Friday, 25 June 2010

chloe's imdb board

okay there have been some good posts regarding chloe and some rather Minging posts as well those minging posts are rather bad and uncool and have been logged and reported i am not giving out names of those users but i can't believe the lameness of some people out there chloe and her family and others (me) visit there and it is really awful that people are being so 'fucking' lame on there for those who have posted comments about chloe that are legit thank you for doing so but for those who have been so cruel especially at Chloe's parents then you should be so  'fucking' ashamed of your selves.

this board on http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1631269/board will be monitored and anyone being minging on there will be reported

hello one and all

hello this is cat i am really sorry i haven't been here for such a long time but with exams and all the other bull shit thats been going on i haven't been here but i will be back i promise you that okay so lets get on with it well lets see whats happening with chloe!.

Chloe is now living in London , England until at least november she is filming a new movie called

The Invention of Hugo Cabret

which is directed by Martin  Scorsese yes you read correctly okay here is some background to the movie i am not going to reveal much 

Set in 1930s Paris, an orphan who lives in the walls of a train station is wrapped up in a mystery involving his late father and a robot 

and filming is taking place in the following in the following locations

London, England, UK

Paris, France



 

Thursday, 3 June 2010

Hi

sorry for the lack of entries been busy with exams and schools finished i will try to keep this updated as much as possible

Chloe to star in 'Hick'




How many juicy roles are there for unbearably precocious young actresses like Chloe Moretz? Not as many as you’d think, which makes a star turn in an adaptation of a novel about ” a 13-year-old Nebraska girl who gets more than she bargained for when she runs away to Las Vegas” seem like a pretty good idea. So Moretz is signing a deal to star in Hick, based on the novel of the same name by Andrea Portes.

Variety says that Derick Martini, director and co-writer of Lymelife, is set to direct the film. Portes adapted the script herself. I haven’t read Portes, but Lymelife –with its own teen perspective on the dangers and failings of the American Dream — is enough evidence that Martini is a good pick to direct, and with Moretz could make something memorable out of the material. There are elements of Hick’s story that, if handled properly, could provide a particularly nightmarish parallel tale to Hit Girl’s story in Kick-Ass.

Cat's Comment

Hick is another movie which Chloe will be filming in new Mexico later this year already unfortunately people are being rather silly on various websites talking about a rape scene making it out to be full on duh Chloe is 13 and her family won't let her do anything full on like an actual rape scene it will be more implied.

Saturday, 10 April 2010

‘Kick-Ass’ stars in The Soft Pack’s music video'




Chloe Moretz’s Hit-Girl doesn’t just kick ass on the big screen — she’s also a force to be reckoned with in a new music video.

Moretz, alongside fellow “Kick-Ass” stars Christopher Mintz-Plasse and Clark Duke, are the stars of a new music video for The Soft Pack’s “Answer To Yourself.”
The video, directed by Kashy Khaledi, puts a new spin on the high octane action seen in director Matthew Vaughn’s “Kick-Ass,” not to mention a whole new meaning to the term “food fight” as well.
In the video, a high school geek played by Duke sits by himself at a lunch table, quietly minding his own business as he constructs one of the most formidable Twinkie towers of all time. When a group of Varsity jacket-wearing bullies start getting physical with a bespectacled girl on the opposite end of Duke’s table, an unlikely savior comes along — none other than Moretz herself, donning the same schoolgirl uniform she wears in “Kick-Ass.”
But instead of butterfly knives and handguns, Moretz’s weapons of choice are decidedly less deadly but no less effective — shaken up soda cans and other various food products are the tools of the trade this time around, as an epic food fight breaks out throughout the cafeteria.
As Moretz is busy beating the bullies into submission, her “Kick-Ass” compatriot Mintz-Plasse voyages into the cafeteria armed with a bazooka. But instead of packing explosive firepower, this bazooka is loaded with a messy liquid that’s bound to ruin anybody’s day.
While the video eases off on the bloody violence seen in next week’s “Kick-Ass,” the action-packed mayhem is well intact. Furthermore, it’s nice to see these young actors getting a chance to cut loose without actually having to cut anything!

Just a Sweet Young Actress? $&@%# Right!

CHLOË GRACE MORETZ admits she felt a twinge of envy in the summer of 2008 when the action movie “Wanted” was about to be released, and the austere visage of its gun-toting star, Angelina Jolie, seemed to be staring at her from every billboard in Los Angeles.
So she put out the word to her Hollywood representatives: “I really want to do an Angelina Jolie-type character,” Ms. Moretz said recently. “You know, like an action hero, woman empowerment, awesome, take-charge leading role.”
A month later she got her wish when she was offered a part in the adventure film “Kick-Ass” as Hit Girl, a mysterious vigilante who leaves a trail of bullet casings and body parts wherever she goes.
“My mom was like, ‘It’s exactly what you’ve been wanting to do,’ ” said Ms. Moretz, who was 11 years old then. (She’s 13 now.)
The movie, which opens on Friday, is the director Matthew Vaughn’s violent and foul-mouthed satire about aspiring crime fighters who use traditional weapons to compensate for their lack of superhuman powers. While its maladroit title character (played by Aaron Johnson) learns the heroic ropes, it is Ms. Moretz, clad in a purple wig and matching pleated skirt and wielding a mean double-edged blade, who usually utters the foulest language and perpetrates the most gruesome acts of brutality in the film.
For anyone unfamiliar with the “Kick-Ass” comics series (written by Mark Millar, who also wrote the comics version of “Wanted”), Hit Girl has been the movie’s most persuasive ambassador: the Internet went wild this winter for an R-rated trailer in which Ms. Moretz enunciates an obscene word that little girls are definitely not supposed to say, right before she slices and dices her way through a room full of drug dealers.
But Ms. Moretz and her character raise a recurring question about what limits, if any, should be placed on young actors involved in adult storytelling, and to what extent these performers understand the roles that they are playing. For some critics Ms. Moretz’s performance is stirring the same discomfort they felt when a 13-year-old Natalie Portman strutted her stuff for the ruthless hitman played by Jean Reno in “The Professional.”
Mr. Vaughn, who previously directed the crime drama “Layer Cake” and the fantasy “Stardust,” and who wrote the screenplay for “Kick-Ass” with Jane Goldman, described Hit Girl as one half of “the ultimate father-daughter relationship, where Barbie dolls are replaced with knives, and unicorns become hand grenades.”
Raised by her father (played by Nicolas Cage) to be “a fully trained, brainwashed assassin,” Mr. Vaughn said, “she is not normal, and therefore the rules that apply to other people do not apply to her.”
In seeking a young actress who can be both sugar and spikes, it is not hard to see why the makers of the movie would gravitate to Ms. Moretz. On a visit to New York last month, lounging in a private suite at a boutique hotel in Manhattan with her brother Trevor, 23, Ms. Moretz had no trouble acting her age, fiddling with a bottle of designer water or spontaneously singing a chorus from Lady Gaga’s “Dance in the Dark.” (“This is Chloë after dark,” she explained.)
But when discussing her career she assumed the sophistication of an actress twice her age. Each film she appears in, Ms. Moretz said, “sets a new brick in my acting wall.”
“The more bricks I have, the better I am at acting,” she said.
She has built that wall quickly with movies like “(500) Days of Summer,” in which she played Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s precocious younger sister, and the 2005 remake of “The Amityville Horror.” She has hazier memories of other early roles, booked when she moved with her parents and four brothers to Los Angeles for her father’s plastic surgery practice. “I was so tiny,” she said. “I was a little 6-year-old.”
Trevor Moretz, who is also Chloë’s acting coach, and her mother, Teri, read all the scripts she is sent by her agents, and try to balance her grown-up fare with family-friendly movies (like the recent hit “Diary of a Wimpy Kid”). When “Kick-Ass” arrived, the Moretzes felt it was a showcase for Chloë’s grit and athleticism; they recognized its harsher aspects too but believed she was up for the challenge.
“Being the youngest of five children,” Teri Moretz wrote in an e-mail message, her daughter “has a very well-rounded view of the world.” She added: “It definitely pushes boundaries, but Chloë knows the things that Hit Girl says and does are fictional.”
For Chloë herself, Hit Girl was an opportunity to keep pace with her cinematic idols, to do something “no other kid had done except for Natalie Portman in ‘Léon,’ ” she said, using the European title for “The Professional.”
Not that Ms. Moretz knows that Luc Besson film firsthand. “I haven’t even seen it now,” she said glumly. “I’m not allowed.”
Nor had she seen many of the performances that Trevor regarded as Hit Girl’s antecedents, including Ms. Jolie in “Wanted” and Jodie Foster in “Taxi Driver.” She was, however, given a special dispensation to watch Uma Thurman in the “Kill Bill” movies. “It was hilarious,” Ms. Moretz said. “It’s not like, ‘Oh, I’m killing people with real blood.’ It’s fake.”
Before filming on “Kick-Ass” began, Ms. Moretz spent several months in Los Angeles, London and Toronto training in gymnastics, body conditioning and weapons safety. (“Always check your gun when someone gives it to you,” she said. “Make sure it’s a fake bullet.”)
During the six-month shoot she was also told time and again by her mother, her brother and her director that Hit Girl, and not Chloë, was the one swearing and shooting at villains. The lesson seems to have sunk in. “When they call cut, I leave it behind,” Ms. Moretz said. “You should see me after a crying scene.”
Ms. Moretz’s co-stars praised her for her maturity on set. Mr. Cage, who started acting in his teens, said he appreciated the dangers that child stars face “when not all the ideas are completely formed, and you can get into a lot of trouble.” He added, “You can do things that derail your path.”
Ms. Moretz is “not in it for those reasons a lot of people get involved in film making, the look-at-me syndrome,” he said. “She’s interested in building characters.”
But the filmmakers are bracing for the reception that the movie and Ms. Moretz may receive. In Britain, where the movie was released at the end of March, David Cox of The Guardian assailed its creative team and Ms. Moretz’s mother for allowing that swear word spoken by Chloë to become “acceptable parlance for children in mainstream movies,” adding, “We’ll be the poorer for it.”
Mr. Vaughn said this kind of condemnation was hypocritical because it attacked the movie’s language while essentially forgiving its violence. “I was like, ‘Does it not bother you that she killed about 53 people in this film?’ ” he said. “I’m like, ‘Would you rather your daughter swore, or became a masked vigilante killer?’ They’re going, ‘Yeah, I don’t know.’ ”
Via e-mail Teri Moretz wrote that criticism of her or her daughter did not hurt her. “We know who we are and what we believe, so we don’t listen to other people’s opinions,” she wrote.
The flap over the movie has hardly hurt Ms. Moretz’s career. She will next be seen playing a child vampire in “Let Me In,” an American remake of the Swedish horror film “Let the Right One In,” and has been cast in a film adaptation of “The Invention of Hugo Cabret,” the Brian Selznick children’s novel about a Parisian orphan and his robot, which Martin Scorsese plans to direct.
Until his sister reaches the age when she is old enough to choose her projects for herself, Trevor Moretz said it is his and his mother’s responsibility “to look out for her in this industry, and make sure there isn’t any manipulation or exploitation.”
“She’s a very smart girl,” he added.
Ms. Moretz fired back, “Woman!”
He conceded, “She’s a very smart teen.”
Though she plans to continue acting, Ms. Moretz said she might like to fly a helicopter or go sky diving to help conquer her fear of flying. (“When you’re of age,” Trevor said, “go for it.”)
Asked if there was anything she wanted to do on screen that her family would not yet allow, Ms. Moretz said, “I want to wear heels, if that counts. Just give me some Christian Louboutins and a gun.”


Cat's Comment

there you have it folks a nice open interview with chloe and her brother Trevor Duke there has been a lot of dissing from certain media and newspaper's about Kick Ass it was as though Kick Ass was the most violent movie ever made it hasn't been given an adult rating in the UK however in America it has its been given an R rating which means Restricted.

i wonder if American's who can't see it themselves will come to the UK to see it

Friday, 9 April 2010

Chloe Moretz Defends Kick Ass

Chloe Moretz, 13, has defended her controversial role in the action comedy film 'Kick-Ass', claiming she understands the difference between movies and real-life.
Chloe Moretz says her portrayal of Hit Girl in new movie 'Kick-Ass' is make believe and people shouldn't take it so seriously.
The 13-year-old British actress - who plays assassin Hit Girl in the comic book movie 'Kick-Ass' by director Matthew Vaughn - admits she is quite young to play a character who uses such obscene language and violence, but claims that's the whole point of acting because she understands she could never get away with it in real life.
She said: "It's a movie. Obviously a little girl can't beat up and kill huge, heavy men. I don't see how anyone would realize it's not real. It is a controversial role, but it was a role I wanted to do. If I said a sixteenth of the words I did in that movie at home, I would be grounded for the rest of my life for sure."
Some critics claim Chloe - who was just eleven when she played the superhero in the 15-certificate film - should not have been exposed to scenes in which she had to gun down gangsters and skewer drug dealers with samurai swords, but the actress insists her mother was happy for her to take the part.
She told The Sun newspaper: "My mum reads every script before I go for it. She read it and loved the character because it was a challenging role and was something that would stretch me."
One thing the rising star wasn't prepared for, however, was the physical aspect of the movie as there was a lot of training involved.
She explained: "Two months before the movie started I started training to be Hit Girl. I didn't know it was going to be that physical. They made me do 1,000 crunches a night and like 50 pull-ups. I loved learning the martial arts moves."
'Kick-Ass' stars Aaron Johnson as the titular character and tells the tale of a comic book fan who decides he wants to become a superhero.

Cat's Comment
Chloe has defended the movie rightly so who in the right mind is going to watch this movie and think it is real i mean come on how many movies have you watched and then started copying i have never dressed up like Jason Voorhees from the Friday the 13th movies and gone out on a killing spree i mean come on you just don't do it do you 

People must think everyone believes everything they are fucking watching so well done Chloe for telling those sackless tossers who think kick ass is totally controversial anyone would think Kick Ass was the most   controversial movie ever made what i think is controversial is those lame dick heads from the newspapers who talk about something they haven't seen The daily Mail being one of them.

Kick ASS