Showing posts with label megan fox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label megan fox. Show all posts

Megan Fox Thumbs Nail and Toe Thumb Photos

Posted by Milaan Parmar


megan-fox-thumbs-nail-and-toe-thumb-photosCelebrity actress and model Megan Fox’s thumbs nail and toe thumbs photos here. For some reason, the photographer had (or even allowed her to have) her clubbed thumb up right in the middle of the shot.

megan-fox-thumbs-nail-and-toe-thumb-photos

megan-fox-thumbs-nail-and-toe-thumb-photos

Comic-Con: 'Batman 3,' Megan Fox gets 'Hex'-y

Posted by Milaan Parmar

Garyoldman_darkknight"I think the next 'Batman' we start shooting next year, so it's at least two years away," Gary Oldman told a Comic-Con audience during a panel for "Book of Eli" Friday morning, adding, "You didn't hear it from me."

That was the biggest piece of news coming out of Warner Bros.' diverse programming Friday at the Con, ranging from the unsullied innocence of childhood to a revamped Freddie Krueger. Here's a rundown of highlights from Hall H.

'Where the Wild Things Are'

- Adorable star Max Records won fans with his innocent line, "I've never done anything like this before, so I might be just reading things off my hand."

- Records then went on to quote author Maurice Sendak: "I talked to Maurice, and he said, 'I really loved this movie and I hope people like it because if not, they can all go straight to hell.'"

- A slew of clips form the Spike Jonze-directed film gave a good impression. Although not overtly scary, there's an occasional melancholy edge to it that balances the amazing characters and landscapes. Just like in the book, childhood and imagination are celebrated without the sugarcoating common to kids and family films these days. Records is winning.

'Book of Eli'

A surpisingly goofy panel considering the badass nature of the postapocalyptic thriller. Denzel Washington, Gary Oldman and Mila Kunis were on hand to answer questions.

- Oldman about his character: "I want this book, an old book, a very important book, a means of absolute power for me ... Eli does not readily want to give it up and part with it up. It's a graphic novel, by a guy named J.C."

- Comic-Con celebrity persona Bob Stencil spoke Russian to Kunis and included his Ramada Inn room number. Her response: "Good to know. I'll see you in an hour."

- Oldman jokes about the fun of working with Washington: "Sometimes we'd do [scenes speaking with] slang African American, sometimes it was English gentlemen, sometims it was thespian ... like good sex."
Jackieearlehaley_290
'A Nightmare on Elm Street'

- This revamp of the Freddy franchise stars Jackie Earle Haley as the sweater-loving, manicured killer. It's not an origin story, but it will show a bit more of Freddy before he gets fired up. Heh.

- "No, [Robert Englund] is not going to make a cameo in this movie." -- producer Brad Fuller

- "I kind of feel as though I'm doing things that are very diverse. The first few things, I played the tortured soul, and now I'm playing the torturing soul." -- Haley

- A trailer for the film shows Katie Cassidy looking familiarly distraught and stressed out a la "Harper's Island" except she's blonde this time.

'The Box'

- Based on the classic short story about a horrible dilemma and its consequences. A woman is offered a box with a red button on top by a stranger with this proposal: Push the button and a) someone the woman doesn't know will die somewhere and b) she'll get $1 million tax-free. James Marsden plays her husband

- Director Richard Kelly intros the 4 1/2-minute clip with a new score by Arcade Fire. They've definitely gone past the six-page short story, and there are strangely fantastical elements to it like free-standing columns of mysterious liquid that can entrap people. Confused? So were we, but in a good way.


- Kelly is all about the 'rents: "I had the most normal upbringing ... maybe that made me write crazy stories. In 'The Box' Cameron and Jimmy are playing versions of my parents ... they spent time with my mom and dad. Cameron does my mom's Texas accent. There's not one swear word in the whole film. It's an old-fashioned suspense film that I think they'd really like. They had introduced me to Alfred Hitchcock and things like that."

- Bob Stencil got to the mic, and what he asked wasn't that important, but he did have some mysterious "There's Something About Mary" goo deliberately hanging out of his ear.

- One lucky lady in the audience won herself a box/button unit because she had the poster taped underneath her seat. Naturally, she pushed the button on stage for the photo op. "You're really screwed now," Kelly told her.

'Jonah Hex'

Based on the DC comics, this Western series stars Josh Brolin as the facially scarred hero and Megan Fox as his corseted main squeeze.

- Fox loves the physicality of action films and encourages her co-stars not to hold back either. "I tell them, 'If you want to smack me or beat my ass, do it if you think it will help.'"


Meganfox_transformers_tokyo_premiere_290_001- Fox got the expected male attention, including Bob Stencil asking if she could pretend to be attracted to him just as she pretended to be attracted to the scarred Jonah Hex on screen. Her answer: "Yeah."

- Another fan, who's shtick is holding a shoulder-propped video camera while he's at the mic, asked if Fox was interested in celebrity sex tapes. The audience booed him off.

- "It was a phantasmagoria of insanity." -- Josh Brolin

Megan Fox See Full - Biography

Posted by Milaan Parmar


A statuesque actress who flaunted a “bad girl” attitude both on and off the screen, Megan Fox was one of the more popular performers of the new millennium, thanks to major roles as spunky girlfriends and love interests in features like “Transformers” (2007) and numerous, provocative layouts in men’s magazines. After a successful stint as a model, she eventually graduated to television with recurring roles on “Hope and Faith” (ABC, 2003-06). But it was her breakout role via Michael Bay’s summer blockbuster “Transformers” which helped position her as the “new Angelina Jolie.” She certainly had the attitude, looks and tattoos for it. The media blitz helped her graduate to leading lady status with significant tough and sexy roles in a number of features, including the inevitable “Transformers” sequel, “Jennifer’s Body” (2009) for Oscar winner Diablo Cody, and “Jonah Hex” (2010), among others – all of which virtually assured her status as one of the most popular and publicized members of 21st century Young Hollywood.

Born Megan Denise Fox in Rockwood, TN on May 16, 1986, she was the daughter of a former tourism director for Roane County, and though a self-confessed tomboy, began exploring acting and dance at the age of five. After relocating to St. Petersburg, FL, she continued her training throughout high school, and soon added modeling to her list of endeavors. A string of wins at the 1999 American Modeling and Talent Convention convinced her to launch her acting career, so she wasted no time moving to Los Angeles while only 16. Fox made her screen debut as a bratty heiress in the Olsen Twins feature “Holiday in the Sun” (2001), where she was billed under her full name in the closing credits.

Television was her exclusive domain for the next few years, most notably on a Swedish-produced soap opera, “Ocean Ave.” (Syndicated, 2002-03). But she returned to films with a supporting role as Lindsay Lohan’s chief rival in the bubbly comedy “Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen” (2004). Not realizing movie stardom was right around the corner, she revisited television as the ditzy but sweet-natured daughter of Faith Ford on the sitcom “Hope and Faith” (ABC, 2003-06). The recurring role earned her a Young Artists Award nomination in 2005.

In 2007, Fox was suddenly catapulted to stardom as the female lead of the Steven Spielberg-produced “Transformers,” based on the popular toy line and animated television series of the early 1980s. Cast opposite fellow newcomer Shia LaBeouf, Fox played yet another in her long line of popular girls, although this one offered some character wrinkles in the form of extensive automotive knowledge, which later came in handy during the film’s climactic battle. Director Michael Bay sought to blunt Fox’s fragile screen persona by requiring her to gain ten pounds of muscle prior to shooting, and bolstered the physical exhaustion required of her character by continually announcing long night shoots. The approach – though draconian – appeared to work. Critics found her a believable action heroine, and she netted several pop movie award nominations, including a 2008 nod from the MTV Movie Awards for Breakthrough Performance.

“Transformers’” key audience – young adult males – was also taking notice of Fox, though not for her acting ability. The buzz surrounding her appearance in the film led to a barrage of photo shoots for male-oriented magazines like Maxim, GQ and FHM – the latter of which named her the “Sexiest Woman in the World” in 2008 – and all of which devoted numerous pages to Fox in various states of undress, highlighting her growing collection of tattoos. The inevitable comparisons to another raven-haired actress with full, pouty lips, tattoos and a wild side were inevitable. In fact, such were the comparisons to Angelina Jolie, Fox was rumored as the replacement for the globe-trotting actress in the “Tomb Raider” film franchise, though reports from 20th Century Fox would dismiss the claim. Her comments in interviews – like her revelation that she had pursued a relationship with a female stripper while still in her teens – certainly helped to fan the publicity fire building around her, as did provocative paparazzi shots with her longtime boyfriend, “Beverly Hills, 90210” (Fox, 1990-2000) actor Brian Austin Green.

However, Fox’s return to acting after the explosive response to “Transformers” was somewhat anticlimactic. “How to Lose Friends and Alienate People” (2008), based on the best-selling memoir of Toby Young’s tenure at Vanity Fair, cast Fox as a model and lust object for Young’s stand-in (Simon Pegg). The film opened to strong box office in England, but disappeared quickly after a brief stint in North American theaters. Still, Fox’s strong presence in the media kept interest on a steady boil, and her participation in several high profile projects quickly raised the temperature. “Transformers: Rise of the Fallen” (2009) was the most obvious of these, but other action-oriented features seemed to indicate that Fox and her handlers were seeking to push her away from the glossy roles of her past. “Jonah Hex,” based on the cult Marvel Comics series, cast her as a gun-toting mistress of the Old West, while “Fathom” (2010) another feature inspired by a graphic novel, cast her as a young amnesiac recruited by the American military for her underwater abilities. The feature also served as her debut in the producer’s chair. Meanwhile, the Diablo Cody-penned “Jennifer’s Body” offered her another about-face as the title character, a cruel cheerleader who begins picking off the local boys in her small town after becoming possessed by a blood-drinking demon.

* Also Credited As:
Megan Denise Fox
* Born:
Megan Denise Fox on May 16, 1986 in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, United States
* Job Titles:
Actress, Model

Significant Others

* Companion: Brian Austin Green. Began dating c. 2004; engaged in November 2006; rumored to have split in February 2009, but sources claim they are working things out

Milestones

* 1999 Won several awards at the American Modeling and Talent Convention in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
* 2001 Made film debut in the Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen movie Holiday in the Sun
* 2004 Played Faith Ford s daughter on the ABC series, Hope & Faith
* 2004 Series regular debut on the short-lived WB comedy The Help
* 2004 Starred in Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen, alongside Lindsay Lohan
* 2007 Played Mikaela Banes in Transformers, the love interest of Shia LaBeouf s character
* 2008 Joined the ensemble cast of How to Lose Friends and Alienate People
* 2009 Re-teamed with Shia LaBeouf for Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
* Moved to Los Angeles at age 16
* Started training in drama and dance when she was five years-old

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