December 6, 2016 Leave a Reply

Jessica attended last night in Toronto a premiere for Miss Sloane, joined by director John Madded. If you follow us on twitter you will see it happened a very intimist Q&A with Jessica taking a chat with fans. We have in our gallery some HQ professional images from the event, with several more being published on our social profiles. Enjoy!

Appearances & Events > 2016 > Dec 05 | ‘Miss Sloane’ Toronto Premiere

December 5, 2016 Leave a Reply

Jessica attended last night, alongside director John Madden, an official screening of Miss Sloane hosted by The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Chastain has been attending several screenings/Q&A of Miss Sloane, with the studio eyeing on the upcoming major award nominations. Check pictures added in our gallery.

Appearances & Events > 2016 > Dec 04 | The AMPAS Hosts an Official Academy Screening of ‘Miss Sloane’

Appearances & Events > 2016 > Dec 04 | The AMPAS Hosts an Official Academy Screening of ‘Miss Sloane’- Inside

December 4, 2016 Leave a Reply

When Jessica Chastain first read Jonathan Perera’s script for “Miss Sloane” a number of things immediately popped to her. There was the screenplay’s impressive “Sorkin-esque” dialogue. There was the opportunity to work with director John Madden, whom she first collaborated with on 2010’s “The Debt.” And, there was Elizabeth Sloane herself, a top Washington, D.C., lobbyist whose hunger to win drives her to sometimes jaw-dropping extremes.

“You can be addicted to drugs, alcohol, food, sex, whatever it is. Elizabeth is addicted to the win,” Chastain says. “Everything about her is about ‘the win.’ It’s the unwinnable that gets her higher and she goes after that.”

Only 10% of lobbyists are women and talking with them beforehand was a priority for Chastain. She met with 11 female lobbyists in Washington, but a number of meetings weren’t scheduled until the last minute as the two-time Academy Award nominee had to reassure them of her intentions. She notes, “I told them at the time, ‘I’m never going to say your name in the press. I’m never going to tweet about it. If you want to, great, but I’m going to follow your lead. I’m only here for research.’”

What she learned informed her on everything from sexual harassment in the workplace to the difficulties of career advancement. It shattered many of the stereotypes she had beforehand, including the assumption she’d made that her character would not use makeup and wear the same clothes over and over again. She discovered that simply wasn’t the case.

“They presented themselves in this world, which was a boy’s club, with a ferocity and an intimidation. You could feel them before they walked into the room,” Chastain recalls. “There was one lobbyist in particular that I absolutely latched on to with the way she presented herself. I remember calling John Madden afterward and saying, ‘You’re not going to believe this, but everything has changed in terms of how I think she needs to look. She’s wearing a mask! She’s wearing a battle uniform!’”

Chastain’s character hardly sleeps in the film, taking psychostimulants to stay awake and effectively work throughout the night to stay ahead of her competitors. She is literally “on” 24 hours a day, until she’s not. One of the more surprising story lines in the movie, however, involves her regularly scheduled hook-up with a private escort (Jake Lacy). Audiences might not believe a woman as attractive as Sloane needs to pay for a sexual release and Chastain quickly shoots that down as the sexist stereotype it is.

“I think the leap of faith or the reason they don’t buy it is because it’s a woman,” Chastain says. “We see so many times that male professionals score in films and this is the first time we see a successful female character do it. When I saw the movie, I realized how important those scenes are because it’s the first time you see this character away from work. You see her trying to navigate intimacies with another person and you see how much control she’s willing to give up. Every person needs some kind of intimacy in their life, but for Elizabeth it has to be something that doesn’t interfere with her [work] life and doesn’t throw her off balance.”

At its core, “Miss Sloane” is a political thriller about corrupt politicians trying to quiet a lobbyist acting against their interests. This narrative occurs in the context of dueling lobbying firms with opposing agendas on a gun safety bill. It’s an issue that is arguably even more relevant with the events of the past year than it was when Perera first finished the screenplay. Chastain says the movie opened her eyes to the cycle of gun violence in America, but says the legislative battle in the script could have been about any pressing issue — climate change or immigration too.

“It all sort of goes to what Elizabeth says at the end: ‘Our system is broken,’” Chastain says. “I learned so much from reading the script and I wanted to have an audience come away from the film and start a discussion where they can ask questions and they realize things about our political system that maybe they hadn’t before.”

LA Times by Gregory Ellwood and photos by Liz O. Baylen.

Photoshoots from 2016 > 018 – LA Times

December 4, 2016 Leave a Reply

Jessica attended last night in New York, at the SAG-AFTRA Foundation Robin Williams Center, a screening for her new film Miss Sloane and we have pictures added in our gallery. The film is out in selected theaters, to be expanded everywhere on December 9.

Appearances & Events > 2016 > Dec 03 | Cinema Society ‘Miss Sloane’ Screening

December 1, 2016 Leave a Reply

Critics are praising her performance in the movie, which has a 72% positive rating on aggregate review site Rotten Tomatoes. “Equally icy and savvy, Sloane has no patience for hippies, naïve Millennials or the old boys’ club, whose glass ceiling she’s pretty much pulverizing with a jackhammer any chance she gets,” wrote USA TODAY critic Brian Truitt.

Director John Madden says he initially met Chastain while directing her in 2011’s The Debt, when the actress was virtually unknown. Today, “she’s become a spokesperson for women in the industry — roles that are serious and not defined by the clichés of mother, lover or girlfriend,” he says.

The misogyny lobbed at Hillary Clinton in the presidential election is top of mind for the actress, particularly when discussing words used to describe women like Elizabeth Sloane and the Democratic nominee.

During the debates, “the criticism against Hillary was that she was overprepared. I never heard in my entire life that a man was overprepared for anything. I am overprepared in my life,” she says. “What’s wrong with being ambitious, being overprepared, being one step ahead?”

Offscreen, Chastain seems ready to recalibrate her fame. The private star has even started sharing a small slice of her personal life via Instagram, selectively posting occasional shots with her longtime boyfriend, fashion executive Gian Luca Passi de Preposulo. “Gian Luca and I have been together for such a long time, we’re in it for the long haul,” she says.

She’s also switching gears after working relentlessly, having just wrapped the Sitting Bull drama Woman Walks Ahead before beginning the Aaron Sorkin-directed Molly’s Game in Toronto.

“I’m at an interesting point in my life and in my career. A few years ago, I started to examine where I was in the world and what I was contributing to society,” says Chastain, adding that she’s ready to direct and share the spotlight.

“It becomes like you’re eating cake every day. You just want to share the cake!”


December 1, 2016 Leave a Reply

Jessica Chastain, Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Allison Pill are featured on January issue of Glamour Magazine, in a talk about what they learned playing women who run Miss Sloane.

The idea of putting conviction over personal ambition comes up a lot in this film. Can you relate, Chastain?
I no longer think in terms of, Ooh this is a great role and what is it going to do for – actually, I’ve never really thought about what something is going to do for my career. But you listen to your agents who say, “This is a really great thing for you.” I spent a lot of the last five years on a set, and every once in a while you take stock of your life and look at what you’re doing. Now I just want to do what I feel is right in my heart. I want to be involved in a story that makes difference.

Do you think men and women will react differently to this film?
My gentleman friend was so excited by it… he was on the edge of his sit.
Alison Pill: True badassery has no gender

Check digital scans added in our gallery, so you can read the full interview until we transcript it.




December 1, 2016 Leave a Reply

Jessica is on cover of this week’s Net-a-Porter’s magazine The Edit, and on the interview she says it’s easy for her to aim for challenging, feminist roles to portray, despite the difficult characters she gravitates towards.

If I can help create empathy and balance in society, I’m going to do whatever I can to tell stories that subconsciously create that. When I get a script that has the opportunity to create discussion and inspire young girls, I don’t want to say no to that … I just want to contribute.

Which explains why the movie star set up her own production company, Freckle Films, which focuses on getting women more involved in the world of cinema, whether they’re in front of the camera or behind it.

There are incredible movies with female protagonists, but I’m cautious to say everything’s better now because I see studios patting themselves on the back: ‘Look, I’ve got this film with diversity. I’ve got women in this.’ I think when you congratulate yourselves for diversity, that means nothing’s really changed.

Our gallery was updated with digital scans of the magazine.




November 30, 2016 Leave a Reply

The last time that Peter Lindbergh shot the Pirelli calendar, in 2002, his subjects were up-and-coming actresses of the moment, like Amy Smart, Rachel Leigh Cook, Erika Christensen, and James King. Glamorous and sexy, they all looked full of promise and undying youth. The 44th edition, titled Emotional, features Jessica Chastain, Penélope Cruz, Nicole Kidman, Rooney Mara, Helen Mirren, Julianne Moore, Lupita Nyong’o, Charlotte Rampling, Léa Seydoux, Uma Thurman, Alicia Vikander, Kate Winslet, Robin Wright, Zhang Ziyi, and Moscow State University professor Anastacia Ignatova.

The 2017 calendar “conveys personality, sensitivity and the guts to be yourself”, Peter Lindbergh explained at the international press launch of the new calendar in Paris. The German photographer has called the creation “Emotional”, emphasizing how his aim was “not shoot a calendar about perfect bodies but to capture sensitivity and emotion, laying bare the souls of the women in the images, rendering them more naked that a nude.”

A behind-the-scenes video was released with scenes of all actresses of this version, also check screen captures added in our gallery.


Behind the Scenes > Pirelli Calendar

November 27, 2016 Leave a Reply

Last Friday (25) Jessica Chastain was guest on Today Show, to talk about her new movie “Miss Sloane“, which expands to wide release on next Dec. 9. On this interview, already receiving Oscar buzz, Chastain weighed in on the film, and how inspiring it is to play a powerful woman in a male-dominated field. Also a new extended trailer was aired, and you can watch in our archive.

Screen captures and pictures of Jessica on stage can also be found in our archive.

Screencaptures > Talk Shows > Nov 25 2016 | Today Show

Appearances & Events > 2016 > Nov 25 | Today Show

November 17, 2016 Leave a Reply

Jessica Chastain is cover of Vogue Ukraine, in a beautiful photoshoot by Dusan Reljin. I acquired my digital copy and made digital scans for the website, you can find in our gallery.




November 17, 2016 Leave a Reply

The first emotional trailer for The Zookeeper’s Wife was just released.

The historical drama tells the real-life story of Antonina Zabinski, a working wife and mother who, in 1939 Poland, cared for the Warsaw Zoo with her husband, Dr. Jan Zabinski (Johan Heldenbergh). But when their country is invaded by the Nazis, the two are forced to report to the Reich’s newly appointed chief zoologist, but covertly begin working with the Resistance to save lives out of what has become the Warsaw Ghetto.

Niki Caro directs from a script by Angela Workman, based on the nonfiction book by Diane Ackerman. Daniel Bruhl, Johan Heldenbergh and Michael McElhatton are also featured in the cast.

The incredible and little-known story was brought to the screen by a primarily female cast and crew. Chastain recently spoke with Variety about her commitment to working with female directors like The Zookeeper’s Wife’s Niki Caro.

I’ve always worked with female directors. I’m looking to work with a female filmmaker every year. That’s my goal. They’re not given the same opportunities so if I have any influence in choosing a film or a script or finding a director, I’m absolutely going to make a difference. That doesn’t mean I’m excluding men — it means I need some balance in my life.


November 17, 2016 Leave a Reply

We’re already in the wait for the first “The Zookeeper’s Wife” trailer that will be released today. Yesterday, Focus Features released a small teaser, which you can watch below:

The real-life story of one working wife and mother who became a hero to hundreds during World War II. In 1939 Poland, Antonina Zabinski (portrayed by two-time Academy Award nominee Jessica Chastain) and her husband, Dr. Jan Zabinski (Johan Heldenbergh of “The Broken Circle Breakdown”), have the Warsaw Zoo flourishing under his stewardship and her care. When their country is invaded by the Nazis, Jan and Antonina are stunned – and forced to report to the Reich’s newly appointed chief zoologist, Lutz Heck (Daniel Brühl of “Captain America: Civil War”). To fight back on their own terms, Antonina and Jan covertly begin working with the Resistance – and put into action plans to save lives out of what has become the Warsaw Ghetto, with Antonina putting herself and even her children at great risk.

Check the new (beautiful!) poster:

The Zookeeper’s Wife will hit theaters March 31, 2017.