It seems that "Unbroken" actors Miyavi, Jack O'Connell, and Finn Wittrock are very unstoppable when it comes to dropping bombs about their director Angelina Jolie.
Last week, Japanese rockstar and actor Miyavi revealed the expensive weight loss secret of Jolie. Japanese actor appeared on live interview with HuftPost. He joked during the interview that Angelina was the one who tortured him. "It was surprising how much she trusted me, all of us, on the set. She was so determined. I was also surprised how skinny she got. You know, she was not eating much. I felt so bad I was the only one who got fat during filming," Miyavi added.
The Japanese star reportedly got sick and couldn't stop crying. "Salt" actress told him "to immerse himself into the mindset of a man accustomed and desensitised to violence," according to Variety.
In a new interview for the 2015 edition of Esquire, Miyavi co-star Jack O'Connell explained how their director gave him ease before they shoot. He told the magazine, ""she [Jolie] had compassion. She supported me throughout. If I'm watching her treat everyone as an equal, that made me feel exactly like that, too. I spent time with her in the rehearsal period. She set up meetings with my Mum and some of my family. So, by the time we got to the set, it felt like I had a bit of a friend. But it was a massive leap for me, a much more expensive realm of the industry."
Meanwhile, E Online interviewed Finn Wittrock (also an actor of "Unbroken."). Finn told E! reporter Marc Malkin, "I remember waiting to meet her and I was sort of skittish, a little nervous and I had butterflies in my stomach, but in literally like 30 seconds, it was just all distilled and out the window. She was just sort of talking to you just as a person. You know, I think we put her on a pedestal, but she didn't build the pedestal. She's on there with grace, but she talks to you just like a person."
"She breaths. She's warm-blooded," he added while laughing.
Despite of many praises from movie critics, Japanese Nationalists are not impressed with Angelina's war flick. According to Telegraph, Hiromichi Moteki, secretary general of the Society for the Dissemination of Historical Fact said the movie is pure "fabrication."
"If there is no verification of the things he said, then anyone can make such claims. This movie has no credibility and is immoral," said by Japanese nationalist.