Wednesday 2 February 2011

Hollywood

We are well into the awards season and the Oscars is approaching like a speeding bullet. Vanity Fair have released their annual Hollywood edition which includes the lust worthy editorial with the up and coming stars of the big screen. This year's cover does not disappoint.

Having just got back from the cinema to see Black Swan my eyes were drawn to Mila Kunis straight away. I think she has filled the gap that Megan Fox left when she started to loose her curves and took a step back from the limelight. Megan's other look alike is also features, Olivia Wilde.


From L-R: Ryan Reynolds, Jake Gyllenhaal, Anne Hathaway, James Franco, Jennifer Lawrence, Anthony Mackie, Olivia Wilde, Jesse Eisenberg, Mila Kunis, Robert Duvall , Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Andrew Garfield, Rashida Jones, Garrett Hedlund, and Noomi Rapace.

I decided to look back at editorials from years gone by to see who featured and if they have stayed true to 'Hollywood' form.


1995 -'The Class of 2000'
Jennifer Jason Leigh, Uma Thurman, Nicole Kidman, Patricia Arquette, Linda Fiorentino, Gwyneth Paltrow, Sarah Jessica Parker, Julianne Moore, Angela Bassett, and Sandra Bullock


Look at SJP giving a fierce Carrie pose! Even though this shoot was over 15 years ago it still contains some of the biggest actresses in today's industry (sorry that doesn't include you Jennifer Jason Leigh!) With Nicole Kidman gaining many nominations this year and Sandra Bullock sweeping the board last year for The Blind Side it shows that age isn't always the biggest factor in Hollywood with these 30/40 year olds striding on.

Vanity Fair also has a Young Hollywood issue later in the year, and a similarity between last years and the 2000 shoot caught my eye. Take a look for yourself...

2000 - Young Hollywood edition 'Splendour in the grass'




Amanda Seyfried and Marley Shelton...Blue top...Tousled hair behind the ears....holding on to knees. Is it the same person ten years on?! To be honest, I think the similarities are on purpose if you study the poses and positioning (odd how the brunettes are all playing the masculine counterparts though).

Another way this could be interrupted is the breakthrough of young women in Hollywood. Obviously women have always featured in Hollywood but up until the 1950's they would normally be a supporting role to the lead male, or act as some kind of damsel in distress. Now we are seeing women in more cult (Carey Mulligan - An Education), (Kristen Steward - The Runaways) and also comic roles (Emma Stone - Superbad). Although most of the young women above are only just scraping the surface of their careers I'm sure they are better off then women starting 50 years ago.

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