Pami Posted June 26, 2012 Posted June 26, 2012 I think he wasnt ready to start a family with her at that time. He wanted some more time with her,yeah ok...he's still that way. But sometimes I think it was only a matter of years for him to marry Gisele,really. But she was desperate to marry him and I understand her and I dont blame her. He was also a bit childish,but they loved each other. Quote
by_princess Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 But something is the truth ... as Bari says, if he wasn't ready ... , better than he didn't do it. Quote
by_princess Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 but Leo Please if you don't want to get married just have a child. Wow Osa We really want to spread his sperm genes Quote
barilace Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 Gisele was pretty much his first relationship after becoming a huge star so he probably learned a lot from that experience. I remember they were all over the tabloids back then.. so he's probably less public with his gfs now because he doesn't want that kind of attention again. I don't think it means he likes them less I agree with this too, Geegine. I know he and Gisele were raked through the tabloids and all that back then. I remember some photos of the two like running to cars and throwing themselves in the back seat while covering their faces and people putting blankets on their heads while 34943093 lights go off. And, yes, I do remember Leo saying he'd have to be with someone 10+ years before he would think about marriage. THESE LADIES ARE JUST NOT WAITING IT OUT. guuuurls. I don't blame them tho. And Pami, I think we think that because either it's true (lol) or because he was just more pda-ish with Gisele. And now he's curbed that to an extent since Gisele was his first relationship really after Titanic fame...and now he's more cautious with all that. Hmm idk. Quote
by_princess Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 I think that mark of the 10 years is to prepare them from the beginning, they will not be walking down the aisle any time soon Quote
geegine Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 ok I googled it and found the interview.. but it's reallyyy old lol it's from romeo + juliet days so I don't know if he still thinks the same way about marriage. Actually.. I'm going to post the whole interview because it's pretty interesting. btw I love how much of a smart ass leo was before he would never be this open now Entertainment Weekly September 1996 Romeo & Juliet Behind the scenes By Rebecca Ascher-Walsh The bards's tale gets a hip south-of-the-border twist with designer threads, cool tunes, and fresh stars Claire Danes and Leonardo DiCaprio... But did we mention smog, stomachaches, and killer bees? It's not improbable that William Shakespeare had someone who looked a lot like Leonardo DiCaprio in mind when he created Romeo, a youthful hero at once innocent and reckless. It is, however, unlikely that he imagined Romeo suffering from Montezuma's revenge, which has, on this January day, already taken its toll on DiCaprio in a hotel bathroom in Mexico City. His lovely Juliet, played by Claire Danes, is over a bout with the flu that caused production to close for a few days, but her mother, who came down to Mexico to be with her, is just getting out of the hospital with pneumonia. The director, 33-year-old Baz Luhrmann, whose novel idea it was to do Shakespeare in sharkskin, set amid the baroque grime of Mexico City, is sitting in Chapultepec Park, a tissue in one hand and a bottle of vitamin C in the other. The man next to him, doubled over, looking miserable, fighting dizziness by bowing his head to his lap? That's the cinematographer. As German shepherds and armed guards patrol the Renaissance-style grounds of Chapultepec Castle, a history museum that serves as the exterior of the Capulets' home, the omnipresent smog settles over the city below. Crew members paraphrase the local newspaper's version of a weather forecast: "The carbon monoxide level will be dangerous, but the dioxide won't be so bad." The challenges of Luhrmann's Romeo and Juliet, which attempts to combine old language, modern attitudes and settings, South Beach style and Latin exotica, all while shooting on a location chosen for its no-frills dirt cheapness, are considerable to begin with. With today's coughing and sneezing, they become impossible. Word is passed via walkie-talkies: The set is closing for the day. While the film's $14.5 million budget leaves little room for running over schedule, the editors aren't panicked at the prospect of no dailies to screen; they're all sick as well. "What can you do?" asks the on-set Mexican doctor. If it's not the water, it's "the pollution, the exhaustion," the altitude headaches, the nosebleeds, and the stomach ailments. Halfway through the 72-day shoot, the combination of all of the above will knock the crew out of commission for four days. Sure, the course of true love never did run smooth, but this is ridiculous. With American accents, sharp camera angles, and a soundtrack that MTV audiences can relate to (the music producer, Nellee Hooper, has worked with Madonna and U2), R&J, which opens in October, is hardly the project Twentieth Century Fox had in mind when it contacted Luhrmann two years ago, after the release of his critically acclaimed Australian comedy Strictly Ballroom, and told him to write his own ticket. "They got very nervous," admits Luhrmann, whose first step was to lure DiCaprio to Australia for a run-through of an early script soon after the actor's Oscar nomination for 1993's What's Eating Gilbert Grape. The director, a former dancer who glides across sets, dresses for work in immaculate linen suits, and is given to such pronouncements as "It will be abstractly clear," wasn't an instant hit with DiCaprio, and it wasn't simply because he could offer only scale wages. "Most of the movies I do, I don't get paid a lot of money," DiCaprio says. ("Maybe I shouldn't say that," he adds quickly. "People will get used to not paying me a lot of money.") "At first I thought [Luhrmann] was on the pretentious side. But then you start to get to know him and he's exactly what you want a director to be. Because actors are, you know, completely insecure. They need attention all the time." Danes, cast at 16 when she was hot off TV's one-season succes d'estime My So-Called Life, may have gotten more attention than she bargained for; she was called back to read for Luhrmann and DiCaprio several times. Anxious about showcasing a very young actress, Fox nixed then-14-year-old Natalie Portman (Beautiful Girls), after the director had searched "for months all over the world. I saw hundreds of people." Danes was introduced to Luhrmann by fellow Australian director Jane Campion--who had auditioned her for The Portrait of a Lady. At one of their first meetings, Luhrmann recalls, Danes "had just come from an Elle shoot, and she had so much makeup on." But DiCaprio was impressed. "She's a really mature girl for her age," says the 21-year-old leading man. "She was the only girl when we did the audition who came straight in my face to do the lines. She said them looking at me right in the eye. And some of the other girls did, like, the affected flower thing. You know, they stroked their face and looked up and tried to do things with their eyelashes, and it was not nearly as truthful as Claire's performance." Truthful is a buzzword for a young cast that's eager to have its say with the Bard. "Most kids my age think Shakespeare is like, 'This is stupid, I don't get it,' you know?" says Jesse Bradford, 16, who plays Romeo's servant Balthasar. Waiting on the Mexico City soundstage where interiors are being filmed, he plays with one of the silver rings he bought nearby for pennies. "If you put it in modern terms with guns instead of swords, and cool cars and stuff...[it] will clear up a lot of confusing Shakespeare mumbo jumbo." Danes avoided any bewilderment by studying the play with her high school English teacher in L.A. the semester before she headed south. "I didn't necessarily study my character, but the odds and ends of the play itself, to get past the initial fear of having to play Shakespeare," says Danes. "Juliet's situation is pretty desperate. She has parents who neglect her, and she doesn't really have any friends. The material is so dramatic and extreme. One minute I'm getting married, and the next I'm dying. There's no in-between, which is wonderful. It's exhausting." DiCaprio was attracted to the idea that the film would have a timely edge: "I wouldn't want to do it if it [were done as usual], because that would be BS," he says, digging into an enormous vat of caramel popcorn and wiggling around in his chair like a golden-retriever puppy. "If you're excellent at every little verse, if you're perfect, then it's like a high school play or something." Danes, dressed for the costume-ball scene, attempts to maneuver into a chair without bashing passersby with the angel's wings that are sprouting from her back. DiCaprio stands nearby, chatting with the makeup artist who's applying his powder, the wardrobe person who's making sure the lint on his pants looks just so, the production assistant who's lighting his cigarette, and the bodyguard, the back of whose neck bears the tattoo from his last job, "JDTD" ("Johnny Depp to Death" didn't fit). A representative of Dolce & Gabbana, one of the film's clothiers, circles the set--an elevator where Romeo and Juliet will exchange their first kiss. DiCaprio, who seems in a perpetual hyperkinetic frenzy, and Danes, who maintains an apparently unshakable state of serenity, have become unlikely friends. When they finally step into the elevator, his hair and makeup are fussed with so much it tests even Danes' patience, and her unoccupied hands start to roam. "Uh-oh," she says, looking up with the hint of a smile. "I just broke off a piece of the set." The elevator's "up" button is reattached, Luhrmann instructs the pair to fly at each other with passion, and the stars obey, coming together with such force that they crack heads and begin to giggle. The next take is better, but there seem to be 10 more, and then 10 more. DiCaprio rolls his eyes and yawns. "Come on, D, show me a kiss," Luhrmann encourages his Romeo, who is busy thumb-wrestling with his costar. They kiss some more. "One more!" yells the director. "It's the Baz Luhrmann school of counting," a crew member jokes in a whisper. On what must be take 23, the scene is nailed. "The amount of kisses that are in this movie is astonishing," says Danes, whose onscreen parents, Diane Venora and Paul Sorvino, are absent, but whose real-life father looks on proudly. "I'm getting kind of used to it." Although Danes insists that she's comfortable in the few scenes where she appears topless (she will not be shown from the front), "Claire has to be covered up," says DiCaprio protectively. And even when the two consummate their marriage, "there's no real love scenes. We just say a bunch of stuff, and then I roll over in the sheets, and then we wake up the next morning." Off in a trailer, a bare-chested John Leguizamo, who plays Tybalt, Juliet's cousin and Romeo's nemesis, is being coached in the use of firearms by gun wrangler Charlie Taylor. Taylor's been working on the film for seven months, creating jeweled semiautomatic guns for the cast, who will battle each other with bullets rather than bayonets (even Juliet packs a Walther P5 compact). DiCaprio's bodyguard, who knows from such things, affirms that the weapons "are the shit" (that's bodyguardese for cool). Leguizamo's fingers are blistered from practice (he even brings the guns back to the hotel with him, which was apparently no problem even with the president of Mexico staying there; Leguizamo simply strolled through the lobby with the firearms in a brown paper bag). But while he's gotten the hang of spinning and throwing his black pearl-handled piece, "I have to talk at the same time. I'm going to get performance anxiety, I know it. Someone was watching the other day and I panicked. 'I can't get it up!'" Back on the soundstage, DiCaprio, dressed in a blue Hawaiian shirt and slacks, dangles from the ledge of a terrace that is the exterior of Juliet's bedroom, with nothing but a swimming pool below him. Danes is off taking a chemistry test that her teachers have mailed to her; she's not needed for the scene in which Romeo flees her room, jumping into the pool and swimming underwater to escape Juliet's mother. Luhrmann's thesis is that water is the one place the lovers can escape the world, but between bathing scenes and rain scenes, DiCaprio has had enough of getting wet. "I've been in the water so much, it's like an aquatic version of Romeo and Juliet," he says good-naturedly. While the crew figures out how to get him from the terrace into the pool with a minimum of danger, DiCaprio balances on the precipice. "I don't know if I'm ever getting married," he says. "I'm probably not going to get married unless I live with somebody for 10 or 20 years. But these people took a chance and they did it. We don't have the balls that Romeo did." DiCaprio clings to the rail and begins to moon-walk, a la Michael Jackson. "Jesus, Mary, and Joseph, crap, Jesus," he mumbles, as his foot slips through a trellis. "This sucks." Down below, Luhrmann lets out a laugh. "It's very wild, it's very sexual, it's about two young kids who have sex and commit suicide," he says. "But there are ludicrously comic things all the way through the structure. It's irony where something is both funny yet tragic--you know, you're crying and laughing at the same time." With that, the cast and crew pack up their equipment and prepare for the six-hour drive to Veracruz, where coastal scenes will be shot. The company is excited about escaping to more comfortable climes and experiencing good health. One week later, a crew member calls with the news that irony is alive and well on William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. "No pollution, no nosebleeds," she says happily. "Just El Norte winds and killer bees." http://leonardo.holl...rviews/ew01.htm Quote
BarbieErin Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 thanks for this article geenine. Certainly Leo don't talk openly like this nowadays. Quote
neonntiger92 Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 i wonder why leo got so cagey over the span of his career. Quote
barilace Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 I think it's because of Titanic. He went from being just a talented actor that people liked to being LEOMANIA ROMANTIC HERO JACK DAWSON111. And people having his face on their rims. That tv show/special/whatever that aired and was called like "I love Leo" or some stuff...idk, but you can find it on youtube, I believe. THAT IS THE MOST FACE PALMING THING I HAVE EVER EVER SEEN. The host wanting to sit in the desk he did as a high school drama student and then talking about maybe some gum on the desk was his and she wanted to taste it...and then all the girls sitting around having like cake and going on and on and on about Leo and getting Leo tats. AND ETC ETC. If I were Leo, I'd so the same re going inward and not letting people know about me. Well...after I died from second hand embarrassment that is. Quote
neonntiger92 Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 I think it's because of Titanic. He went from being just a talented actor that people liked to being LEOMANIA ROMANTIC HERO JACK DAWSON111. And people having his face on their rims. That tv show/special/whatever that aired and was called like "I love Leo" or some stuff...idk, but you can find it on youtube, I believe. THAT IS THE MOST FACE PALMING THING I HAVE EVER EVER SEEN. The host wanting to sit in the desk he did as a high school drama student and then talking about maybe some gum on the desk was his and she wanted to taste it...and then all the girls sitting around having like cake and going on and on and on about Leo and getting Leo tats. AND ETC ETC. If I were Leo, I'd so the same re going inward and not letting people know about me. Well...after I died from second hand embarrassment that is. god i keep forgetting leo-mania was a thing that would do it, oh man Quote
geegine Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 leomania was so embarrassing. He had the craziest fans. do you guys remember when his fangirls sent hate mail to the Academy when they snubbed him for titanic? it was soo embarrassing, and he was mocked so much for it. ia barilace.. I probably would've retreated from the public as well if I were him. lol Quote
BarbieErin Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 That for sure is a good reason to keep things private, I bet he couldn't imagine he would pass for this era in his life where all the girls around the world wanted him and that should have been scary for him in some ways, I think he just wanted to be a respected actor and all of a sudden he turned into the poster boy like Leo himself said so many times and I guess we can't blame him for his attempts to keep all private. I'am a fan post Leomania, I started to like him in 1999 when the thing was a little bit more calm I would say but I remember all my school friends going crazy on him and sooooooooooooooo many many pics, it's was madness really and I also don't remember something so big like leomania, that was all over the world. Maybe the Beatles or Elvis on 50's got something close to that, because not Bieber or Pattinson can beat that... Quote
osa castillo Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 oh when they cry just for seen him, it was crazy, at least that part of been married some time hasn't changed.and yes Princess we want a lot of Leo's babies, no matter what, I can offer my self if he need it, but I want the natural way, nothing about in vitro, artificial o whatever just like or grandmas. :brows: Quote
BarbieErin Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 Why we never saw pics of Leo with Kate's daughter Mia? Kate always say how Mia loves him and call him uncle Leo just like Ruby does. I'am saying this because I saw Kate riding a bike in NY with Mia, I thought like Leo loves to go bking he could go for a ride with Mia someday, I would love to see. But really, I always wanted to see pics of Leo with Kate's children, never saw that... and candid pics of Leo and Kate. I believe the only pics we saw of Leo and Kate, I mean candid pics, it was last year when they were watching a play on broadway and someone took pics of them inside the theater. Quote
BarbieErin Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 For sure Leo have to spread his good genes foward, it's about time. WE NEED TO SEE LEO'S BABY ♥ Quote
katchitup Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 Leo just needs to have children.....I want to see those beautiful babies And I think leo does want children, more than marriage, from what he expresses in interviews, and in real life, I believe he really wants kids. I think hes not too worried about when is all Anywho, I just want to see some leo babies Quote
Nanda23 Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 One article to opinion Leonardo DiCaprio: Brilliant Actor or Overrated? http://macedoniafilm...r-or-overrated/ imo: I can't believe that people hate The Beach that much! BRILLIANT, FOR SURE! But my vote doesn't count, everybody knows I'm suspect . And "The Beach"... I really liked the first half of the movie, but I think the screenwriter got lost in the last minutes... yet this isn't a bad movie, is just a little confused. Leo is great in it, so I think part of the blame also goes to the director... I like Danny Boyle, but he is kind crazy . Quote
Nanda23 Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 Who do you all think its leos most attractive GF? I am not talking personality wise. Just soley based on their looks. I'm just curious, I don't know what alot of the newbies on this forum think, and others Bar has a sick body... I mean, THAT IS NOT FROM THIS WORLD, lets be real . I like her the most. I also like Erin (but to be my fav they have to stay together for a while ), she's hot and so angelical... sounds a sweet girl in interviews. Blake... she has a beautiful body. Gisele... I have some issues with her, lets put this way. I still don't believe they gave us a forum to talk only about those things ... one kiss in the ass - no homo - of who asked for it to moderators... I know they keep coming here to read what we write . Quote
BarbieErin Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 Well I will say my opinion about his gf's beauty because I didn't said yet... Honestly I never thought Gisele was THAT beautiful but I think she have amazing hair and a unique face, and I think she's a great and versatile model but I'am not a fan of her body. Bar is really gorgeous, her face is soooooooo beautiful and very feminine, her curvy body always had my attention, really amazing body. Blake, I have to admitt that her legs are unbelievable, incridible legs. And than she have a good hair and beatiful smile but that's all I can say about her... Erin is aww, the sweetest thing, looking at her work as a model especially for VS, she's growing on me a lot, her body is insanely beautiful and her face is flawless. Quote
by_princess Posted June 27, 2012 Posted June 27, 2012 I'm not sure whether what this person wrote is for real or what. She seems legit - she used to be a reporter for the Chicago Sun. But would Leo have ever tweeted about getting beat in pool by his girlfriend? (this is dated 2010) http://open.salon.co...s_with_dicaprio Posey thanks for posting the aticle First... Wow... that text was way too long for me. I couldn't understand the half maybe I have to wait for the movie to see what it was about. but the part of the pronunciation of the Scorsese name definitely reminded me the cast of Bridesmaid in the Sag awards trying to figure out the proper pronunciation. Score-say-zee or Score-sez-ee? Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.