Michael Fassbender

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Great movie suggestions, Penny and Artica. I'll add to my earlier ones Heavenly Creatures, 13 Assassins and Fright Night (yes yes). Anyone else seen and liked Certified Copy? I found it so great, except for Shimmell's chewing of scenery in the restaurant.

How peculiar is it that everyone is present for the Haywire premiere and junket except the Fass ...maybe he's locked down and recovering from a facelift in time for the Globes? :graucho:(hehe kidding... I hope).

Can't blame him for not going to the Haywire premiere. It's not like his part is massive in it and he's done some promotion for the film. My guess is that he's in London. He's got a massive week ahead of him with the Shame premiere on Tuesday and the Golden Globes on Sunday. Hopefully he'll take it a bit easier now.

I haven't seen Certified Copy yet. Is it good? I have seen the other three films. Good stuff!
 
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I'm not going to judge Nicole's relationship status based on one poster on IMDB's comments about her having a boyfriend. If she indeed had a BF during the time then obviosuly, yeah, girl not cool. However, she could've easily been off the market (or single) at the time. I just don't jump to conclusions so quickly.

I just realized she was with Michael at the GQ party in early November.


Yeah, I'm gonna agree with you there. Nobody really knows the girl and I'm not one to believe hearsay on the internet...'cause, you know, it's the internet.:smile1: The only people who know what really went down between the two of them are the two of them.

Also, if she did have a boyfriend at the time then shame on Michael as well. It takes two to tango. Why is it always just the woman's fault? He's a grown man, seven years her senior, so he is no victim. He knows the deal. Plus, nobody knows for sure who dumped whom if, indeed, there was even a need for anyone to be dumped.

I'm not going to be hard on her because I don't know her or anything about her, factually speaking. And the situation could easily be looked at as Michael wolfishly preying upon a younger, naive, much more inexperienced and lesser known actress whom he didn't bother to inform of his less than honorable intentions. Or not. We don't know. I do know that in every interview I've seen with her, the girl comes across as very intelligent and beautiful...even in the q & a with Steve and Michael where she looked nervous as hell:laugh:. She still gave a clear and concise answer. So yeah, no judgement from me where this chick is concerned.

I do wish they would've taken some pictures of them together at the GQ party, though!:graucho:
 
Yep, ain't never gonna happen! In London (white) men love skinny girls. Even if the girls aren't particularly pretty, they are more popular than average/biggger women. It's all about showing of those legs, especially in the media industry. Men are either all over you or they ignore you completely. Funnt bunch these Brits.

From what I've heard about Paris, it's a lot worse in your neck of the woods, Penny. Bigger people are treated like dirt. Do you agree?



Yes, they can live in hope and die in despair!



I would love to see those photos as well. Fassy seems like an incurable flirt, but I don't think Octavia's bf needs to worry. Don't think he'll be trying to get into her knickers any time soon.


OMG, best quote ever! :laugh: And sooo true.
 
I love the way he speaks the truth that most people don't want to hear. I think he's bold, brilliant and inventive. At the last THR director's roundtable, he was asked about the lack of black actors/actresses cast in leading roles in major films productions and McQueen turned to Alexander Payne, Jason Reitman and the others and just said "You should ask them."
It was f#cking brilliant... and there were uncomfortable faces all around :shame:
He doesn't give a f#ck about fitting among the Hollywood crowd and he's always completely straight up in interviews.
"Twelve Years A Slave" might be also hard to watch for some people :rolleyes:

Right, huh? :pout: I still admire their work but their reactions drove me mad too that day. What a f#cked up world are we livin' in? :shame:
And the worse is that they probably won't do a thing about it after that embarrassing moment, there's not a single black actor/actress in any of their films :weird: (I guess white people problems are more trendy and bankable in Hollywood's mind...)

Well said!!! Couldn't agree with you more! :ty:
 
I do not think it's always the woman's fault , but if a person cheats on his spouse with a single person, then the cheater is more to blame.
Threating one's SO badly is worse than threating a stranger badly.

That does't make the 3rd person innocent or a victim.
The only victim is the cheater's SO and if they have kids , the kids too.

But I do not know the facts about Nicole , so I am writing this in general , not about her and M.

Yeah, I'm gonna agree with you there. Nobody really knows the girl and I'm not one to believe hearsay on the internet...'cause, you know, it's the internet.:smile1: The only people who know what really went down between the two of them are the two of them.

Also, if she did have a boyfriend at the time then shame on Michael as well. It takes two to tango. Why is it always just the woman's fault? He's a grown man, seven years her senior, so he is no victim. He knows the deal. Plus, nobody knows for sure who dumped whom if, indeed, there was even a need for anyone to be dumped.

I'm not going to be hard on her because I don't know her or anything about her, factually speaking. And the situation could easily be looked at as Michael wolfishly preying upon a younger, naive, much more inexperienced and lesser known actress whom he didn't bother to inform of his less than honorable intentions. Or not. We don't know. I do know that in every interview I've seen with her, the girl comes across as very intelligent and beautiful...even in the q & a with Steve and Michael where she looked nervous as hell:laugh:. She still gave a clear and concise answer. So yeah, no judgement from me where this chick is concerned.

I do wish they would've taken some pictures of them together at the GQ party, though!:graucho:
 
It's so nice to come back after Christmas weekend and see so many new pages in this thread :D Thank you for all new pics, interviews, links, thoughts and opinions and of course :welcome2: to all thread newbies! If someone is still lurking, come out and join the fun. :cool:


Re: McQueen

I think McQueen has really sharp and inquisitive mind and therefore very low tolerance when it comes to BS. Like some of you mentioned, he is also very honest and straight forward. No wonder some find him a bit abrasive. Also I don't see why some journalists feel the need to point out his skin colour. Seriously, what that has to do with his abilities as a director? :rolleyes: Steve gave them proper answer in THR interview.

Personally I would love to have a chat with him because he seems like a really interesting and thoughtful fellow. Here's the interview with Steve done by Scott Feinberg http://youtu.be/Z-bkLmIRzV8 Pay attention for oopsy daisy!

Re: Michael and drinking

Considering he comes from family with gastronomy background, I doubt Michael is a heavy drinker. He sure knows how to party and probably has been drunk as skunk but I honestly doubt he drinks somewhere in the solitude of his hotel room because he feels lonely, sad etc.

Oh and about thrashing out over a pint - in next paragraph Micheal said:

"I have an open relationship with my friends," he says, claiming he isn't afraid to appear "vulnerable" in front of them. "I try not to be affected by insecurities. These are things that we have within us all, and we all suffer from them."

Had to Google that phrase to be sure about the meaning(never heard it before, English isn't my 1st language) - it means to have something out, to talk something out.

I swear I'm not a stan :laugh: but I like to set things straight and to improve my English at the same time :D


Re: Nicole

One thing is sure - one doesn't know a thing about Nicole's personal life. Everything I've read so far is pretty much hear-say, Internet gossip and lots of wishful thinking done by portion of Michael's fans. Nicole and Michael had amazing chemistry in Shame for sure but that doesn't have to mean they are going to hook up in real life as well because she happens to look like one of Michael's ex-GFs. I've seen pics from red carpet and their body language is a bit odd. Whatever is going on between Michael and Nicole, it's up to them live and deal with it, not me. :laugh: If they're happy, I'm happy for them ;)
 
Re: Michael and drinking

Considering he comes from family with gastronomy background, I doubt Michael is a heavy drinker.

I would actually tend to think the opposite, especially if you're working in an establishment that serves liquors and spirits. If it's a busy place, then the hours are condensed like crazy between supper and closing time, so it seems harmless to down a couple of beers at the end , and quickly becomes a ritual habit over time. A workaholic acquaintance of mine executive chefs at a really popular joint in town, and he often stays until closing time (round 2 am) every night, 6 nights a week, just joining the other co-workers for many pints to relax over the crazy work shift. They do it every night. He's developed alcohol issues. Of course, the blueprint doesn't extend to everyone in the catering trade, but ...

Anyway, I hope he doesn't develop serious booze problems -- if that's not already the case -- but I somehow get the feeling that he'd go more the route of Kiefer Sutherland the Christmas tree-attacker :xtree: rather than Mel "Sugartits" Gibson and Tom Sizemore, were it the case.

Back to topic: here's a a nice Irish Independent article about this lad - and did anyone get ahold of this month's Little White Lies mag? Curious to see how the interview goes. McQueen and Abi Morgan's are available for read on the LWLies website.

http://www.independent.ie/lifestyle...ews-gossip/michael-is-kerry-gold-2982509.html
 
New interview of Michael :smile1:

Michael is Kerry gold

MICHAEL Fassbender sits alone on a couch sipping mint tea with the look of a man for whom exhaustion is just a routine part of a normal day. Outside, the last embers of the winter sun are disappearing behind the buildings of London, the city that has provided a home to the actor, as is the case with so many from Ireland, for most of his adult life.
Tiredness is part of the game when there's a movie to promote, especially when its star is getting so much recognition that he can almost single-handedly propel a small arthouse film with a difficult subject matter into the mainstream. And so Fassbender must stay on the hamster wheel of publicity.
When the big award ceremonies roll around over the next couple of months it seems inevitable the 34-year-old's name will be there, smack bang in the middle of the list of nominees alongside the Clooneys, DiCaprios, Pitts and the Oldmans.
Fassbender, the name that made life difficult for him at school in Fossa in the years following his family's decision to move from Heidelberg to Killarney when he was just two, could well become one of the most recognised and respected in the movie business. A Golden Globe nomination is already in the bag and the Los Angeles Film Critics Association has named him the best actor of 2011.
It's not bad for a man who, just a few years ago, was wondering if the acting game was really for him as he was sizing up a career in the catering industry, the only other thing he really knew, having spent his teenage years helping out in the family restaurant, the West End House in Killarney.
In Shame, he has again teamed up with McQueen in an uncompromising and non-judgmental look at the nature of sex addiction. "It seems to be a topic that was bubbling around within the media but no one had taken it on in film form," Fassbender explains. "I know that with Steve he's going to be dealing with it uncompromisingly and he's going to be going straight to the core of it and the truth of it and he'll deal with it respectfully, so I knew I was in good hands."
"I don't want to be one of those actors who's sitting there saying 'this is such hard work' when obviously there's a lot of people out there doing proper hard graft, but the fact of the matter is that this was the fifth film of six films I did over a 20-month period and they were all back-to-back so I was jumping from one personality to the next. By the time I got to Shame, I was kind of tired."
"It was an intense experience. It was eight weeks - three weeks of preparation and we filmed it in 25 days so you're living very closely with a character who doesn't like himself, essentially. So you're spending a lot of time with Brandon and the world he occupies and he's not getting any real gratification, nourishment or pleasure. He's someone who doesn't like himself very much so he sets about punishing himself and that can be kind of exhausting at times. It was definitely the toughest job so far."
His collaboration with McQueen is becoming defining. The director speaks effusively of Fassbender, while the actor is eternally grateful for the opportunity he was given.
"[Collaboration] is what you hope for, but it's never a given. When I started out I thought, hopefully, I can find a director and together we'll have an understanding of one another and a shorthand. I'm just so lucky that I found it with Steve and at a really crucial time for me as well. The recession was about to hit in 2008 and that means less jobs for less actors and certainly for unknowns, which I was when Steve gave me the opportunity to play Bobby Sands. So it happened right at the right time for me."
Despite his modesty, Fassbender was not quite an unknown. His face was recognisable from the Guinness ad in which a man swims across the Atlantic to apologise to his brother in a New York bar. A role in 'Band of Brothers' put him on the brink of the big time but things didn't pan out as planned.
"I thought at that point, 'well, this is Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks. This is as good as it's going to get. I'm on a roll now.' Obviously that wasn't the case. I was in the wilderness for a couple of years after that."

Was there ever a plan B?
"The only thing I ever really knew was catering. My parents had the restaurant down in Killarney. I worked in that from when I was 16. When I came to London I worked in bars for someone who is a really good friend of mine now. I thought 'sh*t, if this doesn't work what am I going to do? I didn't go to university so I don't have anything academic to fall back on. But I do know the world of catering so maybe there was something I could do there."
The son of a German father and Irish mother, in many ways the time spent in the family restaurant was an ideal training ground for an actor. "It's a fascinating world, I guess that's why people have made films about [it]. It's not only the public that's coming in that you're observing, it's the characters that you work with. Then there's the inner politics and the hierarchies within that system. There's a constant battle going on between front of house and the kitchen. There's a lot of colourful characters that end in the catering trade. So, for sure, it's a great place to observe and it's also a great place to keep social contact going. For an out-of-work actor it's a good place to be if you're not on set working. You're still interacting with people and observing what kind of person drinks what drink. It's an interesting insight.
"At times you're thinking, 'Jesus I'm sick of this sh*t'. People come into the bar and you instantly dislike them and they haven't done anything wrong. I wanted to be an actor and I wanted to get an opportunity to do that job. Doing a job that is a back-up is fine but after a while you're like, 'sh*t, just give me an opportunity'. It's ups and downs, like any other thing."
These days, there are mainly ups. Over the next few months he stars in David Cronenberg's A Dangerous Method, Steven Soderbergh's Haywire and Ridley Scott's Prometheus. Throw into the mix a couple of the biggest awards going and by mid-2012 life could be unrecognisable. "We'll see," is his nonchalant reply when I put it to him that his world is about to change drastically. "I look different in the Ridley Scott film." He's clutching at straws now.

Soderbergh's thriller 'Haywire' was shot in Dublin. Did this feel like returning "home"?
"People always say 'do you consider yourself German or Irish?' Well, obviously, I grew up in Ireland from two. That's where I formed my personality and that's where my friends are from. Still today, I have friends who I hang out with who I've known since I was four. But then I think maybe my work discipline comes from my German side.
"But we had a great time filming there. It made me very proud with the Irish connection and to see an Irish crew work so efficiently for someone of Soderbergh's status. He was very complimentary about the crew."
A Dangerous Method is already causing a stir, as Fassbender, who plays psychiatrist Carl Jung, gets involved in some serious spanking sessions with a patient, played by Keira Knightley.
"It's actually in my contract: 'Must get naked and have intense sex scenes.' I don't think they're that crazy. It's funny, when you deal with sex it becomes such a topic of conversation, but you can blow someone's head off in a film or decapitate someone in the most gruesome way and that seems to be more acceptable and more the norm. I've had sex, you've had sex, but have you shot somebody in the face? So why is that more normal than somebody spanking somebody in a sex scene? People do it."
I tell him that spanking Keira Knightley doesn't sound like much hardship for a day at work. He agrees, but it's perhaps not as enjoyable as it sounds. "It's awkward. I'm like 'Keira, I hope you don't mind.' It's a very structured environment, so it's not sexy. People are like 'yeah whatever' but it is kind of awkward. You want to make sure that they don't feel like you're taking the p**s."
Fame, too, is on the horizon and while he claims now that "people recognise me when I'm three steps beyond them" the coming months could bring prying eyes into all aspects of his life. "It's a reality and I couldn't be frustrated by it because you understand that it's just human nature for people to want to find out about people."
A relationship with his X-Men co-star Zoe Kravitz, daughter of Lenny Kravitz and Lisa Bonet ended last year and ostensibly Fassbender is unattached, not that he would say if the situation was otherwise.
"I think it's best that I keep myself as private as possible because it makes my job easier for an audience because if they don't know me then they can invest in the character more whereas if they're like, 'that's him and he's seeing such and such at the moment'... I try and keep as low a profile as possible where it concerns that. Or when people ask about it, I say it's not really important. I don't want to get into that aspect of it. To keep things as simple as possible - I think that's what I'm very much honing in on as much as I can. There are so many things that are out of my control that I can't do anything about, but the ones that I can I need to make sure that I'm doing the right thing."

And then there is the awards season, and what will be will be.
"To be honest with you, I'd be lying if I said the prospect of being number one among the company I'm in doesn't excite me. I will also say that I can't sit around going 'what is the possibility of an Oscar?' Then it's a little bit like Gollum and Precious. And the prospect of awards for the film is a big deal, especially for a film like this. It gives a validation to the subject matter which other people might be deterred from because they think it is something else. To be in the position that I'm in now is the highest that I could possibly hope to achieve."
 
I haven't seen Certified Copy yet. Is it good? I have seen the other three films. Good stuff!

I can only vouch for my opinion, but I thought Binoche was TERRIFIC in it. Natural, effortless... Oscar-worthy (sadly it's not getting any traction whatsoever at this year's race). A subject matter like art and idealities could spew thousands of different opinions about the meanings and layers and contradictions within, but it doesn't at the same time mean that you to need to connect some higher dots to enjoy it. I hope I didn't make the movie sound like some pedantic stuff, actually.
 
I would actually tend to think the opposite, especially if you're working in an establishment that serves liquors and spirits. If it's a busy place, then the hours are condensed like crazy between supper and closing time, so it seems harmless to down a couple of beers at the end , and quickly becomes a ritual habit over time. A workaholic acquaintance of mine executive chefs at a really popular joint in town, and he often stays until closing time (round 2 am) every night, 6 nights a week, just joining the other co-workers for many pints to relax over the crazy work shift. They do it every night. He's developed alcohol issues. Of course, the blueprint doesn't extend to everyone in the catering trade, but ...

Anyway, I hope he doesn't develop serious booze problems -- if that's not already the case -- but I somehow get the feeling that he'd go more the route of Kiefer Sutherland the Christmas tree-attacker :xtree: rather than Mel "Sugartits" Gibson and Tom Sizemore, were it the case.

Back to topic: here's a a nice Irish Independent article about this lad - and did anyone get ahold of this month's Little White Lies mag? Curious to see how the interview goes. McQueen and Abi Morgan's are available for read on the LWLies website.

http://www.independent.ie/lifestyle...ews-gossip/michael-is-kerry-gold-2982509.html


I agree that catering industry is high pressure, high stress environment with long hours where many hit the bottle to unwind. However when it comes to people who grew up in such circumstances, like Michael did, it's a bit different. Somehow you learn from young age that drinking isn't a solution to your problems or a way to relax yourself after work. Seeing people getting drunk and making fool out of themselves almost every day plays significant part too. Last but not the least is that alcohol is easily available.

BTW, I'm speaking from personal experience and I happen to know quite a lot people with background, almost the same as Michael's, including my cousins. :smile1: Most of them couldn't wait to get out of the restaurant after it was closed. Imagine spending 10 to 12 hours per day and then stay for a drink. No way.

Like Artica, I would like to know why Micheal is being perceived as heavy drinker. :confused1:
 
I would actually tend to think the opposite, especially if you're working in an establishment that serves liquors and spirits. If it's a busy place, then the hours are condensed like crazy between supper and closing time, so it seems harmless to down a couple of beers at the end , and quickly becomes a ritual habit over time. A workaholic acquaintance of mine executive chefs at a really popular joint in town, and he often stays until closing time (round 2 am) every night, 6 nights a week, just joining the other co-workers for many pints to relax over the crazy work shift. They do it every night. He's developed alcohol issues. Of course, the blueprint doesn't extend to everyone in the catering trade, but ...

Anyway, I hope he doesn't develop serious booze problems -- if that's not already the case -- but I somehow get the feeling that he'd go more the route of Kiefer Sutherland the Christmas tree-attacker :xtree: rather than Mel "Sugartits" Gibson and Tom Sizemore, were it the case.


Keira did admit though that Michael was a heavy drinker and that no one could beat him to it so... Sometimes during interviews on red carpet or press conferences I just can't tell if he's being goofy or if he's already drunk :wondering
I'm sure he has a drink every single day and that's a problem on the verge :nogood:
But I really hope he drinks more tea than beers/champagne/martinis...

C'mon he drinks/he's a drunk in pretty much every (scenes) of his movies :laugh: just look at those pics and tell me that's some weird coincidence (art imitating life?) :wtf:
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2620/3834403888_a748f43dc6.jpg
http://www.michaelfassbender.org/michaelfassbender-kierstonwareing1.jpg
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-xqGIJVuiVqo/TfZy9cGvLqI/AAAAAAAAC_w/tIxwhxCP_z0/s1600/xmen+martini.jpg
http://cineplex.media.baselineresearch.com/images/463662/463662_large.jpg
http://pics.livejournal.com/glvalentine/pic/000eswdp
http://www.petit-bulletin.fr/multimedia/articles/111220_111214Adangerousmethoddm03906rrvb.jpg
http://media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lwkflcjuVR1qbldmt.jpg
http://cdn.mos.totalfilm.com/images/x/x-men-first-class-02-645-75.jpg
http://images5.fanpop.com/image/photos/27400000/Angel-michael-fassbender-27453000-1280-717.jpg
http://www.gq.com/blogs/the-q/inglourious_basterds_xl_04--film-A-1.jpg
http://www.gq.com/blogs/the-q/michael-fassbender-katie-jarvis-fish-tank-car.jpg
http://www.bfi.org.uk/sightandsound/images/newsandviews/420/shame_420.jpg
http://michael-fassbender-online.net/main/wp-content/uploads/PB.jpg
http://previewandplay.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/haywire1-300x148.png

:drinks:
 
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