Divergent Faction


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VOTE Shailene Woodley & Miles Teller for Best Kiss and Miles for Breakthrough Performance for the MTV Movie Awards!

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Vote for Miles Teller for Breakthrough performance at the MTV Movie Awards. Miles can win for his role of Sutter in The Spectacular Now in which he costarred in with Shailene Woodley.

CLICK HERE TO VOTE FOR SHAILENE AND MILES FOR BEST KISS!

CLICK HERE TO VOTE FOR MILES FOR BREAKTHROUGH PERFORMANCE!


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A Look Inside ‘The Spectacular Now’ featuring Shailene Woodley and Miles Teller!

A new video from A24 features a behind the scenes look at The Spectacular Now. The video includes interview with Miles Teller, Shailene Woodley and more.

The Spectacular Now has been released in limited cities and will be released on on August 28th.


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EW Maps out Shailene Woodley, Ansel Elgort and Miles Teller’s Book to Movie Domination!

Check out this very informative graphic that EW made including Shailene Woodley, Miles Teller and Ansel Elgort,s Book to Movie Domination!

Sound off in the comments below with your thoughts.


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Miles Teller and Shailene Woodley talk ‘The Spectacular Now’, love scenes and Comic Con with Up & Comers!

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Miles Teller and Shailene Woodley have been busy promoting their upcoming movie The Spectacular Now! They recently got interviewed by Up & Comers. In the interview they talk The Spectacular Now, Comic Con and more.

Check out the interview below:

You just got back from Comic Con, any crazy sights?

Shailene Woodley: I felt sort of gipped on the Comic Con thing, because we saw the inside of hotels rooms and then had to leave. I was like, “Where are all the Star Wars people?’”

Miles Teller: I walked around.

SW: He got to see… he sent me pictures of cool stuff.

MT: I thought it would be weirder. There’s a lot of “Walking Dead”, a lot of zombies, but I thought it would be… I’ve been to hippie festivals, music festivals. I’ve seen weirder people at that.

SW: I saw R2 D2. That was pretty cool.

MT: The [Divergent] footage was great, though. Being in a hall with 6,000 people showing first footage and all these people love this book so much, that was pretty great. That was the first time I’d seen any of it.

So what made you decide to get in this movie?

MT: Well, I think for me, it was just hands down one of the best scripts that I’d ever read, and very rarely I think in this business, at a young age, as we are, to be afforded the opportunity to be in films that you want to be in is rare. So, I was just happy to be a part of it. To work with James. I saw “Smashed” so I wanted to work with James.

You guys share a nice, natural free-loving kind of chemistry. Can you talk about the first time you guys met each other and how that worked out?

SW: We met at a restaurant. I expected Miles to be quiet and introverted like he was in “Rabbit Hole”, and he was not. He was like “I just got back from Vegas, man. I danced for five days straight. I wore an astronaut’s suit. It was great!” [laughs] And I was like “Whoa, who is this new person? I’m so excited to meet him!” We just naturally sort of have a good rhythm together so we’re very lucky.

MT: I think Shailene and I don’t take ourselves too seriously. I mean, obviously we have our passions and our convictions and this and that, but she can poke fun at me and I can tell her she eats bugs and it’s just fun. It’s just open.

I read earlier that [Miles] was drinking Gatorade and [Shailene] was drinking Chinese herbal supplements before your kissing scenes.

SW: Oh well see, there’s the situation. I would take my little Chinese herbs and he’d be like “Shai, you just ate dirt!” And I’d say, “Miles you just ate Twizzlers.”

MT: It was funny because I’d never seen her take these herbal vitamins, whatever it was. But we’re about to do this kissing scene and she’s shoveling this crap in her mouth. I’m like, okay. Then I kiss her and I’m like, this tastes very musty. I was like, “Shai, can you just not do that before we’re about to do a kissing scene.” She said, “You just drank a Gatorade and you taste like processed.” So, that was kind of how it went.

James was saying he was with you guys when you met at the restaurant and he was kind of watching you and seeing how you interacted with each other. That must be the weirdest thing because it’s almost like when you do a chemistry read, that you know you’re being watched but you have to try to be natural.

MT: He did a good job of watching then, because he was eating French fries the whole time.

SW: [laughs] Yeah, exactly. It was super casual. It’s not always like that, you know. Meeting Theo for “Divergent” was different, and meeting pretty much any other guy that I’ve ever worked with has been different. We just sort of naturally had this brother-sister like, “Yo buddy, what’s up?”

MT: And there was no real pressure around. It wasn’t like I had to convince Shai, or I had to convince these studio heads. It was really just, “Hey let’s meet for coffee” because I think we’d already gotten it at that point, right?

SW: Yeah. Well, you were… it was still the deciding factor.

MT: Yeah, Shailene had it for sure. But I- they were on the fence.

SW: No, no, no, you had it.

MT: Oh, okay.

Shailene, this is your first time showing much skin…

MT: Wait till you see her other films. [laughter] Rowr.

What was your mindset?

SW: It was actually both Miles and I’s first time having to do an intimate on camera scene, and it was lovely. He’s such a gentleman and he would hold the sheet up for me. There were only a few people in the room so it felt very safe and it felt very comfortable and it felt like a very… one of the things that I talked to James about before we started filming is I said, ‘listen I noticed there’s a sex scene in this movie and nothing bugs me more than watching two actors have sex on screen and have it be over-exaggerated with you know, like a Top Gun…what’s that song that plays in the Top Gun sex scene?

Take My Breath Away.

MT: That is awesome. [laughter]

SW: No, I mean James showed us that example when we did that table thing as sort of a hilarious joke. It’s different in that movie, but I don’t like seeing sex scenes in films that are so exaggerated, especially with teenagers because that’s just never realistic. And I also don’t like seeing sex scenes where a girl has her bra on and he has his boxers on, and you’re like wait I’m confused, how does this work? So we wanted it to be as real as possible. We also didn’t want it feel exploitative. We wanted it to feel natural and comfortable for our characters but not comfortable for the audience, and I think we achieved that.

Playing off that a little bit, you both have these tremendous emotional scenes, where you have to really go down there and get those emotions and feelings up. How do you switch that off? Is it just like a switch?

MT: It is…I mean, we shot the last scene of this movie very early on, right?

SW: Second day.

MT: Yeah, the second day we shot the last scene of the movie, and we obviously hadn’t done any of the stuff in between. And the end of the movie takes place a couple months after the…that scene takes place a couple months after the last time that we see each other, so that was difficult. But for the stuff with my dad, you know who that character is and what he means to you. When he’s slowly not becoming that character, he’s actually everything but the man that you think he’s going to be, you feel for kids like that because I know a lot of my buddies in high school whose parents were divorced. They’d always tell me, “Man, it’s so awesome your dad is always there.” But yeah, sometimes you have to do, like the time you meet, the time you break up, a happy moment right after a sad moment. Hopefully you have some time to get there but that’s your job as an actor and you need to be able to do it.

Is there anything you do to decompress from that?

MT: [mimes taking a drink] [laughter] Take the edge off. No, some things you have to build up, like that car accident scene. That was tough because the car is stopped and I think at the time it’s like three o’clock in the morning. On “action” somebody would shake the car and we were supposed to imagine that we’d just spun out and you’d have to get to that state of where you’ve almost just gotten into a head-on collision. That took a couple scenes to build up. I remember for Shailene, James wanted her at a certain spot… it’s really the place she gets to in the movie, but I think Shai was kind of resisting it. She didn’t want to come off as over the top. In your head, when you haven’t gone through a car accident you’re like “no, this is way too much emotion, I wouldn’t be doing that” but I love it in the movie when she’s at that state, I think that’s really well done.

Can you talk about the teen experience, how that related to the characters you played?

SW: I think that one of the most special things about this movie is, it’s an accurate portrayal of what’s it like to be an adolescent in high school. It doesn’t try and hide the fact that alcohol exists but it also doesn’t make alcohol a character in the movie. It’s just something that’s there. Which is how high school is, whether people want to accept the fact that that’s what their kids are doing or not, it is what they’re doing, or it’s what their friends are doing. And also, the drinking and driving aspect, the teenagers not talking to their parents, the parents not being around because they’re trying to work to feed their children and at the same time, their kids are off living lives that they don’t really know exist. So I think that, for me at least, it was a big honor to be a part of a film that I feel – looking at all the coming-of-age films – I feel most accurately represents what my high school experience was like, in a different way. I had a very different family and different circumstances. But just the truth of it and the way that they were dressed and the lack of makeup and the lack of glamour and over-exaggerated story lines or themes. I think it’s really special and I really hope people get to go see it.

MT: Yeah. And then for me, I was 25 when I filmed it, and even though high school doesn’t feel that long ago, at the same time I’d went to college in New York by myself, I was living away from my parents. Then there’s a couple years after college. I think your 20’s is such an interesting time because you’re in between marriage and this kind of selfish person that you were in college. But then once they throw a backpack on you and you’re walking around a high school hallway, it just all kind of comes flooding back so…

SW: [sings] It’s all coming back to you now…

MT: [chimes in] back to you now…na na na na. I don’t know any words to any freaking songs.

SW: Me either.

Before this, was there a favorite coming-of-age movie?

SW: I liked three. I liked “The Goonies,” “Dirty Dancing, “ and “Big”. [to Miles] “Big” was your #1.

MT: What was the one that I just said though?

Footloose.

MT: [laughing] Footloose, is that what you said? I’ve never seen the original.

SW: What?! Come off it!

MT: I did the play in high school. In the play you get to learn about Willard’s mom and he’s much deeper. But what was the film I was talking about?

SW: “Big”!

MT: No, dawg.

SW: Oh, “Sandlot”.

MT: No.

SW: What do you mean, which one?

MT: I thought of another one that I…oh yeah it was “Sandlot”!

Shailene, are you going to cut your hair for “The Fault in Our Stars”?

SW: I am! I tried on wigs yesterday to see what length we want to do it and I’m gonna cut it in two weeks!


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Shailene Woodley and Miles Teller talk transition from ‘The Spectaular Now’ to ‘Divergent’ with THR!

Miles Teller and Shailene Woodley talk the transition from The Spectacular Now to Divergent with The Hollywood Reporter.

Teller clearly had Divergent on the brain during The Spectacular Now’s recent press junket, letting out a Freudian slip of sorts while talking about a prom scene in the latter.

“I like the prom scene too because I think for your character,” he looks at Woodley, “It’s such a divergent — diversion from … ” Woodley laughs. “I thought you looked really cute in your prom dress,” he eventually spits out.

Asked about transitioning from love birds to mortal enemies on screen, Teller plays up the duo’s real-life friendship.

“I knew I’d be comfortable doing any kind of stuff with Shailene,” he says. “And they told me I got to beat her up … [I] started doing some pushups.”

“Plus one for him!” Woodley chimes in.

But anyone who worries that Woodley’s sugary-sweet demeanor in real life could mean a watered-down version of Tris: fear not. The 21-year-old “carries the torch” on Divergent, gushes Teller.

“Shailene was right there when we were doing the boot camp,” he says. “The chin ups, the push ups, the gun work. Shailene was the leader on that.”


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Miles Teller talks differences between Peter in ‘DIVERGENT’ and Sutter in ‘The Spectacular Now’ with Page to Premiere!

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At Comic Con Page to Premiere got to chat with Miles Teller(Peter) before the Summit Entertainment party. In there interview he talked the differences between Peter in Divergent and Sutter in The Spectacular Now.  He reveals that Peter may be more likable than we think he is.


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Shailene Woodley talks ‘DIVERGENT’ and ‘The Spectacular Now’ with Yahoo Movies!

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Yahoo Movies had a chance to interview with our Tris, Shailene Woodley. During the interview Shailene talked about The Descendants, The Spectacular Now and Divergent.

Shailene talking Divergent with Yahoo Movies:

YM: And it’s back to being a teenager for “Divergent,” which opens big next March
Shailene: I play Tris, a sixteen to eighteen year old who has to choose to value herself over her family. In the future there are many factions, and once you leave your birth faction you don’t return. In the course of the story Tris experiences the consequences of leaving her family behind. Her actions highlight her bravery and selflessness at the same time.

Shailene talking The Descendants and The Spectacular Now:

YM: Has your life changed dramatically since you turned 21?

SW: The only switch is being able to buy my wine. Becoming 25 in a few years will be a bigger deal.

YM: How do you personally resemble your characters Alexandra from “The Descendants” and Aimee from “The Spectacular Now?”

SW: I’m a mix of all of them. I had the anger and the complex emotional drama of Alexandra. I also had the tenderness and the audacity and the search for knowledge of Aimee. Combining them is a healthy mix of who I was as a teen.

YM: Would you call Alexandra a troubled teen?
SW: She was just a teenager playing with drugs but I wouldn’t say she was a troubled teenager. Most adolescents go through this phase and everything is relative. Alexandra came from a very broken family where she didn’t have a mom or a dad she could relate to. That led her to proclaim her independence that she didn’t have to be so righteous.

YM: Now you play an honor student that takes to the flask and loses her virginity…

 SW: Aimee also comes from a broken family situation but while Alexandra wallowed in self-pity, Aimee found strength and turned it into a passion for future. She did get the grades, and was in the French Club and then she met someone.

YM: That someone is Sutter, who introduces her to the flask, sex – and high school popularity.
SW: Aimee’s never gotten attention from someone so strong and independent with a keen sense of self-confidence, and she loses herself in him a little bit. I think that the thing with Sutter and Aimee is that he actually helped her. She got accepted into college and didn’t stand up to her mom who didn’t want her to go. It’s a normal process for teens to lose themselves in infatuations. They think it is a first love, but it’s more a deep infatuation because they lose themselves. You learn a lot in the relationship – but you learn a lot more after it’s over.