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Entries in Jennifer Lawrence (482)

Saturday
Sep262015

Jennifer Lawrence's "Hometown Hero" Banner Revealed in Downtown Louisville

Louisville native Jennifer Lawrence received special recognition in downtown Louisville on Saturday morning. A “Hometown Hero” banner honoring Jen was revealed at the Kentucky Center for The Performing Arts. The banner was made possible by a group of young fans calling themselves Lawrence's Ladies. They raised money for the banner by creating a GoFundMe page. The banner is the latest in the Greater Louisville Pride Foundation’s “Louisville’s Hometown Heroes” series. The banners honor famous Louisville natives and events. 

Images thanks to @PhotograTom.

Friday
Sep252015

New Still of Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss Everdeen in Mockingjay Part 2 + Sam Claflin Interview in total Film

Click for larger size

There's a beautiful and intense new Mockingjay Part 2 still of Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss and a short blurb about the film in Total Film's Winter Preview Edition.

Click for full sizeThere's also a cute little interview with Sam Claflin where they pose film quotes to him as questions. Oh, to have been a fly on the wall at that that infamous old lady strip club....

Click for full size

Wednesday
Sep162015

New 'Mockingjay Part 2' Poster + Tickets on Sale Oct 1st

A gorgeous new Mockingjay Part 2 poster debuted today on Jennifer Lawrence's facebook page (yes, she DOES have one, people! It's run by her team) along with the announcement that Mockingjay Part 2 tickets will go on sale October 1st.

The poster features Katniss and a Mockingjay with the new tagline:

 

A Creature As Unquenchable As The Sun

 

The tagline is a quote from Mockingjay, Chapter 25. It's after a very, very sad thing happens. You know what I'm talking about, book readers.

 

Mockingjay Part 2 Ticket & Double Feature Information:

The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2 tickets will go on sale nationally on Thursday, October 1, 2015 beginning at 12pm EST/9am PST. Buy tickets in the first 24 hours to receive a bonus digital download of Mockingjay Part 1! Mockingjay Part 2 showtimes will begin 7pm on Thursday, November 19

BONUS DOUBLE FEATURE:

Wednesday, November 18, fans will have an opportunity to screen a double feature of Mockingjay Part 1 and Mockingjay Part 2. THE HUNGER GAMES DOUBLE FEATURE will be a one night only, premium experience including exclusive on-screen content and premium giveaways, allowing moviegoers to see THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY PART 2 a full 24 hours ahead of Thursday’s advance shows. These special showings will also be showing at IMAX theaters, so you'll be able to see both films in IMAX!

You'll be able to purchase the double feature tickets across the US starting on October 1st. 

What do you think, tributes?

Wednesday
Sep162015

New 'Mockingjay Part 2' Stills

Thanks to QuarterQuell we've got 2 new Mockingjay Part 2 stills and a look at the full, untagged versions of the Mockingjay Part 2 stills released with the Mockingjay World Tour announcement. 

Wednesday
Sep092015

New 'Mockingjay Part 2' Still of Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss + Interview

The New York Times just released a brand new still from Mockingjay Part 2 alongside a great interview with Jennifer Lawrence. Seeing this new image makes me realize how badly we are starved for STILLS! We want more!!

Here's the full interview by Brooks Barnes:

"I picture myself drowning.”

Jennifer Lawrence swallowed hard and continued. “I picture myself drowning. Outwardly, I look like I’m having a blast, and I am, at least on some levels. There I was — burp, burp, burp — just a little gal from Kentucky getting discovered by big ol’ Hollywood. But inside I’m terrified. In an instant — boom — everyone’s listening, everyone’s looking.”

Ms. Lawrence, 25, was trying to remember the even younger woman she was in the fall of 2011, as the promotional campaign for the first “Hunger Games” movie began. The attention was not entirely new; she attended the 2011 Academy Awards as a best actress nominee, for the gritty indie “Winter’s Bone.” But that experience was nothing compared with the scrutiny that arrived when she signed on to play Katniss Everdeen, the reluctant fighter at the center of the “Hunger Games” series.

And now? How does Ms. Lawrence assess herself as she prepares to say goodbye to Katniss? “Mockingjay Part 2,” the fourth and final “Hunger Games” movie (at least for now), arrives from Lionsgate on Nov. 20.

The answer — along with Ms. Lawrence’s take on Kris Jenner, being too young to play roles for David O. Russell but doing it anyway, and her dreamy connections to her “Hunger Games” cast mates — emerged last month during an hourlong conversation in a suite at the Four Seasons hotel here. She arrived for the afternoon interview fully primped for a photo shoot (black stilettos, white micro-miniskirt with zippers on the side) and took command: efficient handshake, can we please turn off the air conditioning, let’s get on with this. Before long, though, she had her feet on the sofa and was unwrapping candy while laughing and showing signs of being a fun gossip. Here are excerpts:

Q. At this point, Katniss has been through the mill. She’s had to hunt children for sport against her will. She’s been bedeviled more than once by that godforsaken cat.

A. If Katniss was scared in the last movie, then she is almost numb in the next one. She’s been through so much.

Q. Does the same description apply to you? You’ve been through a lot, too, over these last few years. Your private photos stolen and published online. Your pay for “American Hustle” dumped on the Internet as part of the Sony hack. Falling down at the Oscars.

Could you maybe rattle off a few more mortifying things about me? [Laughs.]

Sorry. How have you personally changed since the first “Hunger Games”?

I don’t feel like I’m being dragged by anything anymore. I feel more in control. I’m calmer. I know that there’s no point to feeling anxious all day, so I try not to. I’m still scared, but it’s about different things. Now, I worry about — [Trails off and shifts a bit uncomfortably on the sofa.] O.K., get ahold of yourself, Jennifer. This is not therapy.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Sep092015

Jennifer Lawrence - New Images & Video for The Be Dior Winter 2015 Handbag Campaign


Dior has released some new images and a behind the scenes video of the lovely Jennifer Lawrence for their Winter 2015 Be Dior Handbag campaign

 

My handbag is noisy too, Jen.





What do you think of Jennifer's latest Dior campaign? You can check out photos from her Shine Don't Be Shy Dior Addict lipstick campaign here
Tuesday
Sep082015

'Mockingjay Part 2' and Cast Featured on Entertainment  Tonight

Entertainment Tonight aired a little featurette on Mockingjay Part 2 and cast members Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson and Liam Hemsworth last night. Check it out:

Seeing the old clips makes me a little nostalgic. I can't believe it's the beginning of the end! 

Friday
Sep042015

The Hunger Games Producer Nina Jacobson Talks About The End of The Franchise, Women in Hollywood & More With FilmInk

Nina, Liam, Jen, Josh and Francis at the Catching Fire premiere in Madrid Nov 2013

FilmInk just posted a great new interview with Nina Jacobson on the end of The Hunger Games films, how Jen Josh and Liam have changed over the course of filming and some of the challenges facing women in the movie industry today. She also reiterates how she feels about more Hunger Games films. Same here, Nina!

Nina Jacobson was named one of Forbes most “100 Powerful Women” in 2005, and that was before the savvy producer had even broken out on her own and helped launch a franchise known as The Hunger Games. Jacobson began her career with brief stints at Universal Pictures and Dreamworks before she moved to Walt Disney in 1988 where she worked as studio executive on such blockbuster works as the first Pirates of the Caribbean film, Remember the Titans and the first Chronicles of Narnia film. However, in 2006, Jacobson was one of the causalities in a restructuring at Disney and she was let go from the company. Her termination at Disney, however, pushed Jacobson to start her own production company, Color Force, in 2007. The company secured the rights to Jeff Kinney’s Diary of a Wimpy Kid books, which proved a hit franchise. But the next series of novels she would acquire would do ever better. They were The Hunger Games, and with the series coming to an end in November, Jacobson reflected on production, and talked female protagonists and directors and the push for change. 

It’s a good investment that you made…

It turned out ok!

What sparked this for you?

I just found that it was a book where once I picked it up I couldn’t put it down. I couldn’t stop thinking about it. It just felt really powerful, really relevant. And I thought that it managed to be provocative and to talk about violence, entertainment, and the gap between the 1% and the 99%, but to do it all through the prism of a character who you felt deeply for. It just felt like something you had never seen before, and something that I wanted to see on screen, and a character that was unforgettable.

In what ways have you seen Jennifer, Liam and Josh change over the course of filming?

I think the most heartening thing has been to see how close they have become with each other. Often times fame divides people and makes people individuate or be competitive with each other. They never turned that way. They became a family, they became incredibly close, they grew up together. Other people of that age are going to college, and they instead had this experience. Certainly their freedom of movement has been impacted, but they have had a good role model in someone like Woody. Everywhere you go people recognise him, and he’s really gracious about it, and really appreciative. It’s not like you appreciate it when people bother you at dinner, but appreciate that success of that kind is nothing to be taken for granted. They all come from good families, of people who have their head on straight, and are surrounded by good people and not yes people.

In terms of franchises and offshoots, is there another life for any of this Hunger Games mania?

I don’t know. Right now it’s hard for me to picture that. Right now it feels complete. If Suzanne Collins has an inspiration I’d be psyched, but at this point I don’t know how to do that.

In your career, you’ve gone through so many incarnations. Would you ever want to step back into the studio reigns again or do you like the independence you have now?

At this point, I love the feeling of being one of the people who makes the thing. That you really feel a sense of connection and being on the team, and being the advocate. At this point it’s hard for me to imagine going back. I loved being an executive and never thought I’d want to be a producer, and now I love being a producer and it’s hard to imagine putting the suit back on. But never say never.

In terms of having female characters as protagonists, and proving that can be successful, how important was The Hunger Games?

I think The Hunger Games is part of a larger story, that thankfully has included some other big titles that have shown it not to be an anomaly. Whether it’s Frozen, Inside Out, Bridesmaids, Spy, The Heat… there are so many great, entertaining and successful films that have been made and driven by great actresses. Something like the latest Ghostbusters is something that you wouldn’t have imagined happening five or ten years ago, and now it makes perfect sense. It’s part of a larger story in which some of these strides are being made, and the obvious is becoming apparent – which is that as 50% of the population, and with probably more than 50% of consumer decisions being made by women, we should also be able to star and drive commercially successful films. I think it has been happening for a long time, but people just keep not getting the point. Something like Titanic was driven by Kate Winslet and by female audiences who saw it again and again and again. And people still need to be reminded about the obvious. Hello!

Jennifer Lawrence has her production company. Did she pick your brains about it?

Yeah, we definitely talked about it a bit. I’m really proud and excited to see her take that next step. She actually said one of the nicest things to me that anybody ever said, which was that on set that I don’t say that much, but what I do say she always wants to hear. The idea that it’s better to create an environment in which people can do their best work, and to only speak up when you have something meaningful to say, and not just to impose your presence as a producer. To let other people’s voices emerge instead of your own.

Be sure to check out the full post at FilmInk.