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1990s heartthrob unrecognisable from his Titanic days as he attends Supanova fan event Sydney
1990s heartthrob unrecognisable from his Titanic days as he attends Supanova fan event Sydney

Daily Mail​

time11 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

1990s heartthrob unrecognisable from his Titanic days as he attends Supanova fan event Sydney

Billy Zane was one of the most beloved heartthrobs of the 1990s. Now 59, the distinguished actor proved he's still genetically blessed - albeit almost unrecognisable from his heyday - as he attended the Supanova fan convention in Sydney on Sunday. The American star graciously signed autographs for his admirers while appearing at the event as one of the key celebrities that drew in the crowds. Billy opted for a pair of yellow tinted glasses and covered his shaved head with a grey cap for the occasion. He added a pale grey suit for a dapper look and appeared in his element as he mingled with his fans. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. The Titanic star became a household name in 1997, after appearing alongside Kate Winslet as the film's villain, Caledon Hockley. He is also known for his impressive turns in the The Phantom in 1996, Dead Calm in 1989 and Zoolander in 2001. Last year, Zane was again unrecognisable after transforming into Marlon Brando for the new biopic, Waltzing With Brando. The actor could be seen portraying the silver screen legend Brando when he was preparing to star in one of his most iconic roles of all time. Fans praised the casting choice for the new movie, which will premiere at the Torino Film Festival in Italy, and said Zane's transformation into Brando was 'astonishing.' Zane - who went shirtless while filming a beach scene for the biopic - went viral on X for his uncanny portrayal of the iconic actor, and fans also took to social media to share their excitement for Zane's comeback. Just after seeing one still from the movie, several social media users are already saying he deserves to win an Oscar for his portrayal of Marlon Brando as Don Vito Corleone in The Godfather. In Waltzing With Brando, which is directed by Bill Fishman, Zane portrays the late actor during the period he was preparing for some of his most iconic roles - The Godfather as well as Last Tango in Paris. The biopic is based on a memoir penned by the acclaimed actor's architect, Bernard Judge. It tells the story of how Brando discovered Judge and convinced him to build the world's first ecologically perfect retreat on the tiny, uninhabitable Tahitian island of Tetiaroa. The film festival's new artistic director Giulio Base also gushed about Zane's performance in the role and his attendance at the event to promote the biopic. 'You won't believe it: he is possessed by Brando,' he told Variety about Zane playing the iconic star — who died at age 80 from respiratory and heart difficulties in July 2004. Following the big reveal as Brando, Zane started trending on X, formerly Twitter, as many social media users reacted to his transformation. Many fans gushed over the decision to cast Zane in the role of portraying Marlon Brando. One social media user wrote: 'Billy Zane is such a good casting choice!' Another person tweeted that they were 'already' looking forward to Zane receiving his first Academy Award nomination. 'I'm already rooting for Billy Zane to get his first Oscar nomination,' one X user said. 'The hair and makeup alone has already won the Oscar.' One X user said that Zane portraying Brando is 'pitch-perfect casting.' 'I hope the film is good, because this is pitch-perfect casting, and I'd personally love to see a Billy Zane comeback.' Another person said that the actor looked identical to Brando when in costume and jokingly insisted that they did not believe the photo was Zane. 'Well, I am still waiting for the picture of Billy Zane. This is clearly Marlon Brando,' the tweet read. One X user shared their shock at Zane's similarities to Brando. 'Apparently, these are pictures of Billy Zane, in an upcoming Brando biopic. Astonishing,' they wrote. Similarly, another person, a self-proclaimed fan of Brando's movies, said they had to do a 'triple take' after seeing the still of Zane as Brando in The Godfather.

To Die For: all hail Nicole Kidman, the erotic thriller's secret weapon
To Die For: all hail Nicole Kidman, the erotic thriller's secret weapon

The Guardian

time28-01-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

To Die For: all hail Nicole Kidman, the erotic thriller's secret weapon

When talking erotic thrillers, Nicole Kidman's name isn't the first name that springs to mind. But more than any other, it is perhaps the genre that has borne Kidman aloft – and, I would argue, to which she's given the most. It was in Dead Calm, holding her own against a psychotic Billy Zane, that a 30-year-old Kidman caught the eye of Tom Cruise, who ushered her into the Hollywood fold. A decade later, her on-screen pairing with Cruise in Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut would be the stuff of fervent anticipation. And now, as a pussy-bowed tech CEO with a submissive kink in Babygirl, Kidman has again bottled some heady bit of the zeitgeist. Each of these performances is a standout, but only one film – her breakout – showcases the willowy star in full-on femme fatale mode, and that is To Die For. Gus Van Sant's prescient, pitch-black media satire was adapted (by Buck Henry!) from Joyce Maynard's novel of the same name, itself a fictionalised riff on the real-life case of Pamela Smart – who, in 1990, at the tender age of 22, manipulated her teenage lover and a few of his pals into offing her husband. Kidman stars as Suzanne Maretto, nee Stone, a character who exists on her own, lightly demented plane: equal parts Elle Woods and Patrick Bateman. With her perfectly primped do and array of garish pastel ensembles, Mrs Maretto is the prettiest poison you ever did see, radiating a strawberry blond ambition that's clearly grander than her hum-drum New Hampshire home town, the fictional and trenchantly named Little Hope. Suzanne's specific ambition is to be on TV. 'You're not anybody in America unless you're on TV,' she says pertly in one of the to-camera monologues that punctuate the film. She has a crisp, singsong lilt that lands somewhere between confidential and condescending, and peppers her speech with references to her heroes – Barbara Walters, Johnny Carson, Connie Chung – albeit she has more to say about whether or not they're 'ethnic' and what they eat for dinner than any of their journalistic coups. Suzanne may have big dreams but she is also bracingly small-minded. By her own, cathode ray-fried logic, her husband is a nobody: Larry Maretto (Matt Dillon) works at the Italian joint his parents own, and would rather his wife focused on starting a family than becoming a media megastar. (His enthusiasm about her weather girl gig at the two-bit local TV station is quick to wane.) For Suzanne, that's reason enough to have Larry killed – though she tells James, the lunkheaded teen punk she's pegged to do the deed (Joaquin Phoenix), that it's because he beats her. Poor James. He's one of the misfit trio Suzanne's been filming for what she envisions as a hard-hitting documentary – one of our enterprising antiheroine's many initiatives – and he's already enamoured. No one but Suzanne has ever given him such solicitous attention, especially not anyone so 'clean'. Once she starts the slow drip of sexual encounters, he's putty in her manicured hands. 'A guy that does that to someone like you doesn't deserve to live,' James sputters during one of their trysts. 'I suppose you're right,' replies Suzanne, gazing pointedly at him with glassy, unblinking eyes. Then: 'Oh, fuck, I love this song!' She squeals and turns the radio up, flooding the parked car with the opening riff of Sweet Home Alabama. Suddenly she's out of the vehicle and twirling girlishly, a nymphette in the headlights. More than the spirit of Lynyrd Skynyrd, Suzanne is moved by the apparent success of her little sob story, not to mention the presence of an appreciative audience: through the windshield, James looks on, befuddled and utterly bewitched. It's one of the film's laugh-out-loud moments: Kidman's tonal pivot is so quick, so bizarre, as to dizzy the viewer along with her dim-witted mark. Like Eyes Wide Shut, like Babygirl, To Die For is not a straight-up erotic thriller but one with a twist; it's bitterly comic where others are sexily cruel. Kidman was not first choice for Suzanne – that was Meg Ryan, who turned it down for fear of damaging her girl-next-door image – but she pursued it with a fitting pertinacity. Kidman's efforts (unlike Suzanne's) paid off, yielding a deliciously monstrous confection – and if this character is lesser known than others in the femme fatale pantheon, it's because she's naff rather than chic; naive rather than urbane. Like the film itself, Suzanne goes against type – and so, time and again, has Kidman. To Die For is available to stream on SBS On Demand in Australia, ITVX in the UK, and Criterion in the US. For more recommendations of what to stream in Australia, click here

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