We need to formally thank whoever made the decision to release Gwyneth Paltrow's cookbook and "Iron Man 3" right around the same time, because it was that single decision that made all these ridiculously pretentious and dumb interviews possible. Can we just take a moment for that, please?All right, now let's see what Gwyneth has to say about eating.On Leonardo DiCaprio's part in her eating habits:"I hung out with Leonardo DiCaprio when I moved to New York. He was vegetarian and he'd talk about how dirty meat is and how bad factory farming is. I haven't eaten red meat in 20 years and although Leo's not totally responsible he definitely planted a seed."On the horrors of eating in England:"I've lived in England for 10 years and the accent is the most beautiful in the world, except for how you pronounce pasta as pass-ta instead of pah-sta.
- 4/22/2013
- by tooFab Staff
- TooFab
The Adjustment Bureau; Hall Pass; Fair Game; The Resident
With the mechanical porn of Michael Bay's Transformers: Dark of the Moon creating an horrendous traffic jam in cinemas, what better time for sci-fi fans to stay at home and watch something rather more rewarding on DVD? Based on a typically paranoid short story by Philip K Dick, The Adjustment Bureau (2011, Universal, 12) is a light-footed, fantastical whimsy pitched somewhere between the head-scrambling brilliance of Christopher Nolan's Inception and the Twilight Zone silliness of Richard Kelly's The Box. Matt Damon plays the upcoming politician whose chance encounter with a glamorous beauty (Emily Blunt) causes him to turn his back on fate on the eve of a crucial election. As it turns out, "fate" is actually managed and manipulated by a group of shadowy men in film noir hats who zip around New York city via a Doctor Who-style maze of magic doors,...
With the mechanical porn of Michael Bay's Transformers: Dark of the Moon creating an horrendous traffic jam in cinemas, what better time for sci-fi fans to stay at home and watch something rather more rewarding on DVD? Based on a typically paranoid short story by Philip K Dick, The Adjustment Bureau (2011, Universal, 12) is a light-footed, fantastical whimsy pitched somewhere between the head-scrambling brilliance of Christopher Nolan's Inception and the Twilight Zone silliness of Richard Kelly's The Box. Matt Damon plays the upcoming politician whose chance encounter with a glamorous beauty (Emily Blunt) causes him to turn his back on fate on the eve of a crucial election. As it turns out, "fate" is actually managed and manipulated by a group of shadowy men in film noir hats who zip around New York city via a Doctor Who-style maze of magic doors,...
- 7/2/2011
- by Mark Kermode
- The Guardian - Film News
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