Celebrity News
Mickey Rourke calls out star Hollywood actress he co-starred with as a phony

(HMG) – Mickey Rourke has created his very own celebrity gossip blind item. The very outspoken actor who has completely turned around his career since “The Wrestler” blurted out that he hated a leading Hollywood actress he worked with recently, confessing to teaming up with “a pain in the ass”.
Rourke, whohits the bigscreen again very soon in Iron Man 2, reveals the actress in question has fooled everyone into thinking she’s “a lot better than she is”.
“I worked with an actress recently who, despite having a reputation as a good actress, s**ts herself when that little red light comes on,” Rourke tells MovieHole.
“She’s fooled everyone into thinking she’s a lot better than she is. Working with someone like that is a pain in the ass.”
So who is the actress that has earned Rourke’s ire?
It isn’t Megan Fox, who co-starred with Rourke in a forthcoming film Passion Play, because he raved about her work not so long ago. So his most recent co-stars, aside from Fox, include Olvia Munn, Scarlett Johansson and Gwyneth Paltrow in Iron Man 2, Australian actress Isabel Lucas and Freida Pinto in Immortals, Emmanuelle Chriqui, Winona Ryder and Amber Heard in Informers.
Who do you think Rourke was referring to? I was first thinking Gwyneth Paltrow, because I could see her and Rourke not getting along, but I have a hard time picturing her freezing up when the cameras are on her.
Rourke meanwhile says he’s signed on to play Mongol Empire founder Genghis Khan, written and directed by John Milius, who penned Apocalypse Now and the soon-to-be-remade Cold War classic Red Dawn:
“I read his script and you know, the man is known for his tough writing. He wrote Conan and Dirty Harry and Apocalypse Now, and it’ll be interesting to see how he works behind the camera. I’m playing Genghis. John wrote as a piece told from the son and grandson’s point of view, how they saw this mythic figure from their family. You see him in flashbacks, back when he was in his mid-40s. And back then, being in your mid-40s was being REALLY old.”





