dailyfirth:

What was the worst injury you suffered during [Kingsman] filming? 

One of the first moves I had in one of the big fights, I was told I wasn’t aggressive enough which really hurt my feelings.

dathatha:

Behind the Scenes with Matt Damon at his GQ Cover Shoot

eldredpeck:

HAPPY 100TH BIRTHDAY, GREGORY PECK!

“What would I like to be remembered as or remembered for? Well, first of all I’d like to be remembered as a good husband and father.”

“As a professional I think I’d like to be thought of as a good story teller – that’s what’s always interested me. And my attempts to become a better and better actor have been because of my love of story telling and wanting to convey that story, hold the audience’s interest, hold them from start to finish and have them walk out of the theatre and feel “that was time well spent. That was a good story, he told it well.” I don’t think that I had an unbroken record of artistic triumph, but there were enough good pictures, and I think the thing that is gratifying is when they still have some kind of a life twenty-five years or more after you’ve made them. And I have a few like that, that when they’re seen people still enjoy them, and get something from them – entertainment, information, a little bit of illumination of the human condition, they still find something of value. In a way it’s an actor’s vanity to imagine that he’ll be remembered and that his work will be appreciated in years to come. But in another way it’s not a bad ambition, to try to do some work that will stand the test of time.”

eldredpeck:

HAPPY 100TH BIRTHDAY, GREGORY PECK!

“What would I like to be remembered as or remembered for? Well, first of all I’d like to be remembered as a good husband and father.”

“As a professional I think I’d like to be thought of as a good story teller – that’s what’s always interested me. And my attempts to become a better and better actor have been because of my love of story telling and wanting to convey that story, hold the audience’s interest, hold them from start to finish and have them walk out of the theatre and feel “that was time well spent. That was a good story, he told it well.” I don’t think that I had an unbroken record of artistic triumph, but there were enough good pictures, and I think the thing that is gratifying is when they still have some kind of a life twenty-five years or more after you’ve made them. And I have a few like that, that when they’re seen people still enjoy them, and get something from them – entertainment, information, a little bit of illumination of the human condition, they still find something of value. In a way it’s an actor’s vanity to imagine that he’ll be remembered and that his work will be appreciated in years to come. But in another way it’s not a bad ambition, to try to do some work that will stand the test of time.”

bobbymoynihans:

Tina Fey and Amy Poehler react to George Clooney’s prank letter