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Monica Bellucci Breaks Down 5 of Her Most Defining Roles


Monica Bellucci began her career in front of the camera at age 16, first as a model and later as an actress. After making her film debut in the 1991 Italian comedy La Riffa, playing a beautiful but destitute widow, she became cinema’s go-to Fellini-esque femme fatale. Over the years, however, she has proven her mettle in everything from arthouse indies to franchise blockbusters — just not very many comedies, as she is quick to point out. “I’ve done more dramatic films and sad stories,” she says. “I don’t know why. Because I’m brunette?”
But the alluring Bellucci is also funny.

When asked what role she is most often recognized for, the actress answers with a story: “I want to tell you something. I was in the airport in New York not long ago. Someone came up to me and he told me, ‘Oh, I love you. I love your work so much. But you know, the role I love the most is Zorro.’ He thought I was Catherine Zeta-Jones!” She keels over in a fit of giggles. “He said, ‘Can you autograph this?’ And I said, ‘Yes. Okay.’ I didn’t have the courage to say, ‘Listen, it wasn’t me!’”
Now, she finally has the chance to prove it on-screen in Mafia Mamma, a mob comedy about a suburban mom who inherits her family’s mafia empire. “When I received the script, I laughed out loud,” Bellucci remembers. “So, for me, it was really a new experience.”

“She’s mesmerizing,” director Catherine Hardwicke says. “Even when she would just talk to me, she would be whispering and saying these beautiful things in that Italian accent. Whatever she asked me, I’d be like, ‘Of course!’ She hypnotized me.”
In conversation with A.frame, Bellucci reflects on five of the most defining roles of her more than 30 years on-screen. “I’ve done many films,” she says, “but there are some of them that really created a special situation.”

1Bram Stoker’s Dracula
Directed by: Francis Ford Coppola | Written by: James V. Hart

Oh my God, it was so funny because actually Roman Coppola saw pictures of me. So, I met Francis Ford Coppola and I was just a model at the time. It was a cameo, but this is what I wanted to do! It was a really important moment for me. Short, but important.
When I say yes to a character, it is because I wanted to share a moment of acting that is interesting for me, but sometimes that can be a big role. Sometimes that can be a small role. When I worked with David Lynch [on Twin Peaks], that was really a tiny moment I had with him on set, but I said yes because it was an experience to be on set with him and to be in a crazy project like that. Sometimes it’s just a matter of meeting interesting people, and being on set with creative directors, talented artists, enjoying the moment.
2Malèna2000
Written and Directed by: Giuseppe Tornatore
Malèna is another incredible story, because I met [Giuseppe] Tornatore when I did a commercial for Dolce & Gabbana. I was so happy to work with him, because I was in love with Cinema Paradiso, like all of us. It’s an amazing movie, and he did it when he was 28 years old! He was very young when he did Cinema Paradiso. And when I did the commercial with him, Tornatore told me, ‘I have an idea in my mind for a movie I want to make. If one day I make this movie, I’m going to call you.’ And I said, ‘Okay, let’s see. What is the movie?’
I was in Puerto Rico shooting my first American movie, Under Suspicion, with Morgan Freeman and Gene Hackman. It was four years later, actually. Tornatore called me and he told me, ‘Do you remember that movie?’ I said, ‘Yeah, of course. I remember that you told me about this movie.’ ‘Okay, I want to make it.’ For five months, we were in Sicily, and voila! We did Malèna. It was an important movie, because it was an Italian movie traveling around the world. For Italy, Malèna was a big deal.
3The Matrix Reloaded2003
Written and Directed by: Lana Wachowski and Lilly Wachowski
This is another crazy story. I was in Paris, and I went to see Matrix — the first one — and I came out from the theater and I said, ‘Oh my God, I want to make a movie like that.’ And then, I was in America presenting Malèna, and the Wachowskis called me. They wanted to meet me. And they offered me Persephone. I was so happy. Then I was in Sydney, shooting the movie. That’s the story. That’s the way it is — cinema is coincidences and unpredictable situations.
4The Passion of The Christ2004
Directed by: Mel Gibson | Written by: Mel Gibson and Benedict Fitzgerald
The Passion of the Christ was a crazy movie. I remember I was in Rome, and there is a costume designer — Maurizio Millenotti, who is a great costume designer — that I did Malèna with. We had lunch together, and he said, ‘Oh, I’m going to do The Passion of Jesus Christ.’ And I said, ‘Who is going to play Mary Magdalene?’ You see, I didn’t say Mary! I said, ‘Who’s going to be Mary Magdalene?’ And he said, ‘The role is not cast yet.’
And then, Mel Gibson wanted to meet me. I met him and boom, I was in the movie. When I did this movie, I mean, nobody would believe that this film would become what it became! But everybody was like, ‘Oh my God, this movie is going to be so controversial’ — those kind of things. I guess I make controversial movies.
Irréversible was very controversial. When we went to Cannes, it was a complete scandal! My mother called me and said, ‘What did you do? Why don’t you make normal movies?’ I said, ‘What do you mean normal movies?’ Now, Irréversible is a cult movie in some ways, even 20 years later.
5Spectre2015
Directed by: Sam Mendes | Written by: John Logan, Neal Purvis, Robert Wade, Jez Butterworth
I was 50 years old, so when my agent called me, saying, ‘Listen, some people want to meet you for Spectre,’ I said, ‘Who am I going to play? M?!’ Actually, it was a revolutionary thing that a 50-year-old woman would be in a film like that. And then, everybody said so many things because I was 50 years old in a James Bond movie! It was an experience. I really enjoyed working with Sam Mendes — he’s great — so it was a very beautiful experience to be in that movie.

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‘I am officially off the market’: When Margot Robbie revealed she made the ‘conscious’ decision of not dating actors


Margot Robbie revealed her decision to not date actors because of the media scrutiny that came with a public relationship of two high-profile actors
Back in 2015, A-lister Margot Robbie made a declaration that she would not be dating any actors. The actress may have alluded to her fiance Tom Ackerley, who she married the following year in 2016. In an exclusive interview with Marie Claire, she revealed that being in a relationship as an actor herself came with its own set of challenges. She believed that dating someone who was popular would add on to the media scrutiny.

Margot Robbie opened up on why she made a conscious decision to not date actorsTalking to Marie Claire, she claimed, “I am officially off the market.” She then shared the reasoning behind her decision and added, “I made a conscious decision not to date actors.” She continued to explain, “But not because I hate actors. That’s a nasty generalization to make, and that’s not the case. People take such an interest in your love life when you have a profile, it puts a lot of stress on a relationship.”
The Barbie actress continued, “So two people with profiles, I figure it’s just double the amount of scrutiny, and I’d like to avoid that at all costs.” This came after reports of her locking lips with Tarzan co-star Alexander Skarsgard started making rounds. It was reported that she was caught kissing the actor during the Sundance Film Festival.

Margot Robbie revealed she opted for a minimal lifestyle even after becoming an actorIn the interview, Robbie also opened up about how she was adapting to fame. She shared, “I have a normal 24-year-old life. If I were a waitress, I’d probably have the exact same lifestyle. I’d go to the same clubs I go to already, live in the same house with the same housemates, hang out with the same people.”
However, Margot Robbie tied the knot with Tom Ackerley who is an English producer and actor. The duo met on the sets of 2013 movie Suite Francaise where Tom was working as an assistant director. Post marriage, both of them launched their production company LuckyChap Entertainment.

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Monica Bellucci and Tin Burton at lunch in the restaurant in Selci Lama


For All Saints’ Day, the Hollywood star from Tiferno returned to his native Umbria to enjoy a moment of relaxation and then visit his parentsOn the occasion of the All Saints’ Day celebrations, the Hollywood star of Tiferno origin, Monica Bellucci, returned to her native Umbria to enjoy a moment of relaxation and to visit her father Pasquale and her mother Brunella.Flanked by her current partner Tim Burton, she went to lunch, together with about twenty old friends, at the Osteria del Musicista, which has always been her favorite restaurant, in Selci Lama.Menu dedicated to typical dishes of the area, which includes an appetizer with breadsticks lined with coppa, duck in porchetta and grilled pork livers, polenta with wild boar sauce accompanied by the very typical cappelletti in broth.To conclude, a dessert based on fried “ciaccia” with Nutella and roasted chestnuts.
Having paid the bill and greeted the restaurant owner and lifelong friend, Roberto Polchi, Monica brought home cappelletti and broth for a family dinner.

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‘Rocky’ Was Quite Different In His Original Screenplay, Sylvester Stallone Claims


Sylvester Stallone took his friend’s advice on a rewrite of the original screenplay to Rocky. A few tweaks later, he was on his way to major success.
In the new Netflix documentary Sly, Stallone discussed how he initially conceived of the project, which had a much harder edge. In the early version, Rocky was depicted as a “thuggish” character, inspired by Martin Scorsese’s crime drama, Mean Streets.

But Stallone’s perspective changed when a friend read the script and thought the boxer was too cruel for audiences to actually care about him.
Stallone recalled her crying.

“She goes, ‘I hate Rocky. I hate him. He’s cruel. He hits people. He beats them up.’”
Stallone took it to heart, and asked what he could do to soften the character.

“I said, ‘what if you stop short of it?’ Like, maybe he almost did. He could have, that’s his job, but he doesn’t?’ ‘That’d be nice,’” he added. “I said, ‘What if he had a girlfriend or something?’ ‘Yeah, that’s nice.’ So I go back, start writing that: ‘Girlfriend. Nice.’”
$117 million in box office later, a franchise was born.

Stallone also revealed that actor Dolph Lundgren sent him to the hospital during one fight scene in Rocky IV.
“Dolph Lundgren… he pulverized me,” Stallone says in the documentary. “Later that night, my heart started to swell—which happens when the heart hits the chest—and then my blood pressure went up to 260, and they thought I was going to be talking to angels. Next thing I know, I’m in intensive care, where I’m surrounded by nuns, and I thought, ‘OK, that’s curtains.’”
Stallone was in the hospital for nine days following the incident, praying for “one more round.”
“For the first minute of the fight, it is going to be a free-for-all,” Stallone told Lundgren. The Swedish actor joked in a separate interview that all he did was “obey orders,” explaining, “[Stallone] was the boss. I did what he told me.”
Doctors allegedly told Stallone that he received a blow to the ribs that made his heart rattle around in his ribcage, a condition typically seen in head-on collisions. “I did hit a bus, of sorts,” Stallone joked.

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