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"Pursuit of Happyness"


bigwillfan

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yeah i gotta find me a rubik's cube now, i also thought his commentary was pretty cool (in the upper left corner of certain pages on the site) here's a new interview from Will with the NY times, there's a pretty cool pic on the page too

No Robots, No Aliens and No Safety Net

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/05/movies/m...2&ex=1162789200

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yeah i gotta find me a rubik's cube now, i also thought his commentary was pretty cool (in the upper left corner of certain pages on the site) here's a new interview from Will with the NY times, there's a pretty cool pic on the page too

No Robots, No Aliens and No Safety Net

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/05/movies/m...2&ex=1162789200

thanks Ash , it was cool & :interesting:

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a message from a film blog that kinda made me laugh:

source: http://www.sbiff.org/blog/2006/10/blissful-pursuit.htm

can't wait for his "at length" piece

also from that blog, something else to look forward to

On January 27th, Will Smith, formerly the Fresh Prince of Bel Air, will be crowned the 2007 Modern Master of the Santa Barbara International Film Festival.

guess this is his "at length" piece

http://www.sbiff.org/blog/2006/11/happy-at-last.htm

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guess this is his "at length" piece

http://www.sbiff.org/blog/2006/11/happy-at-last.htm

Great review.

yeah the only thing is, it doesn't really tell you much more than the previous one lol....his piece about the "Modern Master" will probably be better though, if he writes one

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Will Smith smiles on Detroit

November 15, 2006

BY TERRY LAWSON

FREE PRESS MOVIE WRITER

When it comes to movie stars, the mountain doesn’t usually come to Muhammad –especially when the star has been Oscar-nominated for playing Muhammad Ali.

Yet Will Smith came to Detroit today, to host a sneak preview local premiere of his movie “The Pursuit of Happyness,” opening nationwide Dec. 15.

It’s an inspirational drama based on the true story of Chris Gardner, a struggling salesman in 1980s San Francisco who works as an unpaid intern to compete for a stockbroker’s job – while sleeping in homeless shelters and subway station bathrooms after he and his son are evicted from their apartment.

So why was Smith in Detroit?

“I connected to Chris’ story as being in the spirit of the very design of America,” he said before his scheduled walk down the red carpet at the Phoenix Theater on 8 Mile in Detroit, where he was to be welcomed by the city’s first lady Carlita Kilpatrick.

“Detroit represents that to me, a city that’s taken hard knocks and setbacks, and yet just won’t give up.

“All you have to know to understand how brilliant Thomas Jefferson was is the promise he wrote to Americans: Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. He didn’t say we deserved happiness, or that the government could provide it. It’s the pursuit that matters, the opportunity to make that pursuit. That’s what makes America unique. People like Chris Gardner.”

Gardner’s story came to Smith’s attention after it was told on ABC’s “20/20” in 2003.

The film is true to Gardner’s story except for one detail: His son was 2 when he accepted the internship, but in the movie, he is 5. He is played by “a remarkable, intuitive” first-time actor, Jaden Smith – Will Smith's 8-year-old son with actress wife, Jada Pinkett Smith.

“Jaden was in between Jada and me when I was reading the script, and he asked me what the story was about. I told him, and he said, “Daddy, I could do that, I could play that boy.’ I said, ‘Oh, really?’ But he was serious. So Jada and I talked about it, and we told him look, maybe you can, but you don’t just get the job because you’re my kid.

You’ll have to audition like everybody else, and you may not get it, that’s how it works. Can you handle that?

“He promised us he could, so Jada took him to the first round, where there were about 100 kids being looked at by the director and casting director and producers. They whittled it down to 50 and he made the cut, and after that he was unshakable. I was in his corner, but I didn’t have his back. He earned the job himself, and that’s the way it’s supposed to be.”

(pic on the page guys)

source via google: http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article...NEWS99/61115053

Edited by MissAshley
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Will Smith smiles on Detroit

November 15, 2006

BY TERRY LAWSON

FREE PRESS MOVIE WRITER

When it comes to movie stars, the mountain doesn’t usually come to Muhammad –especially when the star has been Oscar-nominated for playing Muhammad Ali.

Yet Will Smith came to Detroit today, to host a sneak preview local premiere of his movie “The Pursuit of Happyness,” opening nationwide Dec. 15.

It’s an inspirational drama based on the true story of Chris Gardner, a struggling salesman in 1980s San Francisco who works as an unpaid intern to compete for a stockbroker’s job – while sleeping in homeless shelters and subway station bathrooms after he and his son are evicted from their apartment.

So why was Smith in Detroit?

“I connected to Chris’ story as being in the spirit of the very design of America,” he said before his scheduled walk down the red carpet at the Phoenix Theater on 8 Mile in Detroit, where he was to be welcomed by the city’s first lady Carlita Kilpatrick.

“Detroit represents that to me, a city that’s taken hard knocks and setbacks, and yet just won’t give up.

“All you have to know to understand how brilliant Thomas Jefferson was is the promise he wrote to Americans: Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. He didn’t say we deserved happiness, or that the government could provide it. It’s the pursuit that matters, the opportunity to make that pursuit. That’s what makes America unique. People like Chris Gardner.”

Gardner’s story came to Smith’s attention after it was told on ABC’s “20/20” in 2003.

The film is true to Gardner’s story except for one detail: His son was 2 when he accepted the internship, but in the movie, he is 5. He is played by “a remarkable, intuitive” first-time actor, Jaden Smith – Will Smith's 8-year-old son with actress wife, Jada Pinkett Smith.

“Jaden was in between Jada and me when I was reading the script, and he asked me what the story was about. I told him, and he said, “Daddy, I could do that, I could play that boy.’ I said, ‘Oh, really?’ But he was serious. So Jada and I talked about it, and we told him look, maybe you can, but you don’t just get the job because you’re my kid.

You’ll have to audition like everybody else, and you may not get it, that’s how it works. Can you handle that?

“He promised us he could, so Jada took him to the first round, where there were about 100 kids being looked at by the director and casting director and producers. They whittled it down to 50 and he made the cut, and after that he was unshakable. I was in his corner, but I didn’t have his back. He earned the job himself, and that’s the way it’s supposed to be.”

(pic on the page guys)

source via google: http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article...NEWS99/61115053

extended version of this interview

More from interview with Will Smith in Detroit

Expanded version of interview with the visiting star

When it comes to movie stars, the mountain doesn’t

usually come to Muhammad – especially when the star has

been Oscar-nominated for playing Muhammad Ali.

Yet Will Smith came to Detroit on Wednesday, to host a sneak preview local premiere of his movie “The Pursuit of Happyness,” opening nationwide Dec. 15. It’s an inspirational drama based on the true story of Chris Gardner, a struggling salesman in 1980s San Francisco who works as an unpaid intern to compete for a stockbroker’s job – while sleeping in homeless shelters and subway station bathrooms after he and his son are evicted. from their apartment.

So why was Smith in Detroit?

“I connected to Chris’ story as being in the spirit of the very design of America,” he said before his scheduled walk down the red carpet at the Phoenix Theater on 8 Mile in Detroit, where he was to be welcomed by the city’s first lady Carlita Kilpatrick. “Detroit represents that to me, a city that’s taken hard knocks and setbacks, and yet just won’t give up.

“All you have to know to understand how brilliant Thomas Jefferson was is the promise he wrote to Americans: Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. He didn’t say we deserved happiness, or that the government could provide it. It’s the pursuit that matters, the opportunity to make that pursuit. That’s what makes America unique. People like Chris Gardner.”

Gardner’s story came to Smith’s attention after it was told on ABC’s “20/20” in 2003. The film is true to Gardner’s story except for one detail: His son was 2 when he accepted the internship, but in the movie, he is 5. He is played by “a remarkable, intuitive” first-time actor, Jaden Smith – Smith’s 8-year-old son with his

actress wife, Jada Pinkett Smith.

“Jaden was lying in between Jada and me when I was reading the script, and he asked me what the story was about. I told him, and he said, “Daddy, I

could do that, I could play that boy.’ I said, ‘Oh, really?’ But he was serious. So Jada and I talked about it, and we told him look, maybe you can, but you don’t just get

the job because you’re my kid. You’ll have to audition like

everybody else, and you may not get it, that’s how it works. Can you handle that?

“He promised us he could, so Jada took him to the first round, where there were about 100 kids being looked at by the director and casting director and producers. They whittled it down to 50 and he made the cut, and after that he was unshakable. I was in his corner, but I didn’t have his back. He earned the job himself, and that’s the way it’s supposed to be.”

Smith said Jaden soon learned that Daddy and Mommy’s job wasn’t all fun. Jaden had difficulty, Smith says, in finding his motivation for one of the film’s most emotional scenes, which involves the loss of his character’s only toy. “His parents have money, he’s got all kinds of toys, he couldn’t understand why this was such a big deal he had to cry,” Smith says.

When it was over, the young actor made a declaration:

“He said, ‘Dad, from now on, I think I’ll just make comedies.”

Smith, a voracious reader and “full time student of the universe,” says he followed the recent vote to end affirmative action in Michigan, and while he says he was enormously disappointed, he can understand why “good people with good intentions” voted for its passage.

“As a black American, I am 100 percent in favor of affirmative action. But Jada always talks about the beauty and the pain of the true political process. She believes every paradigm ends in paradox, that the result can be the worst thing and the best thing at the same time.

"The very thing that sparks one person can break another. For Chris Gardner, defeat only made him work harder and believe in himself more. And that’s positive thing.”

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article...NEWS99/61116013

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