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Post by googoo on Oct 20, 2003 0:41:27 GMT
Jude Law to play Brian EpsteinWow...Jude Law has Brian's diaries, from 1959-66 (gee, I wonder why they stop in '66?) I would really like to contact this man! And I haven't seen this picture before... SO happy to have found this
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Post by googoo on Oct 20, 2003 1:09:40 GMT
Actually...Jude must have an earlier set of diaries: He said: "They run from when he was 15 until he was 27, with sketches and odd little notes - very funny. He was quite a personality." www.nme.com/news/104524.htmHeh...I love how "Paul" always calls Brian "the fifth Beatle"
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Post by SunKing on Oct 20, 2003 7:54:31 GMT
Please someone e-mail him about "60IF".
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Post by googoo on Nov 3, 2003 7:59:27 GMT
Jude Law has starred in two films about assumed identity: Being Jude LawIn the highly anticipated film ( The Talented Mr. Ripley), Law plays Dickie Greenleaf, an American golden boy whose lust for life and the means for devouring it - all jazz, Vespas and villas in 50's Italy - is so envied by poor pianist Tom Ripley (Matt Damon) that when he can't have Dickie, he becomes him instead. As Dickie's girlfriend Marge (Gwyneth Paltrow) says, when you're in his favor, "you feel like the sun is shining on you." Indeed, when Dickie disappears, the rest of the movie is lonely without him. Law's flesh and blood were his most desirable traits in his 1997 U.S. film debut, Gattaca. In a future where people are judged by their genes, Law's character, Jerome, is a perfect specimen. But when an "accident" leaves him unable to work, he sells his body - skin, hair, eyelashes, blood, urine - to the DNA-deficient Ethan Hawke ("You could go anywhere with that guy's helix under your arm," the black-market identity coordinator says of Jerome). Hawke must learn to be Law and - just like Damon in Ripley - practices forging his signature. But Law sees the roles as different. "One is about the blood - what's in the veins. The other is about this assumed veneer," he says. "The important theme about Ripley that makes the film so relevant is that we have this tendency to project perfection onto people - desirability, beauty, success and what we think that means. But both Dickie and Jerome are actually far from happy, far from perfect or complete, yet society puts this image upon them. In that way, I saw in both of them the tragedy, the less-than-perfect side. They're both in their kind of perfect hell." He takes a moment to think. "There's a great quote I read in this book by Calvin Trillin, Remembering Denny,that we read for Ripley. It was about a Princetonian, all-American golden boy. It says, 'Sometimes you can be a ticket that has been stamped so many times, there's nothing left.' They've both been stamped to the point of disappearing." SOUND FAMILIAR? If anyone knows how to contact this man, PLEASE, speak up!
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Post by IanSingleton777 on Dec 17, 2003 11:00:16 GMT
does he have a web site? Find out his agent and/or management firm? search the web for one of those "e-mail of the stars" sites, which is suppose to tell you their e-mail addresses...
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Post by Forum Manager on Jan 13, 2004 1:06:35 GMT
ironic that his name is jude
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Post by Perplexed on Jan 13, 2004 6:17:55 GMT
and that a large part of the Torah really is A BOOK OF LAW.
Jude Law = Jewish Law
which is a large basis of English common law, from the days of King Alfred's Book of Doom's.
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Post by Otacon on Jan 27, 2004 21:45:51 GMT
They're laughing at us again
OR
Who ever casted him knows what they are doing
Let's hope it's the latter (maybe there will be clues in the movie, if this is the case...)
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