INCLUDE_DATA

Archive for the Category » lily cole «

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010 | Author: Administrator

Source: IMP

Congratulations for winning the IMP Awards Best Movie Poster Of The Year for the gorgeous Lily Cole Poster.

Aside from being immediately eye-catching with the beautiful image of Lily Cole, the poster is overflowing with unique images that mesh together perfectly. Each time you look at it you notice something new. It does a perfect job of capturing the imagination and unique vision of Terry Gilliam.

RSS Feed Add to Technorati Favorites Add to Del.icio.us Stumble It! Submit to Slashdot Submit to Buzz! Digg It!
© Submit to Any - jjtcomputing.co.uk

Friday, January 15th, 2010 | Author: Administrator

Terry Gilliam and Lily Cole attend the red carpet premier of The Imaginarium Of Doctor Parnassus at Roppongi Hills in Tokyo on January 14, 2910.

RSS Feed Add to Technorati Favorites Add to Del.icio.us Stumble It! Submit to Slashdot Submit to Buzz! Digg It!
© Submit to Any - jjtcomputing.co.uk

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010 | Author: Administrator

Be sure to read this terrific interview with Lily Cole of The Imaginarium Of Doctor Parnassus on Sundance.com. CLICK HERE

RSS Feed Add to Technorati Favorites Add to Del.icio.us Stumble It! Submit to Slashdot Submit to Buzz! Digg It!
© Submit to Any - jjtcomputing.co.uk

Wednesday, January 06th, 2010 | Author: Administrator

Below is a list of the cities in Germany where Terry Gilliam’s The Imaginarium Of Doctor Parnassus will be playing. CLICK HERE for the link to the individual theaters showing the film in these cities! Book your tickets TODAY!

Bochum
Bonn
Borken
Braunschweig
Bremen
Bremerhaven
Bruchsal
Burghausen
Cham
Chemnitz
Coburg
Coesfeld
Crailsheim
Darmstadt
Deggendorf
Delmenhorst
Dettelbach
Diepholz
Dormagen
Dorsten
Dortmund
Dresden
Düren
Düsseldorf
Ellwangen (Jagst)
Elmshorn
Emden
Erding
Erfurt
Erlangen
Essen
Esslingen am Neckar
Euskirchen
Frankfurt (Oder)
Frankfurt am Main
Freiburg
Friedrichshafen
Fritzlar
Fulda
Garbsen
Gelsenkirchen
Gera
Göppingen
Görlitz
Goslar
Göttingen
Greifswald
Gronau (Westf.)
Günthersdorf
Gütersloh
Hachenburg
Hagen
Halberstadt
Halle (Saale)
Hamburg
Hamm (Westf.)
Hannover
Hechingen
Heidelberg
Heidenheim
Heilbronn
Herne
Hildesheim
Hof
Hürth
Husum
Ingolstadt
Iserlohn
Jena
Kaiserslautern
Karlsruhe
Kassel
Kaufbeuren
Kiel
Koblenz
Köln
Konstanz
Krefeld
Landau in der Pfalz
Landsberg am Lech
Landshut
Leipzig
Leverkusen
Lich
Lingen
Lippstadt
Lörrach
Lübeck
Lüdenscheid
Ludwigsburg
Ludwigshafen
Lüneburg
Magdeburg
Mainz
Mannheim
Marburg
Meiningen
Memmingen
Mengen
Meppen
Mönchengladbach
Mülheim an der Ruhr
München
Münster
Neckarsulm
Neu-Ulm
Neubrandenburg
Neuburg a.d. Donau
Neufahrn b.Freising
Neumünster
Neunkirchen/Saar
Nidderau
Nürnberg
Nürtingen
Oberhausen
Offenbach am Main
Offenburg
Oldenburg (Oldb)
Olpe
Osnabrück
Paderborn
Passau
Pfaffenhofen a.d. Ilm
Pforzheim
Pirmasens
Plattling
Plauen
Potsdam
Ravensburg
Recklinghausen
Regensburg
Reutlingen
Rheine
Rosenheim
Rostock
Rudolstadt
Saarbrücken
Saarlouis
Salzgitter
Schifferstadt
Schorndorf
Schwäbisch Hall
Schweinfurt
Schwerin
Siegen
Sindelfingen
Singen (Hohentwiel)
Solingen
Speyer
Starnberg
Stralsund
Stuttgart
Suhl
Sulzbach (Taunus)
Trier
Troisdorf
Tuttlingen
Überlingen
Ulm
Verden (Aller)
Viernheim
Villingen-Schwenningen
Vilsbiburg
Waiblingen
Waldkraiburg
Walldorf
Walsrode
Weimar
Wesel
Westerland
Wiesbaden
Wildau
Wilhelmshaven
Wolfenbüttel
Wolfsburg
Wuppertal
Würzburg
Zweibrücken
Zwickau

Berlin
Köln
München
Bremen
Köln
Hamburg
München

RSS Feed Add to Technorati Favorites Add to Del.icio.us Stumble It! Submit to Slashdot Submit to Buzz! Digg It!
© Submit to Any - jjtcomputing.co.uk

Sunday, January 03rd, 2010 | Author: Administrator

Source: Cinematical

By Jenni Miller

I’ve already seen my first movie of 2010, and it was The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus. It was definitely a great choice to kick off a new year! I’m not a huge Terry Gilliam fan either way, so I went in fairly unbiased but excited for a good yarn, dazzling images, and some good-to-great performances. Besides, I can’t resist Tom Waits as the Devil. I was immensely impressed with all of the above, especially the eerily seamless way that Terry Gilliam and co-writer Charles McKeown managed to adjust the story and direction to fit the untimely death of Heath Ledger during filming with help from actors Johnny Depp, Jude Law, and Colin Farrell, who stepped in to play Tony in different scenes. Naturally, Christopher Plummer was great, and Andrew Garfield (Boy A, the Red Riding trilogy) was also wonderful as the smitten Anton. And this was definitely Verne Troyer’s best role yet.

I have a confession to make, though. Although I adore Lily Cole’s heart-shaped face and flame-red hair on the runway, and her costumes looked fantastic, I had no idea that I would actually enjoy her performance. Or that her part would be more than just a pretty plot device to continue the banter between Mr. Nick (Waits) and Parnassus. I was horribly wrong. I know she was in St. Trinian’s, which, despite my best intentions, I had to turn off after half an hour, and I haven’t caught Rage, so I didn’t know much else about her other than her more visible assets. As the kids say, my bad.

But as Valentina, she is feisty, chafing at the bell-dangling bracelet around her ankle that her father makes her wear, and not afraid to give her old man a good tongue-lashing when he’s in his cups and telling her half-truths. She lives a strange, sort of Dickensian existence on the fringes of society with her little family – including Anton (Garfield) and Percy (Troyer), as well as her dad – and like any smart young girl dying to escape the everyday, sometimes she acts like a brat, and sometimes she makes unwise decisions. In the end, Valentina is a real girl, and it takes a real actress to bring her to life. So cheers to you, Lily Cole.

That’s my most recent happy discovery.

RSS Feed Add to Technorati Favorites Add to Del.icio.us Stumble It! Submit to Slashdot Submit to Buzz! Digg It!
© Submit to Any - jjtcomputing.co.uk

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009 | Author: Administrator

Source: POP EATER

‘The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus’ was just supposed to be the latest entry into director Terry Gilliam’s long line of beautiful yet bizarre filmmaking canon — the story of a traveling band of street performers that carry with them a very real gateway into the the world of a person’s imagination. Lily Cole — who plays Valentina, the love interest of Heath Ledger’s Tony — sat down with PopEater at her hotel on the Upper East Side of Manhattan to acknowledge that, yes, she understands that the film is now saddled with an unfortunate stigma: Heath Ledger’s last film. Cole discusses the challenges, obviously emotional at times, associated with the production of this film and reveals the dynamics of separating oneself from her model-turned-actress journey.

You’re already well known in the world of modeling. Is there a difference that comes from fame from modeling as opposed to fame from acting? Do you feel you’re almost starting over?

I don’t even know how it operates, to be honest. Obviously this experience of promoting a film and talking and doing interviews is new to me. I’ve always avoided interviews when I’ve been modeling and I would still be avoiding them (laughs) if I had the option.

Well, don’t I feel special…

No, no… I mean more the personal basis: Selling magazines to promote the film and that kind of aspect of it. Also, I’m quite happy to be here and I’m proud of it. It’s a different beast to my experience of being in a high profile industry, previously, where you do the work and that’s it.

READ MORE HERE

RSS Feed Add to Technorati Favorites Add to Del.icio.us Stumble It! Submit to Slashdot Submit to Buzz! Digg It!
© Submit to Any - jjtcomputing.co.uk

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009 | Author: Administrator

Source: Film Review Online

By Judy Sloane

In Terry Gilliam’s modern-day fantasy, Lily Cole plays Valentina, the daughter of Doctor Parnassus (Christopher Plummer), who performs in his traveling theatre troupe. What she doesn’t know is that her father has gambled away her life to the devil, Mr Nick (Tom Waits) who has arrived to claim his gift – on her 16th birthday.

But Valentina has fallen in love with Tony (Heath Ledger), a charming outsider with motives of his own, who has joined the troupe.

During the shoot of the movie Heath Ledger died suddenly of an accidental overdose of prescription pills, throwing the production into chaos. But Terry Gilliam decided to continue the movie, cleverly using the magical mirror in the film to turn Tony into different personas, played out by Johnny Depp, Colin Farrell and Jude Law.

I spoke with Lily about the movie and her impressions of Heath Ledger in his last performance.

What was the set of the stage like; it looked like a big pop-up book?

It’s exactly how it looks. It wasn’t fake at all, it was a real wagon they built that really could move and the stage really did fall out, and it was quite extraordinary. It was really, really well crafted.
Did you have any mishaps on it?

Yes, how did you know? The first week of rehearsals I fell twice on the same day, once because the mirror had a lip on the bottom, like a gap, and I had to run through it and I tripped on that and fell down. Which was a good fall, I got up, was fine, and carried on. Five minutes later we were rehearsing a scene where the guy is chasing me around the theatre before we run off and I punch him, and the stage was probably five or six feet off the ground, and they hadn’t put any enforcement around the sides yet and there was a blinding light coming up from the floor and I just went completely over the edge of the stage and onto the ground. I was quite lucky that I didn’t break my back or something.
When Heath passed on what was going back to this film like – how hard was that?

Predominantly I wanted to finish it, we’d had a month to absorb that situation which by no means is enough time to get over it, but it was a month to think about finishing the film and once Terry decided he wanted to finish it, it really wasn’t up to me. Then he decided to do it with three actors, who were going to definitely be friends of Heath’s, to come in and fill those three parts, and that felt to me like a really, really beautiful gesture from those three men, and seemed to carry the spirit that everyone else had in trying to finish the film. Heath had really touched us all and we really loved him and he really worked incredibly hard in the first half of it and we were hoping to try and salvage his performance and salvage the film, and it was in that spirit that everyone was unified in trying to finish it.
What was it like working with Heath as an actor?

Really special, I feel very, very lucky. He was a very generous human being, very talented, really intensely gave 100% of himself to every circumstance, and I think all of those qualities are reflected in him as a actor. He was unending in his energy to contribute to his character, to contribute to the film, to try and support me and the other actors to do their best performances, and it was a very special experience.
Your next film is also a fantasy, albeit a much darker one, can you talk a little bit about Phantasmagoria and your role in it?

Phantasmagoria still has no production date. It’s a film about Lewis Carroll and Alice Little from Alice in Wonderland, the girl that Lewis Carroll wrote the book for. The premise of it therefore is non-fiction, but it gets very surreal and fictionalized and I’m due supposedly, if it ever happens, to play Alice and Marilyn Manson was going to play Lewis Carroll, and it kind of explores that relationship.
Does the Tim Burton, Johnny Depp movie have a lot to do with whether or not yours will go?

I have no idea how that works. It seems to me that sometimes if a certain theme is successful, it helps other movies get made, for example the Twilight and vampire explosion, or perhaps they can stifle it, I don’t really know dynamically how that works.
How does Marilyn Manson differ as a film maker from Terry Gilliam?

I think Manson’s a lot darker, the vision he’s setting out to make, he calls it a psychological Horror film. Whereas Terry’s is much more family friendly, I guess that’s the key distinction.
Because of the behind-the-scenes story with this film, it will direct the audience’s attention in a certain direction, is there something about the film you’re afraid people will overlook – how would you like people to see the movie?

I had a journalist who said that she’d taken her son to see it. He didn’t know the story line, he didn’t know about the death of Heath, and she wanted to see how he would enjoy it with that kind of innocence, and he loved it.

It’s an impossible thing to ask me because I do know that back story, but I would hope that people could try and push that aside for the two hours they’re watching it, to just see it as a story and a story that we all kind of set out to tell.

RSS Feed Add to Technorati Favorites Add to Del.icio.us Stumble It! Submit to Slashdot Submit to Buzz! Digg It!
© Submit to Any - jjtcomputing.co.uk

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009 | Author: Administrator

Lily Cole and Verne Troyer will talk about The Imaginarium Of Doctor Parnassus tonight, December 21 on the Reelzchannel on dierectv 7 and 10:30 pm

RSS Feed Add to Technorati Favorites Add to Del.icio.us Stumble It! Submit to Slashdot Submit to Buzz! Digg It!
© Submit to Any - jjtcomputing.co.uk

Tuesday, December 01st, 2009 | Author: Administrator

Source: Movieline

WRITTEN BY KYLE BUCHANAN | 29 NOV 2009, 5:30 PM


Photo Credit: Chris Jackson/Getty Images

Terry Gilliam often likes to shoot his actors using a fisheye lens, but with new find Lily Cole, that embellishment is hardly needed. Cole’s wide-set features and exotic beauty landed her high-profile modeling work on the pages of Vogue and the runways of Chanel and Versace, but Cole says her biggest career challenge was playing the ingenue Valentina opposite Heath Ledger and Christopher Plummer in Gilliam’s upcoming fantasy The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus.

Earlier this month, I spoke to the 21-year-old about her transition from model to actress, the tragedy of Ledger’s death while filming, and the challenge of suddenly acting opposite the new actors (Colon Farrell, Johnny Depp, and Jude Law) called in to finish out Ledger’s role.

Acting obviously has a lot in common with modeling, but how similar do you find directors and photographers to be?
I think there are a lot of parallels. Like you said, there are some similarities between modeling and acting — actually, models often just end up being models because they’re picked randomly, you know? Whereas photographer and directors have both chosen those paths. I know a lot of photographers who’ve played with making short films because there’s often a storytelling element to taking photographs. That seems only to be expanded by a director’s work.

Have you ever been challenged by a photographer the way you were by Terry Gilliam?
No, and that’s not to belittle any of the photographers I’ve worked with. I’ve worked with some really brilliant photographers, but I find that it’s usually their vision that’s put on me, and there’s a small amount I can do with that to role-play and achieve what they’re going after. It’s more their creative vision and I’m just a part of it — which is true to a certain extent with Terry’s work, but Terry is obviously much more demanding of me to contribute and create a character, as he would be with all his actors.

Obviously it’s nice to be asked to contribute more, but is it daunting at the same time?
For sure. I’ve always gone after fears and tried to stifle them by doing them. It is daunting, but it’s more rewarding.

What was challenging about it?
From the outset, being amongst really talented and experienced actors and being expected to do something and create someone. Whatever it was that was expected of me, doing it opposite those actors was daunting.

They’re all so different in technique! Christopher Plummer, Heath Ledger, Verne Troyer, a newcomer like Andrew Garfield…what did you learn from seeing all those different approached to acting thrown together?
The thing with actors is that I don’t know any of their techniques! If they have them, they’re probably secretly locked away. [Laughs] Actually, even though they all have very different skills, there is a similar element of being present, of being real. They know their character and then they play with it, and that’s something that I aspire with practice to also do. It started off that I was very intimidated and I wasn’t quite sure who Valentina was. The whole enterprise seemed very nerve-wracking to me, but with time, I had to be her. These characters all emerged and my character emerged, and suddenly it became a lot more playful.

How did you know you were succeeding? Could you tell whether you were impressing Terry?
I never knew if I was succeeding or not. Sometimes he would let me know, but not often. I only really think I might have succeeded now afterwards, when he’ll respond positively to what I did. During the process, I was constantly walking on a high rope.

Why were you so nervous?
Once we started filming, I actually got more comfortable with it. The concept of going into the movie was what I was intimidated by — sitting in a read-through with Christopher and Heath and Terry and Verne and Andrew. They sat there with more experience and gravitas and ideas, and suddenly I realized how new I was and what a big role I had. I didn’t know what Terry expected of me, but I had to try and live up to something, you know? It was more the proposal that intimidated me than the actuality.

Were you intimidated by Terry’s reputation as this mythic, larger-than-life figure?
Well, he really is the myth and larger-than-life figure! I didn’t know that much about him going in — I’d seen two of his films, Brazil and Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. He is what he seems, I think. His film are such an honest vomiting of what he is, and there’s no compromise or people-pleasing going on. There’s his crazy imagination and thoughtful mind being spread like butter on toast in a film.

You worked on the film both before and after Heath’s death. Can you tell me how the mood on the set changed?
It was an immense, unescapable sadness that hung like a cloud over the whole second half of filming. It was also beautifully unifying: everyone was very affected by what happened and had come back together a month later committed to trying to finish the film, but very aware of this really wonderful human being we’d lost. It was somber, but it was also like a family reunited. Once the ball started rolling and [Johnny Depp, Jude Law, and Colin Farrell] committed, it was going. The machine was churning and the wheels was turning.

How did you recalibrate the performance you’d planned to give opposite Heath as Tony when suddenly you’ve got Colin Farrell in front of you in that role?
It was certainly very weird, and made me really upset the first day because I hadn’t really thought about that dynamic at all. I just kind of did it and it was only afterward, after I’d pushed aside the reality of the situation to reenact my relationship with Tony, that there was the undeniable reality that the only reason I was doing that is because a friend of mine has died. It was such a difficult reasoning to come to grips with. Colin was so lovely, and he was in a strange situation himself, coming in to do that.

ssus-lily-cole-as-v1.jpg

In modeling, the clothes really help inform your method, and Valentina’s look is really quite interesting. Did those types of things help you get in character?
I think it did, but it’s hard to know because I didn’t play the film in contrast wearing tracksuit bottoms. [Laughs] There’s gypsy clothes, dirt on your face, scruffy hair…it gives you a certain feeling, it’s playful and dirty.

You’re obviously going to be acting in the future, but how much does modeling still figure into things?
Not so much. I’ve stopped the last few years, although I’ll do the little thing here and there where it’s appropriate. Most of my time is dedicated to finishing my degree, which I’m halfway through in England .

How do you juggle looking for film work when you’re trying to finish your degree?
I don’t know! [Laughs] I did my A-levels in England when I was modeling a lot, and it was a juggling act. I’m in term times in Cambridge for six months of the year, so that gives me six months to play with. I’m interested in learning and I find it valuable. I found going to school when I was modeling very grounding. It’s really kept my perspective on bigger things in my life.

RSS Feed Add to Technorati Favorites Add to Del.icio.us Stumble It! Submit to Slashdot Submit to Buzz! Digg It!
© Submit to Any - jjtcomputing.co.uk

Saturday, November 28th, 2009 | Author: Administrator

Source: http://community.livejournal.com/doctorparnassus/8227.html

My thanks to H. You rock!

Be sure to check out this great article with Terry Gilliam and Lily Cole as they talk about The Imaginarium Of Doctor Parnassus.

RSS Feed Add to Technorati Favorites Add to Del.icio.us Stumble It! Submit to Slashdot Submit to Buzz! Digg It!
© Submit to Any - jjtcomputing.co.uk