives I was going to suggest – the Sugadults, Splendababes, Sugababes 5.0. Or would that be a legal infringement?

"It doesn't matter who owns the name now," says Siobhán. "That's paperwork." (I take this to mean their rivals have formal rights.)

"Our music speaks for us," says Mutya.

Siobhán: "Only the three of us can write and sing the way we do."

Mutya: "Unfortunately they [the other Sugababes] don't have our vocals. Well, fortunately, actually."

Keisha: "Why are we even talking about them?"

"Everyone calls us the Sugababes anyway," says Mutya.

"Like last night on Old Compton Street," says Siobhán.

"Well, there you go."




They draw attention when they go out, Mutya Keisha Siobhan. Pop allows no definitive endings (Ginger Spice rejoined and Gary and Robbie made up; Backstreet, just this year, came back), but even so – this lot? Pals again? We meet for lunch in a London restaurant and strangers keep looming up from nearby tables to take pictures on cameraphones. I can almost hear the O, the M, the G being tapped in for Twitter dispersal. It's the original Sugababes! And I thought they couldn't stand each other…

Consider the she-said-she-said, at least as it played out in the press. Keisha once told Touch magazine that Siobhán had ditched the band, back in 2001, by going to the loo and never coming back. "After three hours we thought she's been in there a bit long," Keisha was quoted as saying, and this repeatable bit of fiction tailed Siobhán for a decade. Siobhán, for her part, once admitted: "We just didn't get on." When Mutya left the band Keisha said: "There was love there but no friendship". Siobhán, in 2004: "It was all hate, hate, hate."



"Well, our mums always got on," Siobhán tells me, over lunch.

"Even when we didn't," says Keisha.

Of mean statements in the past, they agree, "It's important we remember we were kids."

And that toilet thing, says Mutya, "was quite funny."

Siobhán: "But it kind of gets old after a while."

Mutya: "Yeah."

Keisha has always been wonderfully blunt about the pop industry – beneath the sparkle that relentless push for profit. Whenever a Sugababe left and was replaced Keisha would say something like, "That's business." Was it a business decision to reform? "No," she says. "For us it was deeply personal. Let me use the right words: people didn't allow us to enjoy the experience the first time round."

They've earned enough money, Keisha says, not to have to do this. "I own five houses. Mutya has two properties. Siobhán bought a house a year ago. Making money is amazing, absolutely, but for us the idea of getting back together was more: 'Why don't we try again, and this time enjoy it?'"



During a recent fortnight in Los Angles, a trip to write and record with the producer Dev Hynes (aka Lightspeed Champion), they made time to visit theme parks. They went clubbing in Koreatown. An experiment with an over-the-counter energy supplement left them aching and hungover and wondering if they'd inadvertently taken speed to hike Runyon Canyon.



"To be honest we were pissed half the time," admits Siobhán. She is dressed in hugging jeans, boots, a patterned scarf over a vest. Her basic daily uniform, says Siobhán – and a contrast to Keisha's all-over black bodysuit and aviator jacket. At a time when Keisha was still a Sugababe and Mutya was intermittently touring her solo stuff, Siobhán had re-entered civilian life. From 2006 to 2011 she worked as a model booker in London. Sometimes clients would ask: that Siobhán? But mostly "there wasn't enough time. The phone would be ringing. Paris every season. It was a nice job."

Siobhán has a pleasant, maternal manner – "I miss my girls," she says of the young models she worked with – and it seems obvious to me she's returning to music from a more conventional world. Keisha's different. She arrives at lunch a little flustered, admitting she's not properly familiar, at 28, with public transport. A decade as a Sugababe always meant a driver, but this time the band are "taking control", "no external forces", "organising shoots, preparing our own diary", "girl-powering this shit up". And that sometimes means getting the tube.

"I'm hands-on with the business side of things," says Keisha. "Siobhán does the creative side. And Mutya…"

Mutya's the balance, explains Siobhán.

"What it is," says Mutya, "is there's no point me trying to butt in. I know Siobhán knows her business. I know Keisha knows her business. And I know that eventually they'll tell me about it."




Mutya is like nobody I've met. She wears a leather jacket studded with metal spikes and is smothered in tattoos including one, in Latin, that she can no longer remember how to translate. She's a tireless boob adjuster, "double-Ds, dropping now." She has a habit of inserting strange punctuation into her speech, so that one sentence might unexpectedly become three.

"Jesus! I'm about to fall in. The water."

It is a week after our lunch and the girls have gathered by the River Colne in Hertfordshire for the Observer Magazine's shoot. Wearing white dresses they step off the grassy bank and into the water, wading up to their waists to have dramatic pictures taken. Siobhán is professional about the discomfort and helps to pat beasties from her bandmates' clothes. Keisha, surrounded by the floating tails of her dress, makes an unprintable joke about menstrual cycles. Mutya is struggling – her bra is waterlogged and there's pond-life everywhere. "What is it? I don't even. Fish! Dragonfly! For the love! If I get eaten by the Loch Ness monster I swear. To god."

After a 40-minute dip the girls change their sodden outfits and take a break in the sun. Siobhán mentions her wedding, earlier in the year, to a sailor, Chris. Keisha's boyfriend, a football agent, ferries in a McDonald's. Mutya talks about her daughter, eight-year-old Tahlia. "Look at them," says Siobhán's sister, Róisin, on hand to do make-up, "married and mums".



Soon Mutya and Keisha are reminiscing about how this all started. "My parents called me from downstairs," says Keisha. "I was probably about six. They said, 'Look, look!'"

A talent show hosted by Michael Barrymore was on TV. "And there was this little Filipino girl, with long hair down her back, singing 'The Greatest Love of All'. I'd never seen anyone as small as me sing like that."
Not long afterwards Keisha's family, Jamaican northwest Londoners, moved home and Keisha started at a new primary school. "She was the first person I saw, hair on the carpet – the Filipino girl from Barrymore." Mutya became a friend and they belted out "Feed the World" together in the playground.

Siobhán was another talented child, a champion Irish dancer at five. A manager introduced the young redhead to Mutya and as young teens the pair were taken to sing for label bosses, Siobhán doing the high notes, Mutya the low. When Keisha joined them they almost became "The Q-tees" but one of their managers (this was a growing crowd) suggested a different name. "We ate a lot of junk food and sweets," Keisha recalls, and by the time they were recording together, "we were the Sugar Babes. With an 'r'. I think we had to change that, legally, because Sugar Babes was a porn site or something."

Sugababes at age 16 and 17, standing against a wall 'When people saw pound signs, everything changed. They took away our teenage years': (from left) Keisha, age 16; Siobhán, 17, and Mutya, 16.

Keisha still has their old demo CDs. "Adorable, very 90s… I stopped listening to them after a while. I would think: 'Oh, if we were just left to it, we could have done so much.'" A deal with London Records came in 1998 and One Touch, their first album, was released in November 2000. They think back on those years with some fondness and a lot of scepticism. All-night sessions in the studio. Piercings. Snuck cigarettes. "Harmless stuff, really. And there was a lot of shit going on around us," says Siobhán. "We never did any of it." They left school at 14, to be home-tutored. Their retinue grew.

Keisha: "At one point we had eight managers."

Siobhán: "We were like: who are these people?"

Mutya: "One did this, one did that, one picked his nose."

Keisha: "Our parents were there, but…"

Mutya: "They got pushed to the side."

Keisha: "My mum doesn't know what she was thinking, now. I think we will each always have a…"

Siobhán: "A grudge."

The girls have discussed it and believe they were manipulated.

Keisha: "They'd whisper to one of us: 'You should go solo.' And to another of us: 'So-and-so doesn't like you.'"

Siobhán: "Who would do that to young girls? We thought it was a creative environment and everyone was having fun. When people saw pound signs, everything changed. That was the taking away of our teenage years, for me."




By the spring of 2001 Siobhán wanted out. She felt isolated by the tutoring ("I was in the year above the other two so I had to take lessons on my own") and depressed – possibly a side effect of taking medication for acne. On tour in Australia she told her managers she was leaving and flew home. A press release went out announcing that Siobhán had a kidney infection ("Disgusting, they didn't even call me") and within a week her replacement, Heidi, had been signed.

Mutya left in 2005 to spend more time with her daughter. Neither she nor Siobhán have particularly fond memories of trying for solo careers. Siobhán: "I think we both did it out of necessity rather than want. All you've ever known is music. And there's the question of education. What are you going to go and do?"

Siobhán released two records, the first a No 117 flop but the second, Ghosts, a critical hit ("I won't better it"). Mutya put out an album of her own, Real Girl, in 2007 and Keisha plowed on with the Sugababes. In 2007 there was another UK No 1 single, "About You Now", the Sugababes' sixth, and then in 2009 Keisha tweeted: "It was not my choice to leave."

She says she's legally constrained from discussing her departure from the Sugababes, although "it was a pack of shite, basically, their reasons for me not being in the group any more. I believe that truth always comes out in the end. And karma…"

Mutya: "Karma's a bitch."

Keisha: "That's just a universal rule."


They might have drifted back together earlier. "I saw you both at a birthday party," remembers Siobhán. "We had a chat, to clear the air, but it was in a nightclub, the timing wasn't right." One day Keisha saw Mutya on TV again; not with Barrymore this time, but Lorraine Kelly. The TV host joked that the original Sugababes should reform. Keisha (at home) and Mutya (on set) thought: Hmm. There were talks that stalled in 2009 and then in 2011 the three of them spent a day in a studio together. "The [vocal] blend was ridiculous. So we continued."



Before a comeback gig in London in January they had to watch old YouTube videos of themselves to relearn their routines. Mutya brought along eight-year-old Tahlia for support. Siobhán's family were there, and Keisha's mum. "They hadn't seen each other for years. It was emotional." At one point Keisha tried to explain the tortured history of the Sugababes to Tahlia. "She was like, 'I don't understand!' I was like, 'Look. There were many, many, many members, yeah?'"

It's time for more photographs in the river. While the girls clamber back into the chilly water, I listen to their new album. It's polished, very good in parts, a surprising seam of electropop along with the expected, hook-y R&B. One track has this plea: "Let me stay pals again." The line is Mutya's and that funny syntax makes me think she might have written it, too. As a sentiment, anyway, it makes sense.

The girls told me over lunch they expect this second run together to be a long one. "We definitely want to establish a body of work… It might never end!" Wasn't there a risk of them going through it all again, I asked, only to repeat the same mistakes? Siobhán answered. "Yeah," she said. "But that's sort of life, isn't it?"

In the murky water Siobhán leads a teetering line of original Sugababes away from the bank. Keisha chats about birthday plans. Siobhán picks pond weed from their dresses. And Mutya maintains a running commentary, talking to the water, to the sky, to anyone who'll listen.

"Go! Away! Fish!... Oh, shit me... Fish!… Tadpoles!... I'm standing on, like, a cliff?... There are little worms up and down my legs and I've got no knickers on."



_____

Source

& pictures from Google

I want them to make it past the first album so bad. Mutya is amazing and candid and I love her for it. Good to see them just enjoying themselves. TAGS??!
04 Sep 10:34

When I get a seat in the morning rush hour

by dorasomerville

Thanks to Gary T!

04 Sep 10:11

Luther’s Ruth Wilson on Playing Alice Morgan and Showtime’s The Affair

by Denise Martin

It’s almost as though Ruth Wilson were born to play Alice Morgan, with those arched eyebrows and that natural snarl. Even the Ashford, U.K.–born actress admits a certain ease slipping into the playful-if-serial-killing shoes of Luther’s nemesis turned partner in crime. “She’s a child, a clown, nasty, psycho — you ... More »
    






04 Sep 10:04

Jodie Foster Is Directing an Episode of House of Cards

by Josef Adalian

In Elysium, Jodie Foster plays a ruthless, bloodthirsty bureaucrat who'll stop at nothing to get what she wants. Perhaps she'll channel some of that dark energy into her latest gig: Vulture has learned that Foster will direct a season two episode of Netflix's political thriller House of Cards. While the ... More »
    






04 Sep 10:03

livefastdiechung: Alexa Chung presents Nick Grimshaw with the...

Joana Morgado

NICK <3 <3



livefastdiechung:

Alexa Chung presents Nick Grimshaw with the award for Best Radio Personality at the GQ Men of the Year awards at The Royal Opera House on September 3, 2013 in London, England. 

04 Sep 09:53

Keith Moon, Pete Townshend and Mick Jagger, 1968



Keith Moon, Pete Townshend and Mick Jagger, 1968

03 Sep 17:02

Going to a festival

by dorasomerville

Expectation:

Reality:

03 Sep 12:15

Blake Ritson photographed by Alisa Connan (X)

Joana Morgado

Carrega terça-feira!



Blake Ritson photographed by Alisa Connan (X)

03 Sep 12:11

Benedict Cumberbatch & Edith from Downton Abbey attend Lady Gaga gig

Joana Morgado

não sabia que o Ben e a Liv Tyler coiso <3
lol rumores, é o que dá estar 2 meses desligada do ONTT



They both play slightly uptight characters on their respective shows – Sherlock and Downton Abbey.

But it seems in real-life Benedict Cumberbatch and Laura Carmichael are far from boring as they proved when they attended Lady Gaga’s much talked about Roundhouse show in London on Sunday evening.

The actors, who are both the toast of British talent, appeared to really let their hair down as they chatted away at the bar before the Mother Monster took to the stage.


Benedict, 37, who has been linked to a number of women over the last couple of months, clearly has become a fan of hat wearing since starring as Sherlock Holmes.

Slipping on a baker boy style cap the famous red-head dressed down in a pair brown trousers with a black zip up cardigan and casual trainers – looking a far cry from the dapper appearances he puts on at events.

Laura meanwhile also looked vastly different to her on stage character Lady Edith – showing off a more relaxed style.

The pretty actress wore a pair of dark blue jeans with a white T-shirt and leather jacket, while her hair was worn loose.

Laura and Benedict clearly get along like a house on fire and they were seen laughing away together as they hung around the bar enjoying a few drinks.

Benedict seemed in a particularly good mood and messed around talking selfies of himself and a friend as Laura stood about laughing.

The Star Trek actor is currently believed to be single. For 12 years, he was in an on-off relationship with actress Olivia Poulet, best known for her role as Tory spin doctor Emma Messinger in BBC sitcom The Thick Of It.

Since the break-up, he has been linked with several high-profile women, including Star Trek co-star Alice Eve and Lord Of The Rings actress Liv Tyler.

More recently, he has dated furniture designer Anna Jones, rekindled an old friendship with Russian model and actress Katia Elizarova and has been linked to Charlotte Asprey are leaving a club hand-in-hand with her.

Meanwhile little is known about Laura’s love life.

Gaga was headlining the first night of the month-long iTunes Festival at the famous Camden venue.

The New Yorker opted not to play some of her more well-known songs, in favour of debuting a number of her new tracks from her forthcoming third album Artpop.

But while some of her songs may not have been so well-known her kooky looks were certainly familiar amongst fans.

The 27-year-old singer started her set in ninja-inspired ensemble before switching into a shell bikini top and seaweed encrusted thong- which gave her the chance to show of her derriere.

Die hard fans made themselves known outside the venue, dressing up in typical Gaga fashion, taking inspiration from the singer's most famous get-ups.

And to celebrate her new song Swine, many fans donned pig noses and held up signs that said '#swinefest2013'.

However while Laura and Benedict are clearly fans, having got their hands on the sought-after tickets, they chose not to dress up for the occasion.





Source

03 Sep 12:07

Michelle Dockery and her "friend" enjoy Venice

Joana Morgado

Lady Mary 9 - resto do mundo 0



Her screen character in Downton Abbey has been unlucky in love, but Michelle Dockery looked like she'd hit the jackpot on Saturday when she stepped out in Venice with a mystery man.

The 31-year-old actress is currently in the city for the 70th International Venice Film Festival, where she was the centre of attention earlier this week when she hit the red carpet for an exclusive party hosted by Miu Miu.
Stepping out at the weekend, Michelle looked as if she was ready to soak up some of the historic sights Venice has to offer – but not before an essential trip to Prada.





The couple looked relaxed as they strolled around Piazza San Marco eating ice cream, with her date carrying a small white bag from the luxury designer store.



At one point the hunk draped an arm across her shoulders and planted a tender kiss on her cheek during their afternoon jaunt.

Bonus:

JFC


Where did she find this guy?


Are you kidding me?


This bitch knows the game she's playing.

[Source][2][3][4][5]


Arrivederci losers!

03 Sep 11:48

ISABEL MARANT RESORT 2014

by molly c
Joana Morgado

txii patrão

My favorite looks from Marant's new Resort Collection . . . see them all HERE
Isabel Marant Resort 2014Isabel Marant Resort 2014Isabel Marant Resort 2014Isabel Marant Resort 2014Isabel Marant Resort 2014
03 Sep 11:44

When there's going to be another mini heatwave

by dorasomerville

03 Sep 11:44

When somebody I know is on the same tube as me

by dorasomerville

03 Sep 11:39

Photo

by linelefay




03 Sep 11:05

Ed Westwick & Jessica Szohr Grab Lunch at Jersey Mike's

Joana Morgado

epah não sabia que estes dois ainda rockavam juntos e com o pior aspecto.



Ed Westwick and Jessica Szohr get some sandwiches to go from Jersey Mike’s on Sunday afternoon (September 1) in Hollywood.

The rumored on-again couple have been spotted out and about together frequently over the last couple months. They were seen grabbing groceries with each other last weekend

Ed‘s new film Romeo & Juliet, which stars Hailee Steinfeld and Douglas Booth as the star-crossed lovers, will be hitting theaters on October 11.








JJ
02 Sep 13:47

Photo



02 Sep 13:43

When somebody told me that The OC started 10 years ago!

by dorasomerville
Joana Morgado

confere

02 Sep 13:42

When the server at work goes down

by dorasomerville

Thanks to @jessicachart!

02 Sep 13:36

style-inspo: Stockholm Fashion Week SS 14 Street Style

02 Sep 13:36

Photo



02 Sep 12:08

alexachung: Alexa on her way from NYC to London to promote...

Joana Morgado

Keep cool and carry on



alexachung:

Alexa on her way from NYC to London to promote ‘IT’

02 Sep 11:54

MILEY AND THE MASTERS

by molly c
Thank you BuzzFeed for sharing these art-meets-ugh mashups by jen lewis.

Miley Cyrus Twerks On Famous PaintingsMiley Cyrus Twerks On Famous PaintingsMiley Cyrus Twerks On Famous PaintingsMiley Cyrus Twerks On Famous PaintingsMiley Cyrus Twerks On Famous Paintings
30 Aug 12:23

Leaving work and entering the bar on Friday

by dorasomerville

Thanks to @selenao!

30 Aug 11:56

When I realise that summer's almost over

by dorasomerville
30 Aug 11:15

PARADISE FOUND

by What is Reality Anyway?
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

 One last summer vacation calls for tropical shirts, beach chairs, and umbrellas in your drinks; beer cozies, ice chests, and sunscreen are also recommended.

Illesteva sunglasses, Tommy Bahama shirt, 7 for All Mankind jeans, and Proenza Schouler PS11 bag.
30 Aug 11:14

Paris Fashion Week AW 2013....Karlina

by Vanessa Jackman
Latvian model Karlina Caune, after Louis Vuitton, Paris, March 2013.

Such a fabulous take on the parka/anorak by Thakoon Addition. 

Recreate Karlina's look (kind of):


Mother The Looker skinny jeans, J Brand 8112 Mid Rise Rail jeans, or Citizens of Humanity Avedon ultra skinny jeans

30 Aug 11:08

Stockholm Ink

by The Locals
Joana Morgado

Tudo bom e tudo certo

The Locals in Stockholm
29 Aug 10:23

Trying to fit into skinny jeans

by dorasomerville

Thanks to @LDNfashion!