Wednesday, May 21, 2014
A Nice Headshot Gif. for your Avatar
Posted on 6:54 AM by Barbara Thimen
make animated gifs like this at MakeAGif
<a href="http://makeagif.com/zAahm0" title="Super Elite III headshot on Make A Gif"><img src="http://cdn.makeagif.com/media/5-21-2014/zAahm0.gif" alt="Super Elite III headshot on Make A Gif"></a><div style="font-size:11px;">make <a href="http://makeagif.com/" title="make a gif">animated gifs</a> like this at MakeAGif</div>
Use the Java/HTML code above to add to your application
<a href="http://makeagif.com/zAahm0" title="Super Elite III headshot on Make A Gif"><img src="http://cdn.makeagif.com/media/5-21-2014/zAahm0.gif" alt="Super Elite III headshot on Make A Gif"></a><div style="font-size:11px;">make <a href="http://makeagif.com/" title="make a gif">animated gifs</a> like this at MakeAGif</div>
Use the Java/HTML code above to add to your application
Friday, May 16, 2014
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Looney Toones Pro-Celeb 2014
Posted on 12:22 PM by Barbara Thimen
Play along side a Pro of your choice on Practice Mode around Celtic Manor Twenty Ten course, either with legend or modern golfer A.I. your the Celebrity, send me a photo of your score card combined best score wins, I will post all photos here in order of best score first, 2 entry limit.
Send Photo to marriottcolin2010@hotmail.co.uk
or Twitter @the_chelseaboys
or Twitter @the_chelseaboys
Tuesday, May 6, 2014
The James Bond Fan Club Newsletter Spring 2014
Posted on 4:30 PM by Barbara Thimen
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Monday, May 5, 2014
Add a Animated Golfer Gif to your Avatar or Webpage
Posted on 9:28 AM by Barbara Thimen
make animated gifs like this at MakeAGif
Add the JAVA/HTML Script to your webpage Below
<a href="http://makeagif.com/x_bUX8" title="the golf club on Make A Gif"><img src="http://cdn.makeagif.com/media/5-05-2014/x_bUX8.gif" alt="the golf club on Make A Gif"></a><div style="font-size:11px;">make <a href="http://makeagif.com/" title="make a gif">animated gifs</a> like this at MakeAGif</div>
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Speaking at the special preview of the relocated Bond In Motion exhibition in London in March, Bond producers Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson offered some tantalising clues about the next 007 movie, which will be no. 24 in the 50-year old franchise. At one point during the special launch, which was held at the London Film Museum, responding to a question about the progress of the next Bond adventure, Broccoli said: ‘We are at the early stages, we start filming at the end of the year and the next film will come out at the end of 2015, so it’s an exciting time for us’. She explained that she and Michael had been working on the script with screenwriter John Logan, director Sam Mendes, and 007 star Daniel Craig, ‘and it’s evolving’. She added: ‘This is the exciting bit when we get to get all the creative forces together and start developing the action sequences, and the sky’s the limit at the moment’. Broccoli also hinted that the search for an actor to play the villain was ongoing. Her fellow EON producer, Michael Wilson, also exclusively revealed that 007 will be driving a brand new version of the Aston Martin in Bond 24. Reflecting on the role of Bond’s iconic vehicle in the movies, which often saves 007’s bacon, Wilson pointed out that a ‘lot of people look forward to just knowing what the car is going to be in the next film’. He continued: ‘In the next film, by the way, we are going to have a new Aston people haven’t seen before’. It is thought that the currently untitled Bond 24 will have a 6-7 month main shooting schedule, commencing in November.
Sam Mendes, who has been extremely busy in recent months preparing his Broadway revival of the musical Cabaret, was saluted by his peers and friends from the theatre and film world at a special event in the USA in March. They gathered at the Roundabout Theatre Company Spring Gala on Monday, March 10, in New York. The special gala evening, which took place at the Hammerstein Ballroom in Manhattan, saw Mendes’s ‘extraordinary’ career celebrated with speeches by Helen Mirren, Jeremy Irons, Liam Neeson, and Alan Cumming. Mendes was presented with the Jason Robards Award for Excellence in Theatre.
The revived 2014 version of Cabaret, which Mendes originally directed for the Roundabout Theatre Company back in 1998, stars Alan Cumming and Michelle Williams in the main roles. With its iconic main song ‘Come to the cabaret’ (by Kander John and Ebb Fred), the musical is set in a nightclub in interwar Germany. Interviewed on ‘Charlie Rose’ on Bloomberg TV on April 14, Mendes explained in detail why he personally has been so fascinated by the production over the years. He said he thinks the musical is a ‘special’ and classic piece of theatre, and argued that it is one of the great explorations of Nazism, with the nightclub setting as the perfect metaphor for the gradual entrapment of the German people under the Nazis. Mendes also pointed out that he has had a close working relationship with Alan Cumming for about 21 years. In fact, Cumming, who played Boris Grishenko in Goldeneye (1995), was in Mendes’s 1998 version of Cabaret and has almost made the role his own. It is interesting to note that, according to the showbiz columnist Baz Bamigboye, Mendes has been overseeing things for Cabaret in between scouting for locations for Bond 24. Phew! Where does he find the time?
Talking of ‘evil’ men, all sorts of weird and wonderful rumours about the casting for the next Bond movie’s baddie have started to pop up since the beginning of 2014, including none other than the unlikely figure of John Travolta (who eagerly nominated himself as a potential Bond villain, much to the bemusement of commentators). One of the more credible reports, however, has come in the leading American showbiz journal, Variety, which carried some intriguing claims on April 4 that the award-winning British actor Chiwetel Ejiofor could be a strong contender for the role of lead villain in Bond 24. According Justin Kroll, a film reporter for the journal, 36-year old Ejiofor, who was nominated for an Oscar for his powerful performance as Solomon Northup in 12 Years a Slave, is being eyed up by studio executives for Bond 24, which starts shooting later this year. Kroll claimed that ‘sources’ have told Variety that Ejiofor is the ‘top choice’ to play the villain, and Kroll added: ‘No offer has been made yet, and scheduling would have to be worked out, but sources insist he is the front-runner for the job’.
Christopher Walken, who played the micro-chip magnate (and psychopathic villain) Max Zorin in A View to a Kill (1985), gave a fairly rare interview to the BBC’s Radio Times magazine in March to help publicise his role in the spy film Turks & Caicos, which is directed by David Hare, and co-stars Bill Nighy as the central character, the long-serving but disillusioned British MI5 officer Johnny Worricker. The film, in which Walken plays a shadowy and rather devious CIA agent named Curtis Pelissier, was premiered on the UK’s BBC-2 TV channel on March 20, and has also been given a limited cinema release in the USA. It is the second film in David Hare’s Worricker espionage ‘Trilogy’, a sequel to 2011’s Page Eight (which starred Nighy, Rachel Weisz as political activist Nancy Pierpan, and Ralph Fiennes as Alec Beasley, the British Prime Minister). As the Radio Times noted, Christopher Walken, who is now 70, has spent a career disturbing cinema audiences, which can perhaps be traced back to his ground-breaking role as a disturbed Vietnam vet in The Deer Hunter (for which he received the 1979 Oscar for Best Supporting Actor). Walken conceded to the magazine: ‘I think I got a kind of villainous, disturbed thing going on quite early in my career. There is a tendency – just because of the mechanics of making movies – that if you do something that is a success, you might get asked to do it again’. He continued: ‘Of course there are things that I don’t get offered very often. Things I’d like to do. Wholesome things. I don’t get offered ‘dad’ parts. Or granddad parts. Or avuncular parts. Men with families and jobs’. But Walken made it clear he isn’t about to argue with his luck. He recalled a conversation he once had with Roger Moore on the set of A View to a Kill: ‘We were waiting around to shoot the scene where I get killed and Roger, who’s a dear friend, asked me, “Do you always die?” I answered, “Yeah, pretty much” and Roger said, “I’d love to do that, but they never ask me!”’.
Many Bond fans saw the glossy 4-part TV series Fleming, which was premiered on American TV and, in the UK, started screening on Wednesday, February 12, on ‘Sky Atlantic’. The entertaining series, which stars Dominic Cooper as the Bond creator, is now available on DVD. There was an avalanche of tie-in material to help publicise the show, and also a well-managed Facebook site. One special ‘Sky’ insert designed to publicise Fleming in the BBC’s Radio Times magazine (February 28) was entitled ‘In 007’s Footsteps’, a guide on how to live like Bond (or, should that really be live like Ian Fleming?? The programme’s makers arguably blurred the two). Apparently, budding Bonds should lunch at Scotts restaurant, gamble at Crockfords (a Mayfair Club), swirl a Martini at Duke’s Hotel, hang out at the real-life MI6 building near Vauxhall Bridge, head for Eilean Donan Castle in the Highlands of Scotland (MI6’s Scottish base), visit Bond’s bespoke tailor Anthony Sinclair in Mayfair (who dressed Sean Connery in the early Bond movies), and play golf at the 300-acre Stoke Park Hotel and Country Club (which appeared in 1964’s Goldfinger). So, there you have it. Oh, and don’t forget a gold bar supplied by Auric Enterprises to pay for it all.
Or so Sean Connery’s 007 quipped to Felix in Diamonds Are Forever, playing on the famous saying by Sherlock Holmes, and making those with specialist medical knowledge in the audience laugh out loud, leaving other cinemagoers quietly puzzled. Apparently, however, Holmes’s creator Sir Arthur Conan Doyle did not originally invent the well-known phrase ‘Elementary, my dear Watson’ for his detective. It was probably first used in a stage show in 1899 by an actor called William Gillette. This interesting revelation, and numerous other gems of information, appeared in How To Be Sherlock Holmes, a highly-entertaining documentary shown in the UK on January 14. Sir Christopher Lee, who so memorably played deadly assassin Francisco Scaramanga in The Man With The Golden Gun (1974), was in fine form as one of the contributors to the BBC-4 Holmes documentary, which was part of the BBC’s excellent Timeshift documentary series.
Patrick Macnee, who now resides in California, has had a truly amazing and diverse acting career over the years, and once had a go at playing Sherlock Holmes himself, in a 1993 TV movie, The Hound of London. Moreover, as well as playing Dr. Watson to Roger Moore, Macnee also played the same role twice alongside Christopher Lee as Holmes. In 1984, Macnee even appeared in an episode of the TV detective series Magnum, P.I. as a retired British secret agent who believed he was... Sherlock Holmes! 