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May 17, 2012

“Rise of the Guardians” premiered at Cannes, and is due to open in theaters November 12th, 2012.

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May 07, 2012

Check out the all new sizzle reel, aka new featurette for ‘People Like Us’In Theaters June 29th!

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April 25, 2012

Chris recently spoke with Access Hollywood while attending CinemaCon, see what he had to say below…

“I do know about ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’ because Alice Eve, who’s in our film, [the ‘Star Trek’ sequel], has been reading it like crazy, so yeah, I’ve heard about it,” he told Access Hollywood at CinemaCon 2012 in Las Vegas on Monday.

When asked if he’d play the novel’s Christian Grey, the square-jawed hunk didn’t say no.

“It’d be a hell of a choice for me, I think,” he smiled. “It sounds like an interesting film.”

Chris is currently reprising his role as James T. Kirk in the J.J. Abrams helmed “Star Trek” sequel, and he said the film is going to impress.

“Of course I’m gonna tell you I think it’s gonna be better,” he laughed. “You pick up the characters from where they left off, and the development of the characters — I think — is just as exciting as the first one.

“And it’s relentless,” he added. “I think that’s the best adjective I can use.”

Chris said the team is actually close to wrapping up the second installment in the sci-fi reboot.

“We’re almost done,” he told Access. “It’s wrapping up very soon. It’s just as action-packed as the first one.”

You can check out the interview in full over at AccessHollywood.com

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April 24, 2012

Lending his voice to Jack Frost in the upcoming animated film “Rise of the Guardians” has given Chris Pine a new appreciation of the secrecy surrounding J.J. Abrams’ “Star Trek.”

“Rise of the Guardians,” is a 3-D DreamWorks Animation movie featuring folklore characters like Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny; it’s set for release near Thanksgiving. It might not seem to have much in common with “Star Trek,” but Pine, 31, says working on “Guardians” has given him a better understanding of why “Star Trek” director Abrams is so adamant about keeping the plot of his films a mystery.

“J.J. is super-secretive. The scripts are color-coded, and walking to and from set we have to wear coats and everything,” the actor said at the CinemaCon convention of theater owners in Las Vegas, where he was on hand to promote “Guardians.” “It’s such a pain in the [butt], but I think about how awesome it is, because what he’s protecting is the magic of the unknown.”

With the advent of the Internet, Pine says it’s harder to preserve a sense of wonder among audiences, including children. Can the fantastical “Guardians” work for kids who are jaded at an early age?

“I think probably there’s a certain amount of earlier cynicism because of technology and stuff — they can look Santa Claus up online, and they’ll find a blog post from some hater about he doesn’t exist,” he said. “I do think there’s something genetically programmed in the brain of a child that wants to believe.”

DreamWorks Animation screened roughly 15 minutes of the new movie to theater owners at the Caesars Palace Coliseum on Monday night, and director Peter Ramsey showed illustrations of each of character and described them in elaborate detail. Pine gave an earnest speech about how his imagination ran wild as a kid. It seems the actor took his work on “Guardians” quite seriously. While Chris Rock told 24 Frames he finds doing voice work on the “Madagascar” films an easy gig, Pine said he agonizes over his delivery of every line.

“I do the voice for BMW too, and I’m always thinking, how do you paint a picture with words when the subtle nuances of just you and I sitting here together you can’t display?” he said. “I’ll go in sometimes and think I did a great job and hear it back and think, ‘Well, that’s not what I was trying to do.’ It’s the worst art form for an OCD perfectionist like me.”

Source: LATimes.com

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April 18, 2012


MTV News
: What was it that attracted you to the script originally?

Chris Pine: What attracted me to the film was just the quality of the writing. I was really interested in doing a film that was smaller scope than the films that I had done previously in the past couple years. This one was an intimate family drama, and I thought even the anomalous experience of someone finding out that their father had a completely separate family, everybody’s got family dramas of their own. Certainly, though I can’t relate to that specific experience, I can relate to having stuff in the family. This one takes place in the moment where all the stuff that’s been brewing for years and years and years finally comes to a head and has to be dealt with.

MTV: How does making the film’s central relationship a brother-sister one affect the overall movie?

Pine: Clearly it’s going to progress in a way that can’t be a love story between a sister and brother. It is in a sense that these two people get to know one another and find that they love one another because they’re the only two people that can relate and understand the experience of living in that family with that father and that mother. And because they’ve been so traumatized by the lies that their family has told for so many years, they find solace in one another’s mutual understanding. I think it’s refreshing because I don’t think people have seen something like this specific story in cinema before, at least in the States. There’s a quality of the film that kind of reminded me of one of my favorite films, “Kramer vs. Kramer,” and it kind of has the depth of something like “Ordinary People” and the humor of a comedy. It’s just — for the lack of a better term — very human.

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February 23, 2012


Chris Pine becomes James Bond Jr.

“My character is like a 14-year-old who got the keys to the kingdom,” Pine says.

“He gets to live the movie version of being a spy, which is driving fast cars and shooting guns and going to exotic locales. He’s basically a fun-loving, hedonistic adolescent.”

In the same interview Chris had this to say about upcoming projects:

In reference to ‘Welcome To People’:

Recently, however, Pine acted in indie movie Welcome to People, co-starring Olivia Wilde and Michelle Pfeiffer.

“It’s a film about a young man who, in coming home to bury his father, finds out he had a secret second family. I’m very proud of it,” Pine says.

In reference to ‘Jack Ryan’:

“Not to take anything away from Harrison Ford or Alec Baldwin or Ben Affleck, but I don’t think Jack Ryan is as iconic as Captain Kirk – who was William Shatner. Jack Ryan has been inhabited now by many different guys – so I am not too nervous.

“The task ahead of us now is to make an international spy movie in the post-9/11 era. It’s not going to be a Cold War Jack Ryan.”

You can check out the interview in full over at Adelaidnow.com.au


On Being A Spy And Being Stuck In A Love Triangle In “This Means War”

“I play a guy named FDR, a spy who, with every ounce of his being, enjoys being a spy. He is living the Connery-Bond version of a spy’s life until he meets Lauren Scott and his world is turned upside down. Everything he thought was important—namely guns, women, fast cars and good times with no strings attached—are maybe not so important after all. What becomes important to him is winning the love of this woman,” Pine shares of his character.

When asked which one is harder – the comedy or the action, Chris admits that doing comedy is a lot harder than the action sequences. “Though a lot of it was learning how to work the guns. We trained with a specialist who told us about close quarters combat. Essentially the basic precept is to inflict the maximum amount of damage using the least amount of movement. Efficiency and expediency. Conversely, in film you want to make it look grander and bigger to make it look sexier, so it was trying to marry those two things.”

You can check out the interview in full over at MB.com.ph

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