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Seyfried 'considered sabotaging Cyrus film'



Amanda Seyfried has revealed that she considered "sabotaging" Miley Cyrus's new movie.

The actress, who stars alongside Channing Tatum in Dear John, has admitted that she thought about plotting against Cyrus if their films had similar release dates.


The 24-year-old told MTV: "If [Cyrus's film] The Last Song was coming out the same weekend as Dear John, Channing and I would have to collaborate on some sort of sabotage mission."


Tatum said that he thought the two movies were not in direct competition as so many of Nicholas Sparks's books have been made into films.


He continued: "No, not any more competition than all the rest of his movies coming out. I think all his films are very, very separate from one another with one theme: love. We're not competing for the same weekend."


Tatum also admitted that he hoped fans will enjoy the film as they did with Sparks's 2004 screen adaptation of The Notebook.


He added: "Look, he's got, like, a magic wand when it comes to heartstrings. I think he's a hopeless romantic himself and he just really loves writing about it in really sexy places and really sexy ways.


"Not to be cheesy or melodramatic - everyone wants to feel loved and that their love is special, and when they read about these once-in-a-lifetime sort of relationships and loves, it's a great place to go away and escape."



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Thomas: 'Courage is needed for sex scenes'



Kristin Scott Thomas has claimed that the key to a good sex scene is "courage and choreography".


The actress, who had to film erotic scenes for her new French movie Partir, has insisted that the best way for her to approach a sex scene is to confront it like an action scene.


The 49-year-old told Spiegel Online: "You need courage for it. But in the end professionalism is all that counts, no matter if it's a sex scene or a fight scene. It's all about choreography. The director and the cameras dictate what and how you have to act. Just like they instruct you how to make a blow look like it hurts during a fight scene."


Despite feeling comfortable shooting sexual sequences, she admitted that taking off her clothes for the camera in front of a mostly male cast and crew can be intimidating.


Thomas added: "The only difference is, that you're acting without your clothes on. That can be quite humiliating when everyone else on set is dressed. It was different when we shot Partir though, because there was only one man among the three people who were present.


"Even if I disappoint people's fantasies, that's exactly how it is."



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