Ryan Reynolds and Sandra Bullock made another stop on their promotional world tour for The Proposal yesterday, this time in Germany. The costars continued to make each other laugh for the cameras, and were even treated to flowers and balloons as they posed with director Anne Fletcher. The movie got knocked out of the number one spot by Transformers 2 last weekend, but Ryan and Sandra's big smiles should help make the film a success around the globe.
More of Ryan and Sandra if you read more.
Source: Getty

















Single Dress
Burner
Hugo Boss
I'm excited to see this film!
1These two are so freakin' adorable. Loved this movie. Very cute!
2Germans love Sandra because she speaks REALLY good German (which is a hard feat!)
3She really does (proof here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s10x38SMb-g
). I think she actually also has a German passport, because her mother was German and she
spent a big part of her childhood in Germany. Anyway, love her!
4Those two are really growing on me. Sandy's one cool chick
5Yep, I'm a fan of these two. Very good pairing for a film.
6Cute together but movie sucked!
7not sure that i LOVE what she's wearing but i think that the movie will still do well overseas for them.
8I am loving these two together too!
9Love both of them! But the movie was missing chemisty... Still a good movie, just not great.
10@Mädchen: She can't be a German citizen b/c she is American. The German government has some of the strictest citizenship regulations in the world. Even if a person is born and raised in Germany, they cannot be German unless they renounce their other citizenship(s).
But I also don't think she ever lived in Germany. Her mother was a German opera singer who moved to America before Sandra was born
11she's looking really good and i still haven't seen it yet
12Ryan looks hot as usual, but Sandra's dress is not doing anything for her!
13@ There are exceptions to the citizenship rules. If one of your parents is German (as in Sandra's case), you are automatically eligible for German citizenship, no matter whether you have another citizenship as well. For example, I know a couple that lives in Switzerland, he's German, she's Swiss. Their daughters have both German and Swiss passports. And this was before they changed the rules yet again: now you can actually keep your German passport, if you become a citizen of another EU country or Switzerland.
She was born in the US, but lived in Nürnberg and Salzburg (I think) for a big part of her childhood. She was 12 when her family moved back to the US.
14Sorry, that was supposed to say:
15@ Asche
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