The media build-up has started for the May premiere of this movie Iron Man 2,
and for some reason studio publicists have chosen to focus on how Scarlett
Johansson looks in her snug Lycra catsuit. She plays a spy called the Black
Widow.
"When I first saw (the suit) I was like, 'If I gotta get into that
thing, I better start now'," she told the Independent, a British paper. "I did a
lot of weight training, mixed martial arts and hand-to-hand combat. When you're
working out that much you also have to feed your new body, so you eat in a
different way, very clean, lots of omelette, turkey. ... It's been an empowering
experience. ... I built up so much strength."
Spotlight couple: Aaron
Johnson, star of this new movie Kick-Ass, is engaged, at age 19, to a
43-year-old British divorcée with two kids, ages 13 and 3. "I'm an old soul and
she's a young soul," he told People mag.
The lady is one Sam Taylor-Wood, a
conceptual artist and cancer survivor who's seven months pregnant with his baby.
They met when she directed Nowhere Boy, a 2009 movie in which he played the
young John Lennon.
"I've got a wonderful woman, latex
stockings" Johnson told People. "She's lovely and she's a fantastic mother."
Is it just me, or does that last part seem kinda creepy?
Actress Naomi Watts,
who's got a couple movies opening soon, is laughing off rumours that she's
splitting from actor Liev Schreiber. They've been a couple since 2005 and have
two kids.
Watts tells the N.Y. Daily News that far from splitting, she's
pretty serene about her life these days: "I see myself as any other woman," she
said. "Every day I'm struggling to get it right, be a good mother and have time
for my relationship with Liev. I'm not sure whether I'm doing any of it right,
but I've finally got to the age where at least I know that I'm just doing my
best."
Watts is 41. Schreiber is 42. Their sons are Sasha, 2, and Sammy,
1.
Now it can be told: The new Woody Allen movie will be called Midnight in
Paris. It's about how "a young engaged couple's lives are transformed," says
this press release. "The film celebrates a young man's great love for Paris, and
simultaneously explores the illusion people have that a life different from
their own is better."
Silver lining dep't: It turns out that volcanic ash is,
er, good for your skin. It's not some Icelandic export agency that's claiming
this, it's Tengen, a Japanese beauty-products firm, which claims to use ash from
a 400,000 year old volcano in its face goo. The gimmick - sorry, I mean the
scientific explanation - is that those tiny particles are a great exfoliant,
scouring out your pores at the submolecular level or something.
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