Please enter your login details

You can also sign in with your Sowetan LIVE
and Sport LIVE account details.
   Sign Up   Forgot password?

Sign in with:

 
  • All Share : 40855.89
    DOWN -2.34%
    Top 40 : 3351.01
    DOWN -3.17%
    Financial 15 : 11688.69
    DOWN -2.36%
    Industrial 25 : 46366.22
    DOWN -2.21%

  • ZAR/USD : 9.5330
    DOWN -0.36%
    ZAR/GBP : 14.4128
    UP 0.22%
    ZAR/EUR : 12.3390
    UP 0.43%
    ZAR/JPY : 0.0936
    UP 0.97%
    ZAR/AUD : 9.3015
    UP 0.49%

  • Gold : 1388.0800
    UP 1.45%
    Platinum : 1456.5000
    DOWN -0.58%
    Silver : 22.4350
    UP 0.73%
    Palladium : 742.5000
    UP 0.20%
    Brent Crude Oil : 102.100
    DOWN -0.49%

  • All data is delayed by 15 min. Data supplied by I-Net Bridge
    Hover cursor over this ticker to pause.

Thu May 23 18:47:08 SAST 2013

'Hotel Transylvania' reunites Saturday Night Live cast

Sapa-AFP | 09 September, 2012 09:05
US actor Kevin James poses next to his character "Frankenstein" during the launch of his film "Hotel Transylvania" in Cancun.
Image by: STRINGER/MEXICO / REUTERS

Actor Adam Sandler assembled former ‘Saturday Night Live’ cast members for a new animated monster movie, he said Saturday, because they are "the funniest people I know."

Hotel Transylvania, by director Gennady Tartakovsky premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival where Sandler and fellow SNL alumni David Spade, Molly Shannon, Andy Samberg and producer Robert Smigel spoke to reporters before the screening.

Sandler plays Count Dracula, as an overprotective father of a young ghoul who at 118 years old is eager to break out into the world.

"I like being around them," Sandler said of the SNLers, "And I know they're great at what they do and they're the funniest people I know, so that's why I like doing movies with them."

"You feel like you're working with friends," echoed Molly Shannon.

The all-star monster mash also includes Kevin James, Steve Buscemi, Fran Drescher and Selena Gomez as daughter Mavis.

Sandler commented that although his own children are still "very young," he sees coming the day when he will have to deal with the same emotions as his character.

"It breaks your heart to see a dad struggling and also a boy coming into your daughter's life and having to deal with that," he told a press conference.

Gomez said her own father is doting. "I can relate to (the film)," she said. "I just turned 20 and I still live at home, by my choice, and it's good but we've had our ups and downs."

Samberg chimed in suddenly to ask, "Do they ever yell at you and say 'Get a job!'" to which Gomez, who has been busy this year in breakout movie roles as well as nurturing a singing career and launching a clothing line, replied: "That's one thing I don't have to worry about."

For her role as the bride of Frankenstein in the film, Drescher lamented that director Tartakovsky "wouldn't let me be as sweet as I wanted to be. He wanted me to sound obnoxious and annoying. All the time he said be angrier."

Of her unusual voice, she commented: "Who could make this up. I didn't make it up. I was born with it and figured out how to monetize it" in the film industry.

"My mom was once interviewed and asked, 'Did she always have that funny voice?' And in the exact same voice she said 'We never knew she had a funny voice,'" she quipped.

SHARE YOUR OPINION

If you have an opinion you would like to share on this article, please send us an e-mail to the Times LIVE iLIVE team. In the mean time, click here to view the Times LIVE iLIVE section.