Showing posts with label NaomiWatts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NaomiWatts. Show all posts

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Naomi Watts in sexy bikini true MILF.

With a successful film career, two gorgeous sons and a loving husband, Australian actress Naomi Watts really does have it all.

And if that wasn't enough, the 42-year-old managed to escape the chilly weather in her adopted home city of New York to enjoy a break in the Barbados with her brood this weekend.

Slipping into a string bikini, King King actress Watts proved she really is to be envied by showing off the kind of body that a woman half her age would be proud of.





Yummy Mummy: Naomi Watts enjoys time in Barbados on Sunday with her sons Sasha (right) and Sam (left)
Stunning form: Watts showed off her enviable physique as she enjoyed a dive in Barbados





Wearing a black bucket hat and that celebrity staple - oversized shades, Watts rocked the tiny black number with panache.

And she bravely steered clear of the self-tanner, relying on her porcelain skin to set off her skimpy swimwear perfectly.

Watts seemed happy with the results as she let long-term partner Liev Schreiber snap away with the kind of professional camera that allows no blemish to go unrecorded.

But then her attention was most definitely focused upon her two gorgeous boys, Sasha, three , and two-year-old Sam.

The International star was in family heaven as she laughed with her boys at the quiet resort.

It's a well earned break for the star, who has been filming heavyweight new movie J.Edgar with Leonardo DiCaprio, 36.

Her co-star opted to party at the Coachella festival in the Palm Desert with fellow stars including Diane Kruger, Nicole Richie and Kellan Lutz.

But for Watts, it's all about her family, she even took a break after her children were born - The International last year was her first foray back onto the big screen after new mommy duties.

The family take care to enjoy trips together, visiting the West Coast throughout the harsh winter and travelling to Watts's native Australia around New Year.

Watts, who is good friends with Nicole Kidman and father-to-be Benicio Del Toro, has admitted she'd love a bigger family, and hasn't ruled out adoption.

She told Blackbook last May: 'I would love to have an endless brood of children. I grew up in chaos. I feel comfortable in chaos. Whether or not I'll ever adopt remains to be seen, but I totally believe in adoption.'



Close-up: Liev Schreiber prepares to take professional shots of his partner and youngest son Sam

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Noami Watts stars as CIA operative Plame in Cannes film

Photobucket 
Actress Naomi Watts, left, director Doug Liman, center, and actress Liraz Charhi, right, pose during a photo call for the film "Fair Game", at the 63rd international film festival, in Cannes, southern France, Thursday, May 20, 2010

Photobucket
Actress Liraz Charhi, left, and actress Naomi Watts, right, pose during a photo call for the film "Fair Game", at the 63rd international film festival, in Cannes, southern France, Thursday, May 20, 2010.

Naomi Watts has gotten used to playing unstable women. But with the Cannes Film Festival entry "Fair Game," Watts is playing a woman as steady as they come in Valerie Plame, whose secret CIA identity was leaked by the George W. Bush administration.

Photobucket 
Actress Liraz Charhi, left, and actress Naomi Watts, right, pose during a photo call for the film "Fair Game", at the 63rd international film festival, in Cannes, southern France, Thursday, May 20, 2010



PhotobucketPhotobucket 
From left, actor Khaled Nabawy, actress Naomi Watts, actress Liraz Charhi, and director Doug Liman, rigjt, pose during a photo call for the film "Fair Game", at the 63rd international film festival, in Cannes, southern
France, Thursday, May 20, 2010.


Photobucket

Directed by Doug Liman ("The Bourne Identity," "Mr. and Mrs. Smith"), "Fair Game" chronicles the battle Plame and husband Joe Wilson (Sean Penn) fought in the scandal that called into question the White House's rationale for going to war in Iraq in search of weapons of mass destruction.

"She's a real woman, and more of a woman than I've ever played thus far. A lot of the material I've been drawn to in the past been about women in some kind of psychosis, since David Lynch," said Watts, referring to Lynch's 2001 Cannes entry "Mulholland Dr.", a career-making role in which the actress starred in a tale of shifting identities and twisting personalities.

"But this woman transcends her psychosis, and not alone," Watts told reporters Thursday before "Fair Game" premiered. "She has this incredible husband, Joe Wilson, who gives her the encouragement and strength and belief that they are strong enough to go forward and tell the truth. And who really would have gone there? I certainly wouldn't have. I couldn't have done it. So I'm just in awe of her strength and her courage."

One of 19 movies competing for the festival's main prize, "Fair Game" arguably is the most politically charged film to play in the Cannes main competition since Michael Moore's war-on-terror documentary "Fahrenheit 9/11," which won the top award in 2004.

Beginning in the early days of the U.S. war on terror after the Sept. 11 attacks, "Fair Game" traces Plame's background as a covert operative, taking on assumed identities to uncover details about possible weapons programs in Iraq and elsewhere.

After the Bush administration cites a supposed uranium deal involving Iraq, Joe Wilson writes a piece in The New York Times disputing the information, noting how he was dispatched by the U.S. government to Niger in west Africa to investigate the case but found no evidence of a uranium sale.

Soon after, Plame's CIA cover was leaked to the news media. She says her outing came in retaliation for her husband's Times piece.

I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, then Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff, was convicted of perjury, obstruction and lying to the FBI in the Plame investigation. President George W. Bush commuted Libby's 30-month prison sentence.

In "Fair Game," Watts' Plame and Penn's Wilson face death threats against their family, hostile criticism from the government and accusations of betraying their country.

Wilson, a former U.S. ambassador, fights back in a media campaign against the White House, while Plame refuses to respond publicly to the scandal, which strains their marriage to the breaking point.

"I was so captivated by the character of Valerie Prime and the character of Joe Wilson that I almost forgot it was a true story," Liman said. "She's this incredibly private person, and he's this extroverted, larger-than-life character. And they're married. That's real."

The film is based on the couple's memoirs � Plame's "Fair Game" and Wilson's "The Politics of Truth."

Plame also appeared in the Cannes film "Countdown to Zero," director Lucy Walker's documentary about the continuing danger of nuclear arms. A weapons-proliferation specialist, Plame was among those interviewed about the possibility of terrorist or accidental nuclear detonations.

Though Plame and Wilson were at Cannes for the "Fair Game" premiere, they were not participating in the film's publicity, including a festival press conference.

"She and Joe are both here and are very supportive of the movie. Obviously, part of the story is that they wanted, especially Joe wanted, this story to be told," Liman said. "But this is a film festival, and we were told that in the history of Cannes, they wouldn't normally bring the people on whom the film was based to the press conference. That is the procedure for Cannes."






Click here for more.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Samuel L. Jackson: Liev Schreiber Loved My Sex Scene with Naomi Watts

Photobucket
Samuel L. Jackson and Naomi Watts have a smoking hot sex scene together in "Mother and Child." If you don't believe us, ask Naomi's longtime-partner Liev Schreiber.

He LOVED the scene, according to Jackson.



Jackson said he stopped by his pal Liev's Broadway production of "A View from a Bridge" shortly after Liev had a view of the film which opens Friday.

"When I walked into the dressing room that was the first thing (Liev) talked about," Jackson recalled, replaying the conversation. "He was saying, 'that was so great they way you set it up, your clothes were on, but it was smoking hot.' "

The discussion was fine by Jackson, "As long as the (partner) likes it," he said at the press day for the film.

Jackson said "amazingly" the steamy scene was the first he did with Watts for the movie. That's some introduction. But with Watts playing an aggressive lawyer, he just had to sit back.

"Fortunately, she was the one in charge," he said. "So it worked out great."

"I didn't have to go through the normal things you go through when you have a love-making scene -- where can I touch you? where can I not touch you?"