The Stars Come Out for "Milk" Premiere in SF!
It was a special night tonight in San Francisco. The world premiere of the highly-anticipated new bio-pic "Milk" took place in the famed Castro Theater on a chilly Bay Area night. Hundreds of fans clamored to catch glimples of the cast -- Sean Penn, James Franco, Emile Hirsh and more -- as they walked the red carpet.
If you don't live in San Francisco, we've got you covered. We've got a first look at all the action right here, and we've captured it in photos. Enjoy!
Sean Penn and Robin Wright Penn
Dustin Lance Black
David LaChapelle and Drew Kuhse
T.R. Knight and Mark Cornelsen
Jennifer Siebel Newsom and Gavin Newsom(Images courtesy of Yahoo, Getty)







T.R. Knight not wearing the vote No to 8 button?
Amazing, Diego Luna is straight and was wearing it.
Posted by: Your_Fear | October 29, 2008 at 01:02 PM
God bless America, I'm so proud to be a first cousin to such a moving time...love it
Posted by: Norman Flynn | October 29, 2008 at 05:25 PM
I just will never stop loving Sean Penn as back in the day & still now I sometimes get mistaken for him. TR has a hot BF, good for him.
I don't know or care who David LaChapelle, but we need to break him off from whoever Drew Kuhse is, as Drew looks like he'd be better off with me. lol
And Gavin Newsome deserves a better blow job. Damn he is just like sooo much finer then Anderson Cooper with all that political power & everything.
Posted by: SundiEGO Greg | October 30, 2008 at 03:36 AM
Oh & BTW... Even Sean Penn knows not to wear jeans to a movie premier. Independant, Sundance, or B movie.
Posted by: SundiEGO Greg | October 30, 2008 at 03:39 AM
i remembered first seeing Dustin Lance Black in 'on the bus' as the cute twink producer on the documentary on burning man festival. who would've though he'd made it big...im sure his ex that broke up with him in 'on the bus' is kicking himself. lol
Posted by: cinnamontea | October 30, 2008 at 12:11 PM
The movie is phenomenal, and anyone who remembers that time like I do (I was 21 the year he died)knows how perfectly this movie captures the spirit and tenor of that time...it was both a heady time (? so to speak!) and a depressing time, especially when Harvey got shot...only a few years before AIDS ravaged so many men around my age, Harvey's success was a sign of hope that maybe we could gain some political clout. Harvey led the way, and it is sad that we are still struggling for rights. May this movie be a lesson to all of us that the struggle goes on.
Posted by: Murton | December 14, 2008 at 08:47 PM