Hey, it's Brad Pitt! In the filled-to-capacity press conference room of Toronto's Sutton Place hotel, a gaggle of journalists from around the world pull out their tape recorders and pads and prepare to record his every syllable. Next door, a few dozen who didn't make it into the room watch the Pitt proceedings on closed-circuit television.

This is a real movie star we're talking about here. Rat-a-tat-a-tatta go the camera shutters every time the maler half of Brangelina makes the slightest move. It gets to the point where Henri Behar, the Toronto International Film Festival's stalwart press conference moderator, tells the photographers to "please calm down."

But when Pitt makes a funny face at the sea of shutterbugs, the room explodes in clicks once more. "When I have a breakdown or something, they'll pick that photo from this moment," Pitt jokes good-naturedly. "You'll all know when you see that photo, when I get arrested for a DUI late at night, make racial slurs or something: 'See, we saw it coming.' "

Pitt plays an American man whose vacation to Africa with his wife (played by Cate Blanchett) is shattered by a stray bullet in Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's new film Babel. Ostensibly this is the reason for this presser, but the assembled crowd really wants to ask about a certain three-and-a-half month old baby named Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt. They find ways of sneaking her into their film-related questions.

"That's exactly my thoughts now these days," says Pitt. "Yeah, it definitely colours what I'll approach in the future. I'll try to be a little more mature about my decisions. But, this one, I'll be really proud for them to see."

Proud father that he is, Pitt also brings his Namibian-born daughter into the conversation when not prodded. "Being a father now ... it becomes your big worry, it becomes the one thing that keeps you up at night: How can you protect your children," he says in reference to his own travels abroad. "We have to make other preparations and make sure we're being responsible and smart in some of these areas that [Angelina Jolie and I] travel, because not everyone has the luxurious health care that we have."

a focus on being famous," says the star of The Break-Up and Swingers. "There's less of a focus, I think, in loving something and wanting to be good at something on your own terms."

It was Vaughn's appreciation of a bunch of Los Angeles-based comics who do stand-up for the love of it, rather than for fame or money, that led him to rustle them up and take them on a 30-day tour of the U.S. Midwest last year. A documentary film crew followed the trek and the result is Vince Vaughn's Wild West Comedy Show, which had its premiere at the Toronto film festival.

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