"We Don't Live Here Anymore" Immediately followed by Q&A with Mark Ruffalo & Laura Dern

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"We Don't Live Here Anymore" Immediately followed by Q&A with Mark Ruffalo & Laura Dern

Friday, October 29, 2004

Begins at 4:30 PM PDT
Check-in begins at: 3:45 PM PDT

Thursday, October 28, 2004



WE DON'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE

JACK: And your husband making passes at my wife, how do you feel about that?

EDITH: Well, everybody deserves to be happy, right?

Based on two works by Andre Dubus, WE DON'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE is a sexy and provocative drama about married life and its discontents. Keenly observed, the film charts the amorous affair of a married man with his best friend's wife and how their liaison upsets the delicate balance of relationships, culminating in a fling between their spouses.

Unfolding from four alternating viewpoints, the story captures the paradoxical actions of loving parents determined to save marriages they secretly long to escape, as the couples struggle through their emotional and sexual entanglement. With a wry, knowing humor, WE DON'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE reveals the perverse logic of infidelity -- and the complicity, denial and occasional cruelty that can accompany it.

Mark Ruffalo (JACK LINDEN)

Mark Ruffalo continues to gain recognition for his unique talent and range as an actor with each new film in a rapidly increasing body of work. His roles in the year to come will help to elevate him towards becoming one of the most memorable actors of his generation.

Ruffalo can currently be seen in Focus Features' Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, directed by Michael Gondry and written by Charlie Kaufman. Jim Carrey, Kate Winslet, and Kirsten Dunst also star. He also stars opposite Jennifer Garner in the Warner Bros. romantic comedy, 13 Going on 30, directed by Gary Winick. Ruffalo recently completed production on Michael Mann's Collateral, which stars Tom Cruise and Jamie Foxx for DreamWorks.

In 2003, Ruffalo recently starred opposite Meg Ryan in the controversial thriller by Jane Campion, In the Cut and opposite Sarah Polley in Sony Pictures Classics poignant My Life Without Me. Other film credits include XX/XY; A View from the Top; John Woo's Windtalkers; The Last Castle, starring with Robert Redford; Ang Lee's Ride with the Devil; 54; Committed; and Safe Men.

Ruffalo is best known for his award winning performance in You Can Count On Me, starring with Laura Linney and Matthew Broderick. Co-produced by Martin Scorsese, the film won the Grand Jury Prize and the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award at the Sundance Film Festival in 2000. Ruffalo's performance garnered him the Best Actor Award at the 2000 Montreal Film Festival and the New Generation Award from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, and the film went on to be nominated for two Academy Awards®.

Ruffalo first gained attention in the critically acclaimed off-Broadway production of This is Our Youth, written by Lonergan, for which he won a Lucille Lortel Award for Best Actor. For his work in theater, Ruffalo has won several awards, including a Dramalogue Award and a Theater World Award. In 2000, Ruffalo appeared onstage in the Off-Broadway production The Moment When, a play by Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award winner James Lapine.

A writer, director and producer as well, Ruffalo co-wrote the screenplay for the independent film The Destiny of Marty Fine, which was the first runner-up at the 1995 Slamdance Film Festival and has directed several plays and one-acts, including Timothy McNeil's original play Margaret at the Hudson Backstage Theatre in Los Angeles in early 2001.

Having trained with Joanne Linville at the distinguished Stella Adler Conservatory, Ruffalo made his theater debut in Avenue A at The Cast Theater. At The Cast Theater, he went on to perform in several of Justin Tanner's award-winning plays, including Still Life With Vacuum Salesman and Tent Show.

Laura Dern (TERRY LINDEN)

Laura Dern has emerged as one of the great actresses of her generation proving that she is capable of great depth and range, touching audiences and critics alike with her moving and heartfelt performances.

Dern's next performance is a dramatic and complex role starring opposite Mark Ruffalo, Naomi Watts, and Peter Krause in the feature film WE DON'T LIVE HERE ANYMORE for Warner Independent Pictures. Warner Independent Pictures acquired the rights to the film after it received critical acclaim at this year's Sundance Film Festival. Directed by John Curran and based on two stories by Andre Dubus II (In the Bedroom), this drama examines the consequences of infidelity which befall two marriages. The film will be released on August 13th of 2004.

Dern appeared in a diverse selection of roles in three very different feature films in 2001. She starred alongside Sean Penn and Michelle Pfeiffer in New Line Cinema's critically acclaimed I Am Sam, as Steve Martin's suspicious dental hygienist girlfriend in Artisan Entertainment's dark comedy, Novocaine, and opposite William H. Macy in Focus for first time director Neil Slavin. Focus was screened in competition at the Toronto Film Festival. Dern also had a cameo appearance that year in Universal Pictures' Jurassic Park III, which re-teamed her with director Joe Johnston and actor Sam Neill.

On television in 2001, Dern delivered a captivating performance in Showtime's Damaged Care in which she portrayed the real-life "Dr. Linda Peeno," an advocate and whistleblower against HMO's managed care practices. Dern also served as a producer on this project. Earlier that year, Dern appeared in Lifetime Television's Within These Walls, opposite Ellen Burstyn. Dern also starred in Showtime Television's quirky romantic comedy, Daddy and Them, a film written and directed by Billy Bob Thornton.

In January of 1999 the Sundance Institute presented Dern with the Piper Heidseick Award for Independent Vision (recently re-named the Sundance Institute to Independent Vision Award), following in the footsteps of previous honorees such as Nicolas Cage, Tim Robbins, Kevin Spacey, Benecio Del Toro, and Julianne Moore. Each year, this award is bestowed by the Sundance Film Festival in recognition of the original voice and vision of an actor whose work reveals commitment to independent spirit and artistic merit.

In 1996, Dern starred in Miramax Films' critically acclaimed black comedy Citizen Ruth, directed by a newcomer at that time, Alexander Payne (who has since earned an Academy Award® for his film Election). Dern portrayed a young, glue-sniffing homeless woman whose pregnancy becomes a lightning rod for both Pro-Life and Abortion Rights groups. She received rave reviews by critics such as David Denby of New York magazine who commented, "Laura Dern's performance is startlingly vivid and detailed....sheer exuberant comedy. She has the gift of transparency" and The Hollywood Reporter which stated, "Dern distinguishes herself as the frazzled, self-destructive Ruth. Dern's gangly exuberance and trashy thrashings are perfect." Citizen Ruth was screened at the Montreal Film Festival where Dern was awarded Best Actress for her role.

In 1993, she starred opposite Sam Neill and Jeff Goldblum in Steven Spielberg's worldwide phenomenon and record-breaking box office success, Jurassic Park, the first of the trilogy about cloned dinosaurs. Later that year, she starred opposite Clint Eastwood and Kevin Costner in the Warner Brother's film A Perfect World, which Eastwood also directed.

In one of the most critically applauded performances of the year, Laura Dern received both an Academy Award® nomination and a Golden Globe® nomination in 1992 for her performance as "Rose" in the acclaimed film Rambling Rose, directed by Martha Coolidge and co-starring her mother, Diane Ladd. Peter Travers of Rolling Stone boldly stated that "Her knockout performance ranks her among the best actresses of her generation." This film upholds its place in history as the first time that a mother/daughter team has earned Academy Award® nominations for the same project.

In 1985, Dern won the Los Angeles Film Critics' New Generation Award for her performance in the coming-of-age story Smooth Talk and Mask. She has starred in two films for director David Lynch: Blue Velvet in 1986 and Wild at Heart, winner of the Palme d' Or at the 1990 Cannes Film Festival, which co-starred her Nicolas Cage. Dern's other film credits include Robert Altman's Dr. T and the Women, October Sky, Fat Man and Little Boy, Haunted Summer, Teachers, Foxes, and Ladies and Gentleman, The Fabulous Stains.

Dern made her directorial debut with a short film called "The Gift," which aired as part of Showtime's Directed By series in October 1994. The cast included Mary Steenburgen, Bonnie Bedelia, Isabella Rossellini, Mary Kay Place, Peter Horton, and her mother, Diane Ladd.

In 1997 Dern was nominated for an Emmy Award® and won an American Comedy Award for her guest-starring role in the controversial "Puppy Episode" of the ABC comedy Ellen. She received a 1998 Golden Globe® nomination for her role in Jane Anderson's The Baby Dance, produced by Jodie Foster's Egg Productions for Showtime. The Baby Dance was also awarded with two 1998 Peabody Awards.

Dern received the Golden Globe Award® for Best Actress, as well as Emmy® and Cable ACE® nominations for her starring role in the 1992 telefilm Afterburn. Her other work on television includes Showtime's critically acclaimed film noir series, Fallen Angels, for which she received an Emmy® nomination, and Showtime's original film, Down Came a Blackbird, which she also produced, opposite Vanessa Redgrave and Raul Julia.

Out of appreciation and respect for the extraordinary gift the Dern family has brought to the big and small screen, The Hollywood Entertainment Museum honored Bruce, Diane and Laura with the Hollywood Legacy Award.

Dern resides in Los Angeles with Ben Harper and their two-year-old son.