Posts Tagged ‘viggo mortensen’


- Ever wanted to smell like Bruce Willis? Yeah, me neither, but now you can. (Pssst: if you find any where online that sells this, the "Send us a Tip" button Cinematical could certainly use some loving.) [via BoingBoing]

- Megan Park, one of the fresh faces on The Secret Life of the American Teenager, is the latest to join Christian Slater, Gary Oldman and Dane Cook in the thriller Guns, Girls and Gambling. Yes, Dane Cook will indeed be in a movie with Gary Oldman. Yes, that bothers me as much as it bothers you.

- I want to hate a remake of Let the Right One in. I really, really do. But first Matt Reeves proving his passion for the material, then the fantastic first trailer, and now news that Michael Giacchino is scoring it? I cannot freaking wait for Let Me In!

- Need further proof that M. Night Shyamalan isn't a wise Hollywood investment at this point? His name has been dropped from the new series of horror films he is producing. The first entry, previously titled The Night Chronicles: Devil, will now simply by Devil. Wise move if you ask me.

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Continue reading Cinematical Late Night: Giacchino on 'Let Me In', Willis' Smell, Mortensen's Freud

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When an actor wins an Oscar, all bets are off, including the ones he's made with David Cronenberg. Last December, Cronenberg revived The Talking Cure and had recruited Michael Fassbender, Keira Knightley, and Christoph Waltz to psychoanalyze one another in the name of love and medicine. But Waltz has been buried in offers, and Deadline Hollywood Daily reports that he's dropped out of the project in favor of Water For Elephants. Luckily, Cronenberg has a very good actor and friend in his contacts, and he just called him up. The result is that Viggo Mortensen has now joined The Talking Cure as Sigmund Freud.

Cure centers on a young Carl Jung who uses Sigmund Freud's "talking cure" on a young and troubled Russian woman. In the process of psychoanalyzing her, he falls in love with her. Freud comes along, marvels at his success, and anoints him his psychiatric successor. When Jung starts to develop his own ideas about therapy, Freud isn't too happy, and their professional relationship sours. DHD says that the producers have promised "lots of spirited sex" which Cronenberg has always filmed rather well, so no surprise there.

Mortensen and Cronenberg have two excellent films under their belt, and there's no reason to sneer at a third. (Or a fourth if they ever make that Eastern Promises sequel.) I'm eager to see Mortensen work with Fassbender and Knightley (who both rank among my favorites) and the two method men should really fire up the screen. It's going to be good.

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