
Fut un temps où Matthew Bomer était un candidat sérieux au rôle de Superman.
Finalement, ce fut Brandon Routh qui joua le film.
Il reste toutefois ces deux pubs japonaises pour Toyota où il interprète l'homme d'acier (et Clark Kent) :

«The only good brunette is a dead brunette» (Sarah Walker)
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Je l'ai déjà dit dans Spoilers mais j'aime bien Matthew Bomer en Superman, ça lui va bien, faut juste qu'il se muscle un peu 
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Non définitivement pas lui 

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C'est tout ce qu'il mérite
!

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Osuka a écrit:
Mais qu'est ce qu'il vous a fait ?
Jill est une connasse mais pourtant vous aimez bien Jordana
Différence, j'aime bien Jill aussi.

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Oui moi aussi j'aime bien Jill, je l'adooooore même 
Et je n'aime pas bien Jordana mais j'en suis totalement raide dingue 
Et puis Jill est loin d'être une connasse mais bon ce n'est pas le topic pour délibérer de ce qu'est Jill ou Jordana 
Sorry Lolo 
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Z'avez fini de pourrir mon topic tout beau tout neuf, bientôt ?

«The only good brunette is a dead brunette» (Sarah Walker)
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Bah oui comme tu le vois on vient juste de finir 
Et puis on le pourrissais pas vue qu'on parlait de Jordana 
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Ce qui est vachement logique dans un topic consacré a Matthew Bomer...
'sont vraiment incontrolable les gens de la ligue Anti-Bryce ^^.
Sur ce on retourne au sujet s'il vous plait, c'est a dire Bomer ou le moche qui pue pour certains. 

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Il aurait du continué dans la pub, sa aurait étais mieux pour tout le monde 
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Il faut quand même avouer qu'il a apporté pas mal à la série.
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Les premières photos de la nouvelle série de MB, "White Collar", avec un article en prime.
Je vois maintenant qui est son partenaire du FBI : Tim Dekay jouait le costaud boiteux qui était le copain du héros de la série "Carnivale".
WHITE COLLAR Season Premiere Pictures
Check out the season premiere pictures of the new USA series WHITE COLLAR starring Matt Bomer (NBC’s “Chuck,” “Tru Calling”), Tim DeKay (”Tell Me You Love Me,” “Carnivàle”), Tiffani Thiessen (”What About Brian,” “Fastlane”) and Willie Garson (”Sex and the City,” “John from Cincinnati”) which premieres in October with a 90-minute special episode on followed by 13 one-hour episodes.
Tim Dekay and Matthew Bomer On White Collar
I don’t really know what to think of this show just yet. I am happy that Tim DeKay is now a regular on a show as I believe he is a very strong actor but I am less sure about Matt Bomer. Garson is usually funny so no worries there. Tiffani Thiessen, on the other hand, is a different ballgame. I have seen here in so many shows and I am yet to be impressed by her. Nevertheless, since this show is on USA, I have high expectations for White Collar.
Matthew Bomer
Tiffani Thiessen
Tim Dekay and Matthew Bomer On White Collar
Show Summary: USA Network’s newest original series, “White Collar,” stars Matt Bomer (NBC’s “Chuck,” “Tru Calling”), Tim DeKay (”Tell Me You Love Me,” “Carnivàle”), Tiffani Thiessen (”What About Brian,” “Fastlane”) and Willie Garson (”Sex and the City,” “John from Cincinnati”) in a 90-minute special premiere followed by 13 one-hour episodes. The series will be shot on location in New York.
“White Collar” is about the most unlikely of partnerships between a con artist and an FBI agent who have been playing cat-and-mouse for years. The story unfolds after Neal Caffrey (Bomer), a charming criminal mastermind, has been caught by his nemesis, G-man extraordinaire Peter Burke (DeKay). After escaping from a maximum-security prison to find his long-lost love, Neal is nabbed by Peter once again. Rather than returning to jail for this daring getaway, Neal suggests an alternate plan: he’ll provide his expertise to assist the feds in catching other notorious and elusive criminals – in return for his freedom.
Initially wary, Peter quickly finds that Neal provides insight and intuition that cannot be found on the right side of the law. Thiessen plays Elizabeth, Peter’s wife, an intelligent, high-profile event planner. Garson plays Mozzie, a friend of Caffrey’s who has a strong distrust of the Feds and an unyielding belief in conspiracy theories about everything; with his ear to the ground, Mozzie is always tapped into what’s happening on the street. Diahann Carroll (”Grey’s Anatomy,” “Dynasty”) guest-stars in the pilot and will be recurring in several episodes.
“White Collar” was created and is executive-produced by Jeff Eastin (”Hawaii,” “Meet the Marks”) and comes from Fox Television Studios. Bronwen Hughes (USA’s “Burn Notice,” “Breaking Bad,” “Forces of Nature”) directed the pilot. Clifton Campbell (”Street Time,” “Profiler”) and Tom Garrigus (”Swingtown,” “Everwood”) serve as consulting producers.

«The only good brunette is a dead brunette» (Sarah Walker)
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Osuka a écrit:
Il est vraiment "à croquer".
Voyons voyons nous n'en sommes pas là ma chère :p !
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Un trailer sur la nouvelle série "White Collar" présentant les personnages :

«The only good brunette is a dead brunette» (Sarah Walker)
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Une critique très positive de la série "White Collar" :
Review: USA's 'White Collar' Sizzles
The USA Network has done it once again, taking an old idea and making it slick, sexy, fun, and serious all at the same time. If you think I'm talking about Burn Notice or Psych or even Royal Pains, you'd be wrong. I'm talking about the new series from USA called White Collar that stars, amongst others, Matt Bomer, known from Chuck as Bryce Larkin, and Tim DeKay, best known from both Tell Me You Love Me and Carnivale. With stellar acting and strong characters White Collar is no doubt the next hit for USA, that fits seamlessly into their network brand of original programming.
White Collar, put simply, is kind of like a cross between the first Lethal Weapon movie and Catch Me If You Can, which is to say that its a caper-type, solve-the-crime, buddy series where the characters form an unlikely partnership. The set up is simple, with Bomer playing Neal Caffrey, a charming, good-looking, elusive white collar criminal, or con man to be more precise. Tim DeKay's character, Peter Burke, is an FBI agent that works in white collar crime and spent three years on Caffrey's trail before he caught him and put him in prison. The pilot opens with Caffrey breaking out of prison in pure, suave, con man style in all of about 5 minutes, and all for the love of his life, who's decided to leave him high and dry. Burke is forced to help find him, once again, which surprising doesn't take that long, and ends up setting up the basis for the rest of the series. You see, Caffrey is smart, real smart, and he knows the crimes and criminals that Burke is hunting unlike anyone else. Caffrey convinces Burke to allow him to help solve his toughest case since…well, himself. If you're like me, you're thinking, haven't we seen this in just about every buddy cop movie that was made during the eighties and ninties? While the setup is the same classic formula that has worked time and again, White Collar manages to pull it off with its own unique style and voice that sets this series apart from similar stories.
white collar castThe show also stars Willie Garson from Sex and the City in the role of Mozzie, a guy who helps Caffrey out on the street and has a conspiracy theorist nature about him. As always Garson is fantastic, and plays a paranoid know-it-all with precision. Thiffani Theissen also stars as Elizabeth, Peter's wife on the show. Her character represented the only flaw I saw in the pilot episode. Her chemistry with Tim DeKay wasn't entirely convincing to me, and she seemed to have a better connection with Matt Bomer. I'm also unclear how exactly her character is going to fit in each week. They certainly didn't seem to have much for her to do in the pilot, other than be a catalyst for Peter to realize that Cafferty's talents could be useful outside of his caseload, and in his bedroom. However, I can't imagine that they'd cast someone like Theissen in this role without a plan to have her more involved and with her own character arch, so for now I'll refrain from further judgement and have faith in the writers
In closing I'll say that White Collar works for me, and I think it will work for a lot of people. I can't imagine this show not finding success on USA. While it fits right in with other shows on the network, like Monk, Burn Notice, and Psych, its not a carbon copy of any of them. White Collar also succeeds in something that many other shows fail to achieve. It gives us fantastic characters that we can actually sympathize with, and understand their motivations. We can relate to Caffrey's con man criminal because he's a romantic at heart, searching for his lost love. Elements like this aren't lost on us, no matter how slick and cool the rest of the show is. It all fits together nicely, giving us something we can watch and enjoy week after week, and that is, I think, the whole point to all of this. I'll be watching, that's for sure.
White Collar premieres on USA Network on Friday, October 23 at 10 PM (ET).

«The only good brunette is a dead brunette» (Sarah Walker)
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Un autre article sur "White Collar" (laquelle débute dans trois jours), qui s'attarde un peu sur MB, le décrivant comme souvent en fuite dans ses rôles télévisuels ("Traveler", "Chuck" et maintenant sa nouvelle série), mais qui laisse percer une certaine déception quant au pilote :
'White Collar’ on the run from logic
By ROBERT PHILPOT
Matthew Bomer must have a thing for being on the run. In two TV series, ABC’s short-lived Traveler and NBC’s charming Chuck, he has had a regular or recurring role as a guy trying to elude . . . well, a lot of stuff. Spies, cops, people who framed him for murder, things along those lines.
In Bomer’s new show, USA Network’s White Collar (which premieres Friday), he plays Neal Caffrey, who begins the series by calmly breaking out of prison. Peter Burke (Tell Me You Love Me’s Tim DeKay), the FBI agent who put Caffrey in prison in the first place, is assigned to track him down.
Apparently, Burke is the only person who can capture the elusive Caffrey, a criminal mastermind (although his crime is never exactly clear) whose prison escape happens not long before he would have been released anyway. And Burke does track him down, and through plot tissue we won’t go into here, Caffrey eventually begins helping Burke catch other criminals. It takes a thief to know a thief, right? Or it takes whatever Caffrey’s specialty is, anyway.
White Collar, which is filmed in New York but seems to have little to do with executive crime, seems to get its name from Caffrey’s lucky streak — in short order, he finds a nifty thrift-store suit that makes him look like a young descendant of Mad Men’s Don Draper and strikes up a friendship with a woman (Diahann Carroll) that lands Caffrey a sweet uptown apartment in Manhattan.
The show is of a piece with other USA shows such as Psych and Royal Pains, lighthearted dramas that pair one level-headed male protagonist with another who is more of a loose cannon, and who is pretty confident and satisfied with himself. Its 90-minute season premiere is fairly straightforward, yet in its own way it’s as elusive as Caffrey himself.
We know that Caffrey’s escape was driven by love (his longtime girlfriend says goodbye to him, and he’s out to find her) and that the workaholic Burke has a beautiful, incredibly understanding wife (Tiffani Thiessen, in an unusually demure role for her). But the two men’s odd-couple relationship doesn’t seem built on anything resembling logic; yes, they have a lot of respect for each other, but the idea that Caffrey could stay out of prison by remaining free as an FBI consultant is a leap that isn’t fully supported by the show’s writers.
USA specializes in breezy shows such as this, ones that are easygoing, not too brain-taxing, and a little old-fashioned — they’re TV comfort food that’s tasty but not too filling. But the concept of White Collar promises more than we get in the show premiere, and if it’s going to be a light drama, it could stand to amp up the humor quotient the way, say, Burn Notice or Psych do. Given the chance to have a livelier premiere than most broadcast-network shows did this fall, White Collar falls short. But being on cable, it at least stands a better chance of avoiding cancellation before its writers can give it more juice.
White Collar 9 p.m. Friday
USA

«The only good brunette is a dead brunette» (Sarah Walker)
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