The Bride & Edward Cullen Nov 21, 2009
November 20, 2009 - has signed on to star opposite Twilight star in an adaptation of the Guy de Maupassant short story ".". According to The Hollywood Reporter, Pattinson will play George Duroy, a journalist who goes from zero to hero in Paris thanks to his "ruthless and calculating bedding of the city's most glamorous and influential women. ; Thurman plays the wife of Duroy's friend, a woman who is extremely involved and connected in the goings-on of Parisian society. She helps Duroy in his... (IGN FilmForce)
Hablan las estrellas de New Moon Nov 20, 2009
El guin est basado en un cuento de Guy de Maupassant, que es una historia sper que llevaba aos tratndo de hacerse. Se llama Bel Ami y le he invertido mucho tiempo y ganas porque quiero que sea algo muy personal. (San Diego Union-Tribune)
"Twilight" movies inspire vampire stampede Nov 10, 2009
"You can almost hear the refrain like there's a carnival barker stalking the halls of the Santa Monica hotel hosting the annual American Film Market, where independent producers from around the world seek financing and distribution deals.With "Twilight" fever regripping the nation -- Chapter 2, "New Moon," rises in theaters November 20 -- many of the projects on display at the trade show are spinning any "Twilight" connection they can find to hawk their wares.London-based Protagonist Pictures is... (People's Daily Online, China)
More of this story Sep 30, 2009
The funds will allow all students at the learning center to attend a performance of five short plays in Little Rock which are theatrical adaptations of works by Mark Twain, Edgar Allan Poe, Guy De Maupassant. W. W. Jacobs and Washington Irving. (Hamburg Ashley County Ledger, AR)
Michael Ignatieff: Arrogant Bastard May 14, 2009
Andrew Steele, May 13, 2009 at 5:26 PM EDT. The Conservatives were presented with a complex and challenging opponent in Michael Ignatieff. (Globe and Mail -- Business)
Absinthe and the Arts Apr 30, 2009
French writers and poets like Arthur Rimbaud, Charles Baudelaire, Paul Verlaine and Guy de Maupassant all partook, and some wrote about their experiences or attributed their creativity to the fabled green fairy. Ernest Hemingway was also a fan, as was Oscar Wilde, who often referred to absinthe in his work, and who once wrote, After the first glass, you see things as you wish they were. (Suite101.com)