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@Ran Kotobuki@.
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allah allah! . -
marie..
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Nuova intervista tv =)
Adoro la faccina puppy che fa quando non sa come dire le cose per non spoilerare XD. -
xcusemymonkey.
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Ha un che di Alberto Angela XD . -
marie..
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Ahahahahahahhahahha è vero XDXD . -
@Ran Kotobuki@.
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<3 bellino lui
anche se è da dire che all'inizio quando guarda la telecamera e ha il classico sorriso da tizio imbarazzato per via della telecamera sembra jim carrey in "una settimana da dio" quando aspetta che gli passino la linea e fa ridere XD. -
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intervista radio (francese). -
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Madò sono troppe XD
The Marilyn Denis Show | Celebrities | François ArnaudCITAZIONE“And we’re all very close…especially Cesare and his sister Lucrezia. Who is a beautiful young lady, Holliday Grainger. Amazing actress.”
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xcusemymonkey.
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CITAZIONEWho is a beautiful young lady, Holliday Grainger. Amazing actress.”
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Filippa Lillonza II.
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CITAZIONE“And we’re all very close…especially Cesare and his sister Lucrezia. Who is a beautiful young lady, Holliday Grainger. Amazing actress.”
aw <3
Cmq avete visto la tipa in giallo appena entra? Ha la mascella che rasenta il suolo XD. -
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Notavo che François era in giro con Evelyne da un po', ma non avevamo idea di chi lei fosse XD . -
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Lo accodo alle interviste di Fra perché è lui che parla CITAZIONE
TORONTO - Although he's not sure his show shares all that much in common with other TV period dramas, the Canadian star of "The Borgias" says it's a great time for the genre.
"I think there is some kind of interest in period costume drama now — with 'Rome' a couple of years ago, 'The Tudors,' 'Game of Thrones,' 'Downton Abbey' — these shows are doing well, and if it can bring us a greater audience, why not," says Montreal-born Francois Arnaud, who promises an action-packed second season of "The Borgias," which kicks off Sunday on Bravo! in Canada and on Showtime in the U.S.
"The Borgias" is set in 15th century Italy with Oscar-winning actor Jeremy Irons starring as Pope Alexander VI, who schemes his way to become head of the Catholic Church and then does everything he can to keep a firm grip on his family's power and wealth. Arnaud plays his son, Cesare.
"The first season you have to set things up, you explain a little bit more about the political, historical background and now we've done that and in season 2 we're going straight into the action and straight into the psychology of these characters," says Arnaud.
"More sword fighting, more twisted relationships, more power struggles — good stuff."
One thing most period dramas do share in common, Arnaud says, is a cinematic esthetic that resembles a big screen production. "The Borgias" was shot in Hungary and the first season cost more than $40 million to make.
"I never thought of it as a returning series, I always thought of it as a nine-hour or 10-hour long movie and I think that's how everyone thought of it in the process of making it," says Arnaud, who credits the vision of Oscar-winning director Neil Jordan, best known for "The Crying Game," "The End of the Affair" and "Michael Collins," for elevating the drama to another level.
The combination of stepping into a period-piece role and sharing scenes with Irons was a bit intimidating, admits Arnaud, who counts "The Borgias" as his first big English-language gig. He previously appeared in Xavier Dolan's "I Killed My Mother" ("J'ai tué ma mère") and starred in "Heatwave" ("Les grandes chaleurs").
"I had to face the challenge and although it is intimidating acting off someone like Jeremy Irons it's also very rewarding," he says.
"Now I think we're really good co-workers. He often will give me a call the night before an important scene and he'll ask me about it and what I want to bring to it. It's been great, he's lovely."
With the tagline "Sex. Power. Murder. Amen," "The Borgias" was clearly not envisioned as a family friendly network show, which suited Arnaud fine.
"The shows I have been watching over the last few years have been on cable really and not many network shows. I think (cable networks) trust the directors more too when it comes to nudity or violence, the possibilities are there," he says.
"But I think as much as they promote the nudity and the violence in the show it never felt contrived when shooting it, it always felt it was part of the story we were telling. We're not telling a story about saints, so I think it's part of telling the story right and if we weren't allowed to do that, then it wouldn't be worth taking on that subject."
There's been no official commitment for a third season of "The Borgias" yet, although Arnaud and his fellow cast members have their fingers crossed. It took a few weeks after the debut episode aired before the second season was officially confirmed.
"I think people were confident because we knew the material was strong and we believed in what we did. But some really good shows get cancelled early on, it happens — and some bad shows go on and on and on," he says.
"I think we're all hoping for a season 3 as well."
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marie..
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69_squirrels.
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Di questo passo finirò per guardarmi il telefilm canadese che faceva, parola mia xD
Io l'ho guardato. Tutta la prima serie, e le due o tre puntate della seconda stagione finchè c'era lui che faceva Théo Carpentier. Poi non ne valeva oltre la pena.
Che tesoro lui ha il braccialetto contro il bullismo!!. -
marie..
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Eh io ci ho provato ma capivo ben poco XD . -
69_squirrels.
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Perchè uno a 27 anni è un "uomo fatto"? Di questi tempi sei appena un ragazzo, visto quanto s'è allungata l'età media e considerato che per la sociologia, oramai si è adolescenti fino a 30 anni compiuti^^.
Poi, per quel che mi riguarda, che appaia più "invecchiato" di quando aveva 23 o 24 anni è anche abbastanza normale...XD.
E la ciocchettina bianca, sempre se non è la luce, gli sta pure bene.