Tag: julia
Julia Louis-Dreyfus Wants to Fight in Marvel’s Thunderbolts
The first three phases of the Marvel Cinematic Universe had Nick Fury. The next three, at least, have Contessa Valentina Allegra de la Fontaine. Played by seven-time Emmy award-winner Julia Louis-Dreyfus, the shady character has popped up several times so far, and in her upcoming Marvel movie, Thunderbolts, the …
Raymond van Barneveld cheered to victory by fiancée Julia after rising from sick bed to beat Ryan Meikle
POORLY Raymond van Barneveld peppered the doubles bed after rising from his sick bed – and his hopes have not gone down the pan.
Barney, 55, had a horrible bout of food poisoning on Monday night after visiting a Central London Chinese restaurant and there were doubts about his condition ahead of his 30th world darts championship.
Dutchman Raymond van Barneveld overcame sickness to beat Ryan Meikle[/caption]
Darts legend Van Barneveld says he’s happier than ever thanks to Julia[/caption]
But the No 32 seed – watched on by fiancée Julia Evans – managed to avoid being booted out of the second round at Ally Pally with a 3-1 victory over qualified barber Ryan Meikle.
It is the first time in FIVE YEARS that he has made it to the last 32 of a tournament he last won in 2007.
The former Dutch postie has now set up a blockbuster third-round tie with world No.1 Gerwyn Price after Christmas and the Barney Army will be in strong voice for that one.
It will bring back memories of their tussles at last month’s Grand Slam of Darts, which saw Van Barneveld twice emerge as the winner.
Van Barneveld said: “Ryan never stopped playing. In the first set, I thought when does this guy stop hitting his double 20s? An awesome player.
“Wow, what a great player, All credit to him. I am so happy. I had to work hard.
“I went to a Chinese restaurant in Piccadilly Circus and the whole day I was in bed with food poisoning, me and my manager.
“I didn’t have a good practice. I was very tired.
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“I had worked so hard the whole year and then suddenly we get this.
“You never know what you will get in the prawn crackers.
“My whole stomach had gone. This had been a nightmare. If I managed to play, I am already happy. To play like this, wow, this was a fight against myself, I had to show willpower.
“Julia was emotional, she knew what I had to go through. We were all today in bed.
“I am playing well, I believe in myself. I have a week to prepare, with pills and to relax. I love this game. I didn’t feel happy when I retired.”
Van Barneveld overcame England’s Meikle in round two[/caption]
Julia Fox insists she got Kanye West to like her to ‘get him off Kim Kardashian’s case’
‘Julie & Julia’ Author Julie Powell Dead at 49
What’s UAPS? The UAP Science Ecosystem — United States – Julia Mossbridge
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Even George and Julia can’t rescue this romcom: BRIAN VINER reviews Ticket To Paradise
Julia Fox insists she broke up with Kanye West after spotting ‘red flags’
‘Ticket to Paradise’ review: Take a trip through classic Julia Roberts and George Clooney rom-com banter
No one can elegantly argue under their breath quite like Julia Roberts and George Clooney.
The Hollywood superstar duo have reunited onscreen for the first time since 2016’s Money Monster, and brought back their swift Ocean’s 11 banter for Ticket to Paradise, the latest wedding-based destination rom-com from the director of Mamma Mia!: Here We Go Again, Ol Parker.
In roles specifically written for them, Roberts and Clooney play Georgia and David, a bitterly divorced couple who simply cannot be in the same room without arguing through their teeth. Hissing over shared arm rests, throwing barbs across the middle-seat neighbour on their plane, throwing increasingly fierce public declarations of love at their daughter Lily’s (Kaitlyn Dever) graduation ceremony — the pair imbue Parker and Daniel Pipski’s quick script with every inch of Daniel and Tess Ocean’s combustible chemistry, and it’s a delight to watch them openly despise each other.
When Lily travels with her perpetually partying bestie Wren (Billie Lourd) to Bali, she meets and instantly falls in love with seaweed farmer Gede (Maxime Bouttier), and they decide to get married after dating for 37 days precisely. Worrying their daughter is going to end up making the same choices they did 25 years ago, Georgia and David agree to a rare ceasefire to stop the wedding.
Credit: Universal Studios
As you probably well know, this is nowhere near Roberts’ first rom-com rodeo, and she’s a surefire leading win for Ticket to Paradise, the eternal Girl Standing in Front of a Boy in everything from Pretty Woman to Notting Hill to Valentine’s Day and Eat Pray Love. And it’s not Roberts’ first time attempting to sabotage a wedding onscreen, having valiantly tried in My Best Friend’s Wedding and Runaway Bride. In Ticket to Paradise, Roberts employs the more subtle but confident elements of her rom-com repertoire for Georgia, who emotionally bounces off her co-star Clooney with the greatest of ease.
Clooney, meanwhile, hasn’t done a romantic comedy since 1996’s One Fine Day, and takes on the disgruntled, mansplaining, overprotective dad trope with less ferocity than Robert De Niro in Meet the Parents (who can top an FBI-level investigation hub in a trailer?), but all the mildly perturbed finesse you’d expect. No one casually pauses through a monologue like Clooney, who constantly sounds like he’s in a state of poignant reflection even when explaining the rules of beer pong.
Credit: Universal Studios
As in Mamma Mia!, the engaged couple aren’t nearly as much of a draw as their parents in the film, but Dever and Bouttier make a sweet core pair as Lily and Gede, clinging to each other through the meeting of their sets of parents and perfectly cringing through Clooney and Roberts’ moments of drama, including an arak-fuelled dance-off to Jason Nevins and Run-D.M.C.’s “It’s Like That” and House of Pain’s “Jump Around” that is as face-palmingly ridiculous as Pierce Brosnan singing “S.O.S.”
Parker sets up the pieces for the ol’ lovers-to-enemies-then-back-to-lovers arc, throwing bitey dolphins, Georgia’s overly keen boyfriend Paul (a spectacularly silly Lucas Bravo), and rainy nights in the Balinese jungle in Georgia and David’s path. Parker uses every trick in the classic rom-com book for Ticket to Paradise, even opening the film with a Los Angeles city skyline shot — it’s no surprise the director took the film to Working Title, the studio responsible for ’90s/’00s rom-com cornerstones like Four Weddings and a Funeral, Notting Hill, Bridget Jones’s Diary, and Love Actually.
But more specifically, the film borrows from Parker’s Mamma Mia! experience to tick off the crucial elements of that rom-com subgenre: the destination wedding rom-com. Characters find themselves out of their depth in a beautiful part of the world, navigating new family members, getting acquainted with cultural differences and customs, and building up to the film’s natural finale: the big wedding — think Crazy Rich Asians in Singapore, the fictional Greek island of Kalokairi in Mamma Mia!, Kakadu and the Tiwi Islands in Top End Wedding, and Pam and Greg’s Owen Wilson-pan-pipe-scored Miami wedding in Meet the Fockers. Even Keanu Reeves and Winona Ryder played intolerable wedding guests in stunning San Luis Obispo, California, for the self-consciously named Destination Wedding.
Credit: Universal Studios
With Judy cinematographer Ole Birkeland as director of photography, Ticket to Paradise tries to offer the audience exactly that, with grand sweeping shots of spectacular beaches and mountains, water-level shots of aquaculture farms heaving with bright seaweed, and picture-perfect frames of the main stars clad in lush wedding outfits from The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert costume designer Lizzy Gardiner.
The exact location of “paradise” is never given; it’s just generally located on the Indonesian island of Bali (though it was actually filmed off the coast of Queensland, Australia, in the Whitsunday Islands). But the film does take pains to get this element of the film right, casting Indonesian actor Bouttier as the romantic lead for a start. According to producer Tim Bevan, the team had cultural advisors from script to filming, including cultural consultant Agung Pindha, who also happens to play Gede’s dad in the film. According to the studio, Pindha was heavily involved in decisions around the film’s representation of Hindu Balinese wedding rituals (like Gede’s teeth filing ceremony as a rite of passage), traditional decorations, and food served, such as the babi guling (roast pig) feast.
Ticket to Paradise is exactly that, a fun destination wedding rom-com with Hollywood megastar leads and a savvy script, filmed in a truly magnificent location. You’ll probably add it to your regular Mamma Mia!-adjacent rotation.
Ticket to Paradise is coming to cinemas Oct. 21.