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TIM ROTH | for @magnusedom Reservoir Dogs | 1992
Bonus:
ferretfyre reblogged
TIM ROTH | for @magnusedom Reservoir Dogs | 1992
Bonus:
ferretfyre reblogged
Anonymous requested:
Have you got a gif set of Tim smoking
You worked with Tupac Shakur a few years after that on Gridlock’d.What was your impression of him?
Tim Roth: I adored him. I initially didn’t want him for the role – it just shows my white ignorance. I was just this pasty-faced London boy who didn’t know who he was, despite the fact that he’d gone double platinum by that point, I think. But what happened was, I was attached to the project and we had another actor who was interested in the role, then backed out at the last minute. So we suddenly found ourselves without a second lead. Tupac’s name came up – “He’s a rapper, he’s a really interesting guy and he’s really up for doing this” – and I just said, “Can you get me an actual actor, for fuck’s sake? Please?” I had no idea he was an actor before he was a musician, that he’d gone to the Fame school in Baltimore, none of that.
While this was going on and they were looking for someone else, I got nominated for Rob Roy. And during one of those silly party things you have to go to while it’s Oscar season, Quincy Jones came up to me and said, “Hey, Tupac, you should really give him a chance.” And it’s like, Aw, fuck, okay. Quincy is vouching for him. Let’s set up a meeting.
So the director Vonde [Curtis-Hall] and I are sitting in this restaurant I used to go to, waiting to meet him, and in comes a security team. sweeps the place and then they go out. Then a group of women enter; they go and sit at this table in the corner. And then in comes ‘Pac, who sits down, politely says, “Hi, how are you?” At which point, he proceeded to totally lay out the character. He had it down. And I’m just thinking, This guy is fucking amazing! I want to work with this guy! What do we need to do to get him in the movie? Meanwhile, Vonde is sitting there with a Cheshire Cat grin on his face, just going “I told you so…”.
I had two issues with him. One was the fact that he was writing, he was directing and starring in music videos and recording an album. He’d show up on set exhausted, and I just told him, I need you for five weeks. Let’s make this together, concentrate on this and then you can back to doing the other things. Which he did, and he was really cool about it.
The other thing was guns. We were sitting on the back of a truck, waiting to do a scene in Downtown L.A., and I said to him, “What’s with all the guns, why is there all this drama, what have you got yourself into?” And he very calmly explained to me the world he was living in at that moment, then said, “I think there’s a bullet out there with my name on it, man.” He and I were supposed to hang out the day after he ended up getting shot; we were really excited because he was coming back to L.A. and I really missed him a lot. The joke was that he had to re-record some dialogue for the film, and since I’d already been in the Death Row Studios with him and we’d recorded stuff, it was like, “Okay, ‘Pac, you’re in my territory now!” And then, you know, we got the word he was in the hospital, and then a few days after that, he had died. I still miss him.
phoenixavalon
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Vincent & Theo (1990)
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Grace of Monaco (2014) ❖ Prince Rainier
Rainier III (Rainier Louis Henri Maxence Bertrand Grimaldi; 31 May 1923 – 6 April 2005) was the Prince of Monaco from 9 May 1949 to his death in 2005. Rainier ruled the Principality of Monaco for almost 56 years, making him one of the longest ruling monarchs in European history. Though internationally known for his marriage to American actress Grace Kelly, he was also responsible for reforms to Monaco’s constitution and for expanding the principality’s economy from its traditional casino gambling base to its current tax haven role. Gambling accounts for only approximately three per cent of the nation’s annual revenue today; when Rainier ascended the throne in 1949, it accounted for more than 95 per cent.
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Lucky Numbers (2000)
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Lie to Me (2009) 1.08 ‘Depraved Heart’
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The Cook, The Thief, His Wife & Her Lover (1989)
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tim roth in reservoir dogs (1992)
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* Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead
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cinematic-portraits-deactivated
Tim Roth photographed by Robert Barber, 1985.
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cinematic-portraits-deactivated
Tim Roth photographed on the set of Little Odessa (1994).
Photo credit: Michael Woods Bridgeman Images
This has such an insane type of energy to it… Like I don’t even know how to start describing it
Prada Fall/Winter 2012
phoenixavalon