
Sorry for the really late updates, I have uploaded all the recent events of Arielle to the gallery. She looks really stunning!
GALLERY LINKS:
– Events in 2009: Limited Edition Superbly Restorative Argan Body Lotion Launch
– Events in 2009: Watchmen Los Angeles Premiere
– Events in 2009: NYLON Magazine and MySpace Young Hollywood Issue Party
– Events in 2009: Maxim’s Hot 100 Celebration
This is an off-topic post, I would like to shamelessly plug my new fansite that I have just opened for relationship between Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson) and Bella Swan (Kristen Stewart) from the “Twilight” series by Stephenie Meyer. This site aimed to provide daily updates with news, recent videos/audios & photos. EdwardHeartBella.com
I have uploaded new event photos of Arielle attended the Friday The 13th Premiere on February 9, 2009. She looks great!
GALLERY LINK:
– Events in 2009: Friday The 13th Premiere
There’s a substantial twist in “The Uninvited,” a pretty fair and reasonably scary remake of South Korean director Kim Jee-Woon’s thriller “A Tale of Two Sisters.” The twist was there in the stylish original, which I watched after the English-language re-do. If one of my film critic colleagues hadn’t guessed the twist out loud, and correctly, I might very well have been taken in by it. But you know? I’ll never know.
The Guard Brothers directed “The Uninvited.” They are Thomas and Charles, and they are British, and while much of their work here stays in strict stylistic line with the 2003 original, they supply jolts efficiently. Any idiot can frighten an audience with a “boo!” moment—the heroine turning suddenly, only to be startled by some innocent character, for example. Almost any idiot can direct a sequence involving the slow approach to a creepy, concealing object, out of which something will spring, or ooze or fly. But the quality of the surprise after the suspense, that’s what separates the hacks from the talent. The Guard Brothers cut fast and rarely steer clear of cliche, but they have a knack.
Like turning fresh cod into fishsticks, the Hollywood machine has processed the 2003 South Korean horror film A Tale Of Two Sisters into The Uninvited, essentially remaking it as The Sixth Sense. Gone is the original film’s ambiguous, psychosexual bent; it’s replaced by unsettled ghosts dropping by to parse out information in the spookiest way possible. As with most PG-13-rated horror, it’s a slick, bloodless affair that’s neither as suggestive as the classic general-audiences ghost stories of the past, nor as intense as a hard-R would allow it to be. The result is a middling Frankenstein-like hybrid of spectral mayhem and murder mystery, constructed entirely out of borrowed parts.
Arielle Kebbel Shares Music Favorites With ARTISTdirect
Arielle Kebbel found inspiration from many different places for her character Alex Rydell in The Uninvited, including the musical world. She has a diverse palette for sonic treats, and she shared musical experiences, her ideas for a soundtrack, and some of her favorite bands with ARTISTdirect.com in this exclusive interview.
If you were to create a soundtrack for the film, what bands would you pick and why?
Good question! It’s funny I am very sensitive to music with all of my characters. I actually spend a lot of time thinking about music ahead of time and what the character would listen to and maybe what Arielle Kebbel would listen to in order to help get me into that character. So for me, Incubus has significant meaning just because that was how I started my day every morning. It was one of the soundtracks that helped transfer me from Arielle to Alex. So now anytime I hear a couple of those songs—which I prefer to keep private—it takes me back to feeling like Alex for a minute [laughs].
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