Showing posts with label Lego. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lego. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 May 2010

Jake Gyllenhaal is here to entertain you!

There's nothing for it - here is Jake Gyllenhaal singing 'Hedgehog Doing Karate: The American Idol Song' with Jimmy Fallon - in bright yellow. As I understand it, American Idol is a docudrama about a group of youngsters who crash land on a Pacific Island With No Name, who have to sing their way out of trouble while avoiding the indigenous polar bears and Simon Cowell and Lord Andrew Lloyd Weber.


Do not attempt to watch this clip without sunglasses, ear plugs and a strong constitution. Whatever would Nizam think?



Jake later recounted his traumatic experience in Century City where, just because he was firing some weapon, he was carted off in handcuffs. It is not known if this was before or after the Stealing the Speedo Incident at the Beverly Center. Jake was banned for life from Century City mall. If he goes anywhere near the place now, he is almost instantly surrounded by security and large crowds. Fortunately, I can attest myself that Jake managed to cause no lasting damage to London's Westfield Centre the other week.



This is another of those days when the GyllenGoodies hurtle thick and fast, tumbling down that Disney Mountain of PoP in an avalanche of golden treasures. With Prince of Persia now just hours away from the screens of North America, it's little surprise that PoP Thursday is every bit as jampacked as PoP Wednesday. So, not knowing where to begin, let's continue with Jake Gyllenhaal on the cover and in the pages of London's free weekly magazine, ShortList - more than enough to brighten up the morning commute.


This is such an interesting and varied interview - you can read it online here or click on these scans. 'Yeah, that’s like my favourite thing ever: the many mispronunciations of the name Gyllenhaal. Gill-en-hale, Gyle-en-hall, Gyle-en-hale… Does it bother you? No, I forgive them. It’s an absurd last name. It’s Swedish.'


'Lance Armstrong said to me, “Just break a sweat once a day.” Break a sweat once a day — and not out of stress — and you’ll stay healthy for the rest of your life. And I think that’s really true. Find something to get your heart-rate up, that’s what I did with this. But it’s good also to get paid to do it. That really helps. '


'[They say you’re a dab hand at woodwork. Is that nonsense?] That is kind of nonsense... I’m going to just set the record straight now. I don’t think I’m that good at woodwork. I do like doing woodwork. But I don’t necessarily think I’m good at it. It’s really hard. [What’s the last thing you made?] The last thing I think I made was a big outdoor dining table for my house. I made one for my mom that’s really great, made from salvaged wood. [Do you put your initials in it so she knows it’s from you?] No, no... My genius is anonymity. [That’s beautiful.] I know, it’s beautiful. You may be eating dinner at a table I made and not know it. I could have made this [taps the table in front of us]…'


'Well, he [Paul Newman] was just the guy who made salad dressings to me. But if he hadn’t been this extraordinary actor, this huge movie star, he still would have been this incredible person. Do you know what I mean? He always exuded that. As a kid, I could feel that. But I don’t think I knew how amazing he was until later on. And he became a real guide.'


On testing for Batman Begins: 'That was the beginning of me going after things that I think that people didn’t assume that I could play. Something like testing for the role of Batman, nobody wanted to see me for that.' [Was it a close-run thing?] I got pretty close. I just pushed and pushed and pushed and tried as hard as I could to get it, because I thought, “Maybe I could do it.” That was me saying, “I’m going to do things that people don’t expect.” The Batman thing was the beginning of that. [Are there any other big movies you missed out on?] These are horrible stories. So many, man. I’ve been acting for 15 years, since I was pretty young, so there have been tons of different things. My flummoxed audition for Dude, Where’s My Car? [You really auditioned for that?] Oh man, I gave such a good audition. Such a bummer. It was so good.'



'[Be serious, because we’re going to print this… I’m serious. Totally serious. I came in and they were like, “We don’t want it to be like Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure, we want it to be different.” I was like, “I got it. I got it.” I’d worked on it. I knew exactly what I was going to do. And I was like [puts on dorky accent], “Dude, where’s my car?” That was the character. That was who I was going to be. And they were like, “That’s great, um, can we try it again, without the accent?” And I was like, “That’s all I’ve got... That was what I’ve got for it.” That was a movie I would have loved to have done.'


World Cup: '[England play USA in their first game. You’ll definitely be watching it?] Yes, I’m going to watch it. I’m thinking I may go to South Africa. Maybe. [Your next movie is called Nailed. Other than the fact it’s about a woman with a nail stuck in her head, can you tell us why we should watch it?] Yeah, there’s a pretty raucous sex scene with me and Jessica Biel. It’s so brilliantly shot, crazy camera moves and a lot of choreography on our parts. That was all from the mind of [Three Kings director] David O Russell. I think it took maybe 40 tries to get right. [Not a bad day in the office...] Say no more.' Much more here, including more bewildering and impenetrable consideration of the Donnie Darko plot.


Another fine interview (conducted at the Dorchester in London) can be found today in Australia's Herald Sun. All of these interviews demonstrate what absolute fun Jake had making Prince of Persia and how its publicity has been a joy (the contrast to Rendition strikes me constantly). 'But when I saw the Lego, well. Most of the kids in my life, they would be like, 'There is a Lego Prince of Persia? This movie is gonna be awesome!' That really made me excited. Some may say an Academy Award nomination is a massive achievement, but I would say my own Prince of Persia Lego man (is bigger)... They had to totally redo the classic Lego mullet to accommodate my hairdo and make a new mould.'


'Normally I'm sitting on a set doing scenes and not being able to move and all I want to do is jump up and run around... So it was as fun to do as it is to watch. That was the movie -- we all went to the desert as a huge group of people and we had a whole lot of fun.'

'Everyone takes things so seriously and I've learnt that the world is a pretty rough place. I think if you have the opportunity to take things less seriously for a moment, well, do it... I'm doing something different not just for my career but for my life. I had the honour of meeting President Obama a little while ago and he said to me, 'It's your job as an entertainer to entertain and make people feel good because we're going through a rough time'. I really took those words of advice to heart. I was like, 'All right, many people do much more important jobs than me, but in terms of my job, that's what I do'. I happen to be at an age where I've taken myself so seriously and I don't really want to take myself as seriously any more. So I decided this film was going to be the jump off point for me. I just want to have fun and see what happens creatively... Now, if someone says to me 'You're going to do what?' I will be, 'I'm going to do it'.'


'The heart of this movie is someone coming to terms with someone who didn't want to get close to people... They don't want to open their heart but in the end they have no choice. These are two people fighting that, as every great love story is about that. But for me, it was about: you don't settle for anything, in life, in a love relationship.'


'Can I just say I love Australians? I have to say that right now. I don't want to group you as 'all Australians' but you're pretty rad. I just worked with (American actor) Michelle Monaghan and her husband (Queenslander Peter White) is Australian. Every Australian that comes in and out of my life is just so great.' I like that.



INTERMISSION - go and put the kettle on or pour yourself another drink. Imagine incidental music - maybe something nice on a harp...


... Jake conducted several interviews in Canada (you can watch another one here) on Tuesday and this article sets the scene a little: 'My abs make me who I am. That and the hair," he laughs wryly before reporters at Toronto's Windsor Arm's hotel. Gyllenhaal jokes. He plays. He talks mischievously about his bad eyesight and downing Gummy Bears (a training no-no) while shooting Disney's sprawling new epic, "Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time." You watch. You listen. And then you ask, "Is this the same guy from "Brokeback Mountain?" Yes, and no.'


'Contrary to popular belief, I like to have a good time... We were out to make a movie where people have a good time... That was our intention. To make a fun, lighthearted movie that was a throwback to the films of Douglas Fairbanks and Errol Flynn but modern at the same time... When I was a kid I loved movies like ‘Indiana Jones.' I think ‘Prince of Persia' can give a whole new generation of kids the same kind of thrill.'



I'm sure we all remember WonderCon, the event that kicked off this Prince of Persia Adventure - today an interview from there has been released: 'here he is, the star of solemn dramas such as "Donnie Darko" and "Brokeback Mountain," in one of the back conference rooms of the Moscone Center looking oddly inconspicuous in a black sweatshirt and blue jeans and feeling a little frustrated that his handlers won't let him out to mingle with the thousands of costumed revelers on the floor. "I've always heard about these events, and I've always wondered what they were like," the 29-year-old Los Angeles native says, sipping a cup of green tea. "This feels like home. This is what it was like every Sunday at the Gyllenhaal house."'


'"I don't ostracize myself from the rest of the world in terms of how much I'm entertained by large-scale movies and how much I love them," he says. "So I thought, you know, I got a lot of attention from the other roles I played. It gave me the opportunity to look around."'

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'"But you've got to trust your instincts. Lives and careers are made out of great successes and great failures and taking risks. I feel like, if you try to sit there listening to what everybody thinks you should do and you're not listening to your own heart, then you're bound not to be living life. So I just went, 'I'm going to go for it.'?"' Read more here.


I do want to congratulate Sir Ben Kingsley for his Hollywood Star unveiled today, in the presence of Jerry Bruckheimer.


In another London interview (Reuters) just released, Jake talks some more about his choice of roles: 'I think it was about time I stopped taking myself so seriously, and I think to learn as an actor and as any artist that there are different facets to what you do.'


'I have been told often that I have a good sense of humor and the slew of movies that I've done, starting with this movie to the movie I just did with Anne Hathaway ("Love and Other Drugs") and then a movie I just did with Duncan Jones ("Source Code") all have incorporated that sense of humor and a sense of fun, and I think a sense of real entertainment. Those were the movies that I loved always when I was a kid. I loved Indiana Jones. There were movies I remember that were told for children or the child-like part of ourselves. Some of them are really dark, some of them are light, I consider this (Prince of Persia) as sort of lighter, but that's what I wanted to do, I wanted to tell a story and be in a story that was great fun.'


'When I was a little younger, and I did start (acting) so young, I think you tend to try and be a little bit more of what you think other people might want or what people might consider to be interesting. And then I think I found that I've just decided to do what I find interesting. That doesn't mean I'm not going to do films that are darker later on.'


'These games haven't been given the respect they deserve in the movie world and I think (producer) Gerry (Bruckheimer) has done that. They (gamers) are tough, and I appreciate that. I come from a tough family. I don't mind tough critics.'


And finally...

Jake Gyllenhaal appeared on ETalk in Toronto in Tuesday. You can see a taster here. As yet, this show hasn't made it online, but stay tuned to WDW because, in the next day or two, there will be an astonishing (and dareIsay 'rad') report by a WDW Correspondent and Adventurer! It is going to be Super Dope!



A reminder that if you want to go and heckle Rob on MovieBrit for his guest review of Prince of Persia, please do! I'm off to do that now myself...

Many thanks to Winterbird for treating me to the ShortList! And thanks to IHJ for continuing their incredible job of keeping us well-fed with videos and pictures.
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Wednesday, 26 May 2010

Jake Gyllenhaal on Jimmy Kimmel Live!

Last night, Jake Gyllenhaal was on Jimmy Kimmel (not quite) Live and, as always when Jake's on this show, you're gonna have a big laugh. But to be serious for a moment... please, please don't let your Mini Lego Jake see this interview - it'll give him serious inadequacy issues and he'll sulk for weeks. Many thanks to IHJ for having this ready for us this morning as we wake up to Jake!




I will be back later as PoP Wednesday continues - there is lots more to come!

Sunday, 2 May 2010

Jake Gyllenhaal out and about in London! Gemma's lego issues and Jake's abs need your vote!

Jake Gyllenhaal is in London! We know this for various tweets, but also because of a fabulous picture of Jake and Matty taken in the Smoke. Many thanks to Matty for the permission to post his pic. Nice jackets!

Tweets have put Jake in Claridges - in shorts (not a dress code one normally associates with this fine Mayfair establishment). At a bar (an environment I understand better). And having brunch in Chelsea. I'd like to point out that in Chelsea one has brunch, here we have brekkie.

Unfortunately for Jake, he arrived here during the May Day Public Holiday which means rain is absolutely guaranteed - if only to convince our visitors that it does nothing but chuck it down in Blighty. That is not true - however, it is true that it always rains the first weekend in May. I realise I'm rambling on about the weather. This is another thing about Britain that is not true. We don't talk about the weather all the time. But we do for quite a lot of the time - particularly when we feel bad because Jake Gyllenhaal is getting a soaking on our shores. Jake's also here during our General Election and I want to apologise to him for that too. This is another thing about Britain that's not true - we don't feel the need to apologise all the time. But we do quite a lot of the time.


Gemma Arterton has been chatting away to the Guardian while being dressed in a bunch of feathers and she's talked about how odd it feels to be in two out of every three blockbusters on our screens this summer. That means lego. 'There's a Lego figurine of me for Prince of Persia, but it looks like Anne Widdecombe – I love it! I can't really think beyond that, I can't think about the size of a film or the merchandise or the budget. I just have to be me in that situation.' I'm not aware that there is Anne Widdicombe (famous and not a little scary UK politician) lego but, if there is, they might put a top on her. Has anyone else noticed how big Jake's swords are in that lego above?

Gemma has no need to think about PoP merchandise. There's none left - I've bought it all.


Obviously Jake is a fine, multi-faceted actor. However, never one to ignore a poll, EW is asking us to decide which abs we are looking forward to most this summer. Clearly I abhor this blatant disregard for Jake's talent and dedication to his craft, but, more to the point, have you voted yet? To be honest, I wasn't even aware that some of these people on the list have abs - Predator, for instance. He's not even a person. Jake is being beaten by the abs of Vampirish people. So please pay the poll a visit.


Yesterday we enjoyed the Spike TV interview with Jake at WonderCon. You can see the whole programme here with Jordan Mechner and Jerry Bruckheimer. However, it's a big file and very slow to upload.

A reminder of the little WDW competition in order to win one of the 3D poster/sticker PoP books. Just email me with the names of the characters of Dastan's father and two brothers in PoP by 9 May.


Includes pictures with thanks from Mattypop39 and Disney, via IHJ.

Tuesday, 20 April 2010

Jake Gyllenhaal and swords, Prince of Persia and phones - and never mind the movie, what about the lego?!

We have a new Prince of Persia poster and I'm sure I'm not alone in wondering if Jake Gyllenhaal should be trusted with those swords. Just look at those sharp edges, wantonly flung asunder while the High Priestess Tamina has only some flotsom fabric and a sultry glare for protection.


We have another event to add to the Prince of Persia release schedule for May and that is a preview of the film on 12 May at a NYC event for Sprint. We have already seen that the iPad has been marketed with a PoP scene and now there is also PoP phone wallpaper. But so far, still no sign of PoPsocks or Dastan Pillows. I'd like to put in a request for some PoP Towels.


Gemma Arterton is interviewed in the new edition of Details magazine and in it she says that she has experienced some bad feeling because her character Tamina does not look like the videogame heroine Farah: 'They want me to go to Comic-Con. It kind of worries me... I've gotten letters telling me I'm not right for the part because I don't look like the girl in the video game! She really is this sex goddess. They've got massively high standards.' No, they just may not realise that Farah is not a human being.



I have come to the conclusion that Prince of Persia has been made and is being released purely as a marketing tool to promote the launch of Prince of Persia: The Lego. As is demonstrated by this amazing trailer for the sets. I feel unworthy - I stuck Dastan on a camel and put a snake in the hand of a baddie and that has been the extent of my lego construction skills. (Is Dastan really pronounced like that?)



Pictures from Disney, via IHJ.

Monday, 19 April 2010

Jake Gyllenhaal thanks his Facebook fans, new PoP pics, and Jake and his 'plastic abs' do their bit for lego

I thought it was Monday. But I must be wrong because we have another Jake Gyllenhaal Facebook video! But this time Jake doesn't answer a specific fan question. Instead he thanks us all for joining the Prince of Persia Facebook fan page community. As if anyone could resist?! Watch it here.


Some people find themselves moved to poetry and art at the sight of a meadow full of spring's first flowers, or at the sight of a young animal, furry and taking its first wobbly steps, or at waves lapping on to a white sandy beach at dusk while majestic turtles bury their eggs - for me, it's simple. Stick Jake Gyllenhaal on a horse and I'll never run short of rhyme or paint. I thank you Disney for the new Prince of Persia publicity stills which are indeed works of art.



Sir Ben looks like such a nice chap...


While it's less than certain that I will be able to move Prince Dastan himself in to my flat, I can at least have Prince Dastan lego and it's good to know that lego has roped in Jake for some publicity and that he has been involved in a voiceover. By the sound of it, Jake recorded his piece in Montreal a couple of Saturdays ago: 'With Jake's busy schedule, it was tough to find the right time slot to record, but as always, we were more than happy to accommodate last minute openings. When we received word a few days ago that Jake could patch in through ISDN from a Montreal studio, we were happy to oblige. The Saturday morning session was a pleasant surprise. The recording went smoothly, and we even finished ahead of schedule.'


'Jake was quite the professional, even staying in character between takes at times! He was very friendly, and kept us all entertained with his playful side comments, (An example of his insight: We should all aspire to the ripped physique and "plastic abs" of his Lego counterpart.) Needless to say, Jake proved to be the perfect Prince of Persia.' The short will be released at the same time as the film. More here. I love how Jake stays in character even when he's lego.


We know from GQs of old that Jake keeps a journal. It therefore seems only right that Lego Jake Dastan does the same thing, as we can see here:



Jordan Mechner's graphic novel Prince of Persia: Before the Sandstorm has now been published. It's available from Amazon and you can read more about it at Jordan's blog.


The Volcano may have vanquished the mighty Iron Man, but Mother Nature has at last accepted my sacrifices and tomorrow the metal birds will again soar across the sky!


Pictures from links and from Disney, thanks to IHJ.

Sunday, 18 April 2010

'Please do not touch the ostrich on set today' - Gemma on JR, Jake Gyllenhaal in action, PoP US premiere and a WDW interlude

Gemma Arterton was on the Jonathan Ross show on Friday night, giving UK TV audiences their first proper look at Jake Gyllenhaal as the Prince of Persia. At last! The trailer on a primetime TV programme, accompanied by some appreciative comments about Jake from the host himself. Here are two videos from Friday's show, which hopefully you can all see. Thanks to Monica for the heads up! Prince of Persia is also getting some attention from the British news network ITN.





Talking of videos... we have our first glimpse of Source Code in action! In this video, you can actually watch the fight sequence that we saw in still pictures the other day. And Jake is such a gentleman - he takes the time to help the guy to his feet after beating him up.



Some fun facts about Prince of Persia have been released and among them:

'Morocco offered 100+-degree Fahrenheit temps during production. Massive, air-conditioned tents were erected at the Lycee Hassan II school in Marrakesh. One, which was the size of a football field, housed wardrobe, hair and makeup for the film's background players. And adjoining tent was built just for washing and drying. It was a mind-blowing 124 degrees on the last day of Moroccan filming (Merzouga Sand Dunes outside of Erfoud). According to Morocco Facilities Manager Gregoire Mouveau, during filming in that country the "Prince of Persia" company consumed 1,114,894 bottles of water.'


'Typical warnings on call sheets in Morocco: 'PLEASE DO NOT TOUCH THE OSTRICH ON SET TODAY' or 'BEWARE – SNAKES & SCORPIONS CAN BE FOUND AT THIS LOCATION UNDER AND AROUND THE ROCKS. BE CAUTIOUS.'

'A local Moroccan was hired to clear the shooting areas in the desert of a vipers and scorpions. Donning a t-shirt emblazoned with "Snake Dude," he was easy to spot.'


'Some 20 different versions of the Dagger which holds the Sands of Time were fabricated for the film — from the "hero" version, made of steel, to latex versions, created for stunt sequences.'

'The moment in which Alfred Molina, as Sheikh Amar, kisses his favorite ostrich on the neck was completely unscripted. "I thought I would either get my eye poked out," notes Molina, "or that I would get away with a funny moment."'



'The exterior set of Alamut, designed by Wolf Kroeger, was constructed around the actual 700-year-old walls of the village of Tamesloht, 20 kilometers southwest of Marrakesh. It required 30 miles of scaffold tubing and 400 tons of plaster, with 350 members of the construction crew. The colorful frescoes and mural paintings which adorn the set were painted in seven weeks. The Alamut Eastern Gate set built at Pinewood Studios' "007 Stage," also designed by Wolf Kroeger, required 3,000 eight-by-four-foot sheets of wood, 70,000 feet of three-by-one inch timber, and 40 tons of casting plaster for moldings. It was constructed in a relatively brief 14 weeks.'


'The character who has the most wardrobe changes is not Tamina, played by the beautiful Gemma Arterton, but Nizam, portrayed by Sir Ben Kingsley.'


You can read more fun facts at Filmgecko. Am I the only one to find a tear in my eye at the thought of the tender relationship between Alfred Molina and his favourite ostrich?


As you can see from the poster below, the US premiere of Prince of Persia now has a time and a place.


A WDW interlude

Good morning to you all! Time to go out and sweep my own share of Icelandic volcano off my car and head out into another beautiful warm, sunny day. Yesterday was the Oxford Folk Festival and Ruby and I took advantage of the sunrays to see more Morris Dancers than anyone should be allowed to see on one day (if I hear any more bells...) before taking a look around some of Oxford's beautiful college gardens.



My Flip got a test ahead of any potential events that may be coming up in May...



We even spotted an ostrich? What on earth is that?


Pictures from links, Disney via IHJ, and Ruby and WDW.

Wednesday, 7 April 2010

Updated: Jake Gyllenhaal talks Source Code for SFX, SFX PoP scans and lego in action!

Update: Hiding within the June SFX is an article on a more SFXy film than prince of Persia - Source Code. In addition to talking some more about about the plot (and his own attitudes to time and death), Jake also says what it was that drew him to Source Code: Duncan Jones. 'He's such an incredible director. Moon was fantastic and Sam Rockwell was amazing in it. That's primary. The story for Source Code, though, is amazing.' Click and the whole interview shall be embiggened.


On with the post!

I hope you're ready for some more Jake Gyllenhaal... First off, apart from telling Latinoreview that the swordfighting was all done with makeup and 'the tan was actually practised over and over and over again', Jake also had some more to say about Source Code. He revealed that it actually has the same plot as the Prince of Persia, just without the dagger.



When asked what the story of Source Code is about, Jake does put his head in his hands - hinting at complications and subtleties in the plotting. 'Oh man!... It's science fiction and it's so good... It has little bits to do with time but it's really about a government programme where they're able to insert somebody into a certain period of time, only for a very short time, and within that period of time they can do it over and over again but only in a very small period of time. It's really hard to explain! But I will tell you one thing - Duncan is incredible and the movie is going to be so good.' Jake also reveals that the filming is almost over.


In a longer version of yesterday's PoPsugar video, Jake talks some more about such things as whether his eastern philosophy studies have helped him in any way to recreat Dastan (one of the strangest questions to date).




Jake also talks about the lego: 'It's great. It's really awesome. In fact, most of the kids I know who've seen that there's a lego actually now think that the movie is cool because there's a lego character that's based on it, so that's great fun!'


These comments of Jake are indeed fortuitous. Because what should be waiting for me in my letter box this evening but my very own Mini Jake! Several things to note - I always remembered lego being bigger and secondly, I have no idea how some of it works (ie, the back sword brace thing). However, I did discover that not only does his head come off (or at least I hope it's supposed to as it does now) but also his mullet comes off to reveal a snarling face on the other side! Perfect. I decided to put him to work so that you can get a good look at him. I wanted an ostrich fighting scene, but I don't have an ostrich. I do have a mallard duck - I'm sure you can hardly see the difference.


In this second picture, with the mighty ostrich vanquished, you can now see Mini Jake's other face.


In these pictures you can also see another goodie from today: the June issue of SFX, hot from the presses and my scanner. Here are the scans, including the preamble pages and, at the end, an advert that shows the two versions of the cover side by side. Much of the interview is with Mike Newell and it's a fascinating insight into filming in heat and dust that Brits may be less accustomed to than Jake. It also shows well Mike's vision for this project that clearly seduced him with the mystery, history, danger and romance of the desert and this exotic Arabian Knights world.

In one section, Mike and Jerry Bruckheimer discuss the selection of Jake (and not a Middle Eastern actor) for the role. Jerry comments: 'Jake has a following and hopefully we'll get his fans to come see the movie.'


Jake: 'Normally in videogame adaptations we see characters do incredible things that we know are not possible and in this movie none of that ever happens. He does things that are seemingly impossible but might be possible. I think it's similar to things Chris Nolan does with the Batman stuff. Batman's doing those things too, but there's a reality to the situation.'










Includes images from SFX, scans by WDW and stunning action lego pictures. No ostrich was hurt during the filming of this post.