Showing posts with label Hung. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hung. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Hung On Anticipation


Season one of Hung has ended with one of their most drama filled episodes yet! Ray is concerned about getting laid off from his job, Tanya is left with an ultimatum of sharing Ray with Lenore as a Happiness Consultant or having no one to push around, and Ray’s most recent client is someone who he would have never dreamed of.
Because Ray is worried about the layoffs his school is doing, he is more than willing to work with Lenore – a professional in his eyes – in order to obtain money so that he can find a new home for him and his children. However, this upsets Tanya because she is afraid of losing him completely. As Ray tries to work it out with Tanya, Lenore presents him with a new client that turns out to be his ex-wife.
With such a brain spinning closure, the series have left the audience wanting more, panting for the next season of Hung. It would be no surprise if the premiere for Season 2 will surpass the 2.7 million rating it received for their Season 1 premiere.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Call Them Crazy


First Anne Heche, co-star on Hung, calls her ex-husband, father of her child Homer, lazy on national television and then she’s being assigned a parental coach in order to learn how to cooperate better with her ex-husband when it comes to their son. Now Heche is keeping her two children Atlas, 5, and Homer, 7, away from her grandmother who she feels displays anti-homosexual feelings. Heche explains her reason from keep her children away from their grandmother by saying her mother “attempts to turn gay people into straight people... [and that she] stands up against love.”

Thomas Jane Interview About Dark Country


Sometimes actors and actress want to spread their horizons and try to enter different fields of entertainment and media. Actor Thomas Jane, of TV’s “Hung” has done just that with his directorial debut with the horror thriller “Dark Country”, which is on DVD from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. The film tells the suspenseful, twisted tale of newlyweds who make the regrettable decision of rescuing a sinister car crash survivor known only as “Bloody Face.” For a first time director, the movie’s unique visuals show strong performances.
Read our exclusive interview with Thomas Jane about his first acting and directing movie “Dark Country” and don’t forget to pick yourself up a copy!

Thomas, have you always been interested in directing?
THOMAS JANE: Yes, I have. Working with so many great directors, eventually you come to the conclusion that if you’re going to get anything interesting done, you’re gonna have to direct something yourself. I’ve really been thinking about this and looking for the right project to come along for a while.

Why did you choose “Dark Country” as your first time up at bat?
JANE: Well, I’ve been looking for something unique and something smaller scale - you know, there are only four characters in the film - something that would let me feel I could control it a little bit better than if it were a big budget film with a lot of locations and actors. I also wanted to direct something I could put a unique visual style to and have it makes sense in terms of the story. Movies like this aren’t being made or even considered anymore because today everything’s so big budget and caters to the largest audience possible. Shooting a small movie for the straight to DVD market gave me a certain kind of freedom.

During the film’s shoot, who was tougher on whom: Thomas Jane, Director, on Thomas Jane, Actor, or vice versa?
JANE: They were tough on each other [laughs]. You know, there’s no real handbook to directing yourself in a film and there are not a whole lot of guys who’ve done it. I did call up Mel Gibson and he generously talked to me for an hour and gave me so much good advice. He told me that when he directed his first film he was also starring in, he called up Clint Eastwood because he was nervous about it. Eastwood talked to him for an hour on the phone. He told him not to short change himself as an actor when directing. Sure, you’re gonna be pressed for time, and wanna do one or two quick takes on yourself and move on, but don’t do that. So, that’s the advice passed down from Eastwood to Gibson to me.

You and Lauren German have nice “honeymoon phase” chemistry in the film. Can you talk a little bit about your leading lady?
JANE: Well, Lauren’s a terrific actor. She’s got these classic American movie star good looks, but she can also really act. When I showed the film to people, they were really impressed with her. Anyway, she dedicated herself to this project and really gave it her all. You watch the movie and it looks like it’s a hot summer night and it’s not, it’s actually f*ck*ng freezing and the poor girl was the smallest person on the set and she had the least amount of clothes on [laughs]. She really hung in there and gave it her all.

Ron Perlman’s a fanboy favorite - how’d he come to be involved in the film?
JANE: Well, Ron’s a friend of mine. You know, I publish graphic novels, I’m a big comic book guy and I’ve got a site called rawstudios.com with fanboy stuff on there and so it was just inevitable that I’d become friends with Ron Perlman since he’s such a man of the cloth. I also did a movie with him called “Mutant Chronicles” and we had a blast and became good friends on it. And, so, it was just perfect that I got him in the movie. He just fits that world to a tee and I’m very, very happy and proud that he’s in my film.

Was working with a low budget a creative blessing or curse?
JANE: You know, it’s both. We shot the film in twenty five days. But one of my favorite films is called “Detour” and it’s with a guy, a girl and a car and it’s about their adventures and misadventures on the road. This film definitely takes a page from “Detour” and they shot that movie in, I think, under two weeks, and it’s a classic. You use what you have to your advantage. Instead of trying to hide the low budget, I tried to make it sort of a star in a way and bring out what’s kind of cool and kitschy about doing things on such a low budget - kind of the way Oliver Stone did “Natural Born Killers” using these low budget techniques to create interesting visuals.

Do you have your next directing gig lined up?
JANE: Well, I want to direct “Devil’s Commandos” as a 3-D feature, but I don’t think I’m gonna have time because I’ve gotta do a second season of “Hung” and I’ve got several other acting projects lined up, so I’m gonna be really be busy. I think I’ll end up producing “Devil’s Commandos” and let someone else direct it. But I do want to direct another film. The learning curve is so steep on your first film that it would be criminal not to employ what you’ve learned on another one.

Would you ever direct an episode of “Hung”?
JANE: I don’t think that’s my strength. That kind of comedy directing…there’s so many guys out there who can do it better than me that I don’t feel I have anything unique to give to “Hung” except as an actor. So I’m gonna let the guys who direct things like “Hung” direct that and try not to step on their toes. If I directed the show, it would be very odd. A very strange episode, outside of what people have come to expect [laughs].

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Hung Star Cheap?


Twitter seems to be getting a lot of people in trouble lately. A former waiter in Beverly Hills who used Twitter to update people on the celebrities that dinned at his restaurant was fired when he tweeted about Jane Adams, co-star on Hung, skipping out on her $13.44 bill because she "forgot" her wallet in the car. Apparently not if her agent paid the bill the following day and the waiter was tipped only a month later!
Dear celebs, don't dine unless you have the cash and we all know you do unless you like Lindsay Lohan.



Hung


Do you need to feel better about yourself? Stuck at a dead end job, need to support your children, and as luck has it, need a new place to live because your house burned down? In HBO's new series Hung, Ray Drecker (Thomas Jane) tries to escape his feelings of being a loser by becoming a male prostitute. With the help of Tanya Skagle (Jane Adams) as his business partner, watch Drecker try to boost his self-esteem and better his life as he uses certain endowments that would make it hard for him not to feel like a winner with all the compliments from the ladies.