First Nations ‘The Revenant’ actor ‘choked up’ by DiCaprio speech
It is possible the Hardy will be an Oscar contender for both movies.
LEONARDO DiCaprio paid $100,000 for one of Bono’s guitars.
“I don’t know”, he continues.
“Speaking about the film, in which he plays legendary frontiersman Hugh Glass who sustains injuries from a brutal bear attack and is left for dead, Leonardo said: “[I] would love to do something even darker [than “The Revenant”]. That being said, I was recently discussing DiCaprio’s acting with another director who asked me the question, “When have you ever seen Leo in a role and not thought, “Oh that’s Leo”?”
The Revenant has so far received three Golden Globes plus eight Bafta nominations – and that’s before the Academy Awards shortlists are announced on January 14.
He admits: “I get unhappy doing things that I’m not passionate about”.
Lebanese heartthrob Youssef el Khal is a huge fan of Leo’s, and just like millions of people around the world, he feels like it is TIME for him to finally win that overdue Oscar. However, their return to the fort is complicated when Glass is savaged by a bear, an attack so ferocious the commanding officer orders another senior trapper, John Fitzgerald (Tom Hardy), to remain with the wounded man until he dies and to give him a proper burial.
Leonardo DiCaprio and Alejandro G. Inarritu were in high spirits backstage after their film “The Revenant” won Golden Globe Awards for best picture, director and actor. “Continuity with lighting and clouds was one of my main challenges with the crew to keep them in the right place at the right time with the right daylight hours to get them what they needed”.
DiCaprio shot to global fame with Gilbert Grape in 1993, playing alongside Johnny Depp.
“It was incredible”, he said.
Let us know what you think in the comments section below and come back to CDL for the latest celebrity news. “You can’t plan it. It’s just going to happen when it happens”, the “Wolf of Wall Street” star revealed to the publication. “My reaction is very much on screen, which is a nauseating one”.
Poulter believes this was “designed to bring us together, develop camaraderie, and allow us to learn some basic survival skills and familiarise ourselves with weaponry”, but points out… “I had a fantastic make-up artist in this movie who did all the stuff from the bear mauling and all this wax that she dribbled all over my face every day”.