Sophia Loren is generating red-hot Oscar buzz for her performance in Netflix’s Italian-language drama “The Life Ahead.” The screen legend has earned some of the best reviews of her seven-decade career for her heartbreaking performance as a former prostitute and Holocaust survivor who takes care of children of streetwalkers.
Loren made Oscar history 59 years ago when she became the first performer to receive an Academy Award for a foreign-language film. She took home Best Actress for Vittorio DeSica’s harrowing World War II drama “Two Women,” which was also in Italian. Loren, who also starred with Charlton Heston that year in the lavish epic “El Cid,” had very strong competition when the Oscar nominations were announced in the winter of 1962.
Natalie Wood, who had received a Supporting Actress nomination as a teenager for 1955’s “Rebel Without a Cause,” gave an extraordinary performance as a sensitive teenager living in Kansas...
Loren made Oscar history 59 years ago when she became the first performer to receive an Academy Award for a foreign-language film. She took home Best Actress for Vittorio DeSica’s harrowing World War II drama “Two Women,” which was also in Italian. Loren, who also starred with Charlton Heston that year in the lavish epic “El Cid,” had very strong competition when the Oscar nominations were announced in the winter of 1962.
Natalie Wood, who had received a Supporting Actress nomination as a teenager for 1955’s “Rebel Without a Cause,” gave an extraordinary performance as a sensitive teenager living in Kansas...
- 1/17/2021
- by Susan King
- Gold Derby
My fascination with Audrey Hepburn began in my late childhood. Although I was intrigued by the lithe beauty I had seen in My Fair Lady (a staple in my household growing up) I had never approved of the way that man yelled at her. But one day I went to the video rental store and saw her decked in bright diamonds, holding the longest cigarette holder I had ever seen. No one better yell at her in this one, I hoped. After watching Breakfast at Tiffany’s I devoured Hepburn’s filmography quickly. I couldn’t explain what was this strange hold she had on me, but it remains, to the point where I have a tattoo of her as Holly Golightly on my left upper arm.
The spell she cast on film lovers is evident in her work, but the spell has never been better dissected than in Audrey, the documentary by Helena Coan,...
The spell she cast on film lovers is evident in her work, but the spell has never been better dissected than in Audrey, the documentary by Helena Coan,...
- 1/8/2021
- by Jose Solís
- The Film Stage
Goose, “Captain Marvel” (2019)
Okay, Goose is technically not a cat. Carol Danvers’ orange sidekick is actually a flerken (an alien with massive tentacles hidden inside her mouth), but Goose’s fluffy coat and knack for getting into trouble puts her firmly in the cat category.
Binx, “Hocus Pocus” (1993)
Thackery Binx was just a normal teenage boy in 1693 before he was cursed to live forever in the body of a black cat. But hey, everyone goes through weird phases in their teens.
Cat, “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” (1961)
Let’s make this clear: Holly Golightly does not own this cat. He belongs to nobody and nobody belongs to him. But that doesn’t stop him from playing a pivotal role in the movie, including the tear-jerking final scene.
Jonesy, “Alien” (1979)
This orange tabby was the unofficial mascot of the Uscss Nostromo and one of the few crew members to survive a Xenomorph attack.
Okay, Goose is technically not a cat. Carol Danvers’ orange sidekick is actually a flerken (an alien with massive tentacles hidden inside her mouth), but Goose’s fluffy coat and knack for getting into trouble puts her firmly in the cat category.
Binx, “Hocus Pocus” (1993)
Thackery Binx was just a normal teenage boy in 1693 before he was cursed to live forever in the body of a black cat. But hey, everyone goes through weird phases in their teens.
Cat, “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” (1961)
Let’s make this clear: Holly Golightly does not own this cat. He belongs to nobody and nobody belongs to him. But that doesn’t stop him from playing a pivotal role in the movie, including the tear-jerking final scene.
Jonesy, “Alien” (1979)
This orange tabby was the unofficial mascot of the Uscss Nostromo and one of the few crew members to survive a Xenomorph attack.
- 8/8/2020
- by Kylie Harrington
- The Wrap
It’s shaping up to be a historic weekend in Gotham City (and in Burbank) that starts with the splashy release of Cathy Yan’s Birds of Prey and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn and likely ends with Oscar-night magic for Joaquin Phoenix and Todd Phillips’ Joker.
Yan’s Birds of Prey, much like Joker, puts a premium on over-the-top transformation, although Yan’s movie is about a breakup, not a breakdown. The brash and fizzy underworld adventure stars Margot Robbie as the subversive DC fan-favorite named Harley Quinn, who was introduced on the big screen by Robbie in David Ayer’s Suicide Squad (2016) as the daft but dangerous girlfriend of the Joker (as played by Jared Leto with leering menace).
Robbie stole every scene as Harley and the film did robust business ($747 million worldwide gross) despite sour reviews so Warner Bros. gave the go-ahead for a spinoff...
Yan’s Birds of Prey, much like Joker, puts a premium on over-the-top transformation, although Yan’s movie is about a breakup, not a breakdown. The brash and fizzy underworld adventure stars Margot Robbie as the subversive DC fan-favorite named Harley Quinn, who was introduced on the big screen by Robbie in David Ayer’s Suicide Squad (2016) as the daft but dangerous girlfriend of the Joker (as played by Jared Leto with leering menace).
Robbie stole every scene as Harley and the film did robust business ($747 million worldwide gross) despite sour reviews so Warner Bros. gave the go-ahead for a spinoff...
- 2/7/2020
- by Geoff Boucher
- Deadline Film + TV
by Cláudio Alves
As an obsessive list-maker, to write a top ten for The Film Experience's Year in Review was more of a dream come true than a challenge. As we're in festive times, I decided to give myself a gift, by fusing one obsession with another. Cinema, costume design and list-making all consumed my Christmas Eve afternoon in a haze of sartorial glory. Looking back at the movies of 2019, from opulent period pieces to humble contemporary dramas, I went in search of the year's greatest style icons. Not those of real life, obviously, but the ones who graced the silver screen.
In decades to come, we may look at them as we now look at Darth Vader's sinister countenance or Holly Golightly's Givenchy clad figure. Who knows? More than predicting future icon-status, this is a list of personal favorites, though.
Without further ado, let's celebrate 2019's style icons,...
As an obsessive list-maker, to write a top ten for The Film Experience's Year in Review was more of a dream come true than a challenge. As we're in festive times, I decided to give myself a gift, by fusing one obsession with another. Cinema, costume design and list-making all consumed my Christmas Eve afternoon in a haze of sartorial glory. Looking back at the movies of 2019, from opulent period pieces to humble contemporary dramas, I went in search of the year's greatest style icons. Not those of real life, obviously, but the ones who graced the silver screen.
In decades to come, we may look at them as we now look at Darth Vader's sinister countenance or Holly Golightly's Givenchy clad figure. Who knows? More than predicting future icon-status, this is a list of personal favorites, though.
Without further ado, let's celebrate 2019's style icons,...
- 12/26/2019
- by Cláudio Alves
- FilmExperience
There is no doubt that Hollywood is the movie capital of the Western world. The streets and avenues may not be paved with dreams but there are stars, studios and stories essential to our movie history around every corner.
Capturing the American City on camera, even going so far as to include the city as a character in the films however pretentious that may sound, has long been a feature of urban cinema. The diverse nature of the American city has given rise to many different types of stories, set against many different backdrops, but they are all part of the wide expanse of America’s cinematic heritage.
While L. A. movies have been covered often before, we are here to look at other American cities, the films that were based there, and how their character is captured on the screen.
Las Vegas
The glittering diamond in the rough of...
Capturing the American City on camera, even going so far as to include the city as a character in the films however pretentious that may sound, has long been a feature of urban cinema. The diverse nature of the American city has given rise to many different types of stories, set against many different backdrops, but they are all part of the wide expanse of America’s cinematic heritage.
While L. A. movies have been covered often before, we are here to look at other American cities, the films that were based there, and how their character is captured on the screen.
Las Vegas
The glittering diamond in the rough of...
- 12/15/2019
- by Michael Walsh
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Emilia Clarke has been busy. After eight seasons and nearly a decade spent starring as Daenerys Targaryen on “Game of Thrones,” the four-time Emmy nominee is looking to reset her acting career.
During the show, she had plenty of feature-film side projects, including starring roles as iconic heroine Sarah Connor in “Terminator Genisys” and a key part as Han Solo romance Qi’ra in the standalone Star Wars films “Solo: A Star Wars Story.” Both films were just as demanding as “Thrones,” with significantly less returns, as each proved to be disappointing entries (both critically and in terms of box office take) in two enduring franchises. That’s not how Clarke wants to spend her time anymore.
“For 10 years, I was either on ‘Game of Thrones’ or I was doing a different movie, and if I wasn’t doing a different movie, I was promoting a different movie or I was promoting ‘Game of Thrones,...
During the show, she had plenty of feature-film side projects, including starring roles as iconic heroine Sarah Connor in “Terminator Genisys” and a key part as Han Solo romance Qi’ra in the standalone Star Wars films “Solo: A Star Wars Story.” Both films were just as demanding as “Thrones,” with significantly less returns, as each proved to be disappointing entries (both critically and in terms of box office take) in two enduring franchises. That’s not how Clarke wants to spend her time anymore.
“For 10 years, I was either on ‘Game of Thrones’ or I was doing a different movie, and if I wasn’t doing a different movie, I was promoting a different movie or I was promoting ‘Game of Thrones,...
- 10/31/2019
- by Kate Erbland
- Indiewire
Blake Edwards. Courtesy of Paramount.“[Blake] Edwards has become a stylistic influence in the cinema,” Andrew Sarris would write of the filmmaker in 1968, “And his personality and script dominate Ralph Nelson’s Soldier in the Rain the way Lubitsch’s personality once dominated Cukor’s One Hour With You.” Sarris would dub himself an “Edwardian”in his support of the film director and the inclusion of Edwards in his foundational book, The American Cinema: Directors and Directions 1929–1968, still remains the most serious scholarship on him. Edwards’ distinction in the book included him in “The Far Side of Paradise,” the category that “falls short of Pantheon,” the highest distinction. Edwards would be categorized alongside the likes of Capra, Cukor, Minnelli, Preminger, and Fuller—strong company, but characterized as such for Sarris because there is fragmentation or disruption within their careers. This high distinction by Sarris would have the great film critic come...
- 10/18/2019
- MUBI
The old line you hear about certain authors — he’s as much of a character as anyone in his books! — doesn’t tend to be true even when we say it. Yet in Truman Capote’s case, it’s virtually an understatement. No character he created on the page ever gave off quite the magnetic damaged resonance of his own.
He told the tale of his own youth, more or less, in “Other Voices, Other Rooms” (1948), the autobiographical novel that put Capote — and his homosexuality — on the map. Holly Golightly, from “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” (1958), is an indelibly chic vagabond-waif, but the main reason we still talk about her is the 1961 movie version that cast Audrey Hepburn as a so-toned-down-she-was-barely-even-the-same-character version of Holly. Capote singlehandedly invented the New Journalism with “In Cold Blood” (1966), but as revolutionary as that book was, the disappointment of it, to me, has always been that...
He told the tale of his own youth, more or less, in “Other Voices, Other Rooms” (1948), the autobiographical novel that put Capote — and his homosexuality — on the map. Holly Golightly, from “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” (1958), is an indelibly chic vagabond-waif, but the main reason we still talk about her is the 1961 movie version that cast Audrey Hepburn as a so-toned-down-she-was-barely-even-the-same-character version of Holly. Capote singlehandedly invented the New Journalism with “In Cold Blood” (1966), but as revolutionary as that book was, the disappointment of it, to me, has always been that...
- 9/10/2019
- by Owen Gleiberman
- Variety Film + TV
A handsome newcomer triggers fallout and existential crisis in this wisecracking adaptation of Emma Jane Unsworth’s novel
Emma Jane Unsworth has adapted her 2014 novel for the screen and the resulting movie, directed by the Australian film-maker Sophie Hyde, is flawed but interesting, kept upright by the steely core of Holliday Grainger’s performance. It’s an unexpectedly subdued film about the mortality of friendships and relationships, and there is also, as with so many other semi-autobiographical fictions, a subsidiary pleasure in wondering which elements are based on truth.
Laura (Grainger) and Tyler are best friends who live in Dublin; they’re single, they love going out for cocktails and have developed a kind of sub-Holly Golightly private language about the ironic sophistication of it all. Laura is a would-be writer who has been working on a novel for almost 10 years and Tyler has a dead-end job. The approaching...
Emma Jane Unsworth has adapted her 2014 novel for the screen and the resulting movie, directed by the Australian film-maker Sophie Hyde, is flawed but interesting, kept upright by the steely core of Holliday Grainger’s performance. It’s an unexpectedly subdued film about the mortality of friendships and relationships, and there is also, as with so many other semi-autobiographical fictions, a subsidiary pleasure in wondering which elements are based on truth.
Laura (Grainger) and Tyler are best friends who live in Dublin; they’re single, they love going out for cocktails and have developed a kind of sub-Holly Golightly private language about the ironic sophistication of it all. Laura is a would-be writer who has been working on a novel for almost 10 years and Tyler has a dead-end job. The approaching...
- 8/1/2019
- by Peter Bradshaw
- The Guardian - Film News
Alec Bojalad Mar 21, 2019
Game of Thrones star Emilia Clarke has penned an essay revealing that she suffered two brain aneurysms early in the show's run.
Game of Thrones Season 8 is set to premiere in a scant few weeks. In a new essay from one of the show's stars, Emilia Clarke, the Daenerys Targaryen actress writes that it's something of a miracle that she is still around to see it.
Clarke has penned a first person account of her time on one of television's biggest ever shows for The New Yorker. And in the essay, she reveals that she suffered not one, but two brain aneurysms in the early years of the show. An aneurysm is a weakened area in an artery that could rupture and lead to life-threatening bleeding.
Following Game of Thrones Season 1, Clarke writes that she was stressed with the suddenly expectations for the role she found herself in.
Game of Thrones star Emilia Clarke has penned an essay revealing that she suffered two brain aneurysms early in the show's run.
Game of Thrones Season 8 is set to premiere in a scant few weeks. In a new essay from one of the show's stars, Emilia Clarke, the Daenerys Targaryen actress writes that it's something of a miracle that she is still around to see it.
Clarke has penned a first person account of her time on one of television's biggest ever shows for The New Yorker. And in the essay, she reveals that she suffered not one, but two brain aneurysms in the early years of the show. An aneurysm is a weakened area in an artery that could rupture and lead to life-threatening bleeding.
Following Game of Thrones Season 1, Clarke writes that she was stressed with the suddenly expectations for the role she found herself in.
- 3/22/2019
- Den of Geek
“Game of Thrones” star Emilia Clarke revealed that she suffered from two brain aneurysms that nearly took her life in the early years of the blockbuster HBO series.
Clarke spoke about her health scare for the first time in a personal essay published in the New Yorker on Thursday morning. Just before she assumed her role as Daenerys Targaryen on the first season of “Game of Thrones” in 2011, the actress noticed a “shooting, stabbing, constricting pain” in her head during a workout with her trainer. Rushed to the hospital, she had an Mri scan that showed an aneurysm requiring brain surgery. The then-24-year-old actress underwent a two-week recovery period, during which she couldn’t remember her own name, a result of a condition called aphasia.
“Nonsense words tumbled out of my mouth and I went into a blind panic. I’d never experienced fear like that — a sense of doom closing in,...
Clarke spoke about her health scare for the first time in a personal essay published in the New Yorker on Thursday morning. Just before she assumed her role as Daenerys Targaryen on the first season of “Game of Thrones” in 2011, the actress noticed a “shooting, stabbing, constricting pain” in her head during a workout with her trainer. Rushed to the hospital, she had an Mri scan that showed an aneurysm requiring brain surgery. The then-24-year-old actress underwent a two-week recovery period, during which she couldn’t remember her own name, a result of a condition called aphasia.
“Nonsense words tumbled out of my mouth and I went into a blind panic. I’d never experienced fear like that — a sense of doom closing in,...
- 3/21/2019
- by Jordan Moreau
- Variety Film + TV
David Crow Jan 11, 2019
We examine what the Bird Box ending and its apocalyptic world mean for the characters' futures, as well as our own.
This article contains major Bird Box spoilers.
Who would want to raise a child in a world like this? It’s a cynicism that is stated by many in every generation—often right before parenthood grabs them—and one that nevertheless feels most applicable to a time when climate change and an increasingly destructive divisiveness seeps into the culture. It is also very much the heart of Bird Box, Netflix and Susanne Bier’s apocalyptic melodrama with more on its mind than seeing folks off themselves in grisly ways.
Indeed, the surprise feel-bad holiday smash has already been viewed by more than 50 million Netflix subscribers around the globe, and that number is likely to only increase as the weeks pass and the streaming service has to...
We examine what the Bird Box ending and its apocalyptic world mean for the characters' futures, as well as our own.
This article contains major Bird Box spoilers.
Who would want to raise a child in a world like this? It’s a cynicism that is stated by many in every generation—often right before parenthood grabs them—and one that nevertheless feels most applicable to a time when climate change and an increasingly destructive divisiveness seeps into the culture. It is also very much the heart of Bird Box, Netflix and Susanne Bier’s apocalyptic melodrama with more on its mind than seeing folks off themselves in grisly ways.
Indeed, the surprise feel-bad holiday smash has already been viewed by more than 50 million Netflix subscribers around the globe, and that number is likely to only increase as the weeks pass and the streaming service has to...
- 1/3/2019
- Den of Geek
If you've dressed up as every Audrey Hepburn character for Halloween, from Holly Golightly in Breakfast at Tiffany's to Roman Holiday's Ann, we've got fantastic news for you - a drama series centered around the Oscar-winning actress's life is currently in the works.
Wildside, the production company that gave us Jude Law's The Young Pope and the critically-acclaimed My Brilliant Friend, is developing the series based on a treatment written by Hepburn's son Luca Dotti and writer Luigi Spinola. While details about the series are pretty scarce, Wildside has revealed that the show will follow Hepburn's "formative years." Dotti and Spinola have worked together in the past, coauthoring Audrey At Home, Memories of My Mother's Kitchen, a biography and cookbook combination that followed Hepburn's life from her childhood in Holland to her life as a wife and mother. It also details her philanthropy work and travels for Unicef. The New York Times...
Wildside, the production company that gave us Jude Law's The Young Pope and the critically-acclaimed My Brilliant Friend, is developing the series based on a treatment written by Hepburn's son Luca Dotti and writer Luigi Spinola. While details about the series are pretty scarce, Wildside has revealed that the show will follow Hepburn's "formative years." Dotti and Spinola have worked together in the past, coauthoring Audrey At Home, Memories of My Mother's Kitchen, a biography and cookbook combination that followed Hepburn's life from her childhood in Holland to her life as a wife and mother. It also details her philanthropy work and travels for Unicef. The New York Times...
- 12/16/2018
- by Mekishana Pierre
- Popsugar.com
Take a look at Emmy nominated actress Emilia Clarke aka 'Daenerys Targaryen' in the medieval fantasy series "Game Of Thrones", from a recent pictorial in The Hollywood Reporter:
In 2010, Clarke was cast as 'Daenerys Targaryen' in the HBO series "Game of Thrones", based on the book series "A Song of Ice and Fire" by George R. R. Martin.
In 2013, she was nominated for 'Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series' at the '65th Primetime Emmy Awards'. She has appeared in all broadcast seasons, and returns next year for Season 8.
In 2012, Clarke appeared in "Spike Island". From March to April 2013, Clarke played 'Holly Golightly' in a Broadway production of 'Breakfast at Tiffany's'. In 2013, she also co-starred in the feature "Dom Hemingway". Clarke was cast as 'Sarah Connor' in 2015's "Terminator Genisys". She will also play the lead as 'Nurse Verena', in the up-coming movie "Voice from the Stone...
In 2010, Clarke was cast as 'Daenerys Targaryen' in the HBO series "Game of Thrones", based on the book series "A Song of Ice and Fire" by George R. R. Martin.
In 2013, she was nominated for 'Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series' at the '65th Primetime Emmy Awards'. She has appeared in all broadcast seasons, and returns next year for Season 8.
In 2012, Clarke appeared in "Spike Island". From March to April 2013, Clarke played 'Holly Golightly' in a Broadway production of 'Breakfast at Tiffany's'. In 2013, she also co-starred in the feature "Dom Hemingway". Clarke was cast as 'Sarah Connor' in 2015's "Terminator Genisys". She will also play the lead as 'Nurse Verena', in the up-coming movie "Voice from the Stone...
- 10/16/2018
- by Michael Stevens
- SneakPeek
Some of the most iconic hair fashion statements of all time are movie hair. Cher Horowitz in “Clueless.” Holly Golightly in “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.” David Bowie’s hair in “Labyrinth.” The list goes on. And then there’s the not so good hair moments in the movies. Arguably the most famous of those is having its 20th anniversary this week, the infamous “hair gel” scene from “There’s Something About Mary.” In honor of that classic and unfortunate hair gag, we decided to look at some of the other times that things in movies got a little hairy.
“There’s Something About Mary”
Why does this scene work as well as it does? The gag isn’t especially plausible, but it taps into that crippling fear that the world somehow knows the dirty deed you’ve just done in the privacy of your own bathroom. And Cameron Diaz’s hair,...
“There’s Something About Mary”
Why does this scene work as well as it does? The gag isn’t especially plausible, but it taps into that crippling fear that the world somehow knows the dirty deed you’ve just done in the privacy of your own bathroom. And Cameron Diaz’s hair,...
- 7/11/2018
- by Brian Welk
- The Wrap
Take a look at images, plus footage of actress Emilia Clarke aka 'Daenerys Targaryen' from HBO's "Game Of Thrones", in "Vogue"(Australia) magazine:
Clarke is best known for her role as 'Daenerys Targaryen' in the HBO series "Game of Thrones"...
...receiving two 'Emmy Award' nominations...
...for 'Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series' in 2013 and 2015.
Clarke also made her Broadway debut in a production of "Breakfast at Tiffany's" as 'Holly Golightly', March 2013...
...followed by her star turn as 'Sarah Connor' in the feature film "Terminator Genisys".
Clarke was named "Esquire" magazine's 'Sexiest Woman Alive' in 2015.
Click the images to enlarge and Sneak Peek Emilia Clarke for "Vogue"...
Clarke is best known for her role as 'Daenerys Targaryen' in the HBO series "Game of Thrones"...
...receiving two 'Emmy Award' nominations...
...for 'Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series' in 2013 and 2015.
Clarke also made her Broadway debut in a production of "Breakfast at Tiffany's" as 'Holly Golightly', March 2013...
...followed by her star turn as 'Sarah Connor' in the feature film "Terminator Genisys".
Clarke was named "Esquire" magazine's 'Sexiest Woman Alive' in 2015.
Click the images to enlarge and Sneak Peek Emilia Clarke for "Vogue"...
- 2/22/2018
- by Michael Stevens
- SneakPeek
Filmgoers still want some romance up on the big screen in the local cinemas. As is evident in this weekend’s box office, Fifty Shades Freed, the last film in the ‘Fifty Shades’ trilogy, pushed the franchise over the $1 billion mark globally with a number one debut bringing in $98.1 million in overseas and $38.8 million in North America for a combined worldwide total of $136.9 million.
Need a film to watch with your sweetheart this Valentine’s Day?
While this genre isn’t everyone’s cup of tea, there’s no denying the emotional impact of these scenes that make them noteworthy. If you’re still searching for that special movie, here’s a sampling of scenes from romantic films.
Nothing says enduring love better than the story of Braveheart and the Scot who gave his body and soul to his country and woman he loved. William gives Muron the thistle she...
Need a film to watch with your sweetheart this Valentine’s Day?
While this genre isn’t everyone’s cup of tea, there’s no denying the emotional impact of these scenes that make them noteworthy. If you’re still searching for that special movie, here’s a sampling of scenes from romantic films.
Nothing says enduring love better than the story of Braveheart and the Scot who gave his body and soul to his country and woman he loved. William gives Muron the thistle she...
- 2/14/2018
- by Movie Geeks
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
October marks the 50th anniversary of the beloved film -- especially by fashaholics -- Breakfast at Tiffany's, and Rizzoli is publishing the gorgeous book Breakfast at Tiffany's: The Official 50th Anniversary Companion.
It's amazing to think of all the anecdotes about this movie we didn't know -- it describes how the script came together from Truman Capote's novella, how the film was cast (Capote wanted Marilyn Monroe to play Holly Golightly, who in his book is an obvious call girl), all about its famed New York locations and then all the details of its opening on Oct....
It's amazing to think of all the anecdotes about this movie we didn't know -- it describes how the script came together from Truman Capote's novella, how the film was cast (Capote wanted Marilyn Monroe to play Holly Golightly, who in his book is an obvious call girl), all about its famed New York locations and then all the details of its opening on Oct....
- 10/6/2011
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
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