
Rooney Mara Now Chooses Directors Carefully After ‘Some Bad Experiences’ — and a Good One with David Fincher
by laterdude

Rooney Mara Now Chooses Directors Carefully After ‘Some Bad Experiences’ — and a Good One with David Fincher
by laterdude
17 comments
“Billionaire heiress is picky about working”
When she did the Nightmare On Elm Street remake she hated the experience. She would have quit acting after that film if her agent hadn’t immediately told her about The Social Network.
I don’t blame her.
🙄 oooh I had a bad experience. Waaaah. Says heiress. Barf 🤢. Who gives a crap
The salt is strong in here
Look, there is tangible evidence of how marred with abuse Hollywood is, and everyone is deserving of respect in any environment, however, do gold spoon nepo people get to “choose” really?
When you are an heir to a multi-billion dollar sports empire?
Equity should be the norm, but here again, these people get to choose and others have to fight hard to even get a job.
It’s just a stark contrast in today’s reality when there’s much inequity in this business.
Just leaving that out there for context and your consideration.
I hope she and David Fincher will work on a sequel for The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. The ending left on a cliff hanger.
I’m sure y’all would wanna be careful who you work with after working with bad bosses too. Some people here just want to bitch about any and everything
I really like her. The Trip was awesome!
I got the impression that her relationship with Fincher was…different. In an article the journalist described how she seemed to wait for permission from Fincher to eat until he nods at her during their lunch interview. This was during the Dragon Tattoo promo. Maybe it was nothing.
She had the moment after Facebook movie
Helps to be the kid of a billionaire and have an NFL franchise on both sides of your family.
Damn, she really can’t say anything without ya’ll getting pissed at her for being born rich.
“Rich person doesn’t want to be treated like shit.”
Doesn’t seem unreasonable.
What’s the role of a director in relation to an actor? I always thought it was to give them guidance on the context of the scene and what emotion the director wants to be displayed
I feel like if you came prepared and know enough about what’s going on (maybe asked a few poignant questions if you’re unsure), you’ll be fine
Is that not the case?
Hope she isn’t counting eating an entire pie on camera as a bad experience.
“i am now the gm of either the giants or the steelers”