 | Dakota Fanning: Encyclopedia II - Dakota Fanning - Film
Dakota Fanning - Film
In 2001, at age seven, Fanning was chosen to star opposite Sean Penn in I am Sam, the story of a mentally challenged man who fights for the custody of his daughter. This role made Fanning the youngest person (in 2002, at age eight) ever to be nominated for a Screen Actors Guild Award, for her supporting performance. When she won the Best Young Actor/Actress award from the Broadcast Film Critics Association for I am Sam, she was too short to reach the microphone; presenter Orlando Bloom held her up for the duration of her acceptance speech (which turned out to be quite long).
In 2002, Fanning appeared in three films: As a kidnap victim who is more than the crooks bargained for in Trapped; as the young version of Reese Witherspoon's character in Sweet Home Alabama; and, as Katie in Hansel & Gretel.
Fanning was featured even more prominently in two films released in 2003: Playing the uptight child to Brittany Murphy's childish nanny in Uptown Girls, and one of two children "babysat" by Mike Myers as The Cat in the Hat.
In 2004, Dakota starred in Man on Fire as Pita, a kidnapped nine-year-old who wins over the heart of a retired assassin (played by Denzel Washington). Fanning also won raves from critics: Roger Ebert wrote that Fanning "is a pro at only 10 years old, and creates a heart-winning character." [3] More critical praise followed Hide and Seek, her first release in 2005, opposite Robert De Niro. Though the film was panned, critic Chuck Wilson called it "a fascinating meeting of equals—if the child star [Fanning] challenged the master [De Niro] to a game of stare-down, the legend might very well blink first." [4] She also had a small part in the Rodrigo Garcia film Nine Lives, in which she shared a nine-minute unbroken scene with Glenn Close, who had her own praise for Fanning: "She's definitely an old soul. She's one of those gifted people that come along every now and then."
Fanning completed filming on Dreamer: Inspired by a True Story (with Kurt Russell) in late October, 2004, from which she then went directly to the set of War of the Worlds, starring alongside Tom Cruise. Released in reverse order, both films were critical successes. Of Fanning's performance in War of the Worlds, critic Kenneth Turan calls her "as good an actress as we have today. Fanning has a gift for naturalness and empathy that makes her the perfect audience surrogate." [5].
Again, she moved straight to another film without a break: In May, 2005, she finished filming Charlotte's Web with Julia Roberts in Australia. The film is slated for release in December, 2006.
As of mid-December, 2005, Dakota was listed in the credits of three films: Coraline, The Secret Life of Bees, and Hounddog. She is rumored to be starring in a remake of the classic novel Alice In Wonderland, as well as auditioning for the part of Susie from Peter Jackson's film version of Alice Sebold's book The Lovely Bones. [6]
Other related archives1994, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, Alice In Wonderland, Alice Sebold, Ally McBeal, American, Australia, Brittany Murphy, Broadcast Film Critics Association, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, Cartoon Network, Charlotte's Web, Conyers, Georgia, Coraline, Daveigh Chase, December, Denzel Washington, Disney Channel, Disney's, Dreamer: Inspired by a True Story, ER, Elle Fanning, English, Family Guy, February 23, Fox, Friends, Generation Y, Georgia, Girl Scout cookies, Glenn Close, Hide and Seek, I am Sam, Julia Roberts, July 12, Justice League, Kim Possible, Kurt Russell, Lilo & Stitch 2: Stitch Has a Glitch, Lottery, Malcolm in the Middle, Man on Fire, May, Mike Myers, My Neighbor Totoro, NBC, November 10, October, October 19, Orlando Bloom, Peter Jackson, Ray Charles, Reese Witherspoon, Robert De Niro, Roger Ebert, Screen Actors Guild, Sean Penn, Spin City, Steven Spielberg, Sweet Home Alabama, Taken, The Cat in the Hat, The Ellen Show, The Lovely Bones, The Practice, The Tonight Show, The Washington Post, Tide, Tom Cruise, Tony Scott, Trapped, Uptown Girls, War of the Worlds, Wonder Woman, animated, assassin, awards, cell phone, child actress, commercial, critics, crooks, direct-to-video, drama, film version, guest-starring, miniseries, preschool, prime-time, science fiction, stars, television commercial, voice-over
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Film", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |