It appears Paradise may be lost for Michael Allio and Danielle Maltby.
17.07.2023 - 21:21 / etcanada.com
Michael Cera is looking back at the shock of his nearly overnight fame thanks to “Superbad”.
While the star had been acting in roles prior to the 2007 comedy, with “Arrested Development” and “Juno” under his belt, it was “Superbad” that put him on the public’s radar.
“That was sort of overwhelming,” Cera told The Guardian of being shoved into the spotlight at 19. “I didn’t know how to handle walking down the street. Fame makes you very uncomfortable in your own skin, and makes you paranoid and weird. There were lots of great things about it, and I met a lot of amazing people, but there’s a lot of bad energies, too, ones that I was not equipped to handle.”
READ MORE: Why Michael Cera Wasn’t Included In The ‘Barbie’ Cast Group Texts
Particularly “bad energies” came from drunk people according to the “Barbie” star.
“If people are drunk, and they recognize you, and they’re very enthusiastic, but it can be kind of toxic too,” he said. “When you’re a kid, people also feel they can kind of grab you — they’re not that respectful of you or your physical space. I didn’t know how to respectfully establish my own boundaries.”
The opening weekend of “Superbad” stuck out particularly in his mind as a drastic shift in the way he existed in public.
“It was like a burning feeling the whole time. Just like everybody was so aware of me,” he recalled.
The overnight success resulted in a “crisis” for Cera, where he stepped away from roles that would’ve catapulted him further into fame.
READ MORE: Michael Cera Recalls Rihanna Slapping Him In ‘This Is The End’: ‘I Was Into It’
“There was a point where I wanted to stop taking jobs that would make me more famous,” Cera said, including turning down the opportunity to host “Saturday
It appears Paradise may be lost for Michael Allio and Danielle Maltby.
Once an iconic staple of 90’s teatime telly, Neighbours star Scott Michaelson was the subject of many teen girls dreams when he starred in the Aussie soap as surfer hunk Brad Willis. Delighting audiences between 1991 and 1993, the talented star became a household name with his trademark blonde locks and skills on a surfboard, yet despite his skyrocketing success, Scott decided too swap the bright lights of a soap career for a far more private vocation away from the cameras and the limelight.
The Truth Hurts singer is finding out that the truths of her former employees are hurting more than anything else right now…
Zack Sharf Digital News Director If you watched “Barbie” and thought it was missing a proper fart joke, then you might’ve loved one scene that Greta Gerwig and editor Nick Houy left on the cutting room floor. In a new IndieWire interview with the collaborators, it’s revealed that “Barbie” had a “fart opera” in the middle of its runtime that got cut because it wasn’t received as well as Gerwig hoped. “We’ve always tried to get in a proper fart joke and we’ve never done it,” Gerwig said.
Apparently, there was almost a world where John Stamos didn’t portray Uncle Jesse on Full House!
To this day, fans of Full House see Uncle Jesse every time that John Stamos steps onstage or onscreen in a new role. However, the actor just revealed that he almost quit the show before it became a classic.
Michael Cera does. The longtime actor has nearly grown up on screen, starring in at 15 and becoming a hallmark of the coming-of-age category through hits like and by 19. But, as Cera candidly recalls in a new interview with , being a recognizable teen has its downsides.«I didn’t know how to handle walking down the street.
Superbad” and “Juno,” all that fame at an early age nearly ran him out of the business, Cera, now 35, told the Guardian.“There was a point [at 19] where I wanted to stop taking jobs that would make me more famous,” Cera confessed, in a freewheeling interview about saying no to smartphones, fatherhood and being overwhelmed by early fame. “I didn’t know how to handle walking down the street,” the “Scott Pilgrim” actor said of life in his late teens.
Michael Cera is looking back at a pivotal point in his career.
Zack Sharf Digital News Director Cillian Murphy said during an interview on Marc Maron’s “WTF” podcast that Christopher Nolan’s “Oppenheimer” was made on a relentlessly fast schedule. “We made the movie unbelievably quickly. We made it in 57 days,” the actor revealed. “The pace of that was insane.” By comparison, Nolan’s World War II survival thriller “Dunkirk” shot for 68 days, and his massive spy movie “Tenet” shot for 96 days. Murphy is front and center in a majority of “Oppenheimer” scenes, making the shorter shooting schedule all the more intense for the actor. “The sets are huge, but it feels like being on an independent movie,” Murphy added about working with Nolan, which he has been doing for over 20 years now. “There’s just Chris and the cameraman — one camera always, unless there’s some huge, huge set piece — and the boom op and that’s it. There’s no video village, there’s no monitors, nothing. He’s a very analog filmmaker.”
Michael Cera has said he considered giving up acting due to the “overwhelming” fame following his breakout roles in Superbad and Juno.The actor, who played Evan in the 2007 teen comedy opposite Jonah Hill, explained how he struggled with fame following the film’s release in an interview with the Guardian.“That was sort of overwhelming,” Cera said about his sudden rise to fame aged 19 in 2007. “I didn’t know how to handle walking down the street.
Zack Sharf Digital News Director Michael Cera revealed in an interview with The Guardian that he suffered a career crisis at 19 years old after his career exploded thanks to the 2007 releases of awards juggernaut “Juno” and R-rated comedy blockbuster “Superbad.” Both films made Cera a recognizable actor, but that made life difficult for him in return. “I didn’t know how to handle walking down the street,” Cera said. “Fame makes you very uncomfortable in your own skin, and makes you paranoid and weird. There were lots of great things about it, and I met a lot of amazing people, but there’s a lot of bad energies, too, ones that I was not equipped to handle.”
Michael Cera has been announced to star in a new sci-fi series from director Steven Soderbergh.Command Z sees the actor take on the role of a project leader in the future who sends three people (Roy Wood Jr., Chloe Radcliffe and J.J. Maley) back to 2023 to infiltrate the minds of a number of people and change the course of the future.The series, which sees Soderbergh direct and produce, is available to watch now on the director’s website Extension765 – which also has a trailer.Command Z has also been promoted with a meta letter written by a likely fictional character called Fabrizia del Dongo, which confirms it consists of eight episodes and runs for a total of 90 minutes.“This very morning, our fearful leader explained that in three days (July 17th for those who don’t want to do the math) we will be ‘dropping’ a series of some sort called COMMAND Z,” it begins.“If I seem hedgy, it’s because A) None of us have seen it; and B) it’s apparently about ninety minutes long, but there are eight episodes of varying length, so is it an actual series or just a movie cut up into pieces?”It adds of the secrecy of the project: “When I asked Mr/Dr Soderbergh why he’d done this, why he’d made this project and why he’d made it in secret, he said, ‘Hope, Fabrizia.
It seems like a fairly safe bet that Michael Cera isn’t rushing to pick up the new iPhone after it gets announced.
Steven Soderbergh on Friday unveiled the first trailer for Command Z, a comedic sci-fi series formerly known as The Pendulum Project, which will become available for streaming only on the site for his production company, Extension 765, on July 17th.
Sophia Scorziello editor “This is historic — literally.” At least, that’s what a digital Michael Cera says at the start of the trailer for Steven Soderbergh’s upcoming sci-fi comedy series, “Command Z.” The “Ocean’s 11″-through-“13” director has rounded up Cera, Roy Wood Jr., Chloe Radcliffe and Liev Schreiber for a post-apocalyptic look back at the year 2023, as they traverse into the past by putting a wormhole in a washing machine. The new series follows Soderbergh’s recent Max noir series “Full Circle” on Max, starring Claire Danes and Zazie Beetz. “Command Z” is set to premiere July 17 and will be available on Soderbergh’s website, Extension765.com.
Zack Sharf Digital News Director Hayley Atwell is currently kicking butt in “Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One,” but the Tom Cruise-led action tentpole is not the actor’s first go-around with a Hollywood mega-franchise. Atwell joined the Marvel Cinematic Universe as Peggy Carter in 2011’s “Captain America: The First Avenger.” It’s a role she would flesh out in two seasons of ABC’s “Agent Carter” series, before lending her voice to an alternate version of Peggy in Marvel’s Disney+ series “What If…?” Atwell’s Peggy Carter is a passionate fan favorite among Marvel lovers, which is why fans were so delighted when the character popped up as an alternate Captain America in 2022’s “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” and then made furious when she was almost immediately killed off by Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen). In a new interview on the “Happy Sad Confused” podcast, Atwell called the cameo “a frustrating moment.”
“Barbie” is Canadian content.
Dan + Shay are opening up about a bump in their partnership. In a new YouTube video, the country duo, which is comprised of Dan Smyers and Shay Mooney, revealed that they nearly called it quits.In 2021, Smyers and Mooney were at the top of their career. They won a GRAMMY Award and wrapped up their headlining , but neither Smyers nor Mooney was happy.«I was in the lowest low of my entire life,» Smyers recalled.