anne hathaway catwoman 570x370 Hathaway Earns Presidential Seal Of Approval

President Barack Obama reviewed The Dark Knight Rises and praised Anne Hathaway’s Catwoman performance at Hollywood-studded fundraiser on Monday.

She’s spectacular. I got a chance to see Batman, and she was the best thing in it. That’s just my personal opinion.”

Obama also praised “The Newsroom’s” Aaron Sorkin. Hathaway and Sorkin were two of the hosts of the fundraiser at producer Harvey Weinstein’s lavish Connecticut home. Tickets went for $35,800 each.  Weinstein called Obama “The Paul Newman of American presidents.”

Beneath The Veil

August 19th, 2011 | Posted by James K in Film - (0 Comments)

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The less said about Anne Hathaway in “One Day,” the better… but the actress is stunning in her Interview magazine shoot. And she also has plenty to say. Like Snooki is her twin.

For the full article, go to: www.interviewmagazine.com

 

Watch Out! Here Comes Catwoman

August 5th, 2011 | Posted by James K in Film - (0 Comments)

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The first official photo of Anne Hathaway as Catwoman in “The Dark Knight Rises” has now been released. She looks tough, and how about the cycle.

 

 

Sneak Peek Of Hathaway As White Queen

July 7th, 2011 | Posted by James K in Film - (0 Comments)

hathawayx large e1310058211495 Sneak Peek Of Hathaway As White Queen

Anne Hathaway attends The White Fairy Tale Love Ball in Crespieres, France, on Wednesday

White Queen(Anne Hathaway) | Facebook

JoyHog Recap: 2011 Academy Awards

February 28th, 2011 | Posted by James K in Film | Television - (0 Comments)

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The telecast: Dreadful, disappointing but it ended well before midnight.

The hosts: James Franco and Anne Hathaway, bad idea.

The opening: Strong, well-crafted Inception parody gave false hope telecast wouldn’t suck.

The awards: Worthy winners, no surprises.

The speeches: Colin Firth’s words were most memorable.

Presenters: Sandra Bullock was so good the Academy should consider asking her to host.

The gowns: Mila Kunis, Jennifer Lawrence, Reese Witherspoon looked like goddesses.

Hathaway: Burgundy silk chiffon gown the winner among seven costume changes.

Kirk Douglas: Big, old ham.

Feel free to peruse these links.

PICTURES: Oscars show highlights
Oscar coverage and analysis from the Los Angeles TimesNew York TimesVarietyHollywood ReporterTimeDaily Beast and USA Today.

We’re Watching The Oscars Regardless

February 25th, 2011 | Posted by James K in Television - (0 Comments)

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Deadline’s Nikki Finke has obtained the annotated schedule for Sunday night’s Academy Awards telecast and writes “it looks to be yet another snorefest from the Academy Of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences.”

Here’s her rundown:

Hosts James Franco (127 Hours and a Best Actor nominee this year) and Anne Hathaway (Love And Other Drugs) will open the show with a Billy-Crystal-originated comedic filmed piece where they appear in scenes from the year’s 10 Best Pictures real or not. Then they welcome the audience in the first “Scenic Transition” — this one, from the 1939 movie Gone With The Wind.

Tom Hanks is the first presenter, handing out the Best Art Direction and Best Cinematography Oscars. But almost all the other Academy Award presenters are stars from 2010′s crop of movies or upcoming 2011 pics.

(more…)

Did Vanity Fair Leave Anybody Out?

February 1st, 2011 | Posted by James K in Film - (0 Comments)

0311 980px 522x257 Did Vanity Fair Leave Anybody Out?

Here’s the who’s who on Vanity Fair’s annual Hollywood issue cover, shot by Norman Jean Roy. The front features Ryan Reynolds, Jake Gyllenhaal and Oscar hosts Anne Hathaway and James Franco. Then it folds out, and you see Jennifer Lawrence, Anthony Mackie, Olivia Wilde, Jesse Eisenberg and Mila Kunis. Then it folds out again and there’s Robert Duvall playing bartender, along with Joseph Gordon Levitt, Andrew Garfield, Rashida Jones, Garrett Hedlund and Noomi Rapace.

Vanity Fair’s fashion and style director Jessica Diehl told US:

We wanted to evoke the glamour of 1930s Shanghai, an era of smoky, alluring elegance. We had the gentlemen looking dashing in black tie, whilst the ladies were radiant in spring’s gowns–from Gucci to Yves Saint Laurent–and glittering with diamonds from Chanel and other arbiters of glamour.”