Following Joaquin Phoenix’s recent statement in a magazine interview where he bashed Oscar-campaigning as “utter bullsh*t,” actor Taylor Kitsch immediately made it known to every Academy voter that he will gladly accept the Best Actor nomination that Phoenix, who starred in this year’s “The Master,” is trying to avoid.

“The thing about good actors is they take Oscar nominations for granted,” Kitsch told Hollywood & Swine. “If Joaquin Phoenix thinks campaigning for an Oscar is painful, he should try promoting ‘Battleship.’ ”

Phoenix, already a two-time Oscar nominee, whom many in Hollywood thought was a front runner for Best Actor for his impressive performance in Paul Thomas Anderson’s Scientology-inspired “The Master,” made it clear in the recent issue of Interview Magazine how much he didn’t want to participate in the Oscar process.

Upon reading Phoenix’s interview, Kitsch immediately started his Oscar campaign, which meant having to drop out of the community college drama program that he had recently enrolled in this fall in the wake his three boxoffice failures “John Carter,” “Battleship,” and “Savages.” According to Kitsch, he already has a strategy to eliminate his biggest competition for an Oscar nomination, “Lincoln” star Daniel-Day Lewis, and “Silver Linings Playbook” star, Bradley Cooper.

“I’ve already convinced Daniel-Day Lewis that he can’t let Joaquin Phoenix be the most pretentious actor in Hollywood,” Kitsch said. ”So starting tomorrow, he’ll also be trashing the Academy Awards every chance he gets to guarantee he doesn’t get nominated. And for Bradley Cooper, I’m personally paying to send screeners of ‘Hit and Run,’ and ‘The Words,’ to every Academy voter. That way they’ll know I’m not the only actor who can make horrible movies.”

Las Vegas puts Kitsch’s odds of landing an Oscar nomination this year at 5,000,000 to one, even with Phoenix now out of the race, but Kitsch isn’t deterred. “Directors Andrew Stanton, Peter Berg, and Oliver Stone taught me two things,” said Kitsch. “Never give up on your dreams no matter the odds. And try to work with better directors.”

Source: Hollywood and Swine


I capped Battleship a few weeks ago and I’ve finally gotten around to sorting them and have added them into the gallery.

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Oliver Stone’s thriller Savages starring Taylor Kitsch, Blake Lively, Aaron Johnson, John Travolta, Benicio del Toro and Salma Hayek will make its way to Blu-ray and DVD in a new unrated cut on October 23.

Savages had a modest box office run this past summer with just over $45 million in domestic ticket sales. Tack on an additional $2 million and change from overseas territories and Savages is currently just under $50 million in worldwide business.

Universal is packaging Savages on Blu-ray with DVD, UltraViolet and a digital copy. The feature film will be presented in 1080p video and 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio.

Bonus features on the Savages Blu-ray release include the following:
Feature Commentary with Oliver Stone
Feature Commentary with producers Moritz Borman, Eric Kopeloff, Co-Screenwriter/Novelist Don Winslow, Executive Producer/Co-Screenwriter Shane Salerno and Production Designer Tomas Voth
BD Exclusive: Deleted Scenes
BD Exclusive: Stone Cold Savages – A five-part profile of the film showcases the entire cast and crew as Oliver Stone pushes his loyal and talented company far past their limits in order to bring this story to life. From concept to completion, viewers get unprecedented access to a master storyteller’s creative process.

Click here to pre-order Savages on Blu-ray and DVD for $23.99 at Amazon.com, 31% off the $34.98 list price.

Source: The HD Room


Taylor Kitsch is to play a hunky doctor in The Grand Seduction.

The Battleship star and The Guard’s Brendan Gleeson have both signed up to star in a remake of the 2003 French film Le Grande Seduction, Variety reported.

The film tells the story of a small harbour town which needs a resident doctor so it can land a contract to have a factory built in the town, benefiting all the residents.

Harry Potter star Brendan will play a village resident who finds the doctor and then encourages the whole town to join in attempts to seduce him into staying. It is assumed Taylor will play said physician.

The film will be directed by Canadian actor and director Don McKellar.

Filming is already under way in St John’s, Newfoundland.

Source: Independent.ie


Universal Studios Home Entertainment has announced that the summer flop BATTLESHIP will be available in a Blu-ray/DVD combo pack on August 28th, 2012. From director Peter Berg, BATTLESHIP follows a fleet of ships that is force to do battle with a league of alien-like robots in order to save the planet. BATTLESHIP stars: Liam Neeson, Taylor Kitsch, Alexander Skarsgard, Rihanna, Brooklyn Decker and Tadanobu Asano.

If you’ve ever played the Hasbro board game Battleship, then you may not be too surprised that the film BATTLESHIP flopped at the box office. If you ever had a chance to watch the trailer (BATTLESHIP trailer below), then you were probably wondering if this sea faring adventure was actually a TRANSFORMERS movie in disguise.

Source: Flix 66


‘We had a riot doing it,’ Taylor Kitsch says of filming one particularly violent scene.
In looking at the poster or trailer for Oliver Stone’s “Savages,” it’s easy to see that there is a lot going on in this gritty crime thriller. There’s an ensemble cast comprised of Salma Hayek, Blake Lively, Taylor Kitsch, Benicio Del Toro, John Travolta and Aaron Johnson all acting their hearts out to bring Don Winslow’s book to life.

The story revolves around two “grassroots” pot dealers who are being courted to sell their business to a much larger operation led by boss lady Elena (Hayek) and her unruly, cold-blooded associate Lado (Del Toro). The amiable negotiations get really messy (and really violent) when Elena and Lado kidnap the young drug dealers’ shared lady love, O (Lively).

When MTV News caught up with the star-studded cast recently, we asked them how they approached filming the most violent scenes and whether or not they could enjoy any of the more gratuitous elements. Their answers were surprisingly stereotypical: The ladies cringed at the thought of some of the torture depicted, whereas the gentlemen “had fun” getting stabbed.

“You can’t [prepare for the violence],” Hayek said. “I’ll be honest, it was very hard for me as a person to stomach it. So to be the character doing it, I get really disturbed by it. It’s not easy.”

“With my stuff, the people that are hitting me are really hitting me. They’re putting a cigar cutter around my finger and squeezing it tight and saying, ‘We’re going to squeeze it tight but we’re not actually going to cut off your finger,’ ” Lively recalled of her intense kidnapping sequences. “You’re really experiencing a lot of the things, not to the extent you see in the movie, but when you’re in the environment and you hear stories of the people … I spoke to a girl who was kidnapped by the Mexican cartel, it feels real.”

And in sharp contrast, the men in the film seemed to enjoy their crazy and dangerous violence-heavy scenes.

“I had fun when [Kitsch] stabbed my hand,” Travolta said with a smile. “I thought that was fun.”

“That was a good 12-hour day in that jeep,” Kitsch recalled of their interrogation-esque scene filmed in a jeep. “Because there was just a ton of dialogue as well going back and forth and I’m just listening, taking my sunglasses off, getting ready to stab away. That was a long day. We had a riot doing it.”

“We had a great time,” Travolta said. “Also, I think the privacy of the acting in close quarters, there is some reality that comes out that’s different than when you are out in the open. You can just get down to the truth of the scene. I think a lot of that helped, because you’re all day sitting in this tight little space so all you have is the reality of what you’re going to say and do. … The trajectory of that scene, it’s all over the place.”

Speaking on the subject of onscreen nudity, however, the tables were slightly turned with regard to gender stereotypes, since we see much more of the men than we do of the ladies.

“I was pitching full frontal. Long, slow-motion shots. But Oliver didn’t want it,” Kitsch joked when asked about the more equal opportunity/ semi-naked scenes. “No, I mean it’s all part of it. Look, the movie’s called ‘Savages,’ it’s directed by Oliver Stone. I think we got away with just that, considering what this could have been,” he said. “So it’s all part of it, you sign up for it. I’m not going to complain about it, I think it was done really tastefully and it actually does serve the story.”

“Even the violence, I mean as violence goes, I thought it was pretty well done,” Travolta added. “Because that opening scene, I thought, ‘Oh no,’ I didn’t know that it was done this way. I thought, ‘Oh no, I can’t watch this,’ but then it became OK.”

Source: MTV News


Actor Taylor Kitsch considers box office bombs John Carter and Battleship a “blessing in disguise” because he’s no longer tied down to any potential sequels.

The Friday Night Lights TV star was tipped for big screen success earlier this year (12) thanks to the anticipated releases of science fiction film John Carter and naval war movie Battleship, but each largely flopped with fans.

Yet the 31 year old insists there’s a silver lining behind both disappointments – his schedule is open to any opportunity that comes his way.

He tells the Associated Press, “Maybe it’s a blessing in disguise that it died, and I’m not tied to these things for the next 10 years. I’m free to do whatever I want now. If I want to do something in January, February, March, April, I don’t have to go through two studios to be greenlit.”

However Kitsch refuses to look back on the failed projects with regret, adding, “I feel I grew an immense amount as an actor. On so many levels, it tested me. I wouldn’t change a thing. I wouldn’t take any of those choices back. I love what I’m doing. I’ve started to get excited again, and I think, obviously, it was hard on me that they didn’t work. You have bosses, we all have bosses, you want to do well for them. But I gave everything I had.”

Source: Contact Music




Taylor Kitsch Online | https://www.taylor-kitsch.com
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