Showing posts with label Tomb Raider. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tomb Raider. Show all posts

Friday, 23 March 2018

TOMB RAIDER : Tuesday 20th March 2018.

I saw 'TOMB RAIDER' earlier in the week, and here we have a reboot of the 'Tomb Raider' franchise that launched into the cinematic world in 2001 from its video game origins dating back to 1993. That first outing starred Angelina Jolie as our titular action adventure heroine Lara Croft, with the film being Directed by Simon West for US$115M and grossing US$275M. On the strength of this, a second film was released in 2003 titled 'Lara Croft Tomb Raider : The Cradle of Life', with Jolie reprising her role but this time Directed by Jan de Bont for US$95M and raking in US$157M. Now fast forward fifteen years, and its reboot time for this film franchise, which as a video game has sold over 63 million copies worldwide, and has made Lara Croft one of the most recognisable and notable video game protagonists in existence. And so Norwegian Director Roar Uthaug has helmed this latest instalment based on the 2013 video game of the same name as worked up by game developer Crystal Dynamics. Costing US$90M to make, the film has so far grossed US$163M and has garnered generally mixed or average Reviews.

And so in 2018 Alicia Vikander portrays the fiercely independent, free spirited, reckless and carefree action adventure loving Lara Croft who spends her life kick boxing at her local gym and in between time running food deliveries as a bicycle courier across London. She is the only daughter of eccentric archaeologist adventurer Lord Richard Croft (Dominic West) who went missing some years previously, now believed to be dead. When she is arrested for a relatively minor infraction, involving her bicycle and a Police car, Richard's business partner Ana Miller (Kristen Scott Thomas) posts bail and advises her that if she does not claim her inheritance, her father's estate will be sold off. In flashback we see Lord Croft tearing himself away from his country estate and his young seven year old daughter Lara to go away on some purposeful adventure, and then doing so again at age fourteen . . . a journey he would not return from.

Reluctantly Lara, now in her early twenties, agrees to sign off on the inheritance papers, and in doing so uncovers a key contained in an old Japanese wooden puzzle wrapped up in a handwritten clue that gains her access to a secret office located in the bowels of the Croft estate. Rummaging around in her fathers office, she finds a camcorder with a recorded message to Lara that describes his years long search for the tomb of Himiko the mythical queen of Yumatai whom it is said was able to control the power of life over death. The parting message warns Lara to destroy all evidence of his search for Himiko - written notes, diaries, scribblings, voice and video recordings, lest they should fall into the wrong hands and unleash the power of Himiko upon an unsuspecting world with deadly consequences for all humanity.

Lara travels to Hong Kong in search of a boat owner that allegedly took her father to the island of Yumatai seven years previously aboard 'The Endurance'. After a run in with some local likely lads who steal Lara's satchel, which she retrieves successfully following a foot chase across various boats and junks on Hong Kong Harbour, she encounters Lu Ren (Daniel Wu) the drunken gambling owner of the boat. He explains that it would have been his father (also named Lu Ren) who was commissioned by Richard Croft to take him across 'The Devil's Sea' to the island of Yumatai - but Lu Ren Senior is now dead! However, the pair strike up a deal, and set sail. The ship gets caught up in a boiling sea just off the island and crashes into treacherous rocks and is smashed. Lara is tossed off the boat, and Lu Ren is presumed lost at sea. Washed ashore in the storm, Lara is knocked unconscious by a mystery figure.

The next morning Lara comes around face to face with Mathias Vogel (Walton Goggins) who has been on the island for seven years searching for Himiko's tomb with no success. He claims to have killed Lara's father all those years ago, but is grateful for his detailed research notes found in Lara's satchel that will help him locate the tomb once and for all. Vogel works for a secretive organisation called 'Trinity' that wants to harness the power of Himiko, and ultimately weaponise it. Vogel takes Lara prisoner and puts her to work with a whole bunch of other fishermen and shipwrecked sailor prisoners captured over the years, and Lu Ren, who survived the storm only to be captured himself too.

With the help of Lu Ren, Lara is able to stage a distraction and make an escape, but is chased through the dense jungle undergrowth by two of Vogel's henchmen. She successfully evades them, but gets into various death defying falls and bad scrapes along the way that see her lurch from one near death experience to another in quick succession. Finally, she is hanging from the canopy of an old parachute as it roughly glides her down towards the jungle floor through the trees to come to an abrupt crashing halt. She is injured and passes out from her wound.

Later that evening Lara is stirred by the sounds of someone or something lurking close by. She gets into a fight with one of Vogel's henchmen sent to track her down and retrieve her. She gains the upper hand and drowns him in the river. Her first kill, which distresses her. But this is short-lived when she spies a hooded figure looking on through the nighttime undergrowth. She gives chase but the figure disappears up the side of a cliff with the aid of a rope which is quickly hauled up. Lara climbs up without the aid of the rope into a cave, where the mystery figure is poking around at an open fire. The mystery figure is a heavily bearded Richard Croft. At first Ricard does not recognise his daughter, but she jogs his memory and they embrace. Richard treats Lara's wound, which she sleeps off until the next morning.

Despite Richard's protests Lara sets off to recover his research notes and a satellite phone from Vogel's camp. She and Lu Ren create a distraction so allowing him and the fishermen prisoners to escape amidst the chaos of gunfire and explosions in and around the camp site.

Meanwhile, Richard has ventured up to the uncovered entry to the tomb site, found by Vogel with the aid of his extensive research notes which were clearly not destroyed by Lara despite her father's very specific instructions to do so. He is joined by Lara and then Vogel. With Richard caught in the middle, with his daughter aiming a bow at Vogel and Vogel pointing a gun at Richard's head, something in this Mexican stand-off has to give. And it is Lara who buckles under the pressure, and agrees to open the tomb in lieu of saving her father, much to Richard's disdain. And so faced with various cogs and wheels built into the wall which must be unlocked in sequence in order to gain access to the tomb, Lara sets about her task . . . with relative ease it seems!

With access gained to the tomb, Vogel orders Lara to venture down first, then Richard and then several henchmen bringing up the rear. Needless to say the group is greeted by a number of booby traps and challenges through a labyrinth of tunnels and corridors that open out in to huge expanses of underground space. One of the henchmen perishes at the end of a giant spike, and there are several close calls along the way, but ultimately the group reach Himiko's sarcophagus.

Opening up the casket, two of Vogel's henchmen attempt to lift Himiko's corpse but are almost instantly infected by her power. Lara deduces that she was the carrier of a disease that was so powerful that physical contact alone triggers an immediate reaction whereby the body starts to progressively die and disintegrate. From the markings around the walls, she further deduces that Himiko voluntarily sealed herself in her tomb because she wanted to avoid spreading it, even though she had an immunity to the disease which she was carrying. Vogel shoots one of his infected henchmen, and from this decides that he cannot move the corpse as planned. Instead, he cuts off a finger tip and seals it in a plastic ziplock bag and drops it into his shirt breast pocket. One of the henchmen believed to be dead, rises up and attacks Richard, allowing Lara to make a getaway. In the ensuing gun fight between Richard and Vogel, Vogel is shot in the leg but manages to escape, while Richard fends off the henchmen killing him, but is himself infected by the henchman's touch.

Lara returns to the sarcophagus where Richard sits, the infection taking hold. He tells Lara to keep her distance, and explains that he proposes detonating several bombs to seal the tomb shut forever, prevent the worldwide spread of the disease and killing himself in the process. Lara backs away tearfully and gives chase to Vogel who is fleeing the cave as quickly as he can. The two meet and fight, with Lara ultimately force feeding Vogel the severed finger which he swallows inadvertently biting down on the bag. He stumbles backwards as the disease takes a rapid hold and falls down a deep ravine in the cave on to a bed of human skeletons. The explosion rips through the cave system, the blast destroying everything in its path and sealing the cave tightly shut under mounds of dust, debris and rubble. Lara escapes just in the nick of time, and is pulled out of the rubble at the mouth of the cave by Lu Ren. The two then commandeer an arriving Trinity helicopter to take them and the remaining fishermen prisoners back to the mainland.

Back in London at the headquarters of Croft Holdings, Lara signs her agreement to accept her fathers inheritance looked on by Ana Miller and Mr. Yaffe (Derek Jacobi) legal counsel for Croft Holdings. Once completed Yaffe hands Lara a portfolio of all the companies owned by Croft Holdings. Scrolling through the huge volume of individual business details, she notices a company name that she had seen before on Yumatai Island and deduces that this is a front company for Trinity. Investigating further, she begins to suspect that Ana Miller is not all she seems and that she manipulated Lara to signing over the day to day business operations of Croft Holdings. Knowing how ruthless Trinity is, Lara arms herself with two assault pistols procured from her local pawn shop owned and operated by Max (Nick Frost), ready for her next adventure.

'Tomb Raider' is a bit of a misnomer for this film really, considering that Lara Croft doesn't actually raid a tomb here, but is rather a reluctant bystander dragged along while someone else does the raiding. She's just the 'Joanna on the spot' left to clean up someone else's mess, pay the price and get the hell outta there before it all comes crashing down around her ears. And in casting the diminutive Alica Vikander in the role of our titular heroine she is far cry from the tall statuesque curvaceous arse kicking gun wielding Angelina Jolie that most resembles the video game character that the world has come to know and love. That doesn't make Vikander's performance any less, and she is reasonably convincing in the role but she does get beaten up and picked on aplenty by her male antagonists who are all worthless dispensable bad dudes anyway that we don't care about and ultimately get their comeuppance. In between the well choreographed action sequences the film plods a little, and really there is very little here that we haven't seen many times over in similar genre specific offerings - 'Raiders of the Lost Ark', 'The Mummy', 'National Treasure' and the earlier 'Tomb Raider' franchises most notably. Clearly set up for further instalments, Lara Croft will need to lift her tomb raiding, gun toting, tough as nails approach if she is to succeed in this action adventure world.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Wednesday, 14 March 2018

What's new in Odeon's this week : Thursday 15th March 2018.

With Hollywood's annual awards season drawing to a close on Sunday evening 4th March with the 90th Academy Awards Ceremony honouring the very best in cinematic achievement for 2017, we should also not forget the other notable awards ceremony that took place just 24 hours before, also in Tinsel Town. The 38th Golden Raspberry Awards honour the very worst in cinematic achievement for 2017 as decided by more than one thousand voters making up the Golden Raspberry Foundation who all cast their ballots online from all over the world across nine categories. In case you missed out on the winners and grinners from this erstwhile awards presentation having been swept along by the glitz, glamour and heady excitement of the 90th Oscars, shown below are the main recipients of these not so prestigious barely sought after awards :-

* Worst Picture : awarded to 'The Emoji Movie'.
* Worst Director : awarded to Tony Leondis for 'The Emoji Movie'.
* Worst Prequel, Remake, Rip-Off or Sequel : awarded to 'Fifty Shades Darker'.
* Worst Actor : awarded to Tom Cruise as Nick Morton in 'The Mummy'.
* Worst Actress : awarded to Tyler Perry as Mabel 'Madea' Simmons in 'Boo 2 : A Madea Halloween'.
* Worst Supporting Actor : awarded to Mel Gibson as Kurt Mayron in 'Daddy's Home 2'.
* Worst Supporting Actress : awarded to Kim Basinger as Elena Lincoln in 'Fifty Shades Darker'.
* Worst Screen Combo : awarded to Any Two Obnoxious Emoji's in 'The Emoji Movie'.
* Worst Screenplay : awarded to Tony Leondis, Eric Siegel and Mike White for 'The Emoji Movie'.

Turning attention to this week, we have a reboot of a hugely successful video game film franchise with an updated story and an updated heroine to take us on another epic action adventure of daring do on a journey of discovery to unearth a mythical ancient tomb and her long lost Dad. We then turn to another reboot of a vigilante revenge film that saw five previous instalments dating back to the early '70's dusted off with a big screen action star playing one man judge, jury and executioner on those that wronged him and his family. Next up we have a sequel to a horror offering of ten years ago that sees a family persecuted by three masked assailants in a deserted trailer park one lonely night with deadly consequences on both sides of that terrorising fence. With a change of pace we go to a party hosted by an Aussie film and TV personality who has invited his comedic and singer friends to crack jokes and sing songs all night long around the barbecue with beer in hand; before moving to an award winning documentary about the plight of tens of millions of displaced refugees from around the world looking for a place to call home. We then wrap up with a story of a song inspired by a young mans relationship with his father, and his faith, that went on to become the highest selling record of all time for its genre.

Whatever your taste in big screen film entertainment is this week - be it any of the six latest release new films as Previewed below, or those doing the rounds currently on general release and as Reviewed and Previewed in previous Blog Posts here at Odeon Online, you are here cordially invited to share your movie going thoughts, opinions and observations by leaving your relevant, succinct and appropriate views in the Comments section below this or any other Post. We'd love to hear from you, and in the meantime, enjoy your big screen Odeon experience during the week ahead.

'TOMB RAIDER' (Rated M) - here we have a reboot of the 'Tomb Raider' franchise that launched into the cinematic world in 2001 from its video game origins dating back to 1993. That first outing starred Angelina Jolie as our titular action adventure heroine Lara Croft, with the film being Directed by Simon West for US$115M and grossing US$275M. On the strength of this, a second film was released in 2003 titled 'Lara Croft Tomb Raider : The Cradle of Life', with Jolie reprising her role but this time Directed by Jan de Bont for US$95M and raking in US$157M. Now fast forward fifteen years, and its reboot time for this film franchise, which as a video game has sold over 63 million copies worldwide, and has made Lara Croft one of the most recognisable and notable video game protagonists in existence. And so Norwegian Director Roar Uthaug has helmed this latest instalment based on the 2013 video game of the same name as worked up by game developer Crystal Dynamics. Costing US$90M to make, the film has so far grossed US$14M from its Asian release last week.

And so in 2018 Alicia Vikander portrays the fiercely independent, free spirited, reckless and carefree action adventure loving Lara Croft. She is the only daughter of eccentric archaeologist adventurer Lord Richard Croft (Dominic West) who went missing some years previously, now believed to be dead. When she is arrested for a relatively minor infraction, Richard's business partner Ana Miller (Kristen Scott Thomas) posts bail and advises her that if she does not claim her inheritance, her father's estate will be sold off. Reluctantly she agrees, which sets in motion a chain of events that takes Lara on a journey in the hope of solving the mystery of her father's disappearance to his last known destination - a fabled tomb on a mythical island located somewhere off the Japanese coast. The stakes couldn't be higher as Lara must rely on her sharp mind, blind faith and stubborn spirit to venture into the unknown, and thwart the nefarious organisation known as Trinity, and one Mathias Vogel (Walton Goggins) also in search of the tomb. Also starring Derek Jacobi, Nick Frost and and Daniel Wu.

'DEATH WISH' (Rated R18+) - another reboot of a tried and tested franchise here, that has its roots dating back to the early '70's with the 1974 vigilante revenge action film of the same name based on the 1972 book by Brian Garfield. That 1974 film starred Charles Bronson in the lead role of architect Paul Kersey who becomes a vigilante after his wife is murdered and his daughter sexually assaulted during a home invasion. Directed by Michael Winner that film cost US$3M to make and grossed US$22M, resulting in four successive films being made through until 1994 with Charles Bronson returning for them all with Michael Winner helming the first three in the series. Now in 2018 Writer, Producer, Actor and Director Eli Roth helms this rebooted sixth offering whose previous Directing credits include 'Cabin Fever', 'Hostel', 'Hostel : Part II' and 'The Green Inferno'. This time around Bruce Willis stars as Chicago Hospital trauma surgeon Paul Kersey who sets out to get revenge on the men who attacked his family killing his wife Lucy (Elisabeth Shue) and badly injuring his daughter Jordan (Camila Morrone). Also starring Vincent D'Onofrio, Dean Norris, Mike Epps and Kimberly Elise, the film cost US$30M to make, has so far grossed US$25M and has received generally negative press so far.

'THE STRANGERS : PREY AT NIGHT' (Rated MA15+) - this horror film is a sequel to the 2008 Bryan Bertini Directed film 'The Strangers' about a young couple who are terrorised by three masked assailants over the course of an evening at a remote summer home. Made for US$9M that film grossed US$83M, and so now ten years later we have the follow up featuring those same three masked assailants who stalk a family spending an evening at deserted mobile home park. Sounds like a recipe for disaster and blood curdling thrills and chills. Made for US$5M the film has so far recouped US$11M since its US release last week, and is helmed this time around by British film Director and Writer Johannes Roberts who seems most comfortable in the horror genre. The film stars Christina Hendricks, Martin Henderson, Bailee Madison and Lewis Pullman as the victims to the three stalking characters of Dollface, Pin Up Girl and Man In The Mask.

'THAT'S NOT MY DOG' (Rated M) - here we have lovable and affable Australian Actor, Comedian and Television Personality Shane Jacobson playing himself in this Aussie comedy film Directed by Dean Murphy that is Co-Produced and Co-Written by Jacobson too. The film celebrates the Aussie love of joke telling centering on Jacobson who throws a party inviting the funniest people that he knows, who from start to finish tell jokes and sing songs in their own trademark style. Featuring a wealth of local comedic and singing talent all playing themselves there is Paul Hogan, Jimeoin, Steve Vizard, Tim Ferguson, Paul Fenech and a whole host of others all giving it their funniest best shot over a barbie and a beer. The film goes on limited cinematic release before a television special and a book release.

'HUMAN FLOW' (Rated M) - this Documentary from Chinese Director, Writer, Cinematographer, Artist and Activist Ai Weiwei is a German produced film from Amazon Studios that charts the human refugee crisis that is altering the face of our planet. Filmed over the course of one year and across 23 different countries the film tells the unflinching, heartbreaking and crucially relevant story of over  65 million people around the world who have been forced from their homes to escape famine, climate change and war. The greatest displacement of the global population since World War II, here filmmaker Ai Weiwei examines the monumental scale of the global refugee crisis and its profoundly personal human impact. Weiwei follows a chain of urgent human stories that stretch across the world, taking in Afghanistan, France, Hungary, Turkey, Greece, Germany, Kenya, Jordan, Gaza and Iraq amongst others. The film has picked up six award wins and eleven nominations, including a Golden Lion nod at last years Venice Film Festival.

'I CAN ONLY IMAGINE' (Rated PG) - is a film based on the story behind the most played contemporary Christian song of all time 'I Can Only Imagine' by Christian rock band 'MercyMe'. The song was written and composed by lead vocalist Bart Millard, and was inspired by the death of Millard's father (who died in 1991, when Millard was just eighteen years of age) and considers what it would be like in Heaven and to be standing before God. The song has been certified double platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America for sales of over two million digital downloads, and is the first (and so far only) Christian single to reach that milestone. Directed by Andrew and Jon Erwin, the film stars J. Michael Finley as Bart Millard in his film debut, and Dennis Quaid as Arthur Millard, Bart's father, and tells a complex father and son story.

With six new release films this week to tempt you out to your local Odeon, remember to share your movie going thoughts with your other like minded cinephile friends afterwards here at Odeon Online, and meanwhile, I'll see you sometime somewhere in the week ahead at your local Odeon.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Friday, 30 May 2014

Birthdays to share this week : 1st - 7th June.

Do you share your birthday with a well known, highly regarded & famous Actor or Actress; share your special day with a Director, Producer, Writer, Cinematographer or Singer/Songwriter/Composer of repute; or share an interest in whoever might notch up another year in the coming week? Then, look no further! Whilst there will be too many to mention in this small but not insignificant and beautifully written and presented Blog, here are the more notable and noteworthy icons of the big screen, and the small screen, that you will recognise, and that you might just share your birthday with over the coming week. If so, Happy Birthday to you from Odeon Online!

Check out too the spotlight on this weeks Birthday Girl on 4th June, Angelina Jolie, at the end of this feature.

Sunday 1st June
  • Morgan Freeman - Born 1937, turns 77 - Actor | Producer
  • Brian Cox - Born 1946, turns 68 - Actor
  • Jonathan Pryce - Born 1947, turns 67 - Actor
  • Powers Boothe - Born 1948, turns 66 - Actor
  • Robert Powell - Born 1944, turns 70 - Actor
  • Alanis Morissette - Born 1974, turns 40 - Singer | Songwriter | Actress
  • Jason Donovan - Born 1968, turns 46 - Singer | Songwriter | Actor
Monday 2nd June
  • Zachary Quinto - Born 1977, turns 37 - Actor | Producer
  • Liam Cunningham - Born 1961, turns 53 - Actor
  • Dennis Haysbert - Born 1954, turns 60 - Actor | Producer
  • Stacy Keach - Born 1941, turns 73 - Actor | Producer
  • Wentworth Miller - Born 1972, turns 42 - Actor
Tuesday 3rd June
  • Imogen Poots - Born 1989, turns 25 - Actress
Wednesday 4th June
  • Angelina Jolie - Born 1975, turns 39 - Actress | Producer | Director | Humanitarian
  • Russell Brand - Born 1975, turns 39 - Writer | Producer | Actor | Singer | Songwriter
  • Sean Pertwee - Born 1964, turns 50 - Actor
  • Bruce Dern - Born 1936, turns 78 - Actor
  • Geoffrey Palmer - Born 1927, turns 87 - Actor
Thursday 5th June
  • Mark Wahlberg - Born 1971, turns 43 - Actor | Producer | Singer | Songwriter
  • Kathleen Kennedy - Born 1953, turns 61 - Producer
  • Kenny G - Born 1956, turns 58 - Singer | Songwriter | Composer
Friday 6th June
  • Paul Giamatti - Born 1967, turns 47 - Actor
  • Jason Isaacs - Born 1963, turns 51 - Actor | Producer
  • Robert Englund - Born 1947, turns 67 - Actor
  • Sandra Bernhard - Born 1955, turns 59 - Actress
  • Billie Whitelaw - Born 1932, turns 82 - Actress
Saturday 7th June
  • Liam Neeson - Born 1952, turns 62 - Actor
  • Karl Urban - Born 1972, turns 42 - Actor
  • Michael Cera - Born 1988, turns 26 - Actor
  • Ronald Pickup - Born 1940, turns 74 - Actor
  • William Forsythe - Born 1955, turns 59 - Actor | Producer
  • Virginia McKenna - Born 1931, turns 83 - Actress
  • James Ivory - Born 1928, turns 86 - Director | Writer
  • Tom Jones - Born 1940, turns 74 - Singer | Songwriter
  • Prince - Born 1958, turns 56 - Singer | Songwriter 
Angelina Jolie Voight was born to renowned acting father Jon Voight and mother Marcheline Bertrand in Los Angeles. She is an accomplished Actress, Producer, Director, Writer, and Humanitarian in her spare time whilst also playing the other part of Hollywood power couple Mr. and Mrs. Brad Pitt . . . and oh by the way, she has been cited numerous times and in assorted publications over the last ten years or so as the world's most beautiful woman, and, in 2009, 2011 and 2013 was the highest paid Actress in Hollywood. Not bad credentials really!

Her acting career kicked off at age seven starring alongside her father Jon Voight in 'Lookin' to Get Out', with a bigger break coming in 1995 in 'Cyborg 2', but it was 1995's 'Hackers' that propelled her more into the mainstream playing alongside future husband Jonny Lee Miller. From there she moved to 'Pushing Tin' with John Cusack and future husband Billy Bob Thornton. Now firmly on the Hollywood map she went on to 'The Bone Collector' and then her Academy Award winning 'Girl, Interrupted', followed by 'Gone in Sixty Seconds', 'Lara Croft, Tomb Raider' and its follow up 'Lara Croft, The Cradle of Life', 'Taking Lives', 'Alexander',  and 'Mr. and Mrs. Smith' with future life partner, one Mr. Brad Pitt. Other notable outings have included 'The Good Shepherd', 'Changeling' 'Wanted', 'Salt', 'The Tourist' and 'Maleficent' out this week and previewed in Post #97. She has also lent her voice to the role of 'Tigress' in the 'Kung Fu Panda' series with the third instalment due for release in 2015. Earlier this year Jolie has been resident in Sydney Directing 'Unbroken' due for release later in 2014, and the reprisal of her role as Evelynn Salt has just been announced for 'Salt 2'.

Outside of starring in and making movies Jolie is the Special Envoy and former Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, for which she has won much acclaim for her work undertaken to highlight such issues on the global stage and in ultimately trying to make a difference through her celebrity status and ability to influence change.

In early 2013 at age 37, she underwent a double preventative mastectomy having learnt that there was an 87% chance of her developing breast cancer. Again, using her celebrity status and the privileges this affords she went public to raise awareness on a global scale of the choices women have to beat breast cancer. 

Jolie and Pitt have six children - three biological and three adopted. In 2008 she and Pitt sold the first pictures of Knox Leon and Vivienne Marcheline to 'People' and 'Hello' magazines for a reported US$14M - the most expensive celebrity pictures ever taken, with the proceeds going to the Jolie-Pitt Foundation.

The recipient of 33 award wins and a further 62 nominations so far to date, Jolie has picked up two Academy Awards - a win for Best Supporting Actress in 'Girl, Interrupted' and the 'Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award'. She was nominated for Best Actress in 'Changeling'. Added to this she has a BAFTA Nominations also for 'Changeling' and has won three Golden Globes for 'George Wallace', 'Gia' and 'Girl, Interrupted' with four other nominations.

Not doing things by halves Jolie was married from 1996-99 to actor Jonny Lee Miller, and from 2000-03 to actor Billy Bob Thornton. Since 2005 she has been with Brad Pitt with whom she seems most settled - six children, numerous awards & accolades, in demand in front and behind the camera, the Hollywood power couple, supporters of Humanitarian causes . . . it's a wonder they ever see each other! Let's hope that Brad makes time for Angelina on her birthday this week!

Angelina Jolie - beautiful woman, Actress, Director, Mother, inspiration, crusader of worthy causes - Happy Birthday to you from all at Odeon Online!

-Steve, at Odeon Online-