stellapetite
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‘Mission: Impossible 4′ snares its villainess: Lea Seydoux
Léa Seydoux, the French actress who recently appeared in Ridley Scott's "Robin Hood" and the opening farmhouse scene of “Inglourious Basterds,” will square off against Tom Cruise in Paramount’s fourth “Mission: Impossible” movie. Seydoux will play the lead female villain in the pic, which just began shooting in Europe.
The movie features two Europeans as its heavies, with Michael Nyqvist, the actor who played journalist Mikael Blomkvist in the Swedish thriller “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” and its sequels, already on board as the male side of the villain coin. The movie, being directed by Brad Bird, has new franchise faces Jeremy Renner, Paula Patton and Vladimir Mashkov joining regulars Cruise, Ving Rhames and Simon Pegg.
J.J. Abrams, who is producing with Cruise and Paula Wagner, worked on the story with scribes Andre Nemec and Josh Appelbaum, who wrote the screenplay.
The “Mission: Impossible” movie is 25-year-old Seydoux's latest foray into English-language production. She recently wrapped “Midnight In Paris,” Woody Allen’s latest dramedy, which stars Marion Cotillard, Owen Wilson and Rachel McAdams.
She is repped by United Agents and Adequat in Europe
via the hollywood reporter
NOW PLAYING
Pictures of the dress created by Karl Lagerfeld for Léa Seydoux in Louis Garrel’s movie “Le Petit Tailleur”.
Movie distributed by MK2 Diffusion, now in theaters
heyuguys.co.ukEva Green, Lea Seydoux and Gerard Depardieu Cast in Farewell, My Queen:
A woman whose function it once was to read books aloud to Marie-Antoinette is haunted by the memory of her last days at the French court of Versailles, when Louis XVI’s magnificent palace succumbed to the irrepressible forces of revolution. Now exiled in Vienna, Madame Agathe-Sidonie Laborde looks back twenty-one years to the legendary opulence of Versailles and, overcome with nostalgia and remorse, discovers the full measure of her fascination with the Queen she served.
Transporting us to eighteenth-century France with the skill of a consummate storyteller, Chantal Thomas meticulously re-creates the miniature universe of Versailles, brilliantly juxtaposing its beauty and its dawn-to-dusk ritual with the chaos that erupts. Her portrait of Versailles and of Marie-Antoinette is an incomparable account of the collapse of a lost world.
