Filed in Gallery Updates Interviews Smashed

Mary Attends the 40th Anniversary And The Book Release Of “W: The First 40 Years” Event

I’ve added some new event photos of Mary attending the 40th Anniversary and book release Of “W: The First 40 Years” event in Los Angeles. Mary even posed with her husband Riley at the event. Be sure to check out all the pics in the gallery.

Also, there’s new interviews and photos I’ve added to the gallery. Below is part of her interview with Now Toronto magazine:

“I haven’t done a big film since [Smashed],” she says. “I did a cameo in Die Hard 5, but I [only] worked for a day, so I can’t quite count that. I’ve only done small parts in a string of really small films; I haven’t made the leap back to big films yet. I’m moving toward wanting to be a collaborative part of the process as much as I can. I would like to be filmmaker-focused in everything I do.” 

GlobeandMail also interviewed Mary about Smashed:

Winstead was knocked sideways when she read Smashed ’s script. “ She’s a completely real character that you just never, ever see in scripts,” Winstead, 27, said during an interview during the Toronto International Film Festival in September. “She always has to be perfect, she always has to be making the guy a better person. She’s on a pedestal. And here’s a woman who’s dragging herself through the mud with what she’s doing to herself, making terrible choices and yet you still root for her.”

The article’s accompanying photo can also be viewed in the gallery.

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Filed in A Good Day to Die Hard Gallery Updates Movies

Mary Featured in the New Die Hard 5 Trailer!

While Mary only has a small cameo appearance in A Good Day to Die Hard (or Die Hard 5) when it comes out early next year, a new UK trailer (via Yahoo!) shows part of Mary’s scene in the upcoming action film. Thanks to Darren for the heads up! The film will be out February 14, 2013.

Edit– Caps are now up in the gallery.

So great to see Mary in the film as Lucy again! 🙂 If you want to see the trailer in HD, you can see it over at the Apple site by clicking here.

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Filed in Interviews Smashed

Mary Lists Some of Her Favorite Films

Public Radio sat down with Mary a couple of weeks ago and due to Smashed‘s release, asked her to name some other films that deal with heavy situations that are her favorites. You can listen to her interview below:

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Filed in A Glimpse Inside the Mind of Charles Swan III Movies

A Glimpse Inside the Mind to Premiere at Rome Film Festival

According to sentieriselvaggi.it, Roman Coppola’s A Glimpse Inside the Mind of Charles Swan III will be in competition at the Rome Film Festival 2012, which takes place from November 9-17.

In the film, Charlie Sheen is the protagonist Charles Swan, a playboy who is also a successful graphic designer. When his young and comely girlfriend Ivana (Katheryn Winnick) causes him heartbreak, Charles falls into chaos: fantasies of revenge, in which raves between spying and western, runs into the Bond spies and Cowboys, hallucinations and nightmares that have to do with past relationships. From there, his sister Izzy (Patricia Arquette), his best friend Kirby (Jason Schwartzman) and his accountant Saul (Bill Murray) try to intervene. Complete cast includes Aubrey Plaza, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Dermot Mulroney, and in a cameo, Stephen Dorff.

The film will be released in the U.S. sometime in February 2013.

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Filed in Gallery Updates Scott Pilgrim Vs The World The Thing

New Candids Added to the Gallery

Thanks to Melanie, I’ve added some new (but old) candid shots of Mary. Head to the gallery to see all the latest photos. We have a pic of her on set of The Thing:

New pics of her at the Toronto airport when she was arriving to TIFF:

Walking her dog in Toronto while on break filming Scott Pilgrim:

And finally we have a new photo of Mary while at the Hamptons Film Festival:

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Filed in Gallery Updates Interviews Movies Smashed

The Boston Globe Interviews Mary About Smashed

Smashed will be opening in Boston this upcoming Friday and The Boston Globe did an interview with Mary (and director James Ponsoldt) about the film. Here’s what Mary had to say:

“I grew up in a dry county in Utah,” Winstead (“Scott Pilgrim vs. the World”) says. “And my family was pretty strict, Southern Baptist. So I never experienced alcoholism firsthand. I mean, I drink now. My friends drink. But I’ve never been close to anyone who drank to excess. So preparing for this role and understanding Kate’s frame of mind and her struggle meant talking to people who have struggled with substance abuse and simply exercising my craft and thinking hard about how I work through my own issues, compared to Kate.”

She also talks about the types of roles she’s looking forward to:

“I don’t have a dream role or a dream type of role,” she says, joking for a moment that “Smashed” is the third consecutive film in which her character is named Kate. “That’s as close as I want to come to typecasting. But I acknowledge this role will probably open doors for me. And really what I want most from that is the ability to keep working with directors like James, and the ability to pick roles just because I love the character and the script and not because I need the role to raise my profile or for a paycheck.”

She does, however, vow to keep seeking roles that help her “better understand myself and how I relate to the people in my life.”

Also, head to the gallery (or click on the thumbnail) to see a new photo of Mary and James from the interview.

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Filed in Film Reviews Interviews Movies Smashed

The ScoreCard Review Interviews Mary; New Smashed Review

The DC Examiner reviewed Smashed and gave it a pretty great review. Here’s part of the review:

Mary Elizabeth Winstead gives a compelling, Oscar-worthy performance as Kate, a fun-loving wild child who is rarely sober, and rarely needs to be with her equally sloshed music journalist husband Charlie(Aaron Paul) enabling her at every turn. Fairly early on we see these two are a toxic pair, with Charlie allowing his wife to drive off in a drunken stupor, the evening devolving into a random crack smoking binge, and ending with Kate waking up in the middle of nowhere on a street corner.

Due for a role she could really sink her teeth into, Winstead is a revelation as Kate, and will remind some of Gena Rowland’s award-nominated turn in A Woman Under the Influence. She’s more than just the typical caricature of a drunk, but plays someone whose learned alcoholic behavior filled her with a false glow. Without it, she’s all jitters and social anxiety, incapable of dealing with the full force of life crashing down around her. You won’t find a better female performance this season. Paul is solid, but he shrinks a little bit opposite Winstead. This is clearly her show, and she more than runs away with it.

Scorecard Review also interviewed Mary and James about the film. As always, click on the link to read it in full:

Did working with this story make you re-examine how you view alcohol and those who abuse it?

Winstead: It made me look at a lot of the people I know in Los Angeles. I drink, I’ve never been compelled to drink a lot, or felt good when I drink a lot. And certainly I have been drunk many times, but it’s just not something I really enjoy. I love getting just a little bit tipsy, or having a couple drinks. But my whole life, for whatever reason, I usually cut myself off after that. I have other problems, but I looked at the friendships and relationships that I have, and the people who I have never seen sober, or talked to them when they’re sober. When you’re young enough, you think, “Ah, there’s that crazy kid that I used to talk those times,” but the film definitely makes you think about these people, and at what point do you start worrying about them. And in Los Angeles, and this industry, that line is continually more and more blurred. The older I get, the older my friends get, I don’t really know where it is, and I think the line is different for everyone.

And ShockTillYouDrop also had a brief interview with Mary:

As someone who feels more comfortable with films like Scott Pilgrim and Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, how was your comfort zone on this?

It was scary for me to take it on, because I had never done anything like this before. I was always wondering ‘when am I going to get one of these parts?’, and then when you actually get the part you’re like ‘how do I do this!?’. But the response has been good and it’s really helped my confidence so I’m looking forward to hopefully doing more roles like this. I definitely feel more confident doing leading dramatic roles.

Is there anything you can relate to in regards to your character?

Oh yeah. I mean, when I first read it, I was probably in too much denial of my own problems to relate to her. And then when I really started looking at the things in my life, and looking at myself, it was sort of like the flood gates opened and the whole movie was kind of a breeze. I kind of figured it out and it unlocked everything.

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