Brad & Angelina MegaPost Part 3A.
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guli1 |
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Edited By: guli1
05/05/2009 2:02 AM.
Edited 2 times.
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aleine23 |
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good nite
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aleine23 |
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guli1 |
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Goodnight Sara
and thanks for the video |
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scrambler |
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bye Sara
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dorothy streets |
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gulli, check your PM. Peace
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guli1 |
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Brad obviously knows how to invest and has great taste!
Newson Chair Sells for Design-Art Record 1.1 Million Pounds http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601088&sid=aEmdHinuP6fk&refer=muse |
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angel 2 |
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guli am still around
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guli1 |
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angel 2 wrote: Hiya...how ate you angel 2???? I'm trying to wind down
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angel 2 |
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am fine guli
tring to read a novel i cannot sleep |
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guli1 |
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This was in India during filming AMH!
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guli1 |
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angel 2 wrote: angel---me neither and I am trying so hard to go to sleep but as usual I am wide eyed and bushy tailed |
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angel 2 |
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night night madam guli
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dulcinea13 |
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My all-time favorite Brad commercial/photoshoot Shot in October, 2007 for Edwin Jeans
Edited By: dulcinea13
05/05/2009 3:50 AM.
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NATSU23 |
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I'll never go to JJ!
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Pitussa |
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• Meanwhile, in Los Angeles, Brad Pitt danced along energetically as Chris Cornell rocked the Wiltern Theater, playing songs from his new album Scream. Wearing a newsboy cap, the actor hung out in the VIP section just in front of the soundboard, but was friendly to fans who approached him on his way to the bathroom. The actor also danced to opening act DJ Skee and headed backstage after the show to greet him and Cornell. Courteney Cox Arquette and David Arquette were also at the show, but opted to stand in the crowd closer to the stage. ![]() And his kids??yo sere un troll pero no entiendo a este señor..VERY BAD MISTER
PITT
Edited By: Pitussa
05/05/2009 8:23 AM.
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WENGSAN |
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guli1 wrote: ok i can not afford to watch this vid. am so jealous of baby zee.
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bdj.aboutthejoliepitts |
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http://blog.nola.com/mike...rbergh_reconnects_w.html
Let's say you're a Hollywood director. You've already done the blockbuster thing, helming a trio of successful caper films starring the likes of Brad Pitt and George Clooney. And you've already made Oscar history, by being one of a very short list of people nominated twice for best director in the same year. What do you do next? The short answer: pretty much whatever you want. And for Steven Soderbergh, the Baton Rouge-raised director of "Traffic," "Erin Brockovich" and the "Ocean's Eleven" movies who burst onto the scene in 1989 with his indie sensation "sex, lies and videotape," that means getting back in touch with his indie roots -- and his Louisiana roots. "That's where I came from, and it's always nice to return to that, because you're reconnected with the enthusiasm of the amateur," Soderbergh said. "For me, the associations of making a movie with a small crew on a short schedule are all positive. That's how I made my short films; that's how I made my first feature." That's also how he made his most recent film, the forthcoming "The Girlfriend Experience," which he will bring to New Orleans this week with his previous film, the historical epic "Che," for a pair of screenings and discussions to benefit the New Orleans Film Society. The rewards of telling such a story in such a small, almost experimental, way extend beyond mere nostalgia. For Soderbergh, it also is a sort of Petri dish, in which he can tinker with filmmaking techniques -- one of his favorites being the use of nonprofessional actors, which he's been doing on and off for about 10 years now -- in a relatively low-risk environment. If they don't work, well, lesson learned. If they do work, however, some of those techniques can be adapted for bigger-budget films. Case in point: "Moneyball," Soderbergh's big-screen adaptation of author Michael M. Lewis' best-selling book about Oakland A's General Manager Billy Beane and his analytical approach to building a team in today's competitive environment. Brad Pitt will star, but the film also will be heavily populated by nonprofessional actors. "He's playing Billy Beane, and then I'm casting a lot of real people around him," Soderbergh said. By the time cameras start rolling on the project in about six weeks, roughly two-thirds of the 2002 A's will have been enlisted to appear in the film. Among them: sluggers David Justice and Jeremy Giambi, catcher-turned-first-baseman Scott Hatteberg, reliever Billy Koch, manager Art Howe, pitching coach Rick Peterson. "To have them around all the time that you're doing it is just going to give it an energy that's unique," Soderbergh said. |
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bdj.aboutthejoliepitts |
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bdj.aboutthejoliepitts |
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http://www.baltimoresun.com/entertainment/movies/bal-to.dvd05may05,0,7526583.story Cutting-edge film technology has rarely been put to better use than in The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, starring Brad Pitt as a man born old and growing ever-younger. Through methods that are exhaustingly broken-down in the DVD extras, makeup artists worked closely with computer wizards to, first, age Pitt several decades, and then to put his wizened face on a tiny body. The results are astonishingly seamless, to the point where you quickly stop noticing the magic and start paying attention to the story. And that's a good thing, because director David Fincher (Fight Club, Se7en) and screenwriter Eric Roth, working off a short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald, have created an affecting, incisive portrait of love and pain, devotion and distraction, fantasy and reality. From the moment the foundling Benjamin is embraced by his adoptive mother, Queenie (a forthright and loving Taraji P. Henson), to the fleeting final moments he spends with his lifelong love, Daisy (Cate Blanchett), this is a film of scope, compassion and wonder. |
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and thanks for the video


And his kids??yo sere un troll pero no entiendo a este señor..VERY BAD MISTER
PITT

http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/article/628900
Get your copy today
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
(Paramount)
(4 out of 4)
A magical and moving account of a man living his life resoundingly in reverse, very loosely based on an F. Scott Fitzgerald short tale from 1922, it delivers top-notch moviemaking in every department. Most impressive of all is the digital breakthrough that allows Brad Pitt to age so convincingly from very old to very young, placing his face upon the forms of stand-in actors.
Nominated for multiple Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Director for David Fincher (Zodiac), film tells the story of a baby, Benjamin, that is born in 1918 looking like a tiny old man. His father abandons him on the doorstep of a seniors' residence, where kindly Queenie (Taraji P. Henson), takes him in. It gradually dawns on Queenie that Benjamin is aging backwards. As the years pass, a beautiful redheaded dancer named Daisy (Cate Blanchett) enters his life, and the two recognize that they are kindred spirits.
Daisy's dancing takes her to New York, Paris and back to New Orleans, and her natural aging eventually intersects with Benjamin's unnatural youthfulness, with attendant complications of both heart and mind.
There is no abiding message, just the wistful observation that life has a way of taking its own path, sometimes a backwards one, and we do have choices in how we travel it.
The bountiful extras, depending on which edition you purchase (there's also a Criterion Special Edition), fully explore the film's groundbreaking special effects. There's information on the "digital makeup" used, the thousands of costumes and the creation of an animatronic baby. Fincher provides a director's commentary.