Kelly Brook is in the new issue of Total Film Magazine and the photoshoot is extremely hot, showing her in a bikini while paying homage to famous Hollywood women.
In the main photo above she is doing her best Princess Leia impression which I’m sure will send all of the Star Wars fanatics into a seizure.
The more I see her in photoshoots and bikinis the more excited I get for Kelly Brook‘s spread in Playboy magazine.
[Click thumbnails for larger view]
source: Kelly Brook Is Sexy As Princess Leia In Bikini [Celeb Gossipz]
If you’re a Star Wars fanatic then you probably know all of these products but if you’re like me and don’t have a clue when it comes to Star Wars stuff well then you will get a kick out these. Here is the weirdest but also the funniest products of all time that came from the franchise.
Space Slug Oven Mit
Tauntaun Sleeping Bag
Death Star Grill
Slave Leia Pet Costume
Dagobah Frog Habitat
Jedi Bathrobe
Star Wars Porcelain
Chewbacca Backpack
Darth Vader Toaster
Felucia Ant Farm
Chop Sabers
They really have every category checked don’t they?
source: The Most Awesomely Weird ‘Star Wars’ Products Of All Time [The Huffington Post]
Maxim have come up with a list of their hottest nerd crushes and I have to agree with most of them, although I think they are missing Sarah Michelle Gellar (Buffy) and Eliza Dushku.
13. Liv Tyler (Arwen Undómiel) The Lord of the Rings
Granted, she wasn’t the purtiest gal in the LOTR trilogy—that would be Orlando Bloom—but her pert-lipped princess upped a whole new generation of fantasy fetishists’ expectations for elvish tail.
12. Milla Jovovich (Leeloo Minai Lekarariba-Laminai-Tchai Ekbat De Sebat), The Fifth Element
The primordial shrieks, the speaking in tongues, the acrobatic dives from tall building and speeding car alike… In short, nerds dig Leeloo because she reminds them of their moms.
11. Natasha Henstridge, Species
Of course, when she impaled some random dude with her tongue during a make-out session, she added a layer of dread to an exercise that already set hearts a-palpitatin’ among the nerdlinger set.
10. Jennifer Garner (Sydney Bristow), Alias
The show’s mythology lost us after a few seasons—wasn’t it eventually revealed that Sydney was her own mother or something?—but the costumes never did. Note to future starlets: Well-tailored schoolgirl and dominatrix getups can do an awful lot to conceal your profound inability to emote.
The Trek has come a long way from Scottie’s paunch and brogue, hasn’t it? If Mr. Blackwell were commenting on Seven’s nothing-to-the-imagination jumpsuits, he’d say something like, “Set your phasers to STUNNING!” Then he’d inch closer to death’s sweet embrace, hating himself just a little bit more.
7. Famke Janssen (Dr. Jean Grey/Phoenix), X-Men
There’s something about a smart-gal-gone-bad (more like telepathically superbad, actually) that never fails to whirr a fan boy’s propeller. Separately, how come X-Men Nation never entirely warmed to Halle Berry’s Storm? She’s got glowing eyes and she can make it hail. Like a man needs anything more in a mate?
Not that any of these gals are remotely attainable, but this impossibly dimensioned tart gets bonus points for literally being the figment of some video-game designer’s imagination. That most people prefer the pixelated Lara to the one embodied by Angelina Jolie in the two Croft movies says an awful lot, none of it good, about us as a society.
5. Grace Park (Lt. Sharon “Boomer” Valerii), Battlestar Galactica
She gets the nod over cast mate Tricia Helfer’s Number 6 for a single reason: Helfer, who plays a cylon frostier than a mug o’ root beer on the show, recently dropped her space drawers for Playboy (photos available at alt.battlestar.nerdbooty). Park, on the other hand, remains as mysterious to this audience as the outdoors.
4. Carrie-Anne Moss (Trinity), The Matrix
Whether her form-fitting suit was leather, pleather, or vinyl, she cut quite the figure in it, especially when bounding off walls and displaying the best high kick this side of Radio City Music Hall (hoy-o!). Too bad the producers saddled her with actual human emotions in the two sequels.
3. Gillian Anderson (Dana Scully), The X-Files
Remember the episode, set in Las Vegas, when Scully, like, totally transformed into the anti-Scully and started hitting on the Lone Nerdm…er, Gunmen? That was cray-zee! Scully would no sooner swim in that pool than wear a miniskirt.
2. Zoe Saldana (Neytiri), Avatar
It’s a testament to the incredibly advanced level of motion capture animation on display in Avatar that we left crushing on Zoe Saldana even though she doesn’t technically appear as herself in the movie. We left thinking, “Is it wrong to want to go blue?” And the answer is: “Of course not.”
1. Carrie Fisher (Princess Leia), Star Wars: Return of the Jedi
The nerd-universe equivalent of Phoebe Cates doffing her top in Fast Times at Ridgemont High.
A lot of actors who get movie roles weren’t actually the first choices for the role, some original actors pass on the project because they don’t like it or they aren’t getting enough money or sometimes they just can’t schedule it in. Well here is 10 actors who have passed on some of the biggest roles of all time, some of the photos are manips of what they would be like in the role and some are just their normal boring face.
Will Smith – Neo, The Matrix
Will Smith passed on the role of Neo as did Ewan McGregor. Will Smith said, “You know, The Matrix is a difficult concept to pitch. In the pitch, I just didn’t see it. I watched Keanu’s performance – and very rarely do I say this – but I would have messed it up. I would have absolutely messed up The Matrix. At that point I wasn’t smart enough as an actor to let the movie be. Whereas Keanu was smart enough to just let it be. Let the movie and the director tell the story, and don’t try and perform every moment.†Will Smith went on to star in I, Robot.
W.C. Fields – Wizard, The Wizard of Oz
The part of the Wizard was written for W.C. Fields and it seems that it was perfect role, a traveling con man. He turned down the role for the most famous of reasons…money. He was only offered $75,000 by MGM but he wanted $100,000. Other sources say he turned it down to write You Can’t Cheat an Honest Man. The role went to Frank Morgan.
Cary Grant – James Bond
The producers of the James Bond films originally approached Cary Grant about playing the role of Britain’s 007 agent. Cary declined the role because he didn’t want to be tied to a film series. The role went to Sean Connery starting with Dr. No in 1962. Fleming wasn’t entirely happy with the choice. “He’s not exactly what I had in mind,†said Fleming.
Bette Davis – Scarlett O’Hara, Gone with the Wind
Bette Davis turned down the role of Scarlett O’Hara in Gone with the Wind. The role went to Vivien Leigh. Davis decided to pass on the role when she thought Errol Flynn would by playing the part of Rhett. She had refused to work with him earlier.
Sean Connery – Gandalf, Lord of the Ring Trilogy
Amazingly, Sean Connery turned down the role of Gandalf from J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings Trilogy. His reason for passing on the role was due to the length of time for filming – 18 months. Sir Ian McKellan won the role and everyone couldn’t be happier. Mr. Connery said he had never read Tolkein and when he read the script he referred to the hobbits as bobbits.
Daryl Hannah – Vivian, Pretty Woman
Daryl Hannah turned down the role of the hooker, Vivian, because she felt it was demeaning to women. Strangely, she later appeared in Dancing at the Blue Iguana in the role of a stripper. Even more unbelievable, Molly Ringwald also passed on the role of Vivian. Vivian’s role was soon nabbed by Julia Roberts.
Kevin Costner – Bill, Kill Bill Vol. 1 and Vol. 2
Mr. Costner turned down the role of Bill in Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill: Vol. 1 and Kill Bill: Vol. 2. He opted instead to direct Open Range in yet another poor career choice…cough, cough Water World.
John Cusack – John Bender, The Breakfast Club
I think John Cusack is one of the finest actors of my generation and I’m very disappointed that he didn’t get to be part of The Breakfast Club. Of course, he was a mainstay in the teenage angst movies of the 80s, so I’m happy. He was originally the actor chosen to play John Bender. Unfortunately he was unable to fit it into his schedule and Judd Nelson ended up in the role.
Bruce Willis – Sam Wheat, Ghost
Bruce Willis turned down the role of Sam Wheat in Ghost “because he didn’t think the plot would work and that playing a ghost would be detrimental to his careerâ€. Ironically, he played a ghost in The Sixth Sense and he would have played opposite his now ex-wife, Demi Moore.
Al Pacino – Han Solo, Star Wars
Al Pacino, Nick Nolte and Christopher Walken were all considered for the role of Han Solo. Even harder to imagine, supposedly Burt Reynolds turned down the role. Harrison Ford took the part and the rest is box office history.
I can safely say that I am glad none of these actors took on the roles, maybe they would actually be good and I am just used to the ones who actually did the project. But Sean Connery as Gandalf is a big no no for me.
source: 10 Actors Who Passed on Movie Roles [Top Tenz]
I know this may not be a bombshell to most “Star Wars” fans, but James Earl Jones was not in the Darth Vader suit at the time of filming. For the eight people who didn’t know that, sorry to ruin the illusion.
Since Jones’s voice was dubbed in later, David Prowse, the English Actor and body builder (thanks wikipedia) inside the suit, could be heard saying the lines during the actual filming.
This is actual footage from the filming of the first movie. Not really the menacing voice of a Sith Lord, or a body builder for that matter. But he delivers the lines with such gusto. Such fervor.
I don’t know about you, but all I can think about is THIS.