Suffer through 90 seconds of Justin
Timberlake trying to act.
Alas, Juno Temple is nowhere near as firmly in the plus column: if it weren't enough that she's generically deranged and combative in a role that wants her to be Angelina Jolie in Girl, Interrupted, she's also stuck with the worst cornrows since Justin
Timberlake tried them out.
Watching
Timberlake try to be funny in Bad Teacher made me nervous if he could find his comedic rhythm on the big screen.
Justin
Timberlake tries to steal the spotlight from Robbie Williams on The Late Show with Graham Norton while promoting Trolls with Anna Kendrick
Not exact matches
Try to steer clear of the 2001 Justin
Timberlake and Brittany Spears look Definitely check out their Getty Image of this fashion faux pas.
Timberlake and Kunis
try hard to keep this charm machine purring, and they do indeed have traces of chemistry, which is more than you can say for most romantic couples in the movies these days.
Co-starring Carey Mulligan, Justin
Timberlake, John Goodman, and Garrett Hedlund, the movie tells of a folk singer - songwriter roaming New York in the 1960s,
trying to be the next Bob Dylan but straining in his quest (it's reportedly based in part on the posthumous memoir of folk artist Dave Van Ronk).
In «Friends With Benefits,» a romantic comedy about two pals who
try to incorporate sex into their friendship, Mr.
Timberlake has his biggest role yet, playing a hotshot art director with intimacy issues.
Shrek the Third (DreamWorks, May 18) Starring: Mike Myers, Cameron Diaz, Eddie Murphy, John Cleese, Amy Poehler, Antonio Banderas, Justin
Timberlake Director: Chris Miller, Raman Hui Rating: PG The Pitch: Eager to shirk his royal responsibilities as heir to the ailing King Harold (Cleese), Shrek (Myers)
tries to install Artie (
Timberlake) as the new king.
Her boyfriend Ronnie (Justin
Timberlake) comes back after being discharged from the army, misunderstands the relationship between Lazarus and Rae, and
tries to kill him.
Meanwhile,
Timberlake is
trying a little too desperately to be a sexy nerd, never quite convincing us that he's really this dorky.
Follow optimistic Poppy (voice of Anna Kendrick) and kill them with kindness, or
try the approach of the ever pessimistic Branch (voice of Justin
Timberlake) and use more defensive tactics?
We can just take the first fifteen to twenty minutes as an excuse to get the ball rolling and to eventually put Will (Justin
Timberlake) and Sylvia (Amanda Seyfried) together and on the run so as to
try and give both characters a sense of fulfilment.
Myspace has
tried to make a comeback in recent years, thanks to Justin
Timberlake and a pivot to music, but it's still no Facebook (or Twitter or Snapchat or...).
Don't let Justin
Timberlake's emotional turmoil in
trying to navigate a friendship after sex scare you.