Tongues are wagging about Kirsten Dunst and Orlando Bloom playing tonsil hockey recently. The two play lovers in the upcoming comedy, “Elizabethtown,” and apparently grew close.
Besides a lot of touching at the MTV Video Music Awards, a tattler says he saw the pair after the show, making out in a Miami hotel pool. “There’s real chemistry between them. It was hot!” said the eyewitness to Star mag. (What is he, the male Paris Hilton?)
Star says that despite his three-year on-off relationship with Kate Bosworth, Orlando’s had a thing for Kirsten for a while. A “friend” says, “I think he would leave Kate in a second if Kirsten became available. He said Kate means the world to him, but he can be fickle.” But Dunst also has been on and off again, with Jake Gyllenhaal, her boyfriend of two years. Though they broke up last year, they’ve also been spotted hooking up more than once since then.
Related Travel Information
Orlando Bloom set out to prove that English actors can do American accents in his new film, a romance.
Orlando stars in Cameron Crowe's Elizabethtown, as a shoe designer who falls in love while flying to his father's funeral.
Susan Sarandon is also in the movie, and Kirsten Dunst plays the flight attendant who wins Bloom's heart.
Source: news.scotsman.com
Actress Kirsten Dunst has vehemently denied reports that she had a fling with actor Orlando Bloom on the sets of their movie Elizabethtown.
According to Internet Movie Database, the actress admits she got close to Bloom but says the friendship never turned romantic. Speaking at a press conference at the Venice Film Festival she said, "If you're alluding to whether Orlando and I got together then that's a No."
But she added, "There are a lot of charismatic people in this industry and I can understand why people on location get together."
Source: hindustantimes.com
From "Say Anything ...." to "Almost Famous," Cameron Crowe has made his name with movies that strike the right tone -- a bittersweet balance that's funny, melancholy, romantic and observant. It's one his idol, Billy Wilder, perfected decades ago.
Which is what makes "Elizabethtown" so curious, and such a disappointment.
In telling the story of a young man who returns to his small-town Kentucky roots after his father's death, it's as if writer-director Crowe wanted to make several movies but couldn't decide among them, so he just made them all, then trimmed for time.
Characters say and do things real people don't say
When Drew Baylor, played by Orlando Bloom, gets fired from his job and goes home to kill himself using a self-propelling knife attached to an exercise bike, it is clear that this will be a quirky tale.
Baylor, a young shoe designer, has failed miserably in his newest design of a shoe with silver flaps, costing the company $972 million.
Phil DeVoss, his conniving, unemotional boss played by Alec Baldwin, spends no time in condolences and instead calls Baylor to own up to his fiasco to a waiting reporter.
“I am ill-equipped in the philosophy of failure,” he says and