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Izabella Scorupco Movies

As a child, Izabella Scorupco silently watched her loud-mouth cousin hog all the attention at family gatherings. As an adult, the cover model-turned-pop diva-turned-screen siren never goes unnoticed.
Scorupco was born on June 4, 1970, in Bialystock, an industrial town in northeast Poland, to Madgelena and Lech Scorupco. Her mother, a doctor, and her father, a jazz musician, divorced when she was one (her father died 18 years later). In 1978, Scorupco and her mother relocated to a suburb of Stockholm, Sweden. There, Scorupco took various singing and acting courses and began composing her own plays, which she would bully her classmates into performing. From ages 12 to 13, she visited a Catholic convent to study French. Though she claims to have spent most of her time there frequenting nightclubs, French is one of several languages that she speaks fluently.
Scorupco's big break came at 17 when Swedish film director Staffan Hildebrand stopped at her school while on a promotional tour. Determined to get the filmmaker's attention, Scorupco bombarded Hildebrand with questions and then convinced him that the plot of his next film -- about a child of divorce who wants to travel north to see her father -- mirrored her own life experience. Impressed, Hildebrand cast her in the film, 1988's Ingen Kan Älska Som Vi (There Is No Love Like Ours), which made her a teenage idol.
After graduation, Scorupco traveled throughout Europe, acting in television commercials and modeling (she even appeared on the cover of Italian Vogue). In her spare time, she would sing with friends who were musicians and eventually decided to make a record. In 1989, Scorupco released the ABBA-inspired song "Substitute." The single went gold in Sweden, along with its album, IZA (released in the States as Independence by IZA). In 1991, she followed up her success with a second album and the pop single "Shame, Shame, Shame."
That same year, Scorupco returned to acting for the television miniseries V Som I Viking (The Single Mother). She also met and fell in love with Polish ice hockey player Mariusz Czerskawski. In 1994, after Scorupco finished filming her role in the medieval drama Petri Tårar (The Tears of Saint Peter) (1995), Czerskawski began playing for the National Hockey League and the couple relocated to the United States. Barely a year later, the actress made her Hollywood debut as Bond girl Natalya Fyodorovna Simonova (a Russian computer whiz determined to save the world) opposite Pierce Brosnan in Martin Campbell's GoldenEye (1995).
On Christmas Day in 1996, Scorupco and Czerkawski married at the Little White Chapel in Las Vegas. A year later, Scorupco gave birth to their daughter, Julia. The actress then returned to Poland to star in Jerzy Hoffman's Ogniem I Mieczem (With Fire and Sword) (1998). The historical film, based on Nobel prize-winner Henryk Sienkiewicz's novel, was the country's biggest film production to date.
In 1999, Scorupco became the spokeswoman for the very popular Swedish cosmetics company Oriflame. She then signed onto the cast of the thriller Dykaren (The Diver) (2000). Only four days after Dykaren finished shooting, the actress flew to New Zealand to reteam with GoldenEye director Martin Campbell for Vertical Limit (2000). The action-packed film featured Scorupco as a French Canadian mountain climber who helps Chris O'Donnell rescue his sister after an avalanche buries her in a crevasse. Scorupco took the part in order to work with Campbell again, despite the fact that she had never climbed before and the job required that she hang from ropes almost 1,200 feet from the ground on a set that had to be evacuated several times. Her fearlessness established Scorupco in Hollywood as a credible action hero and she went on to star alongside Matthew McConaughey and Christian Bale as a dragon-slaying helicopter pilot in the sci-fi thriller Reign of Fire (2002). ~ Aubry Anne D'Arminio, Rovi
2007  
R  
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Two recent college graduates hatch an ingenuous scheme to increase their income while having a bit of naughty fun on the side in this sexy comedy that proves just how wild lonely housewives can be when left unattended. For Spence and Hogan, the carefree days of college come crashing to an end when they are forced to go to work for a group of heartless divorce lawyers who seem to take great joy in tormenting the dejected young slackers. Subsequently presented the opportunity to start a club in which older women can discreetly experience the joys of being with a younger man, these two put-upon legal workers set about rounding up a group of their most libidinous young men to launch a successful start-up business that thrives on pleasure. Faye Dunaway, Carrie Fisher, Izabella Scorupco, and Joanie Lauer star in a scorching age-disparity comedy from cinematographer and special effects artist-turned-director Christopher Duddy. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Jason JurmanWarren Kole, (more)
 
2004  
R  
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Planned for years, but plagued by problems such as the death of director John Frankenheimer before production had even begun and the exiting of star Liam Neeson, the fourth installment of the Exorcist saga finally got off the ground with Paul Schrader (Affliction, Auto Focus) behind the camera and Stellan Skarsgård filling the shoes left empty by Neeson. But the pitfalls didn't stop there, as Morgan Creek decided against their initial approach assigned to Schrader after seeing his finished cut, and hired Renny Harlin to reshoot the film with extra gore and head-spinning nastiness. The first prequel in the series, Exorcist: The Beginning is based upon events occurring before the first film. Playing the character made famous by Max von Sydow in the earlier films, this entry finds Skarsgård as a young Father Merrin facing true evil for the first time in Africa in the wake of World War II. When a young local boy begins to behave strangely, it becomes more and more apparent to Merrin that the child is a victim of demonic possession. Boasting a first-time screenplay by best-selling novelist Caleb Carr (The Alienist), Exorcist: The Beginning features a supporting cast headed by Izabella Scorupco (GoldenEye) and James D'Arcy (Master And Commander). ~ Matthew Tobey, Rovi

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Starring:
Stellan SkarsgårdIzabella Scorupco, (more)
 
2002  
PG13  
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Medieval fantasy meets futuristic science fiction in this effects-heavy action epic from former X-Files director Rob Bowman. In present-day London, 12-year-old Quinn Abercromby witnesses the awakening of a hibernating dragon from a centuries-long slumber, the result of a construction dig supervised by his mother and an incident for which Quinn feels partially responsible. Twenty years later, the adult Quinn (Christian Bale) is the fire chief of a refortified castle community, responsible for dousing the blazes lit by the dragon's prodigious number of flame-spewing offspring, airborne juggernauts that have wreaked havoc across the globe, torching civilization and turning humans into an endangered species. Hope arrives in the form of Denton "Dragon Slayer" Van Zan (Matthew McConaughey), an American known to be the only man to ever kill one of the dragons, and Alex (Izabella Scorupco), a scientist/pilot who's a member of Van Zan's army, a zealous fighting force that includes a secret weapon: the Archangels, paratroopers using themselves as bait to attract and then dispatch the deadly beasts. Reign of Fire (2002) co-stars Gerard Butler, Alice Krige, and Alexander Siddig. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi

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Starring:
Christian BaleMatthew McConaughey, (more)
 
2000  
PG13  
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Family differences and personal grudges add drama to an already tense situation as the lives of a team of mountain climbers hang in the balance in this action drama. Peter Garrett (Chris O'Donnell) and his sister Annie (Robin Tunney) are the children of Royce Garrett (Stuart Wilson), an avid outdoorsman and climbing enthusiast who died when an accident left all three hanging from a single rope; Royce ordered Peter to cut him loose to save the lives of his kids, even though he knew it would mean his death. Years later, Peter has given up climbing and become a respected nature photographer, while Annie, who holds Peter responsible for her father's death, is a famous world-class mountain climber who is hired by Elliot Vaughn (Bill Paxton), a self-made billionaire, to help him scale K2, a mountain in the Himalayas that's the second-highest peak in the world. In the midst of the climb, dangerous weather strikes, and Elliot, Annie, and their crew find themselves trapped in a cavern that's been sealed tight by an avalanche. Peter, who is near K2 working on an assignment, quickly organizes a crew of expert climbers to save Annie and the other mountaineers, who must work under a tight deadline before the trapped climbers run out of air. Peter's partners in the rescue include beautiful medic Monique (Izabella Scorupco), radical climbers Cyril (Steve Le Marquand) and Malcolm (Ben Mendelsohn), disciplined Pakistani crewman Kareem (Alexander Siddig), and Montgomery (Scott Glenn), an eccentric outdoorsman who has a score to settle with Elliot. While backgrounds were shot on location in Pakistan, most of the climbing sequences in Vertical Limit were actually filmed on mountain ranges in New Zealand. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Chris O'DonnellBill Paxton, (more)
 
2000  
 
Izabella Scorupco and Klaus Maria Brandauer star in this slick Hollywood-style Swedish thriller. Arne (Stefan Sauk), a distraught diver living on Sweden's west coast, saves the beautiful Irena (Scorupco) from a watery death when she is locked inside a boat that is intentionally scuttled. Soon she disappears to rejoin her mobster boyfriend Orlov (Brandauer). Meanwhile, various bad guys troll about Arne's village looking for the sunken boat. Soon Orlov and Arne confront each other, and violence ensues. ~ Jonathan Crow, Rovi

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Starring:
Stefan SaukIzabella Scorupco, (more)
 
1999  
NR  
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A lavish historical epic that (on a budget of $8.5 million) was the most expensive Polish film ever at the time of its release, Ogniem I Mieczem/With Fire and Sword is based on a classic Polish novel by Henryk Sienkiewicz concerning political and social turmoil from 1647 to 1649. Cossacks are waiting to strike Poland on the Eastern border that neighbors the Ukraine, the nearby Tartars and Turks are waiting for the opportunity to attack Europe, and the Polish ruling class is busy feuding among themselves. A daring Pole named Jan Skrzetuski (Michal Zebrowski), meanwhile, is vying for the hand of beautiful Helena Kurcewicz (Izabella Scorupco, best known for her role in the James Bond film Goldeneye), against heavy competition from Ukranian Bohun (Alexandr Domogarov), to whom she is already engaged. Helena's aunt and guardian, however, cancels the wedding plans, and an enraged Bohun attempts to kidnap her. One of Jan's associates, Zagloba (Krysztof Kowalewski), foils the plot and whisks her away to the Castle of Bar, but Bohun is not to be denied; he storms the castle, taking Helena and leaving Jan and his men to find her, just as the Cossacks and the Tartars have joined forces to sack the nation. Ogniem I Mieczem/With Fire and Sword was the first in a trilogy of novels by Sienkiewicz, but, ironically, was the last to be filmed by director Jerzy Hoffman. The final book in the series, Colonel Wolodyjowski, was adapted for the screen by Hoffman in 1969, while the second, The Deluge, appeared in 1974. A low-budget Italian version of With Fire and Sword was released in 1961. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Izabella ScorupcoMichal Zebrowski, (more)
 
1995  
 
According to medieval legend, the "Tears of Saint Peter" is a strange elixir said to be able to heal and restore the dead to life. Using the concoction, Carla devises an ingenious plot to rob a wealthy mayor in this Swedish comedy-drama set in the late 15th century. Disguising herself as a man, whom she calls Carlo Marcellini, Carla wants to use the potion to bring back every townsman who has died over the previous ten years. Unfortunately, she falls in love with the mayor's son who makes her promise to also resurrect his beloved, late fiancee. This is a rather randy film and features medieval orgies and full-frontal male nudity. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1995  
PG13  
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Pierce Brosnan made his first appearance as James Bond in this action thriller, the 17th in the series (excluding the 1967 Casino Royale and the 1983 Never Say Never Again) featuring the suave British super-agent. As the story begins, Agent 007 and his partner, Agent 006 (Sean Bean), pull a daring raid on a chemical weapons plant in the Soviet Union; however, they are captured by Russian troops, and while Bond is able to escape, 006 is not so lucky. Several years later, the Soviet Union and the Cold War are a thing of the past, but Bond is still at work ferreting out evildoers everywhere. Xenia Onatopp (Famke Janssen), a beautiful but vicious villain working with the Russian Mafia, spearheads the theft of the controls to GoldenEye, a high-tech satellite weapons system, and with her gunmen, she kills most of the soldiers and guards at a top-secret military facility in the process. Bond joins forces with Natalya Simonova (Izabella Scorupco), one of the base's few survivors, to help track down Onatopp's minions and the controls to GoldenEye, which can destroy all electronic circuits in a given area in a matter of seconds; however, in time, Bond discovers the true identity of the criminal mastermind who is behind this bid for unholy power and world domination -- none other than Alec Trevelyan, the man Bond once knew as 006. In addition to Brosnan, GoldenEye also marked another significant cast change for the Bond series -- Judi Dench made her debut as M, Bond's superior. Minnie Driver also has a cameo as a nightclub singer. Sadly, this was the last film in the Bond series for special-effects supervisor Derek Meddings, who died in the midst of production; the film was dedicated to him. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Pierce BrosnanSean Bean, (more)
 
1989  
 
Annelie (Izabella Scorupco) is a teenager who is in love with Jonny (Hakon Lindberg) in this romantic drama. She defies her mother by traveling to visit her estranged father. Annelie goes to a remote part of northern Sweden to meet the man she has not seen in ten years. When father and daughter don't immediately get along, her romance with Jonny is jeopardized. Several rock groups and scenes from dance clubs are included to spark interest among the target audience. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi

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Starring:
Izabella ScorupcoAnki Liden, (more)