Shia LaBeouf and Megan Fox are certainly fanning the gossip fires when it comes to reports they’re an item. The “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” co-stars (whose movie killed the competition with a $201 million five-day opening) sat side by side during a dinner with 10 pals — including director Oliver Stone — at Nobu on Thursday.

“They definitely seemed into each other,” says a witness, who told us that when Fox left at 10 p.m., LaBeouf followed hot on her heels. Another spy added that, while partying at a Rose’s bash in West Hollywood earlier in the week, “Shia couldn’t keep his eyes off of Megan: He literally watched her like a hawk all night.”

Rashida Jones kisses – and tells. When we approached the star during the opening of “Twelfth Night” in Central Park, the actress confided she prefers the smooches of former “I Love You, Man” co-star Paul Rudd to ex-boyfriend John Krasinski. “I’d definitely have to say Paul!” she enthused. “John’s great, but I’d still say Paul.” We wonder if John’s new girlfriend, Emily Blunt, would make the same choice?

(source)

 

Shia LaBeouf and Megan Fox


Emile Hirsch

Tyrese Gibson and Josh Duhamel

Ciara and Tyrese Gibson

Reggie Bush and Kim Kardashian

Travis Barker and children

Kendra Wilkinson and fiance Hank Baskett

 

Where does Transformers star Shia LaBeouf get his wicked sense of humor?

“My humor came from seeing my parents have sex, smoke weed, my mom being naked — just weird hippie stuff, twisted R-rated humor,” he tells the latest issue of Parade magazine.

LaBeouf — who once called his mom “the sexiest woman I know” — admits: “The good actors are all screwed up.

“They’re all in pain. It’s a profession of bottom-feeders and heartbroken people,” he goes on.

The 23-year-old says that when he’s feeling insecure, he stops his bike on the side of a busy road to see if people passing by recognize him (he’s afraid they won’t).

“Actors live dependent on being validated by other people’s opinions. I don’t understand what it is I do that people want. I don’t know what an actor does. I have no credentials. I don’t know what I’m doing. To my mind, talent doesn’t really exist. Talent is like a card player’s luck. It is motivation, ambition, and luck. It’s just a drive to be the best. I think acting is a con game.”

LaBeouf admits he doesn’t “handle fame well.”

“Most actors on most days don’t think they’re worthy,” he goes on. “I have no idea where this insecurity comes from, but it’s a God-sized hole. If I knew, I’d fill it, and I’d be on my way.”

LaBeouf goes on: “Sometimes I feel I’m living a meaningless life and I get frightened. I know I’m one of the luckiest dudes in America right now. I have a great house. My parents don’t have to work. I’ve got money. I’m famous. But it could all change, man. It could go away. You never know.”

The actor also opens about his spring 2007 split from first love China Brezner, a producer’s daughter he met on the set of The Greatest Game Ever Played.

“Maybe it was career pressure…. Maybe I chose work. Every man has those feelings of escape and survival,” he says.

“I know you shouldn’t be that way. I’m trying to understand it and find the answers. I don’t have them now. Why did the love of my life and I break up Man, I have no idea. What was that all about? I have no answers to anything. None.

“Why am I an alcoholic?” the actor, who was arrested for DUI in July 2008 (charges were dropped), goes on. “I haven’t a —- clue! What is life about? I don’t know.”

 

Shia LaBeouf and Megan Fox



 

It looks like Oliver Stone sealed the deal with Shia LaBeouf to star in “Wall Street 2,” previously titled “Money Never Sleeps.” LaBeouf was in talks with the director to star alongside Michael Douglas and Javier Bardem in the sequel to Stone’s 1987 hit, “Wall Street.” On Tuesday, the two sat down with “six men in suits” at La Bottega in the Maritime Hotel, a source reports. It must have been important because, our witness said, “they demanded the restaurant shut down” for the top-secret meeting.

(source)

 

What John Grisham wants, John Grisham gets.

The author was pulling for Shia LaBeouf to sign on to his latest novel-turned-movie, “The Associate,” and he got his wish. “I think he’ll be wonderful!” Grisham gushes. “He’s a very talented actor, and he’s hot. He’s the hottest 22-year-old actor in America, and I think he’ll do a wonderful job.”

Lucky LaBeouf will join the ranks of Tom Cruise, Matt Damon, Matthew McConaughey and Kiefer Sutherland, who’ve all appeared in flicks based on Grisham novels.

(source)

 

Man, you’d think oversharing had mutated and gone airborne on the set of “Transformers 2″ because Shia LaBeouf has caught whatever Megan Fox has.

In the new issue of Playboy, Shia talks — among other things — about the time he lost his virginity. “I was shaking in my boots,” he says about the romp, four years ago.

“Getting naked was very strange. It was the first time I’d been naked in the light, in front of a girl, with no hiding place.”

Things took a turn for the worse when Shia, who was pretending to be a Lothario, made the age-old mistake of trying to copy a porn he’d seen.

“I remember putting a pillow underneath her because I had seen that in a porn movie…[It] put her at a weird angle, where I couldn’t get in correctly. I’m not extremely well-endowed … and clearly this wasn’t the move.

And while that night might have been a disaster, the lady in question ended up dating Shia for a while, where she became his sex-instructor of sorts. “We had a lot of sex and would read the Kama Sutra together and do the wildest s***.”

Megan, the oversharing ball’s in your court!

(source)

 

It took moments for Shia LaBeouf’s Ford truck to flip over during a wee-hours-of-the-morning car accident last July in West Hollywood. But nearly nine months later, the damage to LaBeouf’s left hand, so badly crushed that one finger had no bone left in it, still hasn’t entirely healed. LaBeouf now says it probably never will. During an exclusive interview with EW about the hotly anticipated June 24 sequel Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, the 22-year-old star reveals that he expects to get back only “about 80-something percent” of his left hand’s dexterity.

Though LaBeouf was not to blame for the accident, which according to published accounts occurred when another driver allegedly ran a red light, the actor refused a breathalyzer test at the scene and was charged with a misdemeanor DUI. In late September, the L.A. County D.A.’s office declined to prosecute LaBeouf, citing a lack of evidence, but in January, his driver’s license was suspended for one year. (That’s a virtually automatic consequence for anyone who refuses blood-alcohol-level testing after an accident.) A few hours after the crash, LaBeouf underwent a four-hour, early-morning surgical procedure on his left hand. A few weeks later — against the advice of at least one doctor, LaBeouf says — the actor returned to the Transformers set with a specially designed prosthetic bandage that had to be rewritten into the plot line. Additional surgery was postponed till after the film wrapped.

In his interview with EW (after the jump), LaBeouf talks about his recovery, another potentially calamitous accident that happened on the set, the advice he got from his former costar Harrison Ford, and how it felt to have the fate of the $200 million Transformers sequel hang on him.

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: What’s been going on with your hand since the first surgery?

SHIA LABEOUF: I’ve had screws and plates put in. They put a screw in one of my knuckles. And they shaved a piece of bone off my hip and made a [bone for my] finger out of it.

Was your hand out the window of the vehicle when it got injured?

Yeah.

How is the hand now?

I’m on my third surgery. That’s coming up in a week or two [from April 2]. My middle finger is still crooked as a f—ing noodle, so they’ve gotta straighten it out and put a screw in it.

How long will it take to recover from this third surgery?

I imagine like two months and I’ll be back on my feet.

How much usage will you get back of your left hand?

Probably about 80-something percent. I’ll be able to make a fist again. There’s a knuckle I’ll never be able to move again, but that’s probably the only permanent damage, other than the scarring.

What do you remember of the initial surgical procedure?

The first voice I heard when I came out of surgery was Harrison’s. Harrison [Ford] called me on the phone and said, “Hey, are you okay?” I said, “Yeah, I’m good.” He said, “Well, then you need to get back to work.” I said, “Are you serious?” He said, “That’s the way this cookie crumbles.” So I went back to work. The show doesn’t stop for anybody.

And of course Harrison, your costar in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, shot most of the second Indy movie with a seriously screwed-up back. How soon did you go back to work?

I was only down for two weeks. The average bone healing time is six months.

Did you consider postponing your return to the set at all?

When I came back it was just out of the guilt that I had. I pride myself on my professionalism, and this is the first issue I’ve ever had where I wasn’t able to come to set, and it’s f—ing heartbreaking when you gotta look at your crew. You know, what can you do? You just gotta grab your balls and move forward. There’s nothing else to do. The thing that cut deep to the core of me was knowing that there were 65 human beings [in the crew] who are like family to me, waiting for me to come back. They were sitting on their asses doing nothing because of my…you know, my situation. It’s the most intense s— I’ve ever dealt with, and am still dealing with. I mean, if people look at me like a drunk a–hole, that’s okay. But I know my family looks at me like a whole different person, and I know my crew respects me immensely. And at the end of the day, I can’t do much more.

How debilitating has it been to have no use of your left hand all these months?

It’s hard to do anything. It’s hard to button your pants or brush your teeth, let alone jump off a three-story building into a pad. This movie was the most physical thing I’ve ever had to do, and I had to do it with a broken hand. It’s the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do in my life. Constantly having to take hits and fall and run through explosions and get hit and beat up all day. Aside from my hand, I also got 25 stitches making this movie, in various parts of my body — stuff that had nothing to do with my hand.

In October, there was a report that you got hit with a prop just above one eye and needed stitches.
I basically stuck a f—ing sharp object through my eyelid.

Michael Bay, your director, says it was a large prop of some kind that caught you, which he didn’t want to identify or describe because it’s a plot spoiler. He also says he dropped to his knees as soon as he heard someone on the set say, “There’s blood.”

They stitched me up in a military hospital. The doctor looks at me and he holds his thumb and forefinger about an inch apart from one another. I said, “What is that?” He said, “Blindness.” This is the most insane s— I’ve ever been a part of.

(source)

 

Shia LaBeouf won’t be up to high-fiving any time soon. Hand injuries that the “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull” star sustained during a July 27 DUI citation and car accident are far more serious than the actor has acknowledged.

“For a while there, it didn’t look good,” a source close to LaBeouf reveals to us. “Shia’s tendons had fused together, and right after the accident there was talk of a partial amputation.”

But things are looking up for the action star, who broke two fingers in the crash. LaBeouf underwent a second surgery two weeks ago and appears to be on the mend. Luckily for the 23-year-old, his pain became art. Writer Roberto Orci revealed that LaBeouf’s injury was written into the plot line of the actor’s upcoming “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen,” which is why he postponed a follow-up correctional procedure.

“Shia had one surgery postponed for ‘Transformers 2,’ but there’s no additional complications now,” a rep for the actor confirms. “It’s taken a while, but the surgery has been completed and Shia should be healing fine.”

LaBeouf isn’t the only movie man to have hand-related drama. Ben Stiller was admitted to N.Y.’s Mount Sinai Hospital on Sunday with trauma to his paw. But contrary to LaBeouf’s more severe condition, the funnyman’s injuries were a little less traumatic.

Amidst much secrecy, “one of the hospital’s top hand specialists was called in to treat him,” a snitch on the scene reports. Of the mangled mit his rep had only this to say, “I can confirm that he broke his hand snowboarding.”

Stiller may have had to spend a scary “Night at the Museum,” but the comedy king got away with only an afternoon at the hospital.

(source)



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