Law abiding citizen - articoli ed interviste

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view post Posted on 26/10/2009, 21:32
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Una lunga,bellissima intervista,anticipata da una premessa che mi ha reso subito simpatico il giornalista: non chiederò a Gerry perchè è hot,nè con chi si vede...parlerò del suo rapporto con i film come LAC e della sua vita ...

http://www.filmschoolrejects.com/features/...rview-colea.php

I always have you in mind, dear reader, which is why I’ve conducted which might be the dullest interview of Gerard Butler on record. Why’s it so dreadfully dull?

Because I didn’t ask him about his ab workout routine, who he’s dating, or what makes him such a rugged man’s man. I also didn’t tell him that you think he’s hot and want to play a little “The Butler Did It” over at his place.

For some reason, I also didn’t feel a great need to tell him “This is madness!” in an effort to get him to proclaim that the interview was Sparta.

Seriously, you people are animals when I ask for interview question suggestions.

But, with the release of Law Abiding Citizen, I was lucky enough to catch the former lawyer (and sometimes actor/producer) during a huge, exhaustive press blitz that he’s running ragged through right now. While I didn’t get to ask him his professional opinion on Donoghue vs. Stevenson (a watershed case in Scots tort law), I did get to talk to him about revenge flicks, messing with an audience’s mind and how his family helped make him into the man he is today.



You’ve been doing press all morning?

I’ve been doing press my only fucking life, it feels like.

[Laughs] You about ready to hang it up then?

Yeah, actually for America, I believe this is my last couple of interviews, and then I’m done, but it seems to have been going on for a long time.

Well, I’ll try to keep this as painless as possible.

Don’t worry. I’m in the role now, so I’m alright actually.

You’re completely press ready so you’re answers are slick and publicist-ready?

It’s interesting you say that because I say I’m in the role – or I’m in the groove rather than the role – but at the same time I feel that normally when I talk about a movie my answers get better and better.

Oh, good.

But I feel like in this, much as I love the movie, I feel like my answers have gotten worse and worse. [Laughs]

[Laughs] Oh, great. That’s fantastic for me, then.

So be prepared for some crap answers.

I’ll prep my audience for that. They’re not used to quality interviews anyway.

[Laughs] Okay.

[Laughs] First formal question, then: How does it feel to be producing?

I feel great. I think you take an extra bit of pride in the film. A huge amount of pride in the film. You feel a lot more pressure, more responsible for how it performs, but you also get double the pleasure because you’re in there as the actor so you’re hoping for a great performance, to be appreciated for that performance, but you’re also hoping for a great movie. It’s just, I feel like I’ve been involved at every level of this from the casting to even choosing the director to developing the script – from deciding to bring the script on and work with it and turn it into a movie. It’s been a – how would you say it? – it’s been a roller coaster ride, and it’s been bumpy at times. It’s great to see it come out and do really well and be appreciated.

Still fulfilling despite the roller coaster?

Totally fulfilling. Totally fulfilling. I think there was a part of me that thought, “Well, I’m producing this. It’s obviously not going to be very good,” but I was totally shocked when I saw it. We did a test screening, and it scored through the roof. It actually scored higher than 300, and that was a big shocker to see that happen. So now I’m Mr. Over-Confident Producer.

That’ll make the next one even better.

I hope so. Let’s wait and see.

Were you a revenge or vigilante genre fan before diving into this?

Yeah, I’ve always liked a good ol’ thriller. I remember growing up, the Death Wish franchise. There’s just something to be said for a kick ass villain, but there’s even more to be said for a would-be villain where you actually understand exactly where they’re coming from. So you have a bit of the psychotic in you, but you also have a bit where you’re driven by a very understandable motivation in terms of payback, revenge.

You got to play around with ethics and got the audience to question their ethical stance. That must have been fun.

Exactly. I think that this film works on a lot of levels. It’s exciting, there’s a lot of suspense, it’s surprising, but at the same time it’s thought-provoking and it does draw you into a lot of questions about justice, about the legal system, about responsibility and accountability. How much one is entitled to stand up for themselves and fight back. Because it is, as an audience, even Jamie’s character the prosecutor says, “I’m with you. I get it.” And as an audience, it’s amazing the amount of support that’s given to my character despite the fact that he’s committing some pretty horrific acts. I thought that was really fascinating when I saw it with an audience – how much of the movie they were still cheering me as the killings started involving more and more innocent people.

I was on your side the entire time.


I think that was an interesting thing to play with as well for my character. He so believes in what he’s doing now that this sociopathic element has developed in him over time. Perhaps there was a hint of it there as it lies dormant, and I think it exists in a lot of people that would have psychopathic or sociopathic tenancies. They don’t always come out. Perhaps it has to be triggered by an event. To think that, over time, Clyde Shelton’s whole purpose has been to exact revenge to teach people the effects of their actions, and therefore he’s taking a great deal of enjoyment out of this. Not so much in a macabre way, but just to feel vindicated. To feel that he now has a voice.

It’s sort of like being a producer. Planning something out for a long time and getting the joy of seeing that come to life. Seeing the response.

Maybe a film producer and a director at the same time where he can boss around all the actors and say, “I want you to go there. I want you to be there. I’m not gonna tell you what’s gonna happen. I’m gonna change the script on you,” and feeling in control of spinning his story to create a feeling and an ending which are all of his own doing and creation.

I like that you call it a story. I see the connection there the most. You’ve mentioned before that your family has been an influence growing up which helps you reach the emotional gamut now. Are there any childhood memories that come to mind specifically?

Yeah, I think that I came from a family of larger-than-life characters who were a joy to be around. They were a lot of jokers and storytellers, a lot of warmth. When people think of the warmth of Scottish people and that kind of Celtic fun they can have, there was a lot of that. And then the Irish blood as well. So there was a lot of that, but it was tough as well. There could be a serious amount of confrontation. Issues were not always talked out in a rational way. It could involve a lot of screaming matches.

Then my father turned up out of the blue, and that was definitely an emotional roller coaster that allowed me in a lot of ways to go deep and understand what I’m missing in my life. My father was probably the craziest and most fun and outlandish one of the lot of them. Then I realize where my own personality traits came from. And then there was just a lot of personal experience that I went through. Issues that were created by my culture and then by myself that probably gave me more depth than anything to draw on from experience of craziness and fun, but a lot of pain and anguish as well.

And what is Evil Twins working on now?

There’s a few different projects that we’ve been working on, but there’s one in particular – it’s a movie called Slide about a former baseball player who goes back to try and patch things up with his child and estranged wife and ends up coaching the kid’s baseball team. He becomes the subject of fascination and longer by every bored house wife in the town. And it’s him trying to survive that while trying to patch things up with his kid. I think we’re going to have GM direct the movie. Hopefully. We’re in talks with him, and he’s very much up for directing it so we’ll what happens there.
 
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Kyriem
view post Posted on 29/10/2009, 14:53




Non so se sto postando questo nel posto giusto.... Admins fatemi sapere...

Spero siano solo supposizioni in quanto non c'è ancora nessuno che vuol distribuire da noi questo benedetto film!!!


Locandina e trailer di Law Abiding Citizen
giovedì 15 ottobre 2009
Uscirà domani negli Stati Uniti Law Abiding Citizen, il thriller con Gerard Butler e Jamie Foxx diretto da F. Gary Gray, regista di The Italian Job. Ecco una serie di creative locandine e il trailer del film...


Fonte: BadTaste.it

Un uomo che ha person tutto è capace di tutto...
Uscirà domani negli USA Law Abiding Citizen.

Il thriller di F. Gary Gray, regista di The Italian Job, racconta le vicende di un uomo che, dieci anni dopo l'omicidio brutale della moglie e della figlia, vuole ottenere giustizia dall'assistente procuratore distrettuale che ha permesso la liberazione di uno degli assassini dopo che questi ha patteggiato. Ma la sua vendetta non minaccerà non solo l'uomo che ha permesso tutto questo: farà infatti in modo di tenere in scacco anche la città e il sistema nel quale ciò è avvenuto...

In Italia non si sa ancora quando uscirà il film (che da noi ancora non ha un distributore), ma possiamo immaginare una release in primavera. Qui sotto potete vedere alcune delle creative locandine realizzate negli USA e in Inghilterra per promuovere la pellicola - da notare il look molto graphic novel di alcune immagini.



http://www.badtaste.it/index.php?option=co...=9960&Itemid=29
 
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gemini78
view post Posted on 31/10/2009, 19:49




Da un articolo di Empire

CITAZIONE
"That was a truly classic textbook example of creative differences," Darabont tells Empire. "When the opinions are so different and you have people who think the movie should be something very much different than the movie you're intending to make, it's best to step gracefully away."

Butler is equally sanguine about the situation. "Frank had creatively different ideas for where the movie should go - that didn't really work out," admits Butler. "But I think Frank's the coolest guy, and I loved him. He did the best rewrite that we got, and the movie benefited greatly from his efforts."

http://confuzzledbutler.blogspot.com/2009/10/empire.html
 
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view post Posted on 10/11/2009, 19:11
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Una breve ma interessante intervista sul personaggio di Clyde( :woot: :caldo: :ndr) in occasione dell'uscita di LAC in UK:

http://www.femalefirst.co.uk/movies/Gerard+Butler-7765.html

Gerard Butler Talks Law Abiding Citizen

Today 13:48

After a busy year so far for popular actor Gerard Butler he's about to return to the big screen with action movie Law Abiding Citizen.

So far he has already starred in The Ugly Truth and Gamer and temas up with Jamie Foxx for his latest movie.

- You’re also a producer on Law Abiding Citizen, so the script really must have had an impact on you.

I was originally pretty engrossed by the script’s punchiness. It hits you in a way that most thrillers don’t - it’s completely unexpected. You’re engaged from the beginning, right from the start when there’s this kind of horrific event happens and you’re with this character, you think this is your guy, but suddenly you swap over and you’re siding with someone else.

Your hero comes from another place. It’s a very engaging, intense scary story but yet at the same time something that fills you with a lot of empathy and emotion for both characters.

- Tell us more about your character, ‘Clyde Shelton’?

This could be anybody. This could be me or you and how would we behave in that situation? He’s not a villain- he didn’t ask to be in this situation. If this hadn’t happened to him he wouldn’t be where he is and he wouldn’t be exacting the revenge or being as violent or as brutal as he is.

But unfortunately, like I say, the randomness of life has left him in that situation. So, for me it was interesting to create this character who in the end you’d be terrified of- but he’s not a stock bad character.

- Whose choice was it for Clyde to be naked when he is arrested?

Well it wasn’t mine, I think that was in there from the start, or shortly after so it was there for a couple of years and I couldn’t wangle out of it.
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- Did you want to? How did you feel about it?

I mean that’s the thing, that’s why to be honest I wouldn’t have got rid of it because it’s a really cool moment. Like so many moments in this movie, it takes you by surprise, but it makes complete sense as well.

He’s being arrested and he has a huge plan so he’s got to play safe and show that there’s nothing else going on. It also was a chance for me to get really cut and shredded!

I was inspired by De Niro in Taxi Driver, and often when you see psychos and you see all those muscles and they’re being all sinewy it’s quite menacing. It suggests how much extra work and effort has been put into this plan.

- Explain the progression from law-abiding citizen to criminal mastermind?

They messed with the wrong guy. There is a switch in Clyde and somebody turned it on. Unfortunately for everybody else, he has the talent, capacity and tenacity to basically ensure that he brings the person that was supposed to help him Nick Rice and the system, to its knees.

- Some people say ‘never play a crazy person crazy’ because crazy people don’t know they’re crazy. How did you approach this with Clyde, is he crazy is he not crazy?

Well I don’t think he’s crazy. I think with Clyde in some ways there’s a complete detachment. In order to get where he’s extremely sane about what he does. There’s so much planning and calculation that’s gone into this and he’s an absolute genius.
 
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Kyriem
view post Posted on 10/11/2009, 21:45




Grazie Ariel!!
 
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view post Posted on 14/11/2009, 10:46
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Ancora un articolo con una breve clip audio in cui gerry spiega come il suo personaggio di Clyde risulti così credibile...

http://www.hollywoodoutbreak.com/2009/11/1...D-or-vigilante/


Actor Gerard Butler understands why the action thriller Law Abiding Citizen elicits such a strong reaction from the audience. Playing Clyde, a man who goes on a bloody journey of destruction after his wife and daughter are murdered, Butler is at his scenery chewing best (think of Clyde as a combination of Hannibal Lecter and King Leonidas) with the film, which has made over $50 million at the domestic box-office. Butler gives us his take on what makes Clyde such an interesting character. (CLICK ON THE MEDIA BAR TO HEAR GERARD BUTLER)


 
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lillika
view post Posted on 23/11/2009, 17:50




Nuovo articolo...Almeno non parlano di sgallettate!!! :P :P


http://blog.onthebox.com/2009/11/23/law-ab...gerrard-butler/

Law Abiding Citizen Press Conference: Gerrard (!!!!!) Butler


“This is the worst press conference of my career,” says Gerard Butler as he struggles to hold a microphone to his mouth in the basement of a Soho Hotel.

“You’re doing fine,” advises a beleaguered PR representative.

“No it’s alright – I don’t give a s**t,” he responds to much laughter. “My publicist is sitting at the back shaking his head thinking, ‘Gerry you were never genius, but what happened?’”

Apparently Butler has had three just three hours of sleep in the last couple of days and to be honest, it shows.

When an ill-advised hack asks him what his idea of hell is, his reaction is pretty predictable: “That’s a f**ked up question. I’m afraid I can’t answer that.”

OTB subtly lowers its hand. He does not look like a man who would respond well to us asking about the rubbish rom-coms he did after 300.

Contrary to the actor’s rantings however, this was not the worst press-conference ever – in fact it was quite interesting. Butler swore a lot, accused a member of the press of stalking him and talked about his first outing as a producer.

His new film, Law Abiding Citizen, hits cinemas next weekend and he plays Clyde Shelton, an apparently normal guy who decides to embark on a devastating campaign to take revenge on the system that cut a deal with his family’s murderer.

Even it’s critics (and there are some) will admit that for its short-comings, it is a fast, violent and very exciting ride which asks serious questions of the ethics involved in modern justice.

Well actually when we say it’s violent, we mean it’s very violent. “There was a discussion as to what level the violence should be, but everybody realised that this was what was going to make the movie stand-out,” said Butler.

“Firstly because it packs a punch and secondly because it’s entirely motivated. There’s also a huge popcorn element to the movie, I mean we can talk about the legal system, but it eventually gets to a certain level where it’s just pure entertainment. At that point we were pushing every piece of violence that we could!”

Well at least you know what you’re getting yourself in for…

Moving swiftly on, Butler starts to explain what got him hooked in on the project in the first place. “I was first interested in it because it is a great story,” he explains.

“You’re climbing into the mind of someone who has been so wronged, everything in his life has changed in one moment. It asks the audience what that must be like and what lengths they would go to for revenge. That’s what fascinated me as an actor.”

“I ended up spending a lot of time justifying my character, it’s a very powerful feeling that the story evokes inside you – i had a lot of empathy for him.”

But Mr Leonidas didn’t just star as the one-man army which had the Philadelphia Police Force quaking in its boots, he produced this story of revenge – which might explain why he looks so knackered at the minute.

“When people are making movies on your back, after a while you want to be involved and get some of teh credit for it, but the whole process of working on the script and everything else took about two years,” he says.

“Originally the financing company wanted me to be just an executive producer, but it was very much a deal-breaker for us – we wanted to be really hands on from the start.”

From what he was saying, it seemed clear that he enjoyed working on the film in this way, but when asked how the actual filming process affected him he spoke of the difficulties he had experienced.

“I don’t think I was always in a good place when we were filming this movie. Part of that was due to the character, but it was also because I was trying to produce and act at the same time.”

“Often my stomach would be churning because of what was going on, but when we finished – that was tough. I was in a funky mood for about a month, I went up a couple of hills, got a tent out and then decided to go off to India – that had some f**king bearing on me!

“Although after saying all that, I don’t doubt that I’ll produce again and hopefully I will have learned a lot from this experience,” he says with no little irony.

Sean Marland

 
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view post Posted on 23/11/2009, 18:24
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... Certo che doveva stare proprio male,Gerry: è davvero intrattabile...in questa intervista,o sbaglio?
 
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gemini78
view post Posted on 23/11/2009, 20:47




No, non sbagli... :blink: :blink: hai presente in poto quando Christine toglie la maschera ad Erik? :fisch:
 
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view post Posted on 30/11/2009, 23:47
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nuova intervista e relative risposte fiume :P
http://www.indielondon.co.uk/Film-Review/l...utler-interview

Law Abiding Citizen - Gerard Butler interview


GERARD Butler talks about starring in and producing violent new thriller Law Abiding Citizen, why some scenes had to be cut and why it asks so many questions of the legal system.

He also reveals why playing a man who loses everything and then turns vigilante killer left him in a pretty funky place afterwards, needing to climb some mountains in Scotland and head off to India…

Q. As a former law student and trainee solicitor, I imagine that the script had a huge attraction from the start?
Gerard Butler: Yeah, that was one of the initial attractions obviously having been involved with the law. But also having realised that after being involved with the law that I know longer wanted any involvement with it. So, to then come across this idea, which is a real indictment of the legal system, or the way that it can be administered. But that wasn’t the main reason I was interested. First of all, it was a great story. It’s as much of a climbing into the mind of a person who’s been so wronged… everything in his life has been changed in one moment. So, what must that be like? And what lengths would you go to as a person to take revenge? I thought that was a far more compelling reason for me to do the movie because that’s what would fascinate me as an audience member and as an actor.

Q. This also marks your first time as a producer?
Gerard Butler: Yeah, it was an interesting experience because I’d never done it before. But it came at a time that I felt I was getting a lot more say in movies, which movies were being made and when people were making movies on my back. So, I thought I wanted to be a little more involved and to get some credit for it. Initially, when we were in negotiations with the financing company they wanted us just to be the executive producers. But that was a deal breaker because we wanted to produce it and actually work on it. My manager, especially, was there months before the production started working on it every day. For me, it was two years of slowly but surely getting this thing going, working on the script and developing it. We went through another director… it was a long journey.

Q. You spent time with criminologists so what did you learn from that experience?
Gerard Butler: There was one specific criminologist who had written a great paper on serial killers but especially revenge killers. He had gone very much into the obsessive nature of this but also the rewards and how somebody who gets into it can really get carried away in a really egotistical way and enjoy hugely the power that they get from it… the cathartic experience because their whole life has become about this objective. They have nothing left, so that was something that definitely tied into my character because he really loses everything in that moment. Therefore, he can take great enjoyment out of this plan that he’s been carrying out.

Q. Did you find yourself taking some of this material home at the end of the day?
Gerard Butler: Absolutely. I don’t think I was always in a good space when we were filming this movie. One, because of the character I was playing and what he was going through, but also because I was trying to produce and I was acting in it as well. This was a type of role that I’d never played before and it was also very dark. We dealt with a lot of issues while we were filming but I think that’s why we’ve made such a great movie because there was always so much discussion about making sure that this story was fool-proof and that every moment was different.

We wanted to maintain the suspense while ensuring that it remained in some way believable. I noticed a lot of the time I was filming that I wasn’t in a great space or my stomach would be churning because of the other issues that were going on. I spent three weeks or a month in a very, very funky place. I actually came back to Scotland after that and went away on my own a lot. I climbed a couple of hills, got a tent out and then went off to India.

Q. Is it true that you originally signed on to play the Jamie Foxx character? Why did you switch?

Gerard Butler: Well, through developing this story I was always going to play the prosecutor. But the more time went on, the more I became seduced by the other role. It was something I’d never played before. I’ve often played the more heroic with a more straight-forward, subtle journey and I wanted something I could get my teeth into a bit more. We also figured that Jamie would most likely prefer to play the prosecutor. So, when I was speaking to the rest of the [creative] team I said: “Do you think Jamie would still be interested if I offered to play the other role?” The second I said it, there was a pause and I thought I shouldn’t have said it because they might agree. But they did and I was screwed. In hindsight, though, I don’t have any regrets.

Q. Will you continue producing?
Gerard Butler: I don’t know. The film that I did after Law Abiding Citizen with Jennifer Aniston, I wasn’t a producer on that. But we have a few different movies we’re developing that I’d love to work on. I’m not averse to doing it again and I don’t doubt that I’ll be doing it again. Hopefully, I’ll have learned some serious lessons.

Q. What lessons have you learned from your experience as a producer?
Gerard Butler: One thing I’ve learned as an actor as well as a producer is to trust my own instinct. I think when I first started acting I would sometimes have ideas about certain things, whether it’s a scene, or a character or certain dialogue, that wouldn’t be followed. I was never in a position to have the power to press the matter. Sometimes it wasn’t even about my character. But I’d watch the movie afterwards and think I was right. I’d see that what they did in that situation was wrong. I noticed that the more involved I became in actually developing stories, I could actually have a huge amount of input and contribute some really good stuff. On this movie, I had so much to do with how the story turned out. In fact, some of the mistakes that were made [on this] stemmed from the few times I didn’t stand up for myself.

Q. Is there a danger than you then become a bit of a pain in the arse for a director?

Gerard Butler: Absolutely! But then it can be a pain in the arse for an actor and a producer if you have a director that doesn’t listen [laughs]. The problem was not with the director. Most of these talks arose before F Gary Gray was even chosen as director. It was to do with the writing of the project and previous positions that were filled. They did not fulfil their tasks and it caused the movie to take a lot longer to be made and cost a lot more money. But through that, the strange thing is we’d almost been down every single avenue or possibility to analyse this – so it cost extra money but we felt it only made the film stronger. It was just more stressful. I also learned that I can be more economical with the force that I have to use. I had a lot more sway than I realised.

Q. Did you discuss how much violence you showed? It is very violent…

Gerard Butler: There was a discussion about how intense the violence would be. What was cool is that there was nobody who was trying to shy away from the violence. You always think somebody will be slightly less into the violent aspect. But we all realised that was what was going to make this movie stand out because it packs a punch but it’s completely motivated. There’s also a huge popcorn element to this movie… as much as it talks about the legal system, and it’s all true, it also gets to the point where it’s just pure entertainment and you have to go and have fun with it. At that point, we were pushing every bit of violence that we could [laughs]… and having to be cut back. There were a couple of things we had to take out of the final cut.

Q. What was deemed too far?

Gerard Butler: There’s one scene where I stab my cellmate… you see this guy bleed to death. This guy was a cage fighter and he said: “Just punch me.” So, I had this steak bone, which wasn’t real of course, but I was punching it with my fist in his throat maybe about 20 times. The blood was literally pouring out of his throat. We did it in one shot and it worked so perfectly – the blood gushed out, then started to slow down and you basically watched this guy bleed out in front of you. We had guys working on this who had worked in the industry for 30 years who were standing in front of the camera with their hands over their mouths going: “Holy f**king shit! I’ve never seen anything like that!” It was incredibly graphic and incredibly powerful but the ratings board said that unless we wanted it to be rated NC-17 we had to cut it out. I wish we’d kept it in.

Interview by Rob Carnevale
 
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gemini78
view post Posted on 6/1/2010, 19:03




Il tema della vendetta fai da te non passa mai di moda. A dimostrarcelo è anche l'interessante Law Abiding Citizen, che vede fronteggiarsi il possente Gerard Butler e il camaleontico Jamie Foxx e che, dopo un discreto successo in patria, sarà nei cinema italiani ad aprile.

http://www.movieplayer.it/articoli/06484/c...dei-film-in-3d/
 
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view post Posted on 1/6/2010, 23:34
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un piccolo articolo che annuncia l'arrivo del 'caso cinematografico' LAC in Italia :D

Gerard Butler giustiziere privato

Il cacciatore di ex Gerard Butler ed il Premio Oscar Jamie Foxx danno vita ad un action mozzafiato dagli imprevisti risvolti etici, che ha conquistato il pubblico americano.
Nei cinema italiani dal 27 agosto, Giustizia Privata ha conquistato già 120 milioni d’incasso nel mondo facendo gridare al caso cinematografico. Al centro di questo action diretto da Gary Gray ( The Italian Job) la vicenda di Clyde Shelton (Gerard Butler), devoto padre di famiglia e cittadino modello che assiste all´omicidio della moglie e della figlia per mano di due ladri. I due malviventi vengono catturati ma a causa di un patto scellerato tra l´avvocato della difesa e il procuratore distrettuale, il peggiore dei due viene rimesso in libertà. A quel punto Clyde decide che vendicarsi di un solo criminale non basta: è tutto il sistema americano che deve pagare per questa macroscopica ingiustizia.

di Tiziana Morganti

nb:Prime foto di Giustizia Privata al cinema dal 27 agosto
(come se non le conoscessimo già :P )
http://www.eclipse-magazine.it/cinema-news...-privato-2.html
 
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gemini78
view post Posted on 1/6/2010, 23:39




Vorrei tanto sapere chi ha gridato al caso cinematografico! :P
 
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view post Posted on 2/6/2010, 08:18
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Panettona,mitico pianeta agreste

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Bè... considerando che la critica lo ha stroncato e il pubblico esaltato... è un 'caso cinematografico'... e sono anche contenta che in Italia finalmente si gonfino un po' le coe anche a favore di gerry!!!
 
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58 replies since 4/4/2008, 20:22   763 views
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