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  • firstvirtual 8:21 pm on November 10, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: jean claude van damme   

    Hard Body Plays an Old Softie (Himself) 

    ON the phone the other day Jean-Claude Van Damme, the martial artist and action hero known in his heyday as the Muscles from Brussels, was sounding anxious and apologetic. He had canceled a trip to New York — missing a host of engagements, including an in-person interview with this writer — to remain in Bangkok, where he recently finished shooting a movie. And he wanted to make clear that he had a very good reason.

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    Photographs courtesy of PeaceArch Entertainment

    Mr. Van Damme in “JCVD.”

    “I adopted seven dogs here, and one of them had a heart attack,” Mr. Van Damme said. “I’m sleeping with him every night at the clinic. If I leave him, he’s going to go back into a coma. He’s a very sensitive dog.” The others — all strays, some disabled (he built “a little wheelchair” for one of them) — have been sent to his home in Belgium.

    It might be odd to think of Mr. Van Damme, a veteran of steroidal exploitation cinema and a virtuoso of the bone-crunching split kick, as an old softie, but it is also perfectly consistent with the image overhaul implicit in his latest vehicle, “JCVD,” which opened on Friday. Directed by the French filmmaker Mabrouk El Mechri, it allows its namesake to reveal new facets to his screen persona basically by playing himself. A jokey hall-of-mirrors movie with a melancholic streak, it stars Mr. Van Damme — who turned 48 last month and whose last film to open theatrically in the United States was the 1998 flop “Knock Off,” — as Jean-Claude Van Damme, a washed-up middle-aged movie star.

    Thanks in part to a widely circulating online trailer “JCVD” has garnered more attention for Mr. Van Damme than he has received in years. (The last time he made even a remote impact on pop-culture consciousness was when he appeared on “Friends” as himself in 1996 and boasted that he could crush a walnut with his buttocks.) “JCVD” was a word-of-mouth hit at Cannes, and it had its North American premiere at a raucous midnight screening at the Toronto International Film Festival.

    The movie’s real-life back story is the familiar, even classic, rise and fall of Mr. Van Damme’s career. He got his break by impressing the Israeli movie mogul Menahem Golan with a kickboxing demonstration. His early films (“Bloodsport,” “Kickboxer”) were slapdash cheapies, often set in vaguely exotic Asian locales and revolving around mano-a-mano fisticuffs that show off his moves (especially those trademark splits, developed from studying ballet and karate as a kid).

    In the ’90s he graduated to slicker studio fare like “Universal Soldier” and “Timecop,” often working with fellow expats who were just starting out in Hollywood (the German-born Roland Emmerich, the Hong Kong directors John Woo and Tsui Hark). But his personal life started to unravel: messy divorces (he has been married five times), an extravagant cocaine habit, an arrest for drunken driving.

    He soon slid back down the B-movie totem pole. Before “JCVD” 13 consecutive Van Damme films had bypassed theaters in this country. With interchangeable plots and titles (“In Hell,” “Inferno,” “Until Death”), they were often shot in low-cost locations like Bulgaria and Romania.

    The years in the straight-to-video ghetto took a toll on his pride. “I wanted to be back on the big screen,” he said. He sensed an opportunity when Marc Fiszman, a French producer, asked if he would consider playing himself in a meta-movie. (Mr. Fiszman’s previous film was the comedy “Jean-Philippe,” starring the singer Johnny Hallyday as a parallel-world version of himself.) A script was commissioned, eventually ending up with Mr. El Mechri, a young director who had some success with his first film, “Virgil” (2005).

    “It was a ‘Die Hard’-ish kind of parody,” Mr. El Mechri said of the original screenplay. “It was just mocking, and it was obviously written by people who didn’t know Jean-Claude at a fan level.” Mr. El Mechri rewrote the script to incorporate a “Dog Day Afternoon”-like scenario — Mr. Van Damme’s alter-ego, after losing a humiliating custody battle, stumbles into a hostage situation — and drew liberally on the star’s biography and persona.

    “JCVD” requires Mr. Van Damme openly to recognize the absurdity and indignity of being an aging action hero. “I still train every day,” he said. “I don’t think an actor my age can do what I can do physically, or even one who is 20.” But he added, “I’m 48 years old and to jump off a staircase and do three somersaults in the air — I will not feel the truth in that character today.”

    Which is not to say that “JCVD” omits the wham-bam violence that fans term Van Dammage.

    It opens with an over-the-top action set piece from a film-within-the-film, complete with gunplay, knife fights and exploding grenades that was shot in a single take and that visibly pushed the star to his limits. “I was completely out of breath to the point of anxiety,” he said.

    Mr. Van Damme’s more sensitive side is on jaw-dropping display in the movie’s pièce de résistance, a soul-baring six-minute monologue with more emoting than in all his other roles put together. His eyes tearing up and his voice quavering, he reflects on his dreams and failures, and effectively head-butts the fourth wall. (“I truly believe it’s not a movie.”)

    The scene came about when Mr. Van Damme, feeling apprehensive on the eve of the shoot, told Mr. El Mechri that he thought the film was still missing a deeper candor. Mr. El Mechri proposed a long, to-the-camera address. Mr. Van Damme said he felt “completely naked” while delivering his monologue.

    When he watched it for the first time, he remembers thinking, “I didn’t lie.” He added, “It was scary for me to do it in French.” French is his native language, but this is his first French-speaking lead role, and he has been mercilessly mocked for spouting Zenlike aphorisms in Franglais on French television. (“Je suis aware.”)

    Filled with whiplash digressions and weirdly poetic grace notes, the show-stopping speech is actually a fair approximation of how he really speaks. On his disillusionment with celebrity, he said: “I was so hungry for fame — not for fame, no — well, let’s be honest, hungry for fame, hungry for love. But then fame came, and it was not existing.”

    On being engaged with his movies: “I want to be involved in that nine-month process. It’s like making a baby. You make love, and it’s the full way to delivery. How can I be mentally pregnant with the film all the way?”

    His next film, which bears the most un-Van Damme-ian title “Full Love,” would seem to offer full-on mental pregnancy: he serves as actor, writer, director and producer. He will only say that it is set in 1960s Louisiana and present-day Southeast Asia and that it will have “a controversial message.”

    The shift to directing is part of a larger attempt to reinvent, or at least reclaim, his career. Moving forward he would like to be seen as “an action character hero instead of an action star.” And he’s convinced that he has embarked on the right path. “It’s difficult to make a bad movie after an experience like ‘JCVD,’ ” he said.

    He acknowledged the importance of personal stability. He remarried his second wife, the bodybuilder Gladys Portuguese, and is reunited with his children. After years in Los Angeles he now divides his time between Belgium and Hong Kong, where he has shot several films and feels wholly at home.

    “I want people to see I’ve changed, that this guy is responsible,” he said. “I want to show my family Daddy’s back, like old times.”

     
  • firstvirtual 8:13 pm on November 10, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: article, depression,   

    Health: depression 

     
  • firstvirtual 7:48 pm on November 10, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , learn languages, ,   

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  • firstvirtual 11:48 am on November 10, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , country, european union, volunteer programs   

    Volunteer in Argentina from an European perspective 

    The Educational Exchange Commission (COINED) and the European Union, through the Program “Youth in Action 2007 – 2013“, will develop the Project ” Voluntary work in Argentina from an European Perspective ” during March to September, 2009 in Cordoba.

    The Project “Voluntary work in Argentina from an European Perspective ” will give the opportunity to 50 german young men to be part of a voluntary work for 6 months. The main objective of the Voluntary European Service is to develop the solidarity and a mutual understanding between young men/women of different countries, promoting the tolerance, respect for cultural diversity and the struggle against racism and xenophobia through an intercultural learning in different cultural, ethnic and religious environments.

    Twenty young men/women from 16 to 30 years old with “fewer opportunities” (unequal social, educational and economic conditions) will take part in this project too. As regards the volunteers in this project, they are young men and woman that want to help, learn and take advantage of this experience in Argentina. They are conscious that their volunteer work will imply carrying out tasks that have social, environmental and / or cultural importance for the local community

     
  • firstvirtual 11:38 am on November 10, 2008 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , ,   

    Penguin books for November 

    Beautiful girls. Crime lords. Deadly secrets. It’s all in a day’s work for James Bond. Quantum of Solace , in suave hardback, perfect for the secret agent in your life.

    Newsletter readers can get 30% off – enter the code bondtastic at the shopping basket, press update basket for discount to apply.

    Christmas Cracking Good Reads
    If you’re going to add one book to your Christmas list this year, make sure it’s one of these six super stocking fillers

    A Guide to Looking and Feeling Fabulous over Forty
    For Crying Out Loud
    Gangs II
    Ministry of Food
    This Charming Man  
    Fern

    Sumptuous, luxurious, Classic leather
    Six of your favourite Penguin Classics in beautifully crafted leather bound editions designed by leather designer Bill Amberg. See the collection here

    Plus, up for charity auction, a set of all six books, signed by Bill Amberg. Find out how to bid here

     

     

    Cheeky Christmas treats:

    “To steal a little from ‘Heroes’ – ‘Save the hedgehog, save the world.’”
    A Prickly Affair on hedgehogs and a nocturnal world of snuffles and prickles.

    The Lost Diaries of Adrian Mole, 1999 – 2001
    Britain’s best-loved diarist is back. And funnier than ever…

    Keeping Poultry and Rabbits on Scraps
    Top advice to keep your chickens and rabbits happy

    The World of Peter Rabbit
    The Collector’s Edition of Original Tales 1-23 with AudioBooks.

    You Can Do The Cube
    The Rubik’s Cube is back! Get the book for the game of Christmas 08 …


    Win the chance to be Nicci French’s next murder victim!

    We’ve teamed up with Alibi, the only TV channel dedicated to crime drama, to offer you the chance to be a fictional murder victim in Nicci French’s next thriller! You’ll be contacted by the authors and see your chilling fate in a limited edition Nicci French book.

    To enter this unique, once in a lifetime competition, you need to sharpen your detective skills…there’s been a murder and we need you to crack the case at: http://www.theperfectalibi.co.uk/niccifrench

     


     

     

     

    Free trial at Penguin Dating

    If conflict resolution hasn’t been your forte in the past then you’ll enjoy the excellent advice of Niamh Greene, writing on Penguin Dating (and maybe even find somebody to practise on?)

    “Do not resort to name calling. Even if you want to call him a fat couch potato, refrain. He might feel perfectly within his rights to tell you in return that yes, your bum really does look big in your favourite jeans – and then where will you be? The divorce courts probably. (Guys – remember these kinds of comments will never really be forgiven or forgotten. In fact, most women will take them to the grave.)”

    Try a free trial today at Penguin Dating

     


     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    FOR ONE MONTH ONLY*
    20% OFF ALL BOOKS ON PENGUIN.CO.UK

    1. Select and add your books to the shopping basket.
    2. At the shopping basket, enter the code: SUBOFFER in the coupon box
    4. Press ‘Update basket’ to activate your discount.

    Offer ends 01/12/2008
    *If a book has more than one offer associated to it, you will automatically get the best value discount.

     


    Extracts & Look Inside
    This month we have extracts from Zoe Heller’s The Believers, Chris Patten’s What’s Next? And Life Begins by Amanda Brookfield amongst others.

    Plus, take a look inside The Really Useful Grandparent’s Book and print off a beautiful family tree.
       
     
              

    Film & TV 
    Grab a stocking full of gifts for the little-uns, pop in something from In The Night Garden, Charlie and Lola and Doctor Who or for the boppers in your house get Up Close & Personal with Zac Efron, Miley Cyrus or Vanessa Hudgens.

    For the grown ups, don’t fret there’s a plenty of Film & TV titles for you too!
     

     
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