Her film resolution
It’s been an interesting year or ten for Lindsay Lohan. Since the “Mean Girls” actress turned 18, she has been challenged by by legal troubles, stints in rehab, and a career slump that needs a serious reboot.
2014 just might be the year for Lindsay Lohan to start a fresh new beginning. At the Sundance Film Festival, Lindsay Lohan announced that she will be producing and starring in a new feature film entitled, “Inconceivable”, a film she hopes will attract big-name actors. The likes of Juliette Lewis and Jessica Lange have been mentioned as possible co-stars for the young starlet to relaunch her faltering career.
A necklace theft, a highly publicized car accident, and several trips to rehab for drugs and alcohol have kept Lohan in the tabloid spotlight; keeping her on the short list for high profile feature film projects is another story.
The Guardian Liberty Voice reports that with Oprah’s Network OWN camera crew in tow, Lindsay, looking polished and professional, announced that she will be making this new film with the help of financier and producer Randall Emmett, beginning in March. Though the universally panned flop “The Canyons” was produced by Lohan, she seems to have much brighter hopes for this new film.
HITFIX reports that Lindsay shared, during a press conference at the festival, “It’s nice change to be back among people that are in the industry that I’ve been in since I was a kid.”
Lohan bowled over critics in her turn as adorable Disney heroine(s) Hallie Parker and Annie James in the 1998 remake of the family classic, “The Parent Trap.” Lohan’s career took off and she landed another feature role opposite Jamie Lee Curtis in the Disney remake “Freaky Friday.” With the release of “Mean Girls” in 2004, Lindsay Lohan became a certified teen sensation. Unfortunately, as with many child actors, Lohan succumbed to the glitz and glamour that ultimately fueled a tumultuous ride in the Hollywood tabloids.
With this attempt to make good and deliver on her promises to behave as an aspiring and lasting Hollywood star, it’s only fair the machine that made her, give her another second chance.
If Robert Downey Jr. can become “Iron Man,” surely Lindsay Lohan can become “Inconceivable.”
Stay tuned for more Lindsay Lohan on Oprah’s OWN Network, where the docuseries covering Lindsay Lohan’s life is set to debut on March 9.
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