X3 in the press - The Official Magazines thread

KID PADDLE Magazine (France) - Issue # 30

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Source: http://www.viapresse.com/via2005/pages-new/catalogue_detail.asp?context=abo&titre=1637
 
NETGUIDE Magazine (New Zealand) - Issue 111, June 2006

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On the cover:
How to network your hoke computers
Now comes the best of both worlds: Putting Windows on a Mac!
We test new budget priced mobiles

PLUS
NZ’s best sites spill their secrets
Bigger helpdesk & genealogy sections
How to take great images with your phone camera
Best sites: Soccer World Cup, PDAs, X-Men 3, unusual food



Source: http://www.netguide.co.nz/magazine/pulp/111/
 
NON-SPORT UPDATE Magazine (US) - June/July, 2006

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X-Men The Last Stand! NSU gets ready for the next X-Men installment with our great Wolverine cover. We've checked in with Rittenhouse Archives to see what they have in store for card collectors awaiting "The Last Stand."

Article: X-Men: The Last Stand
Does X3 mark the end for filmdom’s magnificent mutants?

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Free promo cards: X-Men The Last Stand P2(Rittenhouse Archives), Charmed: Destiny P-2 (Inkworks), The 4400 Season One P-2 (Inkworks)



Source: http://www.nonsportupdate.com/currentissue.htm
 
STARBURST Magazine (UK) - Special Issue #75 (On sale May 17)

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X-Men – The Final Stand
• We catch up with three stars to talk about their roles in the latest instalment – as the mutants prepare to make their last stand!
Ian McKellen
• The acclaimed stage and screen actor discusses his magnetic role as the villainous Magneto!
Ellen Page
• The talented young Canadian actress talks about her roles in X-Men 3 and the powerful psychological drama Hard Candy
Anna Paquin Exclusive!
• We chat to the actress who has made a career in independent films but has a special place in her heart for the role of good mutant Rogue

PLUS…

Sci-Fi Gallery
• Stunning posters from our top features!
Superman Returns
Doctor Who – The Cybermen
X-Men: The Final Stand



Source: http://www.visimag.com/starburst/s75_display.htm
 
Retroman said:
PARADE Magazine

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Feature article on X-Men The Last Stand star Hugh Jackman plus photos


Source: http://cgi.ebay.com/NEW-PARADE-MAGAZINE-HUGH-JACKMAN-X-MEN-THE-LAST-STAND_W0QQitemZ7031684294QQcategoryZ280QQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
http://www.parade.com

http://www.parade.com/articles/editions/2006/edition_05-14-2006/AHugh_Jackman

Onstage and at home, X-Men star Hugh Jackman lives by this credo:
Say ‘Yes’ to What Scares You
By James Kaplan
Published: May 14, 2006

“I’ve always felt that if you back down from a fear, the ghost of that fear never goes away,” Hugh Jackman says. “It diminishes people. So I’ve always said ‘yes’ to the thing I’m most scared about.”

Seven years ago, Jackman was an ambitious yet virtually unknown actor whose biggest credit was a London stage revival of Oklahoma! Suddenly, at 31, he was offered the leading role of Wolverine in X-Men. His wife, actress Deborra-Lee Furness, counseled strongly against the move, worried he’d be typecast as a comic-book hero. “The first thing in this script is that claws come out of your hands?” she asked. “What is that?”

Jackman had no idea—but he took the job. The first two X-Men films earned more than $700 million in worldwide box-office receipts. The newest, X-Men: The Last Stand, opens May 26. Now Jackman, a native Australian, finds himself in command of a franchise and triumphant in a broad range of stage and screen roles. He already has completed five movies set to open this year, ranging from romantic comedy to sci-fi drama.

“I stood back about a week ago, and I was like, ‘Wow! I’m pretty much where I had hoped to be,’” Jackman says. He looks happy as he says it—and is even more delighted a moment later, when I ask if his family (his wife, 6-year-old son, Oscar, and 10-month-old daughter, Ava) is in Los Angeles with him. “They’re always with me,” he says, beaming.

He seems strengthened by their presence. A tall, lean, almost absurdly handsome man, Jackman has hazel eyes set off by a green T-shirt and brown leather motorcycle jacket. His long, blue-jeaned legs are folded under the table. He appears utterly comfortable in his skin, entirely lacking the sense of vanity and prickly self-importance that male movie stars so often carry.

Jackman can portray brooding machismo with ease, but he doesn’t back down from a challenge: He won a Tony Award in 2004 for his uninhibited portrayal of the late Peter Allen, a maracas-shaking, puffy-shirt-wearing, gay Broadway icon. Strikingly open and undefensive, Jackman exudes that rarest of qualities: genuine sunniness.

“I do believe that people bring into this world— and I have two children, so I can see it—a certain demeanor, a certain basic nature in terms of their approach to life,” he tells me. “From everything I’ve heard from my family, I think I was one of those kids who came in pretty happy to be here.”

Yet Jackman understands how precarious happiness can be. When he was 8, his mother left her husband and children and moved halfway around the world—back to her native England. Jackman’s father, a hardworking accountant, did his best to bring up five kids by himself.

“My mother was not well,” Jackman says. “She probably was suffering from postpartum depression. It may not have been diagnosed. I’m not sure. But she was going through a tough time. I spent my first 18 months with my godparents.”

The period after his mother left is seared in his memory: He and his next older brother “fought like cats and dogs,” Jackman recalls. “It was really miserable for a while. Dad was not home till 6:30 or 7 at night, so lots of stuff would happen. We were sort of fending for ourselves. And Dad was just so stretched, often. You’d get in trouble for something you shouldn’t be in trouble for. My brother would hit me, and I’d start crying, and Dad would say, ‘Stop crying, the pair of you. Stop crying.’”

Outside the home, “I felt very exposed,” Jackman says. “Divorce was around, obviously, but no one’s mother left. It was always the father, and he lived around the corner and came on weekends. I remember I just wanted to be normal. Of course I wanted my mom back, and for a long time I thought she was coming back. When I was 12, they tried to reconcile, which was short-lived.” When it seemed as though his parents might get back together, he says, “I remember that feeling of, ‘I knew it, I knew it.’ When that fell apart, I was very angry.”

The teachers at his all-boys private school took pity on him: “Maybe a little extra bit of slack was given to me because ‘his mother left,’” Jackman says, laughing at the memory of perhaps having overplayed the sympathy card just a bit.

In athletics, he turned his anger to his advantage. “I think I am incredibly determined,” says Jackman. “Playing rugby when I was young, if I got tackled very hard, I would kind of go into a little white rage. I don’t know where that came from. Maybe being the youngest, maybe being bullied a bit, or whatever.”

The determination remains, but the anger has dissipated. Jackman now has, he maintains, “a great relationship” with his mother, whose open, slightly mercurial nature he identifies with. “In fact, I never felt angry at her, and I can’t explain to you why. I’ve had many acting teachers who were like, ‘There are demons in there! Pull them out!’ I spent a long time thinking, ‘Right, yeah…’ But they’re obviously not there.”

In the first weeks of shooting the original X-Men, director Bryan Singer worried that he had on his hands a Wolverine who was a bit…light. “He pulled me aside and said, ‘There’s stuff we saw in the audition—stuff we know that you have that you’re not bringing. You’ve just got to get out there and start doing it,’” Jackman recalls.

“I was upset with myself. Upset that I had done four weeks of work, and I hadn’t really gone for it. It sort of went against everything I thought I was about. So I went in the next day and pretty much ad-libbed my entire scene.”

The director “loved it,” adds Jackman. “That’s the role. Wolverine is his own man.”

As is the man who plays him. “The fear of letting myself down—of saying ‘no’ to something that I was afraid of and then sitting in my room later going, ‘I wish I’d had the guts to say this or that’—that galvanizes me more than anything,” Hugh Jackman says. Sunnily.
 
jeepers Retro .. slow down some :D

I went to my Borders today and they told me that they just stocked the shelves with the EW issue with Lost on the cover, that they stocked them yesterday. And that they wont get a new issue in until next week. Is this true? Has anyone found the EW in their area? I think the Borders over here is full of it...
 
Wow. Hugh and Halle are EVERYWHERE.

Thanks, Retro. :):up:
 
I got my new EW with X-Men on the cover in the mail today it was very interesting Ratner was on the defensive and he didn't really understand why people hated him all of a sudden
 
tinkwings said:
I got my new EW with X-Men on the cover in the mail today it was very interesting Ratner was on the defensive and he didn't really understand why people hated him all of a sudden
Why people are hating him?:confused:
 
"Why people are hating him?"

people are getting on his back because he directed the rush hour movies and stuff like that and they don't think he can direct a movie like the x-men I don't get the big deal...plus another excuse to hate him is that he isn't singer...but I'm not judging till the movie comes out and people need to do the same
 
I posted this elsewhere but I guess it belongs here...

I just read the article in the new EW with X3 on the cover...its basically an interview with Brett Ratner...and let me just say in the words of Senator Kelly in X1..."Yukk"...he is a greasey, slimey b@$&ard...seriously, this article almost enjoys depicting him as a spoiled hollywood jerk. If you have strong feelings of hate towards this guy...than reading this will only strengthen your opinions of him...and if you are behind Ratner for taking on X3...well, you'll hope that he has nothing to do with anything X-men related in the future...if ofcourse they even option X4 if it surpasses all expectations...whatever, thats hollywood and the bizness for ya...but man it was dissapointing...he brags, name drops...and believes or is in agreement that he took this on cuz he knew he could make a "big budget" movie. I can only imagine how his interview with Carson is gonna go tonite...they'll brag to eachother about the teeny boppers they've dated...it just gave me a weird feeling...kay I'm done :)
 
Nice scans. :up:
Mr Lex Luthor said:
Wow, Ben Foster was really doing it, too. Awesome scans, thank you. :up:
Woah, what are you doing with Squeek's avvy? :eek:
 
lordofthenerds said:
Nice scans. :up:

Woah, what are you doing with Squeek's avvy? :eek:
and her title, sig and location. I'm constantly confused
 

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