Category: American Hustle

2014 Mar 18

American Hustle Deleted Scene – Jennifer lip-sync Santana’s Evil Ways

A deleted scene from American Hustle, which was released on DVD/Blu-Ray today, on this scene Jennifer dances and lip-sync along Santana’s “Evil Ways” song. All this scene was done in 1 take. It’s amazing! Here’s the video and below are screen captures.

Video Source

2014 Mar 18

American Hustle Screen Captures

Screen Captures from American Hustle are up in the gallery:


Gallery Link:

2014 Mar 08

American Hustle Deleted Scene (Video)

Here’s a deleted scene from American Hustle of Carmine on stage singing and you can see Jen dancing:

This is the scene where this still comes from and never made into the movie:

2014 Feb 16

Jennifer Lawrence wins Best Supporting Award at the BAFTA

Jennifer Lawrence has won the Best Supporting Actress Award, for her role in American Hustle, at this year’s EE British Academy Film Awards, also known as BAFTA Awards.

Jennifer isn’t attending the BAFTA’s cause she’s shooting Mocking Jay.

Congratulations to Jennifer ♥

2014 Jan 17

Jennifer Lawrence nominated for an Academy Award

Jennifer Lawrence has been nominated for Best Supporting Actress at this year’s Academy Awards for her role in American Hustle.

Jennifer is joined in the category by Sally Hawkins, Lupita Nyong’o, Julia Roberts and June Squibb.

American Hustle has gotten many nominations this year:

  • Best Picture
  • Best Actor in a Leading Role for Christian Bale
  • Best Actress in a Leading Role for Amy Adams
  • Best Actor in a Supporting Role for Bradley Cooper
  • Costume Design
  • Directing for David O. Russell
  • Film Editing
  • Production Design
  • Original Screenplay

The Academy Awards will be presented on March 2nd.

2014 Jan 13

Golden Globe Awards Pictures

Good evening, everyone! Jennifer wins Best Supporting Actress and Amy wins Best Actress in Comedy. American Hustle takes the award for Best Picture Musical or Comedy! Here are pictures from Jen, I’ll be uploading more tomorrow:


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2014 Jan 13

Jennifer Lawrence Wins Best Supporting Actress at the Golden Globes

Jennifer Lawrence won the award for Best Supporting Actress at the Golden Globes for American Hustle! Congratulations!

gg2014-jenwin

2014 Jan 12

SAG Foundation Presents A Conversations Q&A With American Hustles Cast – Pictures

Pictures from the SAG Q&A are up in the gallery, thanks Claudia.

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2013 Dec 24

New American Hustle Stills & Behind Scenes

Hello everyone!

I’ve added some new American Hustle Stills and Behind Scenes photos. Enjoy!



Gallery Links:

2013 Dec 14

American Hustle’s Jennifer Lawrence and Amy Adams on Singing, Dancing, Locking Lips, and Building Characters

Jennifer Lawrence and Amy Adams in American Hustle

Christian Bale and Bradley Cooper may have top billing in American Hustle, director David O. Russell’s madcap seventies crime epic, but it’s the film’s knockout dames, Amy Adams and Jennifer Lawrence, who ultimately steal the show. Adams plays Sydney, the lover and partner of conman Irving (Bale), while Lawrence plays Rosalyn, Irving’s wife, who’s poised to spoil his deal with crazed cop Richie (Cooper). Together, they prove why they’re two of our finest actresses, inhabiting roles unlike any either star has played before.

When we caught up with Adams (who continues to fascinate us with the unexpected grit beneath her sunny persona) and Lawrence (whose mix of humor and bemusement only makes her more compelling), both women were more than ready to talk about crafting their characters, dancing with Cooper, and their incredible shared kiss.

On David O. Russell’s knack for creating hyperreal yet completely realistic stories:

AMY ADAMS: Not everything in reality is subtle and slow. When I lose my cool, it is over the top. That’s how we are as humans. What David really does, I feel, is exemplify reality. He finds moments in people’s lives where this so-called “pushed” reality is the truth for these characters.

JENNIFER LAWRENCE: Sometimes real life can be so dramatic and so awful that it’s actually kind of funny. But, above anything else, David’s characters are so incredible, and you have so much emotional freedom, that sometimes what’s on the page turns into something completely different as David’s yelling these ideas and you’re on your toes.

On the best part of playing the rare, well-developed female role:

AMY ADAMS: My favorite part of the process was playing with the vulnerability of my character. She has this veneer, this physicality, and this power, but if I don’t ground that in any true emotion, it’s not going to be that much fun to play, because there are no layers. David always makes sure that his characters are multidimensional and that his women, specifically, are multidimensional. Playing with those dimensions is just a thrill as an actress.

On their kiss, which Adams came up with and Lawrence knocked out of the park:

AMY ADAMS: I feel like Jennifer really made that contribution. I came up with the idea, but she executed it in a way that felt purely driven from character. It didn’t just feel like a moment in which two girls are going to kiss onscreen. It was from somewhere emotional. I mean, she killed it. And that laugh she gives after? I mean, come on now. Genius. I didn’t tell her do that. All I thought was, “What if she plants one on her?” And Jennifer did that in a brilliant way that sells it comically and dramatically. It never feels like it shouldn’t have been there. It feels so organic. And that’s all due to Jennifer.

JENNIFER LAWRENCE: [Whispers] Thanks, Amy.

On getting down with the song and dance of American Hustle:

JENNIFER LAWRENCE: David came to me before we started shooting, and he said he had a vision of Rosalyn wearing yellow cleaning gloves and running through the entire house singing [Paul McCartney’s] “Live and Let Die.” And I thought that sounded incredible, but how’s it going to make sense? I’m usually so stupid with these things. I’m just like, “Yeah, I’ll dance, I’ll sing, whatever!” But I think this song [signifies how] Rosalyn is so angry, and she’s at this point where she’s been lied to for so long. And she’s getting to this point in her marriage, which she’s been fighting for for so long, where she’s finally ready to just let it die. So it was just a really great, crazy moment. I threw my neck out, actually.

AMY ADAMS: I was trained as a dancer, and dancing with Bradley was awesome. He’s such an amazing dancer. It was so much fun.

JENNIFER LAWRENCE: You should have danced with me.

AMY ADAMS: There’s still time!

On using sexuality to get into character:

AMY ADAMS: One part of how I storytell has always been through my body. I find a character through movement. And one of the things that struck me once I had the wardrobe and I knew that Sydney was going to be a sexual being, was the thought of people who also had an elegance with their sexuality and the power expressed through their sexuality. So for me, dancing, again was kind of how I started to feel Sydney. I thought about Ann-Margret and Syd Charice and these women who seemed like they were in control because of the way they moved their bodies.

On playing female cons who are constantly juggling fact and fiction:

AMY ADAMS: It was a very delicate balance. Sydney is a girl who says she wants to be anyone other than who she is. And that’s where we meet her. She’s already at a point of reinvention. She meets Irving, and he presents to her who she wants to be. He sees her as smart and intelligent and as a lady. She loves him and feels found. And then he betrays her. That’s not cool. [Laughs] But I think there are moments where she’s not sure how she feels, and she’s starting to believe her own lies. Maybe things could work with Richie, and maybe she does like him. And it was a really interesting dynamic to play a woman who’s not so much torn between two guys, but between truth and a lie. I think she really just wants somebody to see the truth of who she is. I think every girl knows how that feels—she’s just a little crazy about it.

JENNIFER LAWRENCE: It really just comes down to a study of people. It’s all of these things that I’ve been doing since I was little that were useless—just watching people and studying them and being able to mimic their body language and things like that. And being able to find a person. What kind of person are you playing? How do they move? How do they walk? Between “action” and “cut,” for me, it’s almost like meditating, in a weird way. Like, if I’m cold, in between “action” and “cut” I’m not. Or if I’m in physical pain, in between “action” and “cut” I’m not. I’m in a completely different frame of mind. It’s a high.

Source

2013 Dec 12

New American Hustle TV Spot

A new TV Spot for American Hustle is out

2013 Dec 12

71st Golden Globe Awards Nominations

Jennifer Lawrence has received a nomination for the 71st Golden Globe Awards Nomination in the Best Supporting Actress Category for her role in American Hustle.

She released this statement earlier today:

Thank you to the HFPA. This is so exciting. I’m thrilled that the film received so many nominations and that I get to share this with the rest of the cast.

American Hustle has also been nominated for Best Motion Picture Comedy or Musical, Best Actor and Actress in Comedy or Musical for Christian Bale and Amy Adams, and Best Supporting Actor for Bradley Cooper. The movie has been nominated for Best Screenplay and Best Director.

The Hunger Games: Catching Fire has been nominated for Best Original Song with Atlas.

The 71st Golden Globe Awards winners will be announced on January 12th, 2014.

2013 Dec 12

2014 Screen Actors Guild Awards Nominations

The Nominations for the 2014 Screen Actors Guild Awards Nominations are out and Jennifer has been nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her role in American Hustle.

The cast has also been nominated for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture.

The 20th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards will air on January 18th.

2013 Dec 09

American Hustle New York Press Conference Pictures

American Hustle New York Press Conference Pictures

Jen attended the Press Conference for American Hustle in New York last saturday, here are pictures, thanks to Nicole:

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2013 Dec 09

American Hustle Review

Time Entertainment has a review on American Hustle:

American Hustle: Sex, Scandal and Flat-Out Fun

Christian Bale, Amy Adams, Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence form a fabulous ensemble cast in David O. Russell’s dramatic comedy about the Abscam scandal

Irving Rosenfeld approaches the bathroom mirror without bothering to ask who’s the fairest of them all. Paunchy of gut and bald on top, he knows he has work to do. Like a surgeon of sleaze, he glues a toupee thatch to his pate, arranges the lank hair on his temples across his skull and shellacs the whole mop with hair spray. Now he just needs to suck in his gut and don a three-piece suit and — voilà! — he’s 1970s New Jersey’s idea of a presentable businessman. Or con man, that is: Irving sells art forgeries and takes money for investments in fantasy companies. Charles Ponzi might say, with a connoisseur’s appreciation, “Now that’s a schemer.”

You watch the first scene of American Hustle and think, That’s Christian Bale doing another of his life-imperiling body transformations. Bale lost 62 lb., from a muscular 182 to an emaciated 120, for the lead role in The Machinist; somehow he survived. This time he gained 40 lb. and walked with an older man’s slouch. For his trouble, he herniated two discs. He also crept inside Irving’s body and spirit to play — no, to convincingly be — a grifter working the long con. Doesn’t everybody, really, through white lies and easy evasions? “We’re all conning ourselves one way or another,” Irving-Bale says, “just to get through life.”

The best way we can think of to get through 140 minutes of your life would be to see American Hustle, a balls-out story about political corruption that director and co-writer David O. Russell turned into a crazy, conniving comedy: history replayed as sparkling farce. Russell reunited the star pairs from his last two films — Bale and Amy Adams from The Fighter, Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence from Silver Linings Playbook — then Cuisinarted the romantic alliances until everyone had a chance to get screwed in one way or another. The New York Film Critics Circle recently acknowledged the toxic, tonic splendor of American Hustle by giving it awards for Best Film, Best Supporting Actress (Lawrence) and Best Screenplay (Eric Warren Singer and Russell). These should be the first of many awards from now until Oscar night.

Continue reading American Hustle Review