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Miss Lily Collins sat down with Collider and talked about the passionate fans of The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones, working on The English Teacher (out May 17, U.S), looking vers l'avant, vers l’avant to filming Love, Rosie and much more.

The indie dramedy The English Teacher tells the story of Linda Sinclair (Julianne Moore), a 40-year-old, unmarried high school English teacher in small town Pennsylvania. With no children and no relationships to speak of, her life is uncomplicated, which is just how she likes it. Her greatest passion and her biggest fulfillment comes from helping her impressionable young students discover their own creative voices, until a former étoile, star student (Michael Angarano) returns and threatens to undo it all.

Collider: How did toi come to be a part of this film? Was this a role toi auditioned for, ou did they come to toi about doing this?

LILY COLLINS: I read the script and I was drawn to the tone of the story. I thought it could go so many different ways, depending on how the director wanted to take it and whether they wanted to hype up the comedy aspect of make it plus dramatic. So, I had a meeting with Craig [Zisk], the director, and I liked his perspective on it. I hadn’t done an independent film before, so I was really curious about the process. But also, it’s really hard to not l’amour the idea of this project that involved Julianne Moore, Greg Kinnear, Nathan Lane and Michael Angarano. I’ve been a fan of Michael’s work. I think he’s an incredibly talented young actor. I had just worked with Nathan Lane (on Mirror, Mirror). And Greg Kinnear is Greg Kinnear. You’ve gotta l’amour him. And then, Julianne Moore is someone I’ve admired since I was little. She’s an amazing woman. It was a marriage of the cast, as well as the story, that drew me to the project. Even though Hallie is a smaller character in this very collaborative project, I saw an amazing opportunity to have an experience going head-to-head with Julianne. These characters really do have conflict, and Halle is the catalyst for her spiral downward. It just was a fun character to play and I l’amour all the people that were involved.


When toi work with people like that, do toi just watch and absorb absolutely everything that toi can?


COLLINS: Completely! I’m such a believer in going to set, even when you’re not work because I think the best things to be learned, toi don’t necessarily get from your own scene ou from someone speaking to toi and telling toi advice. I think it’s all about watching and just taking it all in. It’s not even when the cameras are rolling, necessarily. toi can see how they interact with the rest of the crew, and how they deal with being a character and then being themselves.


How did toi find the experience of working on an independent film? Did it inspire toi to want to find a balance between bigger films and indies, from now on?


COLLINS: Completely! It’s definitely influenced my taste, in looking at different kinds of projects. I’ve always loved lire all sorts of genres and different types of scripts, but having that experience of everyone being on a set and working towards a common goal that wasn’t about the money ou the following of a story was literally about the collaboration for the particular project and the passion of acting. I’ve since done another independent because I loved this process so much. It’s plus fast-paced than any other project I’d done before, and that really allows me to be really creative in a short amount of time. You’re all working towards a common goal because, at the end of the day, toi know toi have 20 days to shoot this movie and, if toi don’t get things done, then things don’t get done. So, it was a really great entrance into the indie world and I’m very fortunate to have gotten the chance to work on it.


Was it fun to get to do the scenes with the play rehearsals, where toi got to play around a bit?


COLLINS: It’s great when improv is encouraged. It’s a really fun thing. It depends on who’s in the movie and how their process works, as well. It takes a director who is open to that because toi have a script, but then something funny could happen on set. So, to have people around toi who encourage improv is really exciting because it’s something I’ve always wanted to experiment with. It taught me a lot, going vers l'avant, vers l’avant to other projects, because when toi have two ou three months of filming, as opposed to 20 days, it gives toi plus time with your character to think about things that aren’t written. It definitely taught me a lot for the bigger projects, as well.


Did toi enjoy getting to shoot the actual play and getting to wear all of those costumes?


COLLINS: That was actually kind of terrifying because I didn’t know, until the jour of, right before we started shooting, that there was going to be a live audience. I didn’t know there were going to be 300 people there. So, I opened the curtain to see, like I would have done if I were in a high school play, and I just froze. I was like, “Oh, my god, there’s an actual audience here!” I thought they were going to shoot that separately. And after every take that we did the play, the audience would yell and clap, as if they were a real audience. It was really invigorating to have an actual theater filled with people. I really wasn’t expecting that.


After the trailer for The Mortal Instruments debuted, did toi see the overwhelming response for it online? Are toi prepared for the level of excitement for that film?


COLLINS: I did a Q&A at The Grove where there were about 500 girls, all asking questions. Some of them were close to fainting and they were hyper-ventilating, and I was like, “This is so weird!” I was a fan of the livres before I was cast, so I get being a fan of the series. But then, it’s really weird to be the actress who’s playing the role that people admire so much. It’s like, “I’m just me! Why are toi so excited for just me?!” It doesn’t click for me. But, I’m so proud of this project and I’m so excited to share it. It’s something that I believe in so much, and I would l’amour to play Clary for as long as I can. I’m a firm believer in whatever happens, happens, and just go with the flow, but if that means that people are in l’amour with the movie and support it and continue to be fans, then that’s a blessing. That’s amazing to have.


In just a few years, you’ve developed an jouer la comédie career that many young actress will only ever dream about. Have toi been very careful and deliberate about the roles that you’ve decided to do, ou do toi just feel very lucky?


COLLINS: I do feel very lucky in how quickly it happened. I did a montrer when I was two, but I didn’t start acting, as a child. I wanted to go to school, every day, and be with my Friends and really have that experience. I purposely waited to start auditioning and jouer la comédie until I was ready. I’ve been very careful about keeping my private life private and trying to do this the right way, for me. Everyone has their own process. Regarding scripts and projects, I’ve always been open to lire all sorts of genres and never closing myself off to one because toi never know what toi might find. I’m very specific about what I respond to, what I l’amour and what tugs at my heart. This other project,Stuck in Love, that comes out in June was a passion project, to the extreme. I read it and fought for it for six months. I knew that I had to play the character and I was totally prepared to fight for myself because I believed in it. I feel very lucky that the casts that I’ve worked with have taught me so much and have been so supportive, and that I’ve been able to stay outside of any box with the choices that I’ve made. I fight for roles, all the time. It’s not like things are just handed to me. And I like to fight because I feel like, at the end of the day, it makes it that much plus special when toi have something that you’re really proud of and that toi worked hard for. toi have to prove to people that toi can do different things and toi can be different types of people and that you’re not a one-trick pony, and that’s fun.


Do toi know what you’re going to shoot next?


COLLINS: I’m shooting a movie in May in Dublin, called Love, Rosie. It’s based in England, but we’re shooting it in Dublin. It’s a British romantic comedy. It’s got a lot of heart. There is a lot of comedy in there, but it’s a romantic drama. It’s starring Sam Claflin, as well. I’m really excited about that because I haven’t shot in Europe before, and I get to be British, which is my natural accent and who I am. I’m really excited to get to play around with the accent and do all of that. So, I’m super excited about that.
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When I first saw the prévisualiser of
Mortal Instruments: City of Bones I thought it would be like any other movie. toi see it once and then toi don't see it again. I would have never thought It would be about the cutest guy ever Jace Wayland ( Jamie Campbell Bower ) and the prettiest girl ever Clary Fray ( Lily Collins).So basically its about an ordinary teenager who soon discovers that she is a Shadowhunter, she's half-angel who come from a line of warriors locked in an ancient battle to protect the world from demons. Once her mom disappears she must rejoindre a group of Shadowhunters ( Isabelle, Jace, and Alec ) to find her mother not knowing Valentine has her and also not knowing along the way they have to face demons, warlocks, werewolves, vampires and other creatures. Even though in the book and movie there are some differences. They both are awesome to watch and read.
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Introduction
Cassandra Claire began posting The Draco Trilogy, a Harry Potter fanfic, on FanFiction.Net in 2000, and became extremely well known in the Harry Potter fan fiction community for her work. Though she was known to have plagiarized from June 2001, the full extent of the plagiarism was not public knowledge until 2006. The débats over whether ou not Cassandra Claire was a plagiarist caused a schism in the Harry Potter fandom that lasted several years.

The Full Story
In mid-June 2001, Avocado e-mailed Cairnsy, an administrator at FanFiction.Net, with evidence that Cassandra Claire had...
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Which characters are the best role mannequins in The Mortal Instruments?

Cassandra Clare: Each has something different to teach people

How hard was it doing stunts? Was it difficult to recover?

Jamie Campbell Bower: Very difficult and no I’m still sore and going back to do No. 2 (City of Ashes)

Best joke on The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones set?

Jamie: We had a lot of private ones, but none made much sense. I was probably the biggest joker

Favorite and least favori things about Jace?

Cassie: Fave – that he’s loyal. Least fave he doesn’t think when he acts

Jamie: Most fave vulnerability, least...
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