Rosamund pike gay
In 2005, Rosamund Pike's love life took an exciting shift when she started dating critically-acclaimed director Joe Wright, after being introduced on the set of Pride & Prejudice. Sparks flew between the two, head to an intense whirlwind romance filled with creative collaboration and glamorous red carpet affairs. The couple seemed destined for a fairytale ending when they announced their engagement in 2007, but alas, just a year later, the pair called it quits, leaving fans heartbroken. Despite their split, Rosamund and Joe shared a deep connection that undoubtedly left a lasting impact on both of their lives.
A highly valued filmmaker, Joe Wright is best famous for his visually stunning and emotionally poignant period dramas, including the critically acclaimed Pride & Prejudice (2005), Atonement (2007), and Anna Karenina (2012). With a gift for storytelling and a knack for capturing the essence of literary classics, Wright has earned himself a reputation as one of Hollywood's most talented directors. Throughout his career, he has had several high-profile relationships, including a marriage to musician Anoushka Shankar, with whom he shares two children.
No wonder Rosamund Pike says marriage is over-rated: Hit film Gone Girl has made her a superstar, but her love being is a train wreck
Rosamund Pike talked openly about marriage over the past week, saying that women often have unrealistic expectations of their spouses
One is entitled to wonder what she really thinks — you know, profound down inside.
Publicity quotes may be the natural accessory of every new film, even one as acclaimed as the thriller Gone Girl, but it must own taken a great act of will for its star, Rosamund Pike, to talk openly over the past week about marriage.
Gone Girl is the story of an unhappily married young female who goes missing, leaving her husband (played by Ben Affleck) accused of murder. Yet compared with the dramas of Rosamund’s own life, that’s a adorable straightforward plot.
Her past has all the ingredients for a blockbuster. It is the story of a beautiful English girl, educated privately and at Oxford, whose marriage dreams are twice destroyed in unique circumstances.
She first falls in love with a gentleman who, after two intimate years, realises he is gay and now lives with a civil partner.
In the second reel, she falls in love with another
If you don’t enjoy to watch movies about horrible people doing horrible things, you’ll probably wish to skip J Blakeson’s I Concern A Lot. If you, like me, are a zealous fan of the small but growing canon of womxn loving womxn heist movies — which includes The Handmaiden and the very underrated Can You Ever Pardon Me? —then you might have pleasurable with this cynical, clinical movie steeped in the horrors of capitalism and greed. Enjoyment of the film likely directly correlates with one’s capacity for callousness. I Tend A Lot is wicked from begin to finish. Unfortunately, it’s also ultimately vacuous in its portrayal of money-hungry monsters.
The gay con artist at the center of the tale is Marla Grayson, played by Rosamund Pike in her best role since Gone Girl. Marla has made a mega-scam out of legal guardianship for moneyed seniors. She colludes with doctors and administrators at senior homes to seize rule of these unsuspecting folks’ lives, barring their families from getting involved. It’s a seamless grift. Marla’s brutal pursuit of wealth is horrifying. She sees her charges only in terms of dollar signs. And when she finally hits a snag in her masterminding, it’s not because some
Rosamund Pike Went Stir Insane Living in the ‘Saltburn’ House
As soon as a clip of Rosamund Pike delivering the line, "I was a lesbian for a while, you understand, but it was all a bit too damp for me in the end. Men are so lovely and dry," went viral, the Best Supporting Actress Oscar campaign started in earnest (at least, it did on Twitter and in my heart). The movie is an absolutely wild, I-refuse-to-spoil-it-for-you thriller in which a immature college student named Oliver (Barry Keoghan) spends the summer at his much more affluent friend Felix's house (read: castle). Enter: his outlandish mother Elspeth Catton, played by Rosamund, who spends her days abhorring anything ugly and reading tabloid magazines while lounging horizontally.
It is a deliciously comedic role for the actress, who spoke to Cosmopolitan recently about her backstory for the character, why she found the marriage between her and Richard E. Grant's character Sir James so interesting, and how much director Emerald Fennell actually had to ask her to be in the film.
How does it feel to finally be able to chat about this film now that the SAG-AFTRA strike is over?
If there's one movie that I'm read