Eva Green hot Pics and Biography


Name: Eva Green
Born: July 5, 1980 (Age: 35)
Where: Paris, France
Length: 5 '6 "
Awards: Won 1 BAFTA

Biography:
You can not say they do not begin with a bang. Within just four years of her film debut Eva Green had played a key role in three big blockbusters. Begun in Bertolucci controversial psycho-sexual drama The Dreamers, they immediately strengthen its profile further with the expensive historical epic Kingdom Of Heaven, grabbed the attention of the world with Casino Royale and The Golden Compass. Rarely has an actress achieved worldwide stardom so quickly.

Eva Gaelle Green was born by Caesarean section at St Vincent de Paul hospital in the 14th arrondissement of Paris, on July 5, 1980. Her father, Walter Green (pronounced Greyne) is from Sweden moved with his family when he was 16; then had to be a dentist. He would not speak Swedish in the family home and would never take his family back to Sweden. Eva's mother - not married at the moment with Walter - was the Algerian-born actress Marlene Jobert, a big star in France in the sixties and seventies (and later a hit children's author). Eve was the first non-identical twins, born a few minutes before her sister, Joy (which would become a horse breeder in Normandy are). Her mother's fame was such that an aura of paranoia surrounded births. Fearing that her newborn would be kidnapped, Jobert would change their names, about 30 kilometers outside the city while still in the cradle and quickly whisk them off to the family mansion, an estate of about 70 acres that used Walter rent to his friends. To avoid contamination, Jobert would the children every weekend, take the family spending weekdays in chic 17th arrondissement of Paris, just east of the Bois de Boulogne, inbetween Montmartre and the Arc de Triomphe. Marlene would take care of them from 6 to 11 pm, a young nanny then left. The same nanny would later look after Laura Smets, daughter of rock star Johnny Halliday and actress Nathalie Baye, who would grow up to be an actress too.
As mentioned, Marlene Jobert was big news in France and Eva appears with her mother on the cover of Paris Match when she was two months old. After a brief but successful career as a model, Jobert had studied at the Conservatories of Dijon and Paris and appeared on stage with Yves Montand before making her film debut in Jean-Luc Godard's Masculin, Feminin. Released in 1966, this was a provocative piece that both the language of cinema and the creation of the mind of the nation's youth, challenged the so-called "children of Marx and Coca-Cola." She would go on to star in several TV series and appear alongside Jean-Paul Belmondo and Genevieve Bujold in Louis Malle's Le Voleur, Charles Bronson in the controversial Rider On The Rain and Kirk Douglas in the comedy To Catch A Cold War Spy. Stay on top during the seventies, she would work with the esteemed likes of Claude Chabrol, Philippe De Broca, Orson Welles, Anthony Perkins, Gerard Depardieu and Jean-Louis Trintignant.
The other side of Eva's family also had some cinematic form. Indeed, it can be said that cinema actually brought about her birth. Back in the late 1950s, the French author Robert Bresson was putting together a film called Pickpocket, co-financed by Svensk Filmindustri. To receive this Swedish money, he was forced to cast a number of Swedish actors, and one of them was Marika Green, Walter's older sister, then a student. She would horribly treated girlfriend of compulsive, self-destructive anti-hero games, redeeming him in the end (the film would be a huge influence on Paul Schrader's Taxi Driver). Come the mid-sixties, Bresson was making his classic Au Hasard, Balthazar for the same companies and required Sweden again. Getting in touch with the Green family - the only Sweden he knew in Paris - he came to Walter, who Bresson is famous for its use of non-actors, was quickly tossed. At the same time, Godard made Masculin, Feminin, a production financed by Svensk Filmindustri. The cast and crew of the two films would come into close contact, Godard gets it on with Balthazar star Anna Wiazemsky and Walter Green with Marlene Jobert.
So, given the background of her family, it was not surprising that actress Eva Green would be. But there was more to it than that - the controversial nature of her debut would also echoes of her family thespian past. Rider In The Rain, Marlene Jobert was raped by an escaped maniac, then killed him and lost her mind. Maurice Pialat's 1972 classic Nous Ne Pas Ensemble Vieillirons she'd been confused and terrified mistress of an insane and brutal filmmaker. Both performances had caused a furore. Marika Green, meanwhile, which had appeared in the title role of The Girl Across The Way, co-written by Roman Polanski, and along Jobert in Rider On The Rain would also score a meaty role in Emmanuelle, a piece of soft porn innocence the biggest box office hit ever was France. Here Sylvia Kristel, playing the young wife of a diplomat, would erotic salvation in the arms of many, including lesbian archaeologist to search Green's before discovering that the ultimate turn-on is to be taken from behind by a sweaty Thai boxer . As if we did not already know. Given these performances, and much more, it was almost predictable that Eva's debut, The Dreamers, should be as sexually explicit.


No comments:

Post a Comment