MTV has a new interview and photos of Rupert Grint in Cherrybomb!
Grint got a “little love scene” that’s a little more adult than the one he had in “Driving Lessons,” he said, “which was quite awkward to film, with the whole crew watching. They’re in bed!” But the real adult subject matter, Grint said, is what happens afterwards — which he didn’t want to spoil. “It gets quite serious,” he said. “It gets a bit crazy. Really violent and out of hand and lethal at the end.”
There are a bunch of new photos Rupert Grint on the set of his latest flick Wild Target! We get to see his costar Emily Blunt as well as some other costars!
There are photos of Rupert Grint on the set of his upcoming film Wild Target now online. You can see him standing on a street with co-star Rupert Everett, as well as in the back seat of a car in London.
Kimberley Nixon, Rupert Grint’s co-star in Cherrybomb, has spoken about the movie and Rupert in a new interview with the Western Mail.
However, she found herself filming such a scene with Harry Potter star Rupert Grint in the forthcoming drama Cherrybomb. “It’s sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll. I play a very manipulative vixen and it was lots of fun. It’s good to be a bad girl. I think I can often fall into the girl-next-door box. “Rupert is lovely. We had a difficult love scene together one day and we were both really nervous. But he was really sweet and we giggled most of the day.”
In a new interview with Freddie Stroma who plays Cormac McLaggen, he talks about working with Dan Radcliffe, Emma Watson, and Rupert Grint!
Stroma, who had to take a year out of his degree because of filming in Ireland, described the experience so far as: “Crazy. Really, really cool.” Stroma told London Student that co-star Daniel Radcliffe is: “Hyper but really friendly.” Despite being left under the mistletoe by her character Hermione Granger, Stroma describes the world’s 33rd sexiest woman (according to FHM) Emma Watson as: “really fun and grounded and in no way a diva” and Rupert Grint (Ron) as: “really cool, incredibly witty, but surprisingly quiet.”