{{infobox television |show name | Drive |image |genre DramaAction |picture_format 480i (SDTV)720p (HDTV) |opentheme "Can't Stop the World" by Gavin Rossdale |runtime 42 minutes |creator Tim MinearBen Queen |executive_producer Tim MinearBen QueenGreg Yaitanes |starring Nathan FillionKristin LehmanMircea MonroeRiley SmithKevin AlejandroJ. D. PardoDylan BakerEmma StoneRochelle AytesTaryn ManningMelanie Lynskey |country United States |language English |network Fox |first_aired |last_aired |num_seasons 1 |num_episodes 6 |composer Keith Power |list_episodes #Episodes }} |
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The series is set across the backdrop of an illegal automobile road race with the central focus being on the unwitting competitors and, as the plot develops, the unseen puppet masters who sponsor the race. Minear has described the show's thematic tone by saying "a secret, illegal, underground road race can be anything from Cannonball Run to The Game to North by Northwest to Magnolia-on-wheels. Ours is all those things."
Firefly and Serenity star Nathan Fillion, a longtime friend of series creator Tim Minear, plays the lead role of Alex Tully. Ivan Sergei played Tully in the unaired pilot.
The show premiered on April 13, 2007 on CTV in Canada. It debuted in the United States on April 15, 2007 on Fox, and moved into its regular time slot on Mondays the next day; in that slot it faced stiff competition from NBC's Deal or No Deal and ABC's Dancing with the Stars. On April 25, Fox canceled Drive only after four episodes had aired. As of 2010 the series has not been released to international markets (with the exception of Canada) or on DVD.
scope="col" width=15% | Actor | Role | Vehicle | Notes |
Nathan Fillion | List of Drive characters#Alex Tully>Alex Tully | 1972 Ford F-100 (tan) 1972 Dodge Challenger (black) | ||
Kristin Lehman | List of Drive characters#Corinna WilesCorinna Wiles || | Partners with Alex Tully | ||
Kevin Alejandro | List of Drive characters#Winston SalazarWinston Salazar || | 1964 Chevrolet Impala lowrider (gold) | ||
J.D. Pardo | List of Drive characters#Sean SalazarSean Salazar || | Winston Salazar's partner and half-brother | ||
Dylan Baker | List of Drive characters#John TrimbleJohn Trimble || | 1999 Ford Taurus (silver-blue) | ||
Emma Stone | List of Drive characters#Violet TrimbleViolet Trimble || | John Trimble's partner and daughter | ||
Michael Hyatt | List of Drive characters#Susan ChambleeSusan Chamblee || | Land Rover LR3 (light blue) Ford Focus (North America)>Ford Focus (red) | ||
Rochelle Aytes | List of Drive characters#Leigh BarnthouseLeigh Barnthouse || | Pontiac Solstice (black) | Originally partners with Susan Chamblee and Ivy Chitty | |
Melanie Lynskey | List of Drive characters#Wendy PatrakasWendy Patrakas || | Dodge Grand Caravan SXT (silver) | ||
Taryn Manning | List of Drive characters#Ivy ChittyIvy Chitty || | Originally partners with Susan Chamblee and Leigh Barnthouse, then partners with Wendy Patrakas, then steals the Trimbles' Ford Taurus | ||
Riley Smith | List of Drive characters#Rob LairdRob Laird || | 1979 Pontiac Trans Am (white) | ||
Mircea Monroe | List of Drive characters#Ellie LairdEllie Laird || | Rob Laird's partner and wife | ||
Wayne Grace | List of Drive characters#Jimmy CousinsJimmy Cousins || | Harley Davidson touring motorcycle (black) | ||
K Callan | List of Drive characters#Ceal CousinsCeal Cousins || | Jimmy Cousins's partner and wife | ||
Brian Bloom | List of Drive characters#Allan JamesAllan James || | 2007 Dodge Charger (black) 2002 Chevrolet Impala (red) | Not a race participant | |
Richard Brooks (actor) | Richard Brooks | List of Drive characters#Detective ErhleDetective Ehrle || | Not a race participant | |
Charles Martin Smith | List of Drive characters#Mr. BrightMr. Bright || | One of the race organizers; not a race participant | ||
Katie Finneran | List of Drive characters#Becca FreemanBecca Freeman || | Alex Tully's sister; not a race participant | ||
Amy Acker | List of Drive characters#Kathryn TullyKathryn Tully || | Alex Tully's wife; not a race participant |
Checkpoint | Clue/Instructions | Specifics | |
Text message: "Mainland Go" (announced the start of the race, not a destination) | The starting line of the race. | ||
Jupiter, Florida | Text message: "Fly to Jupiter and find the red eye." | The Jupiter Inlet lighthouse. | |
Cape Canaveral, Florida | Text message: "Kennedy killed in '73." The message is accompanied by a countdown clock. | ||
NOTE: in the ticket was written "ADMIT". | After Sunset [[drive-in movie theater">Rome, Georgia | Each driver was given a red ticket stub with instructions to go to Rome, "After sunset, before dark." NOTE: in the ticket was written "ADMIT". | After Sunset [[drive-in movie theater. |
Appomattox Court House, Virginia | Text message: "Surrender, America" | Appomattox Court House was where Confederate States of America | |
[[Cleveland, Ohio | Most of the racers received two hot candies, while Alex, Corinna, Sean and Winston, who had taken advantage of their head start, received a note reading "Great Balls of Fire: The Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame - Cleveland" | The Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame. | |
Unknown | Alex Tully received the address to the next checkpoint on a slip of paper after arriving at The Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame. | The slip of paper is passed hand-to-hand, and the checkpoint is never revealed in the six produced episodes. |
# | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Productioncode | U.S. viewers(millions) |
Highway scenes were shot on Interstate 210 in Rialto, California on the finished but unopened portion between Alder Ave. and Linden Ave. The exit for Alder Ave can be seen as the exit in most of the freeway scenes. In the first episode, the Alder Ave. sign for the exit is clearly legible. Scenes at the "Kennedy Space Center" were filmed at the Ambassador Auditorium in Pasadena, California.
Fox initially announced that the final two episodes would air on July 4, 2007. The network rescheduled them for July 13 and later pulled them entirely. The two remaining episodes were posted online on July 15, 2007. Executive producers Tim Minear and Craig Silverstein subsequently gave an interview that described what might have happened if the series had continued.
Category:2000s American television series Category:2007 American television series debuts Category:2007 American television series endings Category:American drama television series Category:Fox network shows Category:Television series by Fox Television Studios Category:Serial drama television series Category:English-language television series
cs:Drive fr:Drive (série télévisée) pl:Drive (serial telewizyjny) fi:Drive (televisiosarja)This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
name | Ryan Gosling |
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birth name | Ryan Thomas Gosling |
birth date | November 12, 1980 |
birth place | London, Ontario, Canada |
home town | Cornwall, Ontario, Canada |
occupation | Actor, Musician |
years active | 1993–present |
citizenship | Canada }} |
Having first gained notice at the age of 12 as a mouseketeer on the variety show The Mickey Mouse Club, Gosling has built a reputation for playing misfits in independent films: a fanatic Neo-Nazi in the The Believer (2001), a drug-addicted junior high school teacher in Half Nelson (2006), a socially inept loner in Lars and the Real Girl (2007) and a frazzled husband in Blue Valentine (2010). His most commercially successful movie to date is 2004's romantic drama The Notebook. He has been nominated for an Academy Award for Best Leading Actor (for Half Nelson) and two Golden Globe Awards (for Lars and the Real Girl and Blue Valentine).
2011 saw him expand his horizons. He appeared in his first comedic role in Crazy, Stupid, Love and his first action role in Drive. His next film, political drama The Ides of March, is set to premiere at the Venice Film Festival on August 31, 2011.
He formed a band named Dead Man's Bones with his friend, Zach Shields, and they released their self-titled debut album in 2009. The two met in 2005 (Shields was dating Rachel McAdams' sister) and quickly realized that they shared an obsession with ghosts. Thus, they decided to form their band around the themes of ghosts and monsters.
He performed from an early age. He and his older sister, Mandi, sang together at weddings; he performed with his uncle's Elvis Presley tribute act, Elvis Perry, and he was involved with a local dance company. He spent part of his childhood in Florida, USA after successfully auditioning for a part on The Mickey Mouse Club'' at the age of twelve.
He developed an idiosyncratic accent as a child, later explaining, "As a kid I thought having a Canadian accent didn't sound tough. I thought guys should sound like Marlon Brando. So now I have a phony accent that I can't shake, so it's not phony anymore."
He dropped out of high school at the age of seventeen to focus on his acting career.
His first serious role was in 2001's controversial drama The Believer, which won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival. He has described it as "the film that kind of gift-wrapped for me the career that I have now. I suddenly found myself at Sundance, where people were asking me about my craft. So I had to pretend I had one." In 2002 and 2003, he appeared in The Slaughter Rule, Murder by Numbers and The United States of Leland.
In 2004, he starred opposite Rachel McAdams in the sleeper hit The Notebook. The film made stars of its two leads, had huge popular culture resonance and frequently appears on Most Romantic Movies lists. The chemistry between Gosling and McAdams was often remarked upon, with the New York Times writing, "Their performances are so spontaneous and combustible that you quickly identify with the reckless sweethearts, who embody an innocence that has all but vanished from American teenage life. And against your better judgment, you root for the pair to beat the odds against them." In 2005, his sole appearance was in critical and box-office flop, Stay.
In 2006, he appeared as a drug-addicted, junior high school history teacher in Half Nelson, for which he was nominated for an Academy Award, a Screen Actors Guild Award, and a Broadcast Film Critics Association Award and won Best Actor at the Spirit Awards. He played an introvert who falls in love with a sex doll in the gently comedic 2007 film Lars and the Real Girl, and was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, a Screen Actors Guild Award and a Broadcast Film Critics Association and won a Satellite Award. He also starred opposite Anthony Hopkins in the 2007 courtroom thriller Fracture.
Gosling focused mainly on his band Dead Man's Bones in 2008 and 2009, releasing a debut album and touring North America.
In 2010, he co-starred with Michelle Williams in Derek Cianfrance's directorial debut, Blue Valentine. The low-budget film was mainly improvised: "Most movies when you're acting you're trying to block out the lights and the trailers. Here, you had to remind yourself you were making a film," says Gosling. "Michelle and I found it hard to take off our wedding bands when it was over. We'd built this castle and then had to tear it down." His performance was nominated for many awards, most notably a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Drama. Also in 2010, he narrated ReGeneration, a documentary that explores the cynicism in today’s youth towards social and political causes, and starred opposite Kirsten Dunst in All Good Things. He declined to promote the latter amid rumours he clashed with the director, Andrew Jarecki, on set. When asked if he was proud of the film, he replied, "I'm proud of what Kirsten does in the movie".
2011 saw him expand his horizons: he appeared in his first comedic role in Crazy, Stupid, Love. and his first action role in Drive. His next film, political drama The Ides of March, is set to premiere at and open the Venice Film Festival on August 31, 2011.
He is currently filming The Place Beyond the Pines, a bank heist movie with Bradley Cooper, Eva Mendes and Ray Liotta, and is attached to three movies currently in pre-production: The Gangster Squad, Only God Forgives and a remake of Logan's Run.
He was in a relationship with Rachel McAdams, his co-star in The Notebook, from 2005 to 2007. They also reconciled for a number of months in 2008. Following their split, Gosling said: "God bless The Notebook... It introduced me to one of the great loves of my life. But people do Rachel and me a disservice by assuming we were anything like the people in that movie. Rachel and my love story is a hell of a lot more romantic than that."
He dated Sandra Bullock, sixteen years his senior, for over a year from 2002 to 2003, after meeting on the set of Murder by Numbers.
He co-owns a Moroccan restaurant called Tagine in Beverly Hills, California.
Supportive of various social causes, he has worked particularly closely with the Enough Project.. He was Hollywood's representative at the Campus Progress National Conference in 2008 where he spoke out about Darfur. Gosling said, "For some reason, there's an interest in what people who do what I do have to say... I'm honored to have these experiences." In 2010, he traveled with John Prendergast of the Enough Project to eastern Congo.
Year | Show | Role | Episode(s) & Notes |
1993–1995 | Mickey Mouse Club | Himself | TV Series |
1995 | Are You Afraid of the Dark? | Jamie Leary | 5.02 "The Tale of Station 109.1" |
PSI Factor: Chronicles of the Paranormal | Adam | 1.01 "Dream House/UFO Encounter" | |
Kung Fu: The Legend Continues | Kevin | 4.09 "Dragon's Lair" | |
Road to Avonlea | Bret McNulty | 7.09 "From Away" | |
Goosebumps | Greg Banks | 1.15 "Say Cheese and Die" | |
The Adventures of Shirley Holmes | Sean | 1.01 "The Case of the Burning Building" | |
Flash Forward | Scott Stuckey | 1.11 "Double Bill" and 1.21 "Skate Bait" | |
Matt Kalinsky | 4.05 "I Do, I Don't" | ||
1997–1998 | Breaker High | Sean Hanlon | TV Series |
1998 | Nothing Too Good for a Cowboy | Tommy | TV Movie |
Young Hercules | Hercules | TV Series | |
Hercules: The Legendary Journeys | Zylus | 5.17 "The Academy" | |
2005 | I'm Still Here: Real Diaries of Young People Who Lived During the Holocaust | Ilya Gerber (voice) | TV Documentary |
Category:1980 births Category:Actors from Ontario Category:Canadian child actors Category:Canadian expatriate actors in the United States Category:Canadian film actors Category:Canadian Latter Day Saints Category:Canadian people of English descent Category:Canadian television actors Category:Independent Spirit Award winners Category:Living people Category:Mouseketeers Category:People from Cornwall, Ontario Category:People from London, Ontario
[[ar:رايان غوسلينغ bg:Райън Гослинг cs:Ryan Gosling da:Ryan Gosling de:Ryan Gosling et:Ryan Gosling el:Ράιαν Γκόσλινγκ es:Ryan Gosling fr:Ryan Gosling it:Ryan Gosling he:ראיין גוסלינג lt:Ryan Gosling hu:Ryan Gosling nl:Ryan Gosling ja:ライアン・ゴズリング no:Ryan Gosling pl:Ryan Gosling pt:Ryan Gosling ru:Гослинг, Райан sr:Рајан Гозлинг fi:Ryan Gosling sv:Ryan Gosling tl:Ryan Gosling th:ไรอัน กอสลิง tr:Ryan Gosling uk:Раян ҐослінгThis text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
name | Carey Mulligan |
---|---|
birth name | Carey Hannah Mulligan |
birth date | May 28, 1985 |
birth place | Westminster, London, England |
occupation | Actress |
years active | 2005–present }} |
Carey Hannah Mulligan (born 28 May 1985) is an English actress. She made her film debut as Kitty Bennet in Pride & Prejudice (2005). She had roles in numerous British programmes and, in 2007, made her Broadway debut in The Seagull to critical acclaim. In 2009, she gained widespread recognition for playing the lead role of Jenny in An Education, winning a BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role. Additionally, Mulligan was nominated for a Golden Globe Award and an Academy Award for her performance. She appeared in the dramatic films The Greatest and Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, as well as Never Let Me Go, all in 2010.
Her interest in acting sparked from watching her brother perform in a school production of The King and I (she would later participate in plays at her school) and attending Broadway plays as a teen. Before acting professionally, she had once secretly applied to and been rejected by three drama schools specified on her UCAS application form. After failing an audition, the rejections made her question whether to pursue an acting career and go through what she called a "confusing time". Aside from rejection, she had also questioned being an actress due to her parents' disapproval of pursuing a job in entertainment. They insisted she attend university and believed Mulligan's desire would wear off. Around this time, she had a brief job as a barmaid at a local pub. She later said that those negative experiences had a positive effect on her because it made her know how much she wanted to act.
At 22, she was cast in her first leading role as 16 year old Jenny in the coming-of-age 2009 release drama An Education, which got rave reviews and commissioned $26 million against a $7.5 million budget at the box office. She received critical acclaim for her performance, as the press began referring to her as an "It girl". Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly and Todd McCarthy of Variety both compared her performance to that of Audrey Hepburn. Rolling Stone's Peter Travers described her as having given a "sensational, starmaking performance," while Claudia Puig of USA Today felt that Mulligan had one of the year's best performances, and Toby Young of The Times felt she anchored the film. Writing in The Guardian, Peter Bradshaw concluded that she gave a "wonderful performance." For her work, she garnered Golden Globe, Academy Award and Screen Actors Guild Awards nominations, as well as receiving a British Academy Film Award. Mulligan was a recipient of the Shooting Stars Award from the 2009 Berlin International Film Festival and received an BAFTA Rising Star Award nomination, which is voted on by the British public.
She next starred in The Greatest (2010) as the pregnant girlfriend of a boy who dies; her involvement with the project helped it "tremendously", according to the director. It opened to mostly indifferent reviews, with Ty Burr of the Boston Globe criticising it for being "grueling and gently contrived", but was more positive in his assessment of Mulligan. After being selected to join The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, she won a British Independent Award for Never Let Me Go, an adaption of the 2005 Kazuo Ishiguro novel, which she starred in and narrated and was released in September 2010 - competing against her other project, the Oliver Stone-directed film Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps. The latter, a sequel to the 1987 movie, is about a new story of greed and power. Screened out of competition at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival, it was her first major studio project. She also provided vocals for the song "Write About Love" by Belle & Sebastian. Mulligan returned to stage in Atlantic Theatre Company's off-Broadway play Through a Glass, Darkly from May 13 to July 3, 2011, acting as the central character, a mentally unstable woman, to glowing praise from reviewers.
Script adjustments were made to accommodate Mulligan as Irene, who was originally written as a Latina woman in her late 20s, in the 2011 neo-noir thriller movie Drive. Mulligan began filming Steve McQueen's sex-addiction drama Shame alongside Michael Fassbender in New York in January 2011. Both films will be shown at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival, with the former also been screened at Cannes and the latter at the Venice Film Festival. She will also star opposite Leonardo DiCaprio in the 2012 film adaption of The Great Gatsby playing the role of the superficial Daisy Buchanan. Other upcoming projects for her include the lead roles in an adaptation of My Fair Lady and On Chesil Beach as well as a part in the science fiction project titled, Outback, developed by GK Films.
She attended Catholic school, though now she considers herself simply spiritual. Her religious schooling made the already skeptical Mulligan feel that Catholicism was too strict. Mulligan took part in the Safe Project by being photographed by Nick Haddow in the places they feel the safest, for a series to be auctioned off to raise awareness of sex trafficking. She donated the Vionnet gown she wore at the 2010 BAFTAs to the Curiosity Shop, which sells its donations from celebrities and fashion associates to help raise money for Oxfam.
+ Film and television roles | ||||
! Year | ! Title | ! Role | Notes | |
2005 | Kitty Bennet | |||
2005 | Ada Clare | 15 episodes | ||
2006 | Emily Pritchard | 6 episodes | ||
2006-2007 | Emily Harrogate | 2 episodes | ||
2006 | Agatha Christie Marple: The Sittaford Mystery | Violet Willett | ||
2007 | And When Did You Last See Your Father? | Rachel | ||
2007 | Sister Bridgid | 2 episodes | ||
2007 | Doctor Who | Sally Sparrow | ||
2007 | Elsie Kipling | |||
2007 | Isabella Thorpe | |||
2009 | Carole | |||
2009 | An Education | Jenny | ||
2009 | Cassie Willis | |||
2009 | Rose | |||
2010 | Kathy | British Independent Film Awards>British Independent Film Award for Best ActressPalm Springs International Film Festival | Palm Springs International Film Festival for Breakthrough Performance Award Women in Film and Television Award for Best PerformanceNominated—Saturn Award for Best ActressNominated—Detroit Film Critics Society Award for Best ActressNominated—Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Actress in a Leading RoleNominated—San Diego Film Critics Society Award for Best Actress | |
2010 | Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps | Winnie Gekko | ||
2011 | Irene | |||
2011 | Sissy | |||
2012 | Daisy Buchanan | Pre-production |
+ Stage roles | |||
! Year | ! Title | ! Role | Notes |
2005 | Daisy | ||
2007 | Nina | Royal Court Theatre | |
2008 | Nina | ||
2011 | Through a Glass Darkly | Atlantic Theater Company |
Category:1985 births Category:BAFTA winners (people) Category:British film actors Category:British people of Irish descent Category:British radio actors Category:British stage actors Category:British television actors Category:British voice actors Category:English people of Irish descent Category:English people of Welsh descent Category:Living people Category:Actors from London Category:British expatriates in the United States Category:People educated at Woldingham School
de:Carey Mulligan es:Carey Mulligan fa:کری مولیگان fr:Carey Mulligan id:Carey Mulligan it:Carey Mulligan he:קארי מאליגן jv:Carey Mulligan hu:Carey Mulligan nl:Carey Mulligan ja:キャリー・マリガン no:Carey Mulligan pl:Carey Mulligan pt:Carey Mulligan ru:Маллиган, Кэри fi:Carey Mulligan sv:Carey Mulligan tr:Carey Mulligan uk:Кері Малліган vi:Carey Mulligan zh-yue:Carey Mulligan zh:凱莉·穆里根
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
name | Nicolas Winding Refn |
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birth date | September 29, 1970 |
birth place | Copenhagen, Denmark |
othername | Jang |
occupation | Film director, screenwriter and producer |
years active | 1996–present |
spouse | Liv Corfixen }} |
Winding Refn is married to actress Liv Corfixen, with whom he has two children. He is the half-brother of Danish singer Kasper Winding, and the son of veteran Danish film director and editor Anders Refn.
! Year | ! Title | ! Production country | ! Language | Notes |
1996 | Denmark | Danish | Also WriterAs Actor: Brian | |
1999 | Denmark | Danish | Also Writer/Producer | |
2003 | Fear X | Denmark, Canada and United Kingdom | English | Also Writer |
2004 | Pusher II | Denmark | Danish | Also Writer |
2005 | Pusher 3 | Denmark | Danish | Also Writer |
2008 | United Kingdom | English | Also Writer | |
2009 | Denmark, France and United Kingdom | English | Also Writer | |
2011 | United States | English | ||
2012 | Only God Forgives | France and Denmark | English | Also Writerpre-production |
Category:1970 births Category:Danish film directors Category:Danish screenwriters Category:Living people Category:People from Copenhagen
da:Nicolas Winding Refn de:Nicolas Winding Refn fr:Nicolas Winding Refn it:Nicolas Winding Refn lt:Nicolas Winding Refn ja:ニコラス・ウィンディング・レフン sv:Nicolas Winding Refn
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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