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Old 03-14-2008, 12:31 PM
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What would his mother say?

Ryan Gosling has an Oscar-nominated talent for playing killers, sociopaths and other damaged people. He tells Matt Mueller why he is very happy to be a Hollywood misfit

Friday March 14, 2008
The Guardian



'As soon as you hit a certain budget, you have to justify all of your choices to a committee' - Ryan Gosling. Photograph: Marcel Hartmann/Corbis



When Ryan Gosling's mother, Donna, sat down with her son to watch his first leading role in film - as the ferocious Jewish neo-Nazi in The Believer - she lasted only 10 minutes before bursting into tears and locking herself in the bathroom. Watching her son so plausibly embody a desolate soul who feels nothing but furious contempt for his own heritage, she felt that she'd failed him and that he was channelling his own emotions. It took Gosling an hour to coax her out.



</IMG>
Seven years later, their relationship has progressed to the stage where Gosling can take home a life-size sex doll every night and sleep with it in his mother's basement outside Toronto without her batting an eyelid, which is what happened during the making of the comedy Lars and the Real Girl. "My poor mother, she doesn't ask questions any more," Gosling says. "She just says, 'Oh yeah, sex-doll movie. It's great!' She's a really supportive mom."


In a filmography that started off idiosyncratically and hasn't changed yet, Gosling has specialised in portraying damaged individuals - from the sociopathic teen killer in Murder By Numbers to his Oscar-nominated turn as a crack-addicted school teacher in Half Nelson. Lars Lindstrom is the least threatening character he's ever played. In Craig Gillespie's comedy-fable, Lindstrom is a small-town introvert who orders a sex doll on the internet and parades her around town as his girlfriend, Bianca. Lars fancifully introduces Bianca as a religious missionary who doesn't believe in sex before marriage, and the film landed a PG-13 rating in America, which tells you everything you need to know about its resolute chastity.
"This film is not so far-fetched," Gosling says. "First of all, it happens. There's a huge community of guys out there that have these dolls, and one aspect of the relationship is sexual; but they also have real emotional connections to them. One guy is a hang glider and he takes his doll to watch him hang glide so that he has company. It's fascinating. Kids do it all the time. When a kid loves their teddy bear, he loves it. It doesn't love him back, but that doesn't matter, and if he loses it, it's heartbreaking."

Those murky corners where pain, discord and ambiguity are rife have always attracted Gosling. As a child, acting offered him an escape from small-town bullies, who bashed him for being different (he was raised as a Mormon, and his mother home-schooled him for a year).
If you attempt to draw any link between his own life and the characters he plays, he's quick to bristle. "Come on, doesn't everybody feel like an outsider? I mean, we all do, man. We all feel like Lars. We all have trouble connecting. It's like those drugs that they sell on TV now for anxiety - they basically describe everybody. Lars has the same qualities as I do, and I think as everybody does: trouble communicating who you think you are and relating that to who you are and people's perceptions of who you are. It's difficult to be a person."

You wonder how long Gosling will stay in low-budget indie films before Hollywood swallows him up. It's not for lack of trying: it was almost shocking to witness Gosling turn up in last year's glossy, cat-and-mouse thriller Fracture, opposite Anthony Hopkins. "Fracture was Anthony Hopkins," Gosling says. "I would work with him on anything and that was my opportunity. OK, so you make certain compromises, but you get to watch Anthony Hopkins up close for four months and see how he does it. And that was just as important an experience for me as doing an independent film and getting to do whatever I want."

Last year, he signed up for The Lovely Bones, Peter Jackson's adaptation of Alice Sebold's bestselling novel. Gosling was due to play the grieving father of a murdered 14-year-old girl, only to be dismissed two days before production started. The first time I met him, in Toronto in early September, he was weeks away from heading off to Philadelphia for The Lovely Bones shoot. As much effort as he'd put into ageing himself for the role, with added bulk and a thick, well-tended beard, he was still surprised at having been cast.

"They called me, and I just couldn't see myself as the father of this girl, you know?" says Gosling, who was just 26 when Jackson hired him. "I called Peter and said, 'You must be nuts. I love the story, but me as the dad? You're crazy.' And they were like, 'That's the way that we see it.' So who was I to argue because they want the parents to be young?"

When he reported for duty, it didn't take long for him and Jackson to realise he wasn't a good fit (Mark Wahlberg replaced him). "It was always an issue for me. I always felt too young for the role. It's psychological, I guess, but for me that just felt impossible. We did everything we could to get it to that point, but at the end of the day, I couldn't accept it. Within myself, I just didn't feel right."
Does that mean it was his decision to leave? "No, it was mutual. I mean, it wasn't dramatic, it just became clear that it would be better with someone else. I feel like it's a better movie with Mark Wahlberg in it. You have to know what you can't do, too. The problem is, when you're just starting out, you're trying to convince everybody that you can do anything, because you need a job. You train yourself to think that way. And then when you get to a point where you don't have to hustle for jobs any more, you have to sort of reprogram yourself and think, 'Well, what can't I do?' Because the truth is that they'll catch you. They'll put you in anything."
Will the experience make him reassess how he approaches offers? "Yeah, I think so. It was nice to be believed in that much, but it was also an important realisation for me: not to let your ego get involved. It's OK to be too young for a role."

Hollywood never looks kindly on actors who lose jobs, no matter what the true cause, and the New York Post declared in its gossip column that Jackson was alarmed by the actor's cantankerousness about his wardrobe. But it's a rare actor who can resist the industry's compulsion to fence him in, and Gosling has succeeded longer than most. It was fortunate for him that The Believer was his first leading role, after proving that the small, prickly stories are there for actors willing to take the risk. He insists that the only pressure he has, he puts on himself, "living up to my own expectations in the ways I would deal with the opportunities I've always wanted".

He is working on the cautionary love story Blue Valentine, another low-budget independent movie by a first-time film-maker, about "the domestic life of a man and a woman, which to me is the most interesting dynamic there is". Michelle Williams was to play the female lead, although she's since put herself on indefinite sabbatical following Heath Ledger's death. He's also been involved in All Good Things (directed by Andrew Jarecki, also making his first fictional feature-length film), a period story that will cast Gosling as a wealthy real-estate scion whose poor girlfriend (Kirsten Dunst) goes missing. It's not a coincidence that half of Gosling's 10-film output has been with first-timers. "There's something about working with them that makes you feel like, whether the movie's any good or not, you're working on something special. If you work with a film-maker who's done a lot of movies or has had success, it's different. There's less at stake. It's like, it could work or not work - it doesn't really matter."

More crucially, on low-budget projects no one can force Gosling to do anything he doesn't want to. "Cost is directly related to freedom," he says. "As long as you keep something under a certain number, people don't really care what you do with it. But as soon as you hit a certain budget, you have a lot of people wanting to know exactly why you're wearing those pants and exactly why you're talking that way or being that way, and you have to justify all of your choices to a committee. And they're not really things you can defend. Ultimately, you're just doing them because it feels right - and when you're working on something with a bigger budget, that's not a good enough answer. You have to back it up with charts and graphs, and at that point, your character loses life." · Lars and the Real Girl is released next Fri 21

What would his mother say? | | guardian.co.uk Arts
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Old 03-14-2008, 12:33 PM
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Old 03-14-2008, 11:14 PM
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Old 03-15-2008, 12:15 PM
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Ryan Gosling discovers pneumatic charms in Lars and the Real Girl
In his new film Ryan Gosling falls in love with a sex doll. Will the part blow up in his face?





Kevin Maher



Just how “method” is Ryan Gosling? The 27-year-old actor and Oscar-nominated star of Half Nelson and The Notebook pushed actorly intensity to the limits for his new movie, Lars and the Real Girl, in which he plays a sweetly inhibited office worker who falls for a silicon sex doll. It's a performance balanced precipitously between comedy and tragedy and, to make it credible, the method supremo piled on an extra 20lb (9kg), lived in his character's garage and... “That's just bull**** man!” interrupts Gosling, scoffing broadly in the Toronto hotel bar where he is finishing a heavy day of movie promotion. “I'm not a ********** method actor. When I was shooting Lars, nobody would talk to me for the first two weeks! I finally found out that the word on set was that I was a hardcore method actor. People said �You gotta call him Lars and you can't look him in the eye.' I was, like, �This is such bull****!'”

Gosling's face is an amiable grimace of self-deprecation, buttressed by self-confidence. He is aware, you suspect, that he is consistently described by Hollywood insiders and awards juries as the brightest actor of his generation - the new Ed Norton/Paul Newman/James Dean. “Acting's just a job for me, and it's certainly not art,” he adds, with the casual disdain of a Brando or an Olivier. He admits, nonetheless, that Lars and the Real Girl required more actorly craft than most, just to pull it back from the salacious, the creepy or the plain absurd.

“I saw it as a Ken Loach-type movie about a guy who met a girl, fell in love and found out that they had similar hopes and dreams,” he says. The film, from an Oscar-nominated script by the Six Feet Under writer-producer Nancy Oliver, and co-starring Emily Mortimer and Paul Schneider, examines the effect of Lars's eerie infatuation on his local community. Here, as he drifts around town with his sex doll, now called Bianca, fully clothed and in a wheelchair, it becomes clear that he is delusional but that his love for Bianca is utterly innocent. “I never really thought of Bianca as a doll,” he says. “It was always a very real love story to me, and that's the way I played it.”

It's all a long way from the squeaky clean Canadian pre-teen that he once was, busting some moves as a boy-band moppet opposite Justin Timberlake and Britney Spears on the Disney Channel's Mickey Mouse Club. There's some great footage on YouTube, I tell him, of his 12-year-old self dressed in a grey silk pyjama suit and beating his chest with a stiffened hand, which is boy-band semaphore for “Ya know ah love ya, girl.”

“Yeah, man, there's some great stuff there,” he giggles, cringing. “You can't hide any more. The days of selling some kind of image are over.”

But even Gosling's clean-cut TV adolescence was something of a feint. The son of divorced Mormon parents from Cornwall, Ontario, Gosling saw TV work as a way to escape the two things that he hated most - school and, well, childhood. “I hated being a kid,” he says, stony-faced for the first time. “I didn't like being told what to do, and no one ever asked me my opinion.”

Gradually he built up a screen career. His role as Danny Balint, the conflicted Jewish neo-Nazi protagonist of The Believer, changed everything. “I couldn't have been more wrong for that part,” he says. “I was 19, non-Jewish, and from Canada, playing a 26-year-old Jew from Queens. But I ended up operating on instincts I didn't even know I had.”

The Believer, disturbing and award-winning, and driven by a toweringly physical performance from Gosling, transformed the young tyro, now living in LA, into the hottest prospect in town in others ways, too. His subsequent Murder by Numbers co-star Sandra Bullock, for instance, elided a 17-year age gap to date the actor in 2002, while his fiery onscreen relationship with Rachel McAdams, his The Notebook co-star, became a three-year romance that ended recently in turbulent style when, he claims, “We both went down swinging and we called it a draw.”

It was also on The Notebook that Gosling's reputation as a method-acting madman was fully established. Here, while preparing to play a lovestruck carpenter, he became a fulltime woodworker's apprentice. For his follow-up role, playing a crackaddicted teacher in Half Nelson, he would shadow an inner-city teacher for weeks. And still, there are the denials. “Just because I made furniture for The Notebook, everyone thinks I'm method!?” he says, exasperated. “But that stuff doesn't matter, and nobody can tell anyway.” He shrugs, shakes his head and adds, crucially: “You do that stuff for you, because it makes you feel like you're doing something to justify the stupid amount of money they're paying you to do this thing that's pretty easy.”

This is not arrogance, this is simply Gosling in full flow. This is an actor, unlike most Hollywood actors, who feels that he has nothing to lose. He was recently bounced from Peter Jackson's highly anticipated Lovely Bones adaptation. The producers said that it was about creative differences, Gosling says that it was about his character's age, but secretly you hope that it was his devil-may-care recalcitrance that rattled the studio mindset. Similarly, his next big project, after a thriller with Kirsten Dunst and a romantic drama with Michelle Williams, is a self-financed movie about the child soldiers in the Lord's Resistance Army of Uganda. “We almost have all the money,” he says. “I'm pretty confident that we're going to do it this year.”

In the meantime, don't expect to spot him gadding about in Hollywood hotspots. Instead, the less salubrious downtown LA is Gosling's home turf, complete with wandering junkies and poverty. No, really. “I want a sense of community, and downtown is the only place you can get it in Hollywood,” he explains. “It's full of crack-heads, but at least they will talk to you. And there is one store where I help out - I man the cash, and make sandwiches for people.” He smiles, and adds: “It's not about me. It's simply part of life.” He says this with the confidence of someone who knows which part of life, exactly, is real.

Lars and the Real Girl is on selected release from Friday.

Ryan Gosling discovers pneumatic charms in Lars and the Real Girl - Times Online
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Old 03-15-2008, 05:36 PM
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Old 03-15-2008, 11:44 PM
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Old 03-16-2008, 06:17 AM
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Old 03-29-2008, 11:02 AM
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Ryan Gosling has an Oscar-nominated talent for playing killers, sociopaths and other damaged people. He tells Matt Mueller why he's happy to be a Hollywood misfit.

When Ryan Gosling's mother, Donna, sat down with her son to watch his first leading role in film - as the ferocious Jewish neo-Nazi in The Believer - she lasted only 10 minutes before bursting into tears and locking herself in the bathroom. Watching her son so plausibly embody a desolate soul who feels nothing but furious contempt for his own heritage, she felt that she'd failed him and that he was channelling his own emotions. It took Gosling an hour to coax her out.

Seven years later, their relationship has progressed to the stage at which Gosling can take home a life-size sex doll every night and sleep with it in his mother's basement outside Toronto without her batting an eyelid, which is what happened during the making of the comedy Lars and the Real Girl.

"My poor mother, she doesn't ask questions any more," Gosling says. "She just says, 'Oh yeah, sex-doll movie.' It's great! She's a really supportive mom."

In a filmography that started off idiosyncratically and hasn't changed yet, Gosling has specialised in portraying damaged individuals - from the sociopathic teen killer in Murder by Numbers to his Oscar-nominated turn as a crack-addicted school teacher in Half Nelson. Lars Lindstrom is the least threatening character he's ever played.

In Craig Gillespie's comedy-fable, Lindstrom is a small-town introvert who orders a sex doll on the internet and parades her around town as his girlfriend, Bianca. Lars fancifully introduces Bianca as a religious missionary who doesn't believe in sex before marriage, and the film landed a PG-13 rating in America, which tells you everything you need to know about its resolute chastity.

"This film is not so far-fetched," Gosling says. "First of all, it happens. There's a huge community of guys out there that have these dolls, and one aspect of the relationship is sexual; but they also have real emotional connections to them. One guy is a hang glider and he takes his doll to watch him hang glide so that he has company. It's fascinating. Kids do it all the time. When a kid loves (his) teddy bear, he loves it. It doesn't love him back, but that doesn't matter, and, if he loses it, it's heartbreaking."

Those murky corners where pain, discord and ambiguity are rife have always attracted Gosling. As a child, acting offered him an escape from small-town bullies, who bashed him for being different (he was raised as a Mormon and his mother home-schooled him for a year). But if you attempt to draw any link between his own life and the characters he plays, he's quick to bristle.

"Come on, doesn't everybody feel like an outsider? I mean, we all do, man. We all feel like Lars. We all have trouble connecting. It's like those drugs that they sell on TV now for anxiety - they basically describe everybody. Lars has the same qualities as I do, and I think as everybody does: trouble communicating who you think you are and relating that to who you are and people's perceptions of who you are. It's difficult to be a person."

You wonder how long Gosling will stay in low-budget indie films before Hollywood swallows him up. It's not for lack of trying: it was almost shocking to witness Gosling turn up in last year's glossy, cat-and-mouse thriller, Fracture, opposite Anthony Hopkins.

"Fracture was Anthony Hopkins," Gosling says. "I would work with him on anything and that was my opportunity. OK, so you make certain compromises, but you get to watch Anthony Hopkins up close for four months and see how he does it. And that was just as important an experience for me as doing an independent film and getting to do whatever I want."

Last year, he signed up for The Lovely Bones, Peter Jackson's adaptation of Alice Sebold's best-selling novel. Gosling was due to play the grieving father of a murdered 14-year-old girl, only to be dismissed two days before production started. In early September, he was weeks away from heading off to Philadelphia for The Lovely Bones shoot. As much effort as he'd put into ageing himself for the role, with added bulk and a thick, well-tended beard, he was still surprised at having been cast.

"They called me, and I just couldn't see myself as the father of this girl, you know?" says Gosling, who was just 26 when Jackson hired him. "I called Peter and said, 'You must be nuts. I love the story, but me as the dad? You're crazy.' And they were like, 'That's the way that we see it.' So who was I to argue because they want the parents to be young?"

When he reported for duty, it didn't take long for him and Jackson to realise he wasn't a good fit (Mark Wahlberg replaced him).

"It was always an issue for me. I always felt too young for the role. It's psychological, I guess, but, for me, that just felt impossible. We did everything we could to get it to that point, but, at the end of the day, I couldn't accept it. Within myself, I just didn't feel right."

Does that mean it was his decision to leave? "No, it was mutual. I mean, it wasn't dramatic. It just became clear that it would be better with someone else. I feel like it's a better movie with Mark Wahlberg in it. You have to know what you can't do, too. The problem is, when you're just starting out, you're trying to convince everybody that you can do anything because you need a job. You train yourself to think that way. And then when you get to a point where you don't have to hustle for jobs any more, you have to sort of reprogram yourself and think, 'Well, what can't I do?'. Because the truth is that they'll catch you. They'll put you in anything."

Will the experience make him reassess how he approaches offers?

"Yeah, I think so. It was nice to be believed in that much, but it was also an important realisation for me: not to let your ego get involved. It's OK to be too young for a role."

Hollywood never looks kindly on actors who lose jobs, no matter what the cause, and the New York Post declared in its gossip column that Jackson was alarmed by the actor's cantankerousness about his wardrobe. But it's a rare actor who can resist the industry's compulsion to fence him in, and Gosling has succeeded longer than most. It was fortunate for him that The Believer was his first leading role, after proving that the small, prickly stories are there for actors willing to take the risk. He insists that he puts pressure on himself - by "living up to my own expectations in the ways I would deal with the opportunities I've always wanted".

Gosling is working on the cautionary love story Blue Valentine, another low-budget independent movie by a first-time filmmaker, about "the domestic life of a man and a woman, which to me is the most interesting dynamic there is". Michelle Williams was to play the female lead, but she's put herself on indefinite sabbatical following Heath Ledger's death. He's also been involved in All Good Things (directed by Andrew Jarecki, also making his first feature-length fiction), a period story that will cast Gosling as a wealthy real-estate scion whose poor girlfriend (Kirsten Dunst) goes missing.

It's not a coincidence that half of Gosling's 10-film output has been with first-timers.

"There's something about working with them that makes you feel like, whether the movie's any good or not, you're working on something special. If you work with a filmmaker who's done a lot of movies or has had success, it's different. There's less at stake. It's like, it could work or not work - it doesn't really matter."

More crucially, on low-budget projects, no one can force Gosling to do anything he doesn't want to.

"Cost is directly related to freedom," he says. "As long as you keep something under a certain number, people don't really care what you do with it. But as soon as you hit a certain budget, you have a lot of people wanting to know exactly why you're wearing those pants and exactly why you're talking that way or being that way, and you have to justify all of your choices to a committee.

"And they're not really things you can defend. Ultimately, you're just doing them because it feels right. And when you're working on something with a bigger budget, that's not a good enough answer. You have to back it up with charts and graphs and, at that point, your character loses life."

"Come on, doesn't everybody feel like an outsider? I mean, we all do, man. We all feel like Lars. We all have trouble connecting. It's like those drugs that they sell on TV now for anxiety - they basically describe everybody. Lars has the same qualities as I do, and I think as everybody does: trouble communicating who you think you are and relating that to who you are and people's perceptions of who you are. It's difficult to be a person."

You wonder how long Gosling will stay in low-budget indie films before Hollywood swallows him up. It's not for lack of trying: it was almost shocking to witness Gosling turn up in last year's glossy, cat-and-mouse thriller, Fracture, opposite Anthony Hopkins.

"Fracture was Anthony Hopkins," Gosling says. "I would work with him on anything and that was my opportunity. OK, so you make certain compromises, but you get to watch Anthony Hopkins up close for four months and see how he does it. And that was just as important an experience for me as doing an independent film and getting to do whatever I want."

Last year, he signed up for The Lovely Bones, Peter Jackson's adaptation of Alice Sebold's best-selling novel. Gosling was due to play the grieving father of a murdered 14-year-old girl, only to be dismissed two days before production started. In early September, he was weeks away from heading off to Philadelphia for The Lovely Bones shoot. As much effort as he'd put into ageing himself for the role, with added bulk and a thick, well-tended beard, he was still surprised at having been cast.

"They called me, and I just couldn't see myself as the father of this girl, you know?" says Gosling, who was just 26 when Jackson hired him. "I called Peter and said, 'You must be nuts. I love the story, but me as the dad? You're crazy.' And they were like, 'That's the way that we see it.' So who was I to argue because they want the parents to be young?"

When he reported for duty, it didn't take long for him and Jackson to realise he wasn't a good fit (Mark Wahlberg replaced him).

"It was always an issue for me. I always felt too young for the role. It's psychological, I guess, but, for me, that just felt impossible. We did everything we could to get it to that point, but, at the end of the day, I couldn't accept it. Within myself, I just didn't feel right."

Does that mean it was his decision to leave? "No, it was mutual. I mean, it wasn't dramatic. It just became clear that it would be better with someone else. I feel like it's a better movie with Mark Wahlberg in it. You have to know what you can't do, too. The problem is, when you're just starting out, you're trying to convince everybody that you can do anything because you need a job. You train yourself to think that way. And then when you get to a point where you don't have to hustle for jobs any more, you have to sort of reprogram yourself and think, 'Well, what can't I do?'. Because the truth is that they'll catch you. They'll put you in anything."

Will the experience make him reassess how he approaches offers?

"Yeah, I think so. It was nice to be believed in that much, but it was also an important realisation for me: not to let your ego get involved. It's OK to be too young for a role."

Hollywood never looks kindly on actors who lose jobs, no matter what the cause, and the New York Post declared in its gossip column that Jackson was alarmed by the actor's cantankerousness about his wardrobe. But it's a rare actor who can resist the industry's compulsion to fence him in, and Gosling has succeeded longer than most. It was fortunate for him that The Believer was his first leading role, after proving that the small, prickly stories are there for actors willing to take the risk. He insists that he puts pressure on himself - by "living up to my own expectations in the ways I would deal with the opportunities I've always wanted".

Gosling is working on the cautionary love story Blue Valentine, another low-budget independent movie by a first-time filmmaker, about "the domestic life of a man and a woman, which to me is the most interesting dynamic there is". Michelle Williams was to play the female lead, but she's put herself on indefinite sabbatical following Heath Ledger's death. He's also been involved in All Good Things (directed by Andrew Jarecki, also making his first feature-length fiction), a period story that will cast Gosling as a wealthy real-estate scion whose poor girlfriend (Kirsten Dunst) goes missing.

It's not a coincidence that half of Gosling's 10-film output has been with first-timers.

"There's something about working with them that makes you feel like, whether the movie's any good or not, you're working on something special. If you work with a filmmaker who's done a lot of movies or has had success, it's different. There's less at stake. It's like, it could work or not work - it doesn't really matter."

More crucially, on low-budget projects, no one can force Gosling to do anything he doesn't want to.

"Cost is directly related to freedom," he says. "As long as you keep something under a certain number, people don't really care what you do with it. But as soon as you hit a certain budget, you have a lot of people wanting to know exactly why you're wearing those pants and exactly why you're talking that way or being that way, and you have to justify all of your choices to a committee.

"And they're not really things you can defend. Ultimately, you're just doing them because it feels right. And when you're working on something with a bigger budget, that's not a good enough answer. You have to back it up with charts and graphs and, at that point, your character loses life."

On the outside looking in - Film - Entertainment - theage.com.au
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Old 03-29-2008, 12:08 PM
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Old 03-29-2008, 09:56 PM
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A sighting:

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GET LIT: Ryan Gosling, buying some books at McNally Robinson in New York City.

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Cool. I like reading sitings.
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Old 04-04-2008, 01:57 PM
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(FROM HOLLYWOOD REPORTER) – Frank Langella is in final negotiations to join Ryan Gosling and Kirsten Dunst in All Good Things, a period love story/mystery drama being directed by Andrew Jarecki (Capturing the Friedmans).The story is about a 1980s New York real estate suit (Gosling) who has an affair with a girl from the wrong side of the tracks (Dunst) who goes missing. When a detective uncovers info on her whereabouts, the political stakes begin to rise and people close to the situation wind up dead. Shooting is set to start this month. Langella next appears in the movie adaptation of Frost/Nixon, releasing in December, in which he reprises the role that earned him a Tony. (Variety)

Frank Langella in final talks for ''Good Things'' | Frank Langella | Movie News | News + Notes | Entertainment Weekly
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Old 04-04-2008, 10:41 PM
  #59
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Hm... well its moving forward then. Thanks for sharing B.
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Old 04-05-2008, 09:33 AM
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