Devon Aoki Biography, Age, Height/Weight, Net worth, Movies, Runway, Model, Sin city

Devon Aoki Biography

Devon Aoki (Devon Edwenna Aoki) is an American actress and fashion model. She is best known for role in modelling and films production, her films include 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003), Sin City (2005), lead roles in DOA: Dead or Alive (2006) and Mutant Chronicles (2008).

Devon Aoki Age

Devon Aoki was born on August 10, 1982 (she is 36 years old as of 2018)

Devon Aoki Height/Weight

Devon Aoki stands at a height of 1.65 m (she has a weight of 50 kg (110 lbs)

Devon Aoki Net worth

Devon Aoki has an estimated net worth of $20 million.
Devon Aoki Photo

Devon Aoki Family

Devon Aoki was born to Hiroaki Aoki (father) and Pamela Hilberger (mother). She was raised in California with her six siblings.

Devon Aoki Siblings

Devon Aoki has six siblings Steve Aoki (brother), Jenifer Crumb (sister), Kevin Aoki (brother), Kyle N. Aoki (brother), Kana Grace Nootenboom (sister) and Echo V. Aoki (sister). Her grandparents are Katsu Aoki (grandmother) and Yuno suke Aoki (grandfather). Her father is former Olympic wrestler while her is a jewelry designer. Her father was a Japanese while her mother is a German.

Devon Aoki Husband

Devon Aoki married James Bailey. The couples were blessed with two children.

Devon Aoki Children

Devon Aoki has two children Alessandra Linville Bailey and James Hunter.

Devon Aoki Education

Devon Aoki attended The American High School in London.

Devon Aoki Actor

Devon Aoki started acting while she was still in school. She has produced several movies like 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) and Sin City (2005) and lead roles in DOA: Dead or Alive (2006) and Mutant Chronicles (2008). She is casted as Tatsu Yamashiro in Arrow season 3, but she was replaced by Rila Fukushima due to a scheduling conflict.

Devon Aoki Model

Devon Aoki started modelling when she 13, at 13, she was introduced to modelling by her godmother Kate Moss. Following her runway debut in 1997, she walked for brands including Balenciaga, Comme des Garçons and Chanel. In 1998, at the age of 16, she replaced Naomi Campbell as the face of Versace. She has also been featured in advertising campaigns for Chanel, Yves Saint Laurent, Kenzo, Hugo Boss, L’Oreal, Lancome and Tiffany & Co., and walked for designers including Versace, Chanel, Oscar de la Renta, Diane von Furstenberg, Jean Paul Gaultier, Celine, Baby Phat, and Marc Jacobs.
She has graced the covers of Vogue (Germany, Russia, Japan, Korea), Harper’s Bazaar, i-D, Russh, Numéro Tokyo, 10 Magazine Australia, and Nylon. In 2017, she returned to the runway for Moschino’s fashion show and a advertising campaigns for “Sephora x Moschino” and Hugo Boss. In 2018, she walked in the runway for Jeremy Scott’s eponymous brand, where she starred in an editorial for Vogue USA and appeared in an advertising campaign for Moschino Fragrance. She is now considered as an icon in the fashion industry by models.com.

Devon Aoki Movies

Year

Title

Role

2003Death of a DynastyPicasso
20032 Fast 2 FuriousSuki
2004D.E.B.S.Dominique
2005Sin CityMiho
2006Sean Lennon’s Friendly FireMermaid (“Wait for Me”)
2006DOA: Dead or AliveKasumi
2006ZoomDaravia
2007WarKira Yanagawa
2008Mutant ChroniclesValerie Duval
2009Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are UndeadAnna
2015Jeremy Scott: The People’s DesignerHerself
2016I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead
2017Double Dutchess: Seeing Double

Devon Aoki Music Video

Year

Title

Artist

1997“Electric Barbarella”Duran Duran
“Kowalski”Primal Scream
2003“Act a Fool”Ludacris
“In Those Jeans”Ginuwine
2006“Dead Meat”Sean Lennon
“Bones”The Killers
2013“Just Another Girl”
2016“M.I.L.F. $”Fergie
2018“Waste It On Me”Steve Aoki feat. BTS

Devon Aoki You tube Runway

Devon Aoki Sin city

Filled as they are with cold-blooded killers, femmes fatales, unlucky gamblers and crooked politicians, the mean streets of “Sin City: A Dame to Kill For” are no place to get caught unawares. With the Frank Miller-Robert Rodriguez neo-noir sequel opening Friday, here’s a cheat sheet on all the hardboiled inhabitants of this stylized world — so you can keep up with all the hard-core fans in yours. A long time coming: Although the original “Sin City” earned favorable reviews and grossed more than $158 million at the worldwide box office, it’s taken more than nine years for “A Dame to Kill For” to follow.  Rodriguez and Miller began brainstorming a sequel shortly after the first film opened, but the project got derailed when backers Harvey and Bob Weinstein left Miramax Films to found Weinstein Co., which is releasing “Dame.”

“The Weinsteins told us, ‘We’re not ready — go make a couple more movies and then come back,’” Rodriguez told the Times’ Hero Complex. “Then we got distracted with other stuff. It was just a matter of finding the right time for everything to jell.” The masterminds If there’s a mayor of the “Sin City” franchise, it’s Miller, the prickly comic book legend who first created the stark black-and-white serials in 1991 and would translate them to the big screen years later with the help of “Desperado” and “Spy Kids” filmmaker Rodriguez. Aside from codirecting the original “Sin City” and “A Dame to Kill For” with Rodriguez, Miller has only helmed one other film, “The Spirit,” which was a critical and box-office bomb.
That said, his gritty comics — including the “The Dark Knight Returns” and “300” — have directly and indirectly influenced countless Hollywood movies. Rodriguez, meanwhile, has proved himself to be an imaginative auteur in the past, although his recent films have stumbled. His last two efforts were both sequels that grossed considerably less than their predecessors: “Spy Kids: All the Time in the World” grossed $38 million domestically, down from “Spy Kids 3D: Game Over’s” $111 million, and “Machete Kills” grossed $8 million, down from “Machete’s” $26 million. So far, the reviews and tracking for “Sin City: A Dame To Kill For” (dismal and a sub-$20-million opening, respectively) suggest it could follow in that similar unfortunate pattern.
Going by — and beyond — the book Taking the form of anthology of four linked tales, “A Dame to Kill For” serves as both a sequel and a prequel to “Sin City,” which was largely based on material from the first, third and fourth books in Miller’s comic series. “Dame” draws on Miller’s second book and also features new material written specifically for the film. Thanks to the franchise’s nonlinear structure, “Dame” is free to include, for example, a character who died in the first movie (Mickey Rourke’s hulking antihero Marv).  Marv isn’t the only character making the return trip to Sin City. Also back for more are Jessica Alba as the exotic dancer Nancy, Rosario Dawson as the pistol-packing prostitute Gail and Powers Booth as the corrupt Sen. Roark.
New characters include Eva Green’s Ava Lord (the titular dame), Joseph Gordon Levitt’s cocky gambler Johnny, Ray Liotta’s unfaithful businessman Joey and Christopher Lloyd’s drug-addicted back-alley doctor Kroenig. Still other characters are returning, but played by new actors. In the case of Josh Brolin’s Dwight, there’s a narrative explanation (it involves facial reconstructive surgery). Other replacements were made for practical reasons: Jamie Chung stepped in for Devon Aoki as Miho because Aoki was pregnant at the time of shooting, and Dennis Haysbert took over for the late Michael Clarke Duncan to play Manute.
Black and white, but mostly green: Like its forebear, “A Dame to Kill For” is rendered in hyper-stylized black-and-white with occasional splashes of color. To create the ripped-from-the-page look, Rodriguez and Miller once again shot almost entirely against green screens and filled in the props and sets digitally. But while the process was revolutionary back in 2005, that’s no longer the case today. Films such as “Avatar,” the “300” movies (also based on Miller’s work) and “Gravity” have also placed actors in striking digitally created environments.

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