|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Jun 24, 2006 10:09:25 GMT
I made a few icons, all using the sape pictures, just making a few changes to each one. Which one do you think is the best?! #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 #7 #8 #9 #10 Or maybe you dont like any?
|
|
|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Jun 12, 2006 16:23:25 GMT
Instead of just randomly making new threads everytime you make a new graphic, have your own personal thread. Then people can look at and comment on your graphics! It just keeps the forum neat and tidy. You can call your thread something like Freds Graphics or something. Then we can all find your graphics easilly all in one place!
Thanks ;D
Beth xxxx
|
|
|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Aug 4, 2006 13:09:27 GMT
Brie really loves keeping in touch with her fans. Unfortunately, she has been getting so much email it has been impossible to keep up with it. Please keep the email coming and just try and be patient about getting a response.How to get an answer to your e-mail…
ASK INTERESTING QUESTIONS
TELL SOMETHING ABOUT YOURSELF
What NOT to do...
Brie is not allowed to open forwarded emails and she is not allowed to IM, sorry.The most compelling e-mails will be selected by the webmaster and given to Brie for her to respond to. Even if you don't get a personal response right away, just by emailing Brie you will be added to her email list, which means you will get all the updates on what Brie is up to!To join Brie's fan club go to www.beewearstuff.com Email Brie at authenticbrie@aol.com
|
|
|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Jun 29, 2006 17:27:12 GMT
WWW.BRIELARSON.COM» Brie is not allowed to IM, sorry. » To join Brie's fan club go to www.beewearstuff.com» All requests for charitable donations must be sent via snail mail on official company letterhead to the address below. Thank you. » To request an autograph please send a Self Addressed Stamped Envelope 8 1/2 X 11 envelope to: Brie Larson P.O. Box 800646 Santa Clarita, CA 91380-0646
|
|
|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Jun 27, 2006 15:51:17 GMT
While she's contributed here and there to soundtracks (Disney's 2005 ice skating romp Go Figure, for example), Finally out of P.E. is Raising Dad and Sleepover alumnus Brie Larson's first real leap into music. It's pretty standard fare for the Nickelodeon nation. "She Said" and "Life After You" are slick, empowering pop of the meticulously layered and processed type that's starting to sound pretty tired in 2005, and "Ugly" is the bittersweet, ultimately triumphant ballad. Larson's thin vocal isn't distinctive -- she's interchangeable with Hope Partlow. But on the plus side her team of writers and producers manage some wit and genuinely teen-focused themes, as well as a few memorable melodies. And since so much of mid-2000s teen pop sounds so similar, anything that lends Larson buoyancy and her own voice is a plus. "Whatever" is the album's best arrangement, with a mild R&B flavor in the verses and a snappy chorus, while "Done With Like" ("I'm too young to be jaded!") and the quietly rebellious "Loser in Me" let Larson be the adolescent that she is. The title track is even better. Larson fights through some heavy-handed pitch correction on the vocal and the canned instrumentation to deliver a humorously awkward tale of a girl with rock star dreams who's stuck on earth in gym class. "I play guitar/But your class that won't get me far," she sings. "And I try/But my running sucks/And I try/But I hate doing chin-ups." Brie Larson won't reach rocktastic heaven with Finally out of P.E. But in its better moments she's visible behind its safety-glass formula. ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide
|
|
|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Jun 12, 2006 16:01:51 GMT
I know sometimes its shown on Nickelodeon, only very raley tho. What other channels is it on? Or is that it?
|
|
|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Oct 26, 2006 11:06:43 GMT
|
|
|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Jun 12, 2006 16:03:06 GMT
I didnt know it was her until I found out on IMDB! ;D I am so stupid LOL
|
|
|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Jun 29, 2006 18:23:32 GMT
www.nytimes.comThe New Kid in Town Fights to Save an Endangered Species in 'Hoot' By DANA STEVENS Published: May 5, 2006Roy Eberhardt (Logan Lerman, who played Bobby on the WB series "Jack and Bobby") is the only child in a family that's constantly relocating for his father's work. At 14 he's once again the new kid, this time in the tiny Florida beach town of Coconut Cove. While ducking the school bully (Eric Phillips), Roy spots a mysterious barefoot boy (Cody Linley) who appears to be living on his own in the woods. With the reluctant help of the school's soccer star, Beatrice (Brie Larson), Roy makes the acquaintance of this wild child. Readers’ Opinions Forum: Movies When the three of them discover that a construction site is threatening the habitat of an endangered species of owls, they set out to sabotage the building project, incurring the wrath of a national restaurant chain and baffling a clueless local cop named Officer Delinko (Luke Wilson). This sweet-natured but plodding adaptation of a young-adult novel by Carl Hiaasen could have used a little less broad satire of corporate greed and a few more, well, owls. The critters peep from their burrows for only a few brief moments, whetting the young audience's appetite for a nature film that never emerges. What "Hoot" does get right is locale. The director Wil Shriner, a Florida native, captures the laid-back mood of a Gulf Coast beach town, the kind of place where a middle-school science teacher (the musician Jimmy Buffett, who also produced the film) wears shorts so he can go surfing after school, and dismisses class with the word "mañana." "Hoot" is rated PG for what the press notes call "mild bullying and brief language." This objectionable content must be mild and brief indeed, because it passed this reviewer by entirely. HootOpens today nationwide. Directed by Wil Shriner; written by Mr. Shriner, based on the book by Carl Hiaasen; director of photography, Michael Chapman; edited by Alan Edward Bell; music by Jimmy Buffett, Phil Marshall, Michael Utley and Mac McAnally; production designer, Stephen J. Lineweaver; produced by Frank Marshall and Mr. Buffett; released by New Line Cinema. Running time: 90 minutes. WITH: Luke Wilson (Officer David Delinko), Logan Lerman (Roy Eberhardt), Brie Larson (Beatrice Leep), Tim Blake Nelson (Curly Branitt), Cody Linley (Mullet Fingers), Neil Flynn (Mr. Eberhardt), Clark Gregg (Chuck Muckle), Kiersten Warren (Mrs. Eberhardt), Jessica Cauffiel (Mother Paula/Kimberly), Dean Collins (Garrett), Eric Phillips (Dana Matherson), Jimmy Buffett (Mr. Ryan) and Robert Wagner (Mayor Grandy).
|
|
|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Jun 27, 2006 16:21:46 GMT
Three kids have an unexpected adventure as they try to protect some rare birds in this comedy drama based on a book for young adults by Carl Hiaasen. Roy Eberhardt (Logan Lerman) is a 14-year-old boy whose family has moved so often he's literally lost count of the number of times he's changed schools in the last ten years. Roy ought to be used to being the new kid at school by now, but making the switch from the big sky of Montana to the Gulf Coast of Florida proves to be a major challenge. While Roy quickly becomes the target of school bully Dana Matherson (Eric Phillips), he's befriended by Beatrice Leep (Brie Larson), a spunky girl with enough nerve to stand up to Dana, and her brother Mullet Fingers (Cody Linley). Beatrice and Mullet share their big secret with Roy -- they have a hidden hideaway where they look after a flock of wild owls. The owls in question are on the endangered species list, but that's of little concern to Chuck Muckle (Clark Gregg), a top executive from the Mother Paula's All-American Pancake House chain, who is planning to build a new restaurant in the hollow where the owls nest. Roy, Beatrice, and Mullet are determined to find a way to save the owls, but Muckle and his right-hand man, Curly Brannitt (Tim Blake Nelson), are less interested in saving the birds than in turning a profit. The kids have a plan, however, and they uncover some evidence of interest to David Delinko (Luke Wilson), a well-meaning but slow-witted policeman investigating some dirty doings tied in to the pancake house. Hoot features a handful of new recordings from popular Florida musician Jimmy Buffett, who also helped produce the film. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
|
|
|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Jun 29, 2006 18:36:38 GMT
www.splicedonline.comYoung girls may not know the difference, but 'Sleepover' wallows in tired stereotypes, reinforces superficiality The 'tweenybopper moviegoer is unlikely to be savvy to the rote, one-dimensional nature of clichés like catty in-crowd queen bees, cardboard cut-out dream boys admired from a distance, and underdog cliques of pretty, outcast Everygirls -- but that's no excuse for building a whole picture around such threadbare characters and the inevitable plots that go with them. Yet that's exactly what happens in "Sleepover," the latest example of how Hollywood can strip a halfway decent idea of any originality by saddling it with tedious stereotypes and the false hope of easy, prepackaged solutions for young girls' adolescent problems. It's a comedy in which four "average" junior high girls (Alexa Vega, Mika Boorem, Scout Taylor-Compton and Kallie Flynn Childress), typically nervous about being accepted, are challenged by four shallow, cruel, fashionista cheerleader types (Sara Paxton and three indistinguishable minions) to a one-night, sneak-out-of-the-house scavenger hunt. The winners get to eat lunch at the "cool" table when they go on to high school next year. Completely failing to run with the smarter possibilities presented by the adventurous premise or develop the characters personalities in any significant way, writer Elisa Bell ("Vegas Vacation") and director Joe Nussbaum (who made his name with the ingenious short "George Lucas In Love") manage only to scare up a few funny lines and stick these wholly generic girls in a handful of awkward, passably amusingly situations. Vega ("Spy Kids"), for example, gets trapped in a bland hunk's bathroom shower, with the water running, while trying to steal a pair of his boxer shorts. But from the opening scene to the closing credits, the movie is nothing but cliché (Vega's mom is stern but loving, her dad is a dope and her brother is weird) after cliché ("How did Stacie get so popular anyway? We used to be best friends.") after cliché (during the treasure hunt they're chased by a inept rent-a-cop authority figure) after cliché (the lonely fat girl finds a lonely fat boy to love her) after cliché (the climax is at a school dance -- even though school is out for the summer). Vega and Boorem ("Blue Crush," "Along Came a Spider") -- the two least forgettable stars -- almost inadvertently infuse "Sleepover" with a hint of sweet, sassy spirit that makes the picture sit-through-able for anyone reluctantly roped into attending with the 10- to 12-year-old girls who will no doubt be itching to see it. But the fact is, the filmmakers could have gone for more and just flat-out didn't bother. This is obvious from the artificially staged atmosphere of nearly every scene, and it's reflected in the fact that -- through laziness, omission, and failure to follow up on themes -- "Sleepover" actually serves to reinforce the very selfish, status-symbol, stick-with-your-own-kind teen culture it's meant to decry.
|
|
|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Jun 27, 2006 16:17:52 GMT
Directed by Joe Nussbaum, Sleepover revolves around one of the hallmarks of female friendship: the all-important slumber party. In hopes of shedding their not-so-cool reputations during the summer before their freshman year, best friends Julie (Alexa Vega), Hannah (Mika Boorem), Yancy (Kalli Flynn Childress), and Farrah (Scout Taylor-Compton) decide to host the sleepover of their lives. Far from a mere pillow-fight-laden girl talk-fest, this sleepover includes an intense scavenger hunt against the most simultaneously loathed and envied young women they know: the infamous "popular" clique. Along the way, the girls manage to hijack a car, sneak into clubs, engage in a first kiss, and learn more than a little bit about themselves and their capabilities -- all while evading the watchful eyes of Julie's mother. ~ Tracie Cooper, All Movie Guide
|
|
|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Aug 2, 2006 12:56:28 GMT
Thanks OK!
|
|
|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Jun 26, 2006 18:35:30 GMT
|
|
|
Post by Brie-Larson-Fan on Jun 12, 2006 15:21:10 GMT
This film is so cool!! I was crying at the end (Im so sad, I know!!)
|
|