WE NEED A WORK TOMORROW ONE TOO.
(Source: eqocentric, via latinamericana)
adele wins an oscar
a distance scream is heard
she’s not even an actress leo cries
(via religionisbullshit)
“We do look very different, we’re older. Leo’s 37, I’m 36—were 21 and 22 when we made that film. You know, he’s fatter now—I’m thinner. It’s true though!”
(Source: giovanna-saravia, via vodkaandvogue)
“Leo had slammed his hand on the table countless times and he moved his hand further and he crushed a crystal cordial glass. Blood was dripping down his hand. He never broke character. He kept going. He was in such a zone. It was very intense. He required stitches.”
(Source: its-blee, via mrchrispine)
Leonardo DiCaprio cut his hand while the cameras were rolling on the set of Django Unchained and kept moving through the scene, never breaking character, and his real-life bloodied hand made it into the final version of the film. During one take of that scene, DiCaprio unintentionally slammed his hand into glass, creating a gash that later required stitches. But that didn’t stop him from doing his job. As his hand bled quite visibly, DiCaprio kept going, even using the hand as a new dramatic prop. At one point he smears his bloodied hand over Broomhilda’s face in an act of evil dominance. And Broomhilda (Kerry Washington) looks horrified as he does it. (Perhaps Washington wasn’t acting!) And that was the take that director Quentin Tarantino kept in the film. (Source)
(via mattybing1025)
Kate Beckinsale & Leonardo DiCaprio in ‘The Aviator’, 2004.
(via latinamericana)
(Source: hydrotoxicity, via gokufuckedme)
For Leonardo DiCaprio and his close buddy, magician David Blaine, Thursday, July 30, began like any number of nights on the town—tug on the baseball cap, keep an eye peeled for paparazzi, and-seek out nocturnal adventure. But instead of making for a downtown Manhattan hot spot like the Moomba restaurant, they headed to a sedate stretch of the Upper East Side and Mount Sinai Medical Center. Slipping through a back entrance and into a second-floor room, the Titanic star gave what may have been one of his most heartfelt performances. His special audience: Chinese gymnast Sang Lan, 17, paralyzed from the chest down during a routine warm-up vault gone wrong at the Goodwill Games on July 21.
“Her face lit up, and they had an enormously animated discussion through an interpreter,” said Dr. Kristjan Ragnarsson of his patient’s response to the hour-long visit from her idol. “It inflated her mood considerably.” DiCaprio’s pal Blaine was more low-key about the meeting, details of which the star and his publicist kept as secret as the identity of his date du jour. “Leo does a lot of things like this that you don’t hear about,” says Blaine. “He’s done them for a long time.”(This was from 1998 by the way.)
(Source: icouldadrowned, via asongaboutanoldwelshwitch)
