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Madonna and Guy Ritchie arrive on the red
carpet for the screening of the film 'Revolver' 11 September in
Toronto. |
Broken bones could not keep US pop diva Madonna from travelling to
Toronto to support her husband, director Guy Ritchie, in his quest for a
distributor for his latest film "Revolver," he said.
"The wife is very good, thanks. Eight broken bones and she's come with
me," Ritchie told reporters at the Toronto International Film Festival
where his movie premiered.
However, Madonna shied away from the spotlight while Ritchie went to
work pitching the movie he completed only one week ago about con artists,
starring Ray Liotta, Vincent Pastore, and Jason Statham.
Madonna fell off a horse in mid-August and suffered three cracked
ribs, a broken collar bone and a fractured hand. She was celebrating her
47th birthday with her two children and Ritchie at their sprawling
1,200-acre country estate in Wiltshire in southwest England when the
accident happened.
Specialists expected it would take her three months to make a full
recovery.
Ritchie's "Revolver" is reminiscent of his earlier gritty crime
thrillers "Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels" (1998) and "Snatch"
(2001), but with many more twists and turns that can easily confuse or
entice viewers to watch it several times to uncover its many layers.
Audiences are encouraged not to blink or risk missing key story
elements.
"The script was not easy to digest on the first read," Ritchie
conceded. But, too many movies are "designed not to make you think."
"I think I got fed up with films that don't make you think. I liked the
idea of one that you have to be dancing around with. I like my mind to be
engaged when I watch a film. So, the idea was really to put five films in
one," he said.
The "tricky" action also reinforces the idea that a con is just a
slight of hand -- nobody is sure in this movie who is playing who, not
even the audience.
(Agencies) |