The whole process was filled with fun and a lot of laughter. We had a good time. Do you find yourself trying to absorb everything you possible can, when you work with people like that? Was it fun to be able to use that kind of language, or is it challenging to make a line like that work? What is it that ultimately leads to get excited about a role, and what leads you to pass on a role?
Once you have those things assembled, you can do no wrong, in my book. It was a dream job, from beginning to end. I try not to pass on too many things. I want to work, and there are a lot of great people out there doing good work. Ultimately, he is a brilliant craftsman. He likes to work quickly and he knows what he wants. And some of the shots are very dangerous. But, we have a great time.
Because everybody is good and shares a mutual respect, we can really enjoy it and enjoy each other. We laugh a lot, and make fun of each other. It really is a dream job. So far, Kevin Dillon is being gracious about my interest in his brother, heartthrob Matt Dillon.
Both have always worked as actors — but while the older Dillon found fame and critical adulation in 80s classics such as Rumble Fish , The Outsiders and Drugstore Cowboy , Kevin earned his keep playing bruisers and bullies in mostly forgotten films and TV movies.
And yet I am interviewing him in a plush suite at the Beverly Hilton so, at some point, something went right. But with its mindless fun and glittering Hollywood cameos, Entourage makes more sense for 90 minutes on the big screen than a decade on small. Entourage offered unashamed male fantasy: each week, melon-chested honeys straddled Grenier, while his beef-chested, shit-talking agent, played by Jeremy Piven , was a masterclass in business aggression.
But great parties, good looks and multimillion-dollar deals are hard to empathise with. Whether losing his temper in auditions, getting an erection in a brother-sister scene with Brooke Shields, shaving his balls or finding success voicing a cartoon gorilla called Johnny Bananas, the ritual humiliations grew laceratingly funny.
Leg-pride notwithstanding, he can relate to other elements of the show. Girls would figure out where he lived, drive by and ring the doorbell. But when celebrities are afraid to party openly, they go underground where some really weird shit can go down.
People want to blame the victim. Why were they wearing a certain type of clothing? Why makeup, why alcohol? Well you know what? Not everyone reacts the same, Derek. You dealt with your trauma your way and she felt that if she spoke up, she would never work again. Like many women in that industry or really, in any industry. They actually have to leave the career and find something else to do if they ever want to speak up.
Look at the women abused by Weinstein. They either left the business and took on something else entirely or had their careers go in the dump. Rosanna Arquette. Mira Sorvino. And many, many more in front of and behind the cameras. Read the article and find out what this woman, who trained to be a costume designer and probably loved her job, now does. Read the article and you will see exactly what happened.
I have a hard time believing a rape survivor starts their comment with It sounds to me like she consented. Some who has been raped would have way more compassion than that. September 27, 6 Comments.
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