With news that Dakota Fanning will meet with New Moon director Chris Weitz next week to formally discuss her being offered the role of vampire Jane in the Twilight sequel, it’s time for us to help Weitz find his Alec, Jane’s bloodsucker brother. According to the books, Alec is a pale boy (surprise) who could be Jane’s twin. “His hair was darker, and his lips were not as full, but he was just as lovely,” Stephenie Meyer writes in New Moon. Elijah Wood is a popular suggestion, since Jane and Alec are small in stature, but I doubt that the man who starred in the Lord of the Rings trilogy would want to be backburner in a Twilight sequel. Then again, if Weitz (or the director of any future Twilight sequels) wanted to go off-book and flesh out the fascinating Volturi and their guard with Meyer’s approval, I don’t think anyone would mind. (Right?) Also, what is Elijah Wood doing these days?

Assuming Wood is out, I submit High School Musical’s Lucas Grabeel (pictured) for consideration. He might be a bit too tall to pair with Fanning, but they could always have him stand/walk in a shallow hole/trench. (Really, he’s not going to be onscreen that long for it to become a huge inconvenience.) To me, Grabeel’s face is angelic, but also blank — perfect for a character who is able to cut off all your senses and make you feel absolutely nothing. Together, he and Fanning (character gift: to bring the pain) would be appropriately off-putting. Plus, they’d look so cute together.

(source)

 

Rosario Dawson

Chris “Ludacris” Bridges


Rosie Perez

Dakota Fanning


Rosie Perez and Rosario Dawson

Dakota Fanning and Rosie Perez

 

Angus T. Jones

Dakota Fanning


Val Kilmer

 

At a festival that features several films with sexual content, including full male nudity and a documentary about bestiality, a southern Gothic tale that includes the rape of a young girl is causing the biggest stir.

“Hounddog” is the story of Lewellen, a girl played by 12-year-old Dakota Fanning, who is growing up in the 1960s South. She is a free-spirit obsessed with Elvis Presley and has little supervision by her abusive father and alcoholic grandmother.

Even before the first screening of “Hounddog” at the Sundance Film Festival this week, a Christian film critic, citing Fanning’s age, decried the movie as child abuse, and Roman Catholic activist Bill Donohue called for a boycott.

Fanning is defending her work as well as the movie, and so is the head of Sundance, who said it was courageous for director Deborah Kampmeier to tackle “challenging material.” “Hounddog” is entered in the festival’s dramatic category.

“It’s not a rape movie,” Fanning said Tuesday. “That’s not even the point of the film.”

The disturbing scene lasts a few minutes but is not graphic. There is no nudity, the scene is very darkly lit and only Fanning’s face and hand are shown.

Kampmeier said it took her a decade to get the film made, largely because of the rape scene, but cutting it was a compromise she was unwilling to make.

“This issue is so silenced in our society. There are a lot of women who are alone with this story,” she said.

“When you’re shooting a film, it’s the images you line up next to each other that create a story,” Kampmeier said. “If you have a hand hitting the ground, Dakota screaming ‘stop’ and you see a zipper unzip – that creates a rape.”

Ted Baehr, chairman of the Christian Film and Television Commission and publisher of the Web site movieguide.org, claims “Hounddog” breaks federal child-pornography law. He said the law covers material that “appears” to show minors engaging in sexually explicit conduct.

“Even if they’re not actually performing the explicit act, we are dealing with a legal issue here,” he said.

Baehr said Fanning is being exploited in the film, and that it should be considered an outrage.

“Children at 12 do not have the ability to make the types of decisions that we’re talking about here,” he said. “If we’re offended by some comedian’s racial slur, why aren’t we offended by somebody taking advantage of a 12-year-old child?”

Two other children perform in the film. Cody Hanford plays Buddy, and Isabelle Fuhrman plays a girl nicknamed “Grasshopper.”

Kampmeier said she talked with the children and their parents but didn’t go into great detail with the young actors about the content.

“I didn’t have to articulate to Cody and Isabelle the psychological elements that were going on in this film,” she said. “I used images to tell the story. I didn’t manipulate these children or explain to these children what was going on.”

Fanning said she and Kampmeier talked for months before the film was shot and spent a day painting pottery together and discussing the story.

“It’s not really happening,” Fanning said of a rape. “It’s a movie, and it’s called acting. I’m not going through anything. Cody and Isabelle aren’t going through anything, their characters are.

“And for me, when it’s done it’s done,” she said. “I don’t even think about it anymore.”

Sundance director Geoffrey Gilmore said independent filmmakers should pursue sensitive subject matter.

“I feel the mission and very nature of what Sundance is about is to provide a platform for that,” he said.

 

Here is a clip about “Hounddog”. The film everyone is talking about with Dakota Fanning.

The screenplay for “Hounddog” is a dark story of abuse, violence and Elvis Presley adulation in the rural South, written and directed by Deborah Kampmeier – calls for Dakota Fanning’s character to be raped in one explicit scene and to appear naked or clad only in “underpants” in several other horrifying moments.

Fanning’s mother, Joy, and her Hollywood agent, Cindy Osbrink, see the movie as a possible Oscar vehicle for the pint-size star.

 

Dakota Fanning and Beau Bridges

Aug 072006
 

Investors have withdrawn cash from controversial movie Hounddog – which sees child actress Dakota Fanning appear in graphic rape scenes.

Fanning, who is just 12 years old, plays a sexually abused girl who seeks sanctuary in the music of rock legend Elvis Presley.

The child star’s mother and agent are hopeful that Fanning’s part in the controversial film will win her an Oscar but the team has been lambasted by critics who fear the role will jeopardise her childhood and horrified investors have withdrawn some funding after seeing the upsetting scenes.

A spokesperson for the Los Angeles branch of Citizens Against Child Abuse says, “The subject matter in Hounddog is extremely disturbing. We will reserve judgment until we have seen the film but past experience has taught us that whatever artistic merit it may contain there is every likelihood it will attract the wrong kind of interest.”

A crew member adds, “The movie is dynamite in every sense of the word. I think it will shock people, especially in the deep south where it is set, because of the rape scenes and others in which Dakota is stripped down to her underpants, but in pure theatrical terms it will either become a cult classic or surprise everyone by sweeping the board with awards.

“Dakota has been incredibly brave to perform in scenes many adult female stars would have baulked at. I think a lot of people on set were wondering how they’d feel if it was their daughter acting that role.”

 

It’s Christmas for pedophiles: Dakota Fanning will appear nude in an upcoming movie. Eeewwww.

Well, apparently it’s Inappropriate Child Actor Joke Day on MollyGood. And what better to follow up Haley Joel Osment’s tragic car accident than raping Dakota Fanning? Only in a movie, of course. I do not actually advocate rape of Dakota Fanning, or anyone for that matter.

Seems that little Dakota has more acting balls than many actresses twice her age–she’s willing to go nude and get (fake) raped for the sake of the craft. Now, lets just see whether those scenes make the final, and fucking disturbing, cut. The New York Daily News reports:

The screenplay for “Hounddog” – a dark story of abuse, violence and Elvis Presley adulation in the rural South, written and directed by Deborah Kampmeier – calls for Fanning’s character to be raped in one explicit scene and to appear naked or clad only in “underpants” in several other horrifying moments.

Fanning’s mother, Joy, and her Hollywood agent, Cindy Osbrink, see the movie as a possible Oscar vehicle for the pint-size star. But despite Fanning’s status as a bankable actress – whose movies, including last year’s “War of the Worlds,” have earned more than half a billion dollars since 2001 – the alarming material seems to have scared off potential investors from the under-$5 million indie project.

“The two taboos in Hollywood are child abuse and the killing of animals,” a source close to the situation told me. “In this movie, both things happen.”

Child abuse, animal killing, ya know, same difference. What about animal abuse or child killing? Smooth sailing.

(source)



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