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Monday, 28 December 2015

Rumer Willis steps into the spotlight as she premieres her new film in London

Carving a name for yourself in Hollywood is hard enough, especially when you have famous parents.

But Rumer Willis is determined to step out of the shadow of her father Bruce Willis and mother Demi Moore and become a famous actress in her own right.

Attending the premiere of her new movie Sorority Row in London last night, the 21-year-old showcased a more feminine look.

Rumer Willis attends a photocall for the film "Sorority Row" at Vue West End

My time to shine: Rumer Willis attends the London premiere of her new film Sorority Row in London's Leicester Square last night

With new long hair extensions in place of her usual shorter crop, Rumer worked the girlie look in a salmon Zac Posen tea dress and black Fendi platform heels.

She joined her close friend and co-star Briana Evigan, 22, at the screening of the horror film at the Vue West End cinema in Leicester Square.

In contrast to Rumer's frilly outfit, Briana went for a more figure-hugging sexy BCBG Max Azria blue and orange dress and stiletto heels.

After the premiere, the two actresses decided to see what London's nightlife had to offer and spent the night partying at Bungalow 8 and Movida till 3.30am.

Popping outside Movida for a cigarette break, Rumer and Briana rested their feet and sat down on the steps of the famous Palladium Theatre.

Rumer Willis (left) and Briana Evigan arriving for the premiere of 'Sorority Row', at the Vue West End in Leicester Square

BFFs: Rumer and her co-star Briana Evigan have struck up a close friendship after making the film
The two women struck up a friendship on set of Sorority Row earlier this year and Briana attended Rumer's 21st birthday party in Las Vegas earlier this month.

Since arriving in the capital earlier this week, Rumer and Step Up 2: The Streets star Briana have been working the publicity trail by speaking to the press and appearing on shows like GMTV and ITN News.

But after turning 21 just 11 days ago, Rumer is still ready to party and is planning to see as much of London's nightlife as possible.

She said: 'I have no idea where to go in London. I noticed a few karaoke places and I guess they will be fun.'

Sorority Row tells the story of a group of sorority sisters at a U.S. university, who accidentally kill one of their group and end up being stalked by a serial killer.

Rumer Willis and Briana Evigan spotted enjoying a night out at Movida

Fag break: Rumer and Briana enjoy a cigarette on the steps of the London Palladium

Rumer Willis and Briana Evigan spent the rest of their evening partying at the Bungalow 8 and Movida nightclubs

Ready to party: Rumer and Briana spent the evening partying at Bungalow 8 and Movida, before heading home at 3.30am

The film is just the latest in a string of movies starring Rumer, but is predicted to be her most successful yet.

She starred alongside Anna Faris in comedy The House Bunny last year and has several film roles, including a recurring role in TV show 90210, coming up.

Despite her famous parents, Rumer insists she has to work hard to establish her film career.

She said: 'Having a famous name can be a help.But everyone has opportunities and, in the end, if you are talented, you'll get work.

'If you're not, you won't. And my parents have always been supportive.'

Rumer said she had an unusual childhood growing up with such a stunning mother, admitting Demi wears a small dress size than she does.

She said: 'Growing up with a mother like mine gives you a skewed idea of what a mother should look like. My mother's jeans are smaller than mine.'

Film review: 'Sorority Row' all cheese, but doesn't totally stink

SORORITY ROW — ★★ — Leah Pipes, Briana Evigan, Rumer Willis; rated R (violence, gore, profanity, sex, nudity); in general release

The ending of "Sorority Row" is bad — cheesy, worn-out, seen it in 78 horror movies before. It's almost awful enough to make you forget that the movie that came before it is — as R-rated youth-horror films go — kind of fun. It's all cheese, but at least this cheese, for the most part, doesn't stink.

A darkly humorous morality tale about sorority sisters who play a prank, see it go horribly wrong and then cover up the crime out of misguided "sisterhood" and "loyalty," it gets by on snarky sorority girls, sassy talk and shivering dread — the sound of a tire iron, the murder weapon in the crime, dragging down cinder block walls and across concrete floors.

And it's got topless women, sexual situations, "date rape" drugs, irresponsible binge drinking: You know — college.

The minxes of Theta Pi, lorded over by the beautiful and ruthless Jessica (Leah Pipes, the perfect Mean Girl) "get even" with a cheating boy by faking the "roofies" (date-rape drug) death of his girlfriend. But when they drive him and "the body" out to an abandoned mine to ditch the body, he takes the fakery too literally and finishes the job.

Whoops.

Standing out in the middle of nowhere, lit only by the headlamps of Daddy's Escalade, Jessica, Chugs (Marsha Harshman), Claire (Jamie Chung), Ellie (Rumer Willis) and Cassidy (Briana Evigan) have to weigh the consequences of what they caused to happen. Granted, they might have thought of this before letting Megan (Audrina Partridge) get stabbed with a tire iron. But they're college kids. They don't know "consequences."

"Every job," Jessica pleads," every relationship for the rest of our lives" is going to be tainted with this awful mistake. "Good-bye, life."

Unless, she suggests, they cover it up. So they do.

Cut to graduation night, eight months later, and they're getting cell-phone photos of the crime. And the girls start dying off, one by one.

The "types" in this ensemble are recognizable — the hard-case Jessica, the hard-drinking floozy (Chugs), the ditz (Claire), the hysteric (Ellie) and the conscience, the girl who wants to do the right thing (Cassidy). The young cast acquits themselves nicely in roles that are, by definition, narrowly defined.

Director Stewart Hendler handles this in something like what's become the Summit Entertainment house style — flashy, glitzy, sexy depictions of a party-packed youth culture of affluence. The blue-tinted "Twilight" made the big bucks, but "Never Back Down" is the defining look of this new studio.

The dialogue has a bitchy edge to it — Ellie, "the smart one," is "like a Spellcheck with a nice rack."
"Find me on Facebook. I'll totally confirm you!"

"Waxing isn't just for floors anymore!"

And as for sex games with this crowd — "I don't have time for 'Catch me, rape me!' "

In sum, it may just be another nut-in-a-cowl killing people, with its requisite "Go get the decorations out of the basement" setups. But the murders — deserved or not — arrive after appropriate amounts of suspense, fear and dread. Rob Zombie and the later "Saw" hacks could take notes on this.

Because really, for all the pajama parties, "roofies," hook-ups and hazing rituals, sorority life really is all about the learning. Right?

"Sorority Row" is rated R for strong bloody violence, language, some sexuality/nudity and partying. Running time: 101 minutes.

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