For those who love Jane Austen and all Historical Romance books, movies, or series
Saturday, November 19, 2011
Henry Cavill, Luke Evans | 'Immortals' 4 out of 5 stars
The stuff of legend
Immortals
November 10, 2011 by Todd Gilchrist 4.0/5 rating Box Office Magazine
3.0/5 income
Spectacle and spectacular are often confused for one another in stories of epic adventure, but Immortals is the rare film where they are one and the same. Tarsem—a gifted filmmaker who sometimes sacrifices storytelling for visual sumptuousness—lacquers a straightforward narrative to his decadent directorial DNA, producing a genuinely mythic tale of a mortal who becomes a fulcrum between the well-meaning meddling gods and the villainous mischief of man. With any luck the success of its more-superficial stylistic antecedent, Zack Snyder's 300 will rub off on Immortals box office returns, but more likely the flick is poised for cult adulation, not mainstream glory.
Henry Cavill (of TV's The Tudors and our next Superman) plays Theseus, a peasant content to live a life of unassuming anonymity keeping a watchful eye on his mother. His focus is daily survival, not war. But when power-hungry King Hyperion (Mickey Rourke) invades his village in search of a weapon of mythical power, Theseus is forced into action-and thankfully he's been trained by an old man (John Hurt) whose true identity is none other than the king of the gods, Zeus (Luke Evans), who long ago swore off outwardly meddling in human affairs. Theseus slowly assembles a ragtag group of allies that include Stavros (Stephen Dorff) and a priestess named Phaedra (Freida Pinto). But when Hyperion obtains the Epirus Bow and decides to use it against his enemies, the gods are forced to decide whether or not to intervene and save humankind from itself.
Given the participation of 300 producer Mark Canton, the muscles, and the ancient Greece setting, it's easy to dismiss Immortals as a superfluous knockoff with more style than substance. But where Zack Snyder's film owes its look to a visceral combination of Frank Miller's iconic source material and the director's own cinematic excesses, Tarsem's film is steeped in capital-A art. Even as he sets up nasty modern fights, The Cell director invokes the staging and detail of classical artwork. The framing is painterly, the colors are vivid and the choreography is mythic. The visuals aren't just "cool," each shot directly serves the story while giving the viewer something memorable—and better yet, emotionally provocative—to grok.
Although I'm a fan of his two previous films, The Cell and The Fall, it's fair to say that in the past Tarsem sometimes actively encouraged his visuals to overshadow his stories. But his use of filters and camera techniques is never an end unto itself—he uses his stunning toolbox to create atmosphere and character. (Audiences looking for Snyder-style speed-ramping will find that Tarsem uses it sparingly, and less as a self-celebratory flourish than an integral—and awesomely entertaining—example of power, prowess and skill.) The result is an irony-free, magnificently epic style, a hero's journey that's transcendent yet populist.
Cavill is in the unusual position of being better known for an unreleased project—Zack Snyder's Man of Steel—than his current ones. But as he defines his career, Cavill showcases the rugged yet refined masculinity that makes him an ideal leading man. And in Immortals, he proves that has the personality and talent to back it up. While his fellow actors are clearly either peasants or superheroes from the start, he transitions from one to the other with naturalness and believability. Looking good even when he's covered from head to toe in oil, he has a commanding presence and an ease with the formalities of the film's necessarily melodramatic dialogue that never sounds self-aware or silly.
Meanwhile, Evans plays Zeus as an unexpectedly tormented ruler who presides over gods who oddly aspire to be men, even as men aspire to be gods. His struggles with how much (if at all) to intervene in the human war, show the need to preserve the order of this mythical world. Meanwhile, Mickey Rourke's intimidating offscreen presence gives Hyperion's maniacal ambition surprising credulity—he's more practical than he is one-dimensionally villainous. And as the priestess Phaedra, Freida Pinto's incomparable beauty slowly reveals a sophisticated, thoughtful female character desperately yearns to discard her hermetic purity and experience the world in all of its messy mundanity.
Immortals shouldn't be mistaken for unwarranted self-seriousness or frivolous pageantry—this is theatrical adventure shot through with a sincere appreciation for myth-making. Though Tarsem doesn't have the cache of a David Fincher or Zack Snyder, his distinctive style has crossover potential if he continues to find projects that marry his ornate, high-minded sensibility to a more conventional story. If the key to immortality is living a life worth remembering, Tarsem is well on his way, because Immortals is beautiful, smart and emotionally engaging—a combination is as memorable as it is entertaining.
Distributor: Relativity
Cast: Mickey Rourke, Henry Cavill, John Hurt, Stephen Dorff, Corey Sevier, Kellan Lutz, Freida Pinto, Isabel Lucas, Alan Van Sprang, Luke Evans, Robert Maillet
Director: Tarsem Singh
Screenwriter: Charles Parlapanides, Vlas Parlapanides
Producers: Mark Canton, Gianni Nunnari, Ryan Kavanaugh
Genre: Comedy/Drama
Rating: R for sequences of strong bloody violence, and a scene of sexuality
Running time: 110
Release date: November 11
via Charley Parlapanides.
Henry Cavill, Luke Evans | 'Immortals' | Movie Kingdom TV Review
Video Review of 'Immortals' - 'I have faith in you, prove-me-right.'
Henry Cavill, Luke Evans | Immortals | The Triangle-Review
'Immortals' offers thrilling action, violence and visuals
by Stanely Wright The Triangle
A gold-barred cage embedded in the vast bowel of Mount Tartarus contains the Titans, a vanquished group of seething former gods defeated in a battle among the heavens. Standing toe to toe, these deadly creatures are destined to stay here for eternity, unless King Hyperion has anything to say about it.
Hyperion aims to wreak havoc on Olympus in defiance of the gods he thinks ignored his plea to save his family. The Titans, and the Epirus Bow he uses to release them, are his keys to vengeance, and he’ll mow down anyone in his path to achieve it. Standing within Mount Tarturus, he draws the bow back and an arrow appears, which he fires into the cell which then explodes, releasing the angered Titans.
Relativity Media“Immortals” stars Henry Cavill, Mickey Rourke and John Hurt, directed by Tarsem Singh. The film was released Nov. 11.So begins “Immortals,” the latest in the line of beautifully shot, action-first films, this one derived from the Greek myths of Theseus, the Minotaur and Titanomachy (War of the Titans). Don’t worry if these mythical allusions go right over your head — the film’s advertisers don’t expect you to know them.
They do, however, expect you to respond to heavy scenes of violence, have a healthy respect for nudity and appreciate breathtaking cinematography. These are the main draws of “Immortals,” and director Tarsem Singh capitalizes on them.
A stylistic cousin to “300,” “Immortals” is best appreciated for its astounding visual composition. A hefty combo of CGI and unique camera angles create this effect, often picking up the slack that the dialogue leaves behind.
Protagonist Theseus’ broad shoulders and chiseled stomach also support much of the film’s weight, as they help him protect his home village when Hyperion plunders through. Our hero wields a spear, fighting off dozens in slow motion as he clamors to save his mother from the cruel king’s wrath. I’ll let you see if he was successful, but the battle is most certainly worth the watch.
Theseus and his cohorts engage in several similarly epic fight scenes with Hyperion and his legions throughout the film in which the story comes to life on screen. The most notable scene occurs during the film’s climax, in which Hyperion and Theseus have their final battle. Simultaneously, the Titans and a group of gods, led by Zeus, duke it out in an excessively gory finale.
I found aspects of the plot to be compelling, especially the manifestation of the myth of Theseus and the Minotaur. This gripping sequence had me on the edge of my seat, and at one moment I even feared for Theseus’ life.
This film is largely linear in construction. However, its many themes get muddled in the midst of waving shields and clanking swords. Reflections on love and loss are mere diversions from the brutality of battle, which is clearly the centerpiece. Commendably, these abundant and gruesome scenes are the most compelling part of the movie.
After all the blood was shed, I was amazed and impressed by some of the battles I witnessed, decently entertained by the storyline and admittedly jealous of Theseus’ love interest, Phaedra, for canoodling with such a handsome warrior.
Before the closing credits, Singh offers one last nugget of quasi-profundity — a powerful summation that is both a lasting tribute to a fallen soldier and almost certainly a setup for a sequel. Stay tuned for “Immortals 2.”
Henry Cavill | Man of Steel | Superman
Michael Shannon Elaborates On Getting The Role Of Zod And His Screen Test With Henry Cavill!
Josh Wilding Jr. Editor for Comic Book Movie
The actor who will bring the villainous General Zod to the big screen in 2013's Man of Steel talks about his first "surreal" meeting with Zack Snyder and having to perform a "chemistry test" with Henry Cavill...
Talking to Shortlist Magazine (via The Times of India) the Man of Steel star has looked back on his first surprise meeting with director Zack Snyder, calling it one of the "most surreal" experiences of his life. Why? Well, Michael Shannon says that he simply couldn't understand why Snyder was offering him such a role. "It was one of the most surreal experiences of my life because I was against this panoramic window, looking out on these beautiful hills, rose bushes and hummingbirds while Zack was saying, 'And then, on Krypton, this happens.'"
"By the end, I was kind of confused. I was like, 'Is this an offer or not?' We shook hands and he said he wanted me as Zod," he added. "I was thinking, 'There's something wrong here. This is one of the largest films around. I'm not Robert De Niro - I don't understand why this is being plonked on my lap.'"
Things somehow got even more surreal for the actor when he found out that he wouldn't actually get the role until appearing in a "chemistry test" alongside Henry Cavill - who as I'm sure you already know is playing Superman - which left him more than a little baffled. "Warner Bros said they needed to see me and Henry together first. They called it a 'Chemistry Test'. I was like, 'What, do Zod and Superman make out? You want to see if any sparks fly?'"
STARRING:
Henry Cavill as Clark Kent/Superman
Amy Adams as Lois Lane
Kevin Costner as Jonathan Kent
Diane Lane as Martha Kent
Michael Shannon as Zod
RELEASE DATE: June 14th, 2013
Josh Wilding Jr. Editor for Comic Book Movie
The actor who will bring the villainous General Zod to the big screen in 2013's Man of Steel talks about his first "surreal" meeting with Zack Snyder and having to perform a "chemistry test" with Henry Cavill...
Talking to Shortlist Magazine (via The Times of India) the Man of Steel star has looked back on his first surprise meeting with director Zack Snyder, calling it one of the "most surreal" experiences of his life. Why? Well, Michael Shannon says that he simply couldn't understand why Snyder was offering him such a role. "It was one of the most surreal experiences of my life because I was against this panoramic window, looking out on these beautiful hills, rose bushes and hummingbirds while Zack was saying, 'And then, on Krypton, this happens.'"
"By the end, I was kind of confused. I was like, 'Is this an offer or not?' We shook hands and he said he wanted me as Zod," he added. "I was thinking, 'There's something wrong here. This is one of the largest films around. I'm not Robert De Niro - I don't understand why this is being plonked on my lap.'"
Things somehow got even more surreal for the actor when he found out that he wouldn't actually get the role until appearing in a "chemistry test" alongside Henry Cavill - who as I'm sure you already know is playing Superman - which left him more than a little baffled. "Warner Bros said they needed to see me and Henry together first. They called it a 'Chemistry Test'. I was like, 'What, do Zod and Superman make out? You want to see if any sparks fly?'"
STARRING:
Henry Cavill as Clark Kent/Superman
Amy Adams as Lois Lane
Kevin Costner as Jonathan Kent
Diane Lane as Martha Kent
Michael Shannon as Zod
RELEASE DATE: June 14th, 2013
The Lord of the Rings”: Encore to feature trilogy marathon
Posted by Melissa Hayer
on November 18, 2011M at 11:50 am
Encore will be celebrating the 10th anniversary of “The Lord of the Rings” by featuring an uninterrupted presentation of director Peter Jackson’s Academy Award-winning trilogy this Thanksgiving weekend, beginning at 7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 25, according to a news release.
The trilogy marathon extends through Sunday night, Nov. 27, including nonstop plays of “The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring,” “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers” and “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.”
The marathon starts with the theatrical film versions plus more than two hours of additional content in extended special editions.
Elijah Wood, Ian McKellen, Christopher Lee, Sean Astin, Sean Bean, Liv Tyler, Cate Blanchett, Viggo Mortensen, John Rhys-Davies and Bernard Hill are among the cast of the movies.
For more information, visit www.starz.com/channels/encore/.
Follow me on Twitter: @MelissaHayer
Television Blog
Labels:
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Elijah Wood,
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Liam Neeson - Liam Neeson Backs Ricky Gervais As Globes Host
19 November 2011 14:16
Liam Neeson has thrown his support behind controversial comedian Ricky Gervais as the host of the 2012 Golden Globes, insisting Hollywood needs "a shake-up".
The British funnyman caused outrage when he presented this year's (11) ceremony and made cruel jibes about some of the movie world's biggest stars, including Johnny Depp and Angelina Jolie.
Gervais was widely expected not to be invited back to host another Golden Globes prizegiving, but event bosses shocked industry insiders this week (begs14Nov11) when they announced the Brit had been hired to make his third appearance as the host of the 2012 awards show.
The decision has been met with mixed reactions, while the comedian has revealed he accepted the offer to "shut people up".
And now Neeson, who made a cameo in Gervais' new TV show Life's Too Short, has applauded the choice of host, insisting he's looking forward to hearing the funnyman's banter on stage.
Neeson says, "Hollywood needs a shake-up. He'll be great."
Labels:
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liam neeson,
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Hobbit cast and crew due back
Nelsonians can expect to see famous faces from The Hobbit in the region next month, when a larger group of cast and crew members return for more filming.
A chartered plane left Nelson Airport about 1pm yesterday, with about 150 crew members from production company 3 Foot 7 on board.
They had been filming in Golden Bay for a week, after flying down from Taupo last Friday. They filmed at Canaan Downs on the Takaka Hill and other scenic places like Kaihoka Lakes and Mt Owen.
A crew member who was heading to Auckland on a separate flight said the group that left Nelson yesterday was 3 Foot 7's "second unit".
"We had great weather – it's a shame to be leaving. All the crew are quite disappointed," he said.
The man said the main unit had been based in Ranfurly in Dunedin, where the second unit was heading yesterday.
"The main unit goes through first – we're sort of like the mop-up crew," he said.
"We do a lot of helicopter stuff – tricky stuff, aerial shots. Every day is different." The man said the entire crew stayed in Golden Bay and worked from 4.30am to 7pm six days in a row.
He said Nelsonians were "bound to" see some famous faces when the main unit returned in December.
The Nelson Mail
Labels:
luke evans,
miranda richardson,
orlando bloom,
The hobbit
PBS Announces Winter/Spring 2012 TV Schedule
PBS has announced highlights of its broadcast schedule for winter/spring 2012, including two just announced miniseries: CLINTON, a profile of the 42nd president, from AMERICAN EXPERIENCE and FINDING YOUR ROOTS WITH HENRY LOUIS GATES, JR., an exploration of the backgrounds of famous Americans.
Premieres
Headlining the broadcast schedule on January 8 at 9:00 p.m. and continuing for seven weeks is the eagerly awaited return of MASTERPIECE CLASSIC’s “Downton Abbey, Season 2.” The miniseries opens as World War I changes lives, tests alliances and brings new drama to Downton.
From MASTERPIECE MYSTERY!, premiering at 9:00 p.m. May 6 and continuing through May 20, Sherlock Holmes stalks again in the three-part “Sherlock, Series 2.” This modern version, set in 21st-century London, stars Benedict Cumberbatch (War Horse) as the go-to consulting detective and Martin Freeman (The Hobbit) as his loyal friend, Dr. John Watson.
CLINTON: AMERICAN EXPERIENCE will premiere on President’s Day, February 20 (9:00-11:00p.m.) and continuing Tuesday night (2/21, 8:00-10:00 p.m.), the two-part special, announced today, revisits the tumultuous presidency of William Jefferson Clinton through candid interviews with journalists, insiders and adversaries, including former White House Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers, former White House Counsel Bernard Nussbaum, former White House Chief of Staff and current Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta and Deputy Chief of Staff Harold Ickes, among others. Part of AMERICAN EXPERIENCE‘s critically acclaimed presidential collection, CLINTON joins the ranks of previous profiles ranging from LBJ to Ronald Reagan, FDR and Theodore Roosevelt.
FINDING YOUR ROOTS WITH HENRY LOUIS GATES, JR. will premiere Sunday, March 25 at 8:00 p.m. The 10-part series delves into the genealogy and genetics of famous Americans, combining history and science in a fascinating exploration of race, family, and identity in today’s America. Professor Gates shakes loose captivating stories and surprises in the family trees of Kevin Bacon, Tyra Banks, Robert Downey, Jr., Sanjay Gupta, John Legend, Martha Stewart, Barbara Walters and Rick Warren, among many others.
Premiering April 11 at 10:00 p.m., AMERICA REVEALED takes viewers on a four-hour journey high above the American landscape to reveal the country as it’s never been seen before. With technology expert and communications attorney Yul Kwon (“Survivor: Cook Islands”) serving as host, this exciting new PBS series travels through time, space and systems to reveal a nation of interdependent and intricately interwoven networks that feed and power the nation, produce millions of goods and products, transport people great distances and come together to make America work.
PBS Arts
PBS Arts programming continues on Friday nights following the inaugural PBS Fall Arts Festival. GREAT PERFORMANCES premieres Anna Deavere Smith’s one-woman show “Let Me Down Easy,” a theatrical exploration of matters of the human body, on January 13 at 9:00 p.m. As in her acclaimed earlier plays, Smith develops the work by interviewing an eclectic range of people and performing as the interviewees in their own words. On January 27 at 9:00 p.m., the 90-minute “Tony Bennett: Duets II” (w.t.) captures the legendary singer with a diverse roster of contemporary artists, including Lady Gaga, John Mayer, Michael Buble, k.d. lang, Sheryl Crow, Willie Nelson, Queen Latifah, Norah Jones, Josh Groban, Andrea Bocelli, Faith Hill, Alejandro Sanz, Carrie Underwood and the late Amy Winehouse in her last recording.
Additionally on the PBS Arts docket, MICHAEL FEINSTEIN’S AMERICAN SONGBOOK, SEASON 2 returns with three episodes starting Friday, February 3 at 9:00 p.m., leading viewers across America and through musical history with a variety of surprising guest stars. Premiering February 24 from 9:00-11:30 p.m., GREAT PERFORMANCES gives viewers a front row seat to “Memphis,” starring the original Broadway cast members of the 2010 Tony Award-winning Best New Musical.
Additional Winter/Season Highlights
After the move of NOVA to Wednesday nights in January 2010, year-over-year ratings show that Wednesdays at 9:00 p.m. have benefitted from the move, across all demographics, with ratings among viewers aged 40-49 up 31 percent. Overall, NOVA’s 2010-2011 season ratings are up 25 percent from the ’09-10 season. This winter/spring, PBS continues to pair NATURE and NOVA on Wednesday nights — and solidifies the night by adding more science and natural history programming in the 10:00 p.m. slot.
A two-part NOVA special, “Hunting the Elements,” premieres Wednesday, February 8 at 9:00 p.m., and asks the question, “What are things made of?” David Pogue (“Making Stuff”) spins viewers through the world of weird, extreme chemistry on a quest to unlock the secrets of the elements. In the 8:00 p.m. slot that night is NATURE “Raccoon Nation,” a look at how human beings, in an effort to outwit raccoons, may be actually making them smarter and contributing to their evolutionary success.
As part of the strategy of building a science and nature destination night on Wednesdays, PBS adds to the 10 p.m. slot the new multi-part science series INSIDE NATURE’S GIANTS, beginning Wednesday, January 18 at 10:00 p.m. Bringing together a SWAT team of scientists — including a comparative anatomist, a veterinary scientist and an evolutionary biologist — the series goes inside (literally) to reveal the secrets and anatomical mysteries of some of nature’s largest animals, including a sperm whale, large pythons, a great white shark, and a lion and a tiger.
In additional schedule moves, PBS is focusing even more thematic programming with back-to-back plays of ANTIQUES ROADSHOW, plus biographies and history specials on Mondays; and more history, including thematically linked shows from AMERICAN EXPERIENCE, on Tuesdays, along with FRONTLINE investigations; and independent film and an additional FRONTLINE play on Thursdays.
Beginning in January, AMERICAN EXPERIENCE premieres a slate of new and encore episodes centered on the American West on Tuesday nights, including the premieres of BILLY THE KID on January 10 and CUSTER’S LAST STAND on January 17, airing at 8:00 p.m.
INDEPENDENT LENS returns Thursday, January 12 at 9:00 p.m. with “HaveYou Heard From Johannesburg,” a five-part series chronicling the unprecedented international movement of citizen activists who fought to bring down the system of apartheid in South Africa.
Later in the spring, MASTERPIECE celebrates Charles Dickens with the MASTERPIECE/BBC co-production of the two-part “Great Expectations,” Sundays, April 1 and 8 at 9:00 p.m., starring Gillian Anderson, the Emmy-winning star of “Bleak House,” and Douglas Booth; and a production of the Dickens classic “The Mystery of Edwin Drood,” Sunday, April 15 at 9:00 p.m.
The two-hour JOHNNY CARSON: AMERICAN MASTERS, airing Monday, May 14 at 9:00 p.m., offers an in-depth portrait of the undisputed king of late-night television. In exploring the career, complexities and contradictions of one of the biggest stars television has ever produced, AMERICAN MASTERS secured the Carson estate’s previously unavailable cooperation and permission — unrestricted entrée into his personal archives and perhaps Carson’s greatest legacy, all episodes of “The Tonight Show” from 1970-1992. Clues about his life and stories about his childhood and early days in the business can be found there — and in the expansive family albums and memorabilia, as well. Original interviews with friends, colleagues, his wives and the many performers who appeared, or began, on “The Tonight Show” offer additional context: Carl Reiner, Mel Brooks, Jay Leno, David Letterman, Ellen DeGeneres, Jimmy Fallon, Jerry Seinfeld and Doc Severinsen, among many others.
NATURE “Cracking the Koala Code” airs Wednesday, May 16 at 8:00 p.m. and follows individual koalas from a small social group on an Australian island to reveal how a koala manages to survive and thrive on a diet poisonous to almost all other herbivorous mammals. Following at 9:00 p.m. is NOVA’s “Deadliest Tornado” (w.t.).
Information on additional program premieres, including PBS Black History Month Specials and Election 2012 programming, will be announced throughout December and January.
Headlining the broadcast schedule on January 8 at 9:00 p.m. and continuing for seven weeks is the eagerly awaited return of MASTERPIECE CLASSIC’s “Downton Abbey, Season 2.” The miniseries opens as World War I changes lives, tests alliances and brings new drama to Downton.
From MASTERPIECE MYSTERY!, premiering at 9:00 p.m. May 6 and continuing through May 20, Sherlock Holmes stalks again in the three-part “Sherlock, Series 2.” This modern version, set in 21st-century London, stars Benedict Cumberbatch (War Horse) as the go-to consulting detective and Martin Freeman (The Hobbit) as his loyal friend, Dr. John Watson.
CLINTON: AMERICAN EXPERIENCE will premiere on President’s Day, February 20 (9:00-11:00p.m.) and continuing Tuesday night (2/21, 8:00-10:00 p.m.), the two-part special, announced today, revisits the tumultuous presidency of William Jefferson Clinton through candid interviews with journalists, insiders and adversaries, including former White House Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers, former White House Counsel Bernard Nussbaum, former White House Chief of Staff and current Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta and Deputy Chief of Staff Harold Ickes, among others. Part of AMERICAN EXPERIENCE‘s critically acclaimed presidential collection, CLINTON joins the ranks of previous profiles ranging from LBJ to Ronald Reagan, FDR and Theodore Roosevelt.
FINDING YOUR ROOTS WITH HENRY LOUIS GATES, JR. will premiere Sunday, March 25 at 8:00 p.m. The 10-part series delves into the genealogy and genetics of famous Americans, combining history and science in a fascinating exploration of race, family, and identity in today’s America. Professor Gates shakes loose captivating stories and surprises in the family trees of Kevin Bacon, Tyra Banks, Robert Downey, Jr., Sanjay Gupta, John Legend, Martha Stewart, Barbara Walters and Rick Warren, among many others.
Premiering April 11 at 10:00 p.m., AMERICA REVEALED takes viewers on a four-hour journey high above the American landscape to reveal the country as it’s never been seen before. With technology expert and communications attorney Yul Kwon (“Survivor: Cook Islands”) serving as host, this exciting new PBS series travels through time, space and systems to reveal a nation of interdependent and intricately interwoven networks that feed and power the nation, produce millions of goods and products, transport people great distances and come together to make America work.
PBS Arts
PBS Arts programming continues on Friday nights following the inaugural PBS Fall Arts Festival. GREAT PERFORMANCES premieres Anna Deavere Smith’s one-woman show “Let Me Down Easy,” a theatrical exploration of matters of the human body, on January 13 at 9:00 p.m. As in her acclaimed earlier plays, Smith develops the work by interviewing an eclectic range of people and performing as the interviewees in their own words. On January 27 at 9:00 p.m., the 90-minute “Tony Bennett: Duets II” (w.t.) captures the legendary singer with a diverse roster of contemporary artists, including Lady Gaga, John Mayer, Michael Buble, k.d. lang, Sheryl Crow, Willie Nelson, Queen Latifah, Norah Jones, Josh Groban, Andrea Bocelli, Faith Hill, Alejandro Sanz, Carrie Underwood and the late Amy Winehouse in her last recording.
Additionally on the PBS Arts docket, MICHAEL FEINSTEIN’S AMERICAN SONGBOOK, SEASON 2 returns with three episodes starting Friday, February 3 at 9:00 p.m., leading viewers across America and through musical history with a variety of surprising guest stars. Premiering February 24 from 9:00-11:30 p.m., GREAT PERFORMANCES gives viewers a front row seat to “Memphis,” starring the original Broadway cast members of the 2010 Tony Award-winning Best New Musical.
Additional Winter/Season Highlights
After the move of NOVA to Wednesday nights in January 2010, year-over-year ratings show that Wednesdays at 9:00 p.m. have benefitted from the move, across all demographics, with ratings among viewers aged 40-49 up 31 percent. Overall, NOVA’s 2010-2011 season ratings are up 25 percent from the ’09-10 season. This winter/spring, PBS continues to pair NATURE and NOVA on Wednesday nights — and solidifies the night by adding more science and natural history programming in the 10:00 p.m. slot.
A two-part NOVA special, “Hunting the Elements,” premieres Wednesday, February 8 at 9:00 p.m., and asks the question, “What are things made of?” David Pogue (“Making Stuff”) spins viewers through the world of weird, extreme chemistry on a quest to unlock the secrets of the elements. In the 8:00 p.m. slot that night is NATURE “Raccoon Nation,” a look at how human beings, in an effort to outwit raccoons, may be actually making them smarter and contributing to their evolutionary success.
As part of the strategy of building a science and nature destination night on Wednesdays, PBS adds to the 10 p.m. slot the new multi-part science series INSIDE NATURE’S GIANTS, beginning Wednesday, January 18 at 10:00 p.m. Bringing together a SWAT team of scientists — including a comparative anatomist, a veterinary scientist and an evolutionary biologist — the series goes inside (literally) to reveal the secrets and anatomical mysteries of some of nature’s largest animals, including a sperm whale, large pythons, a great white shark, and a lion and a tiger.
In additional schedule moves, PBS is focusing even more thematic programming with back-to-back plays of ANTIQUES ROADSHOW, plus biographies and history specials on Mondays; and more history, including thematically linked shows from AMERICAN EXPERIENCE, on Tuesdays, along with FRONTLINE investigations; and independent film and an additional FRONTLINE play on Thursdays.
Beginning in January, AMERICAN EXPERIENCE premieres a slate of new and encore episodes centered on the American West on Tuesday nights, including the premieres of BILLY THE KID on January 10 and CUSTER’S LAST STAND on January 17, airing at 8:00 p.m.
INDEPENDENT LENS returns Thursday, January 12 at 9:00 p.m. with “HaveYou Heard From Johannesburg,” a five-part series chronicling the unprecedented international movement of citizen activists who fought to bring down the system of apartheid in South Africa.
Later in the spring, MASTERPIECE celebrates Charles Dickens with the MASTERPIECE/BBC co-production of the two-part “Great Expectations,” Sundays, April 1 and 8 at 9:00 p.m., starring Gillian Anderson, the Emmy-winning star of “Bleak House,” and Douglas Booth; and a production of the Dickens classic “The Mystery of Edwin Drood,” Sunday, April 15 at 9:00 p.m.
The two-hour JOHNNY CARSON: AMERICAN MASTERS, airing Monday, May 14 at 9:00 p.m., offers an in-depth portrait of the undisputed king of late-night television. In exploring the career, complexities and contradictions of one of the biggest stars television has ever produced, AMERICAN MASTERS secured the Carson estate’s previously unavailable cooperation and permission — unrestricted entrée into his personal archives and perhaps Carson’s greatest legacy, all episodes of “The Tonight Show” from 1970-1992. Clues about his life and stories about his childhood and early days in the business can be found there — and in the expansive family albums and memorabilia, as well. Original interviews with friends, colleagues, his wives and the many performers who appeared, or began, on “The Tonight Show” offer additional context: Carl Reiner, Mel Brooks, Jay Leno, David Letterman, Ellen DeGeneres, Jimmy Fallon, Jerry Seinfeld and Doc Severinsen, among many others.
NATURE “Cracking the Koala Code” airs Wednesday, May 16 at 8:00 p.m. and follows individual koalas from a small social group on an Australian island to reveal how a koala manages to survive and thrive on a diet poisonous to almost all other herbivorous mammals. Following at 9:00 p.m. is NOVA’s “Deadliest Tornado” (w.t.).
Information on additional program premieres, including PBS Black History Month Specials and Election 2012 programming, will be announced throughout December and January.
Labels:
antinques roadshow,
downton abbey,
great performances,
masterpiece mystery,
masterpiece theater,
micheal Feinstein,
nova,
pbs
Martin Clunes: Doc Martin
DramaCCPG46 mins
7:30pm Saturday, November 19 2011
About The Program
PC Joe Penhale (John Marquez) is desperate to keep Maggie, his ex-wife, and show her he's changed; that he's the macho husband she wants. But once she has the all clear from the doctor, Maggie plans to return to Bude.Tension is mounting between Louisa (Caroline Catz) and Martin (Martin Clunes). They can't seem to agree on anything, from the schooling for their son, to what to cook for supper. The final straw for Louisa comes when she discovers Martin has set a date for their baby's christening without even consulting her. Louisa decides she has had enough. She packs a bag, and takes the baby back home to her mum.
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Kenneth Branagh to Get BAFTA Tribute
Actor and director honored with Life In Pictures tribute in the British capital.
NOV18
1 day
7:26 AM PST 11/18/2011 by Stuart Kemp
Simon Emmett
LONDON – Actor and director Kenneth Branagh is the latest star to be the subject of a Life in Pictures event, hosted and organized by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA).
Branagh will be the subject of a celebration of his work on the silver screen, on both sides of the camera, at an event at the British organization’s central London headquarters Nov 18.
Branagh is being touted during awards season for his return in front of the camera with his role as Laurence Olivier in Simon Curtis' My Week With Marilyn, alongside Michelle Williams as Marilyn Monroe.
It is distributed in the U.S. by The Weinstein Company and by Entertainment Film Distributors in the U.K.
Branagh’s efforts behind the lens as director of Thor last year will also form part of the evening’s celebration.
He has just completed a sell-out run on stage in Belfast of a new comedy The Painkiller in which he co-starred with Rob Brydon and starred in BBC Radio 4's epic adaptation of Vasili Grossman's Life and Fate.
Branagh is currently shooting the third season of the BBC's BAFTA award-winning Wallander in which he plays Henning Mankell's best-selling Swedish detective.
Branagh’s Life in Pictures follows hot-on-the-heels of one for Oscar-winner Charlize Theron earlier this month.
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Hollywood Reporter
Paul McCartney release Vegetarian Cookbook
London: Beatles star Paul Mccartney, a longtime vegetarian, has co-written the Meat Free Monday Cookbook as part of his ongoing campaign urging fans to eat less meat.
Paltrow and Spacey offered a recipe for lentil stew with pan-fried halloumi and pomegranate and former model Twiggy shared her favourite mozzarella pasta dish.
McCartney has shared recipes for refried bean tacos and super vegetable salad, and described the environmental and financial benefits of giving up meat in the book`s foreword.
"In difficult economic times, people discovered that have at least one meat-free day in their week helped their family budget... (We can) make a huge difference for the better and set a new pattern for the future of this beautiful planet that we all inhabit," he said.
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Today's men need a touch of old-fashioned chivalry, reveals Downton Abbey's Lady Mary Crawley
By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 9:03 AM on 25th October 2011
Women may have won equality since the days of Downton Abbey, but that doesn’t mean they don’t hanker after a degree of old-fashioned male chivalry, according to one of the show’s stars.
Actress Michelle Dockery – who plays Lady Mary Crawley in the period drama – believes modern men have lost some of the most appealing aspects of their personalities.
She explained ‘chivalry’ and good ‘manners’ were two ‘lovely’ traits which have disappeared over the decades.
Asked how she thought the role of women had changed since the days of Downton, set during the First World War, Miss Dockery bemoaned a lack of social graces amongst the younger generation.
The 29-year-old told the Radio Times: ‘We take so many of our freedoms for granted nowadays.
‘I can travel where I like, I can have a baby when I like, I can do any job I want – but I do think chivalry has been lost a little bit.’
Miss Dockery – whose character regrets turning down her distant cousin Matthew Crawley’s marriage proposal – went on: ‘Those old manners – such as men standing when women arrive at the dinner table or opening doors for you – are lovely, and it’s lovely when you see a man doing that today.
‘But young men wouldn’t think about that for a second because it’s not the culture anymore.’
And her co-star Laura Carmichael, 25, who plays Lady Edith Crawley, said: ‘The requirement in those days to find a husband, simply to survive financially, was just awful.
‘But for the drama it’s great because there is a real sense of jeopardy for the girls and that’s what Julian [Fellowes, creator of the series] writes so wonderfully.’
The second series of Downtown Abbey is currently airing on ITV1.
But the show has attracted criticism over the amount of advertisements during each episode. One viewer recently declared: ‘Nice of ITV to broadcast a bit of Downton Abbey between the ad breaks.’
Downton Abbey writers have also been criticised for letting characters use ‘modern’ expressions such as ‘get knotted’ and ‘shafted’.
Both expressions are believed to have originated in the 1960s.
Daily Mail
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2053092/Why-todays-men-need-touch-old-fashioned-chivalry-reveals-Downton-Abbey-star-Michelle-Dockery.html#ixzz1eC8st2mB
Last updated at 9:03 AM on 25th October 2011
Women may have won equality since the days of Downton Abbey, but that doesn’t mean they don’t hanker after a degree of old-fashioned male chivalry, according to one of the show’s stars.
Actress Michelle Dockery – who plays Lady Mary Crawley in the period drama – believes modern men have lost some of the most appealing aspects of their personalities.
She explained ‘chivalry’ and good ‘manners’ were two ‘lovely’ traits which have disappeared over the decades.
Actress Michelle Dockery - who plays Lady Mary Crawley in the period drama - believes modern men have lost some of the most appealing aspects of their personalities
Asked how she thought the role of women had changed since the days of Downton, set during the First World War, Miss Dockery bemoaned a lack of social graces amongst the younger generation.
The 29-year-old told the Radio Times: ‘We take so many of our freedoms for granted nowadays.
‘I can travel where I like, I can have a baby when I like, I can do any job I want – but I do think chivalry has been lost a little bit.’
‘But young men wouldn’t think about that for a second because it’s not the culture anymore.’
The current series of Downton Abbey, airing on ITV1, has received criticism for the amount of adverts being shown while it is on air
And her co-star Laura Carmichael, 25, who plays Lady Edith Crawley, said: ‘The requirement in those days to find a husband, simply to survive financially, was just awful.
‘But for the drama it’s great because there is a real sense of jeopardy for the girls and that’s what Julian [Fellowes, creator of the series] writes so wonderfully.’
The second series of Downtown Abbey is currently airing on ITV1.
But the show has attracted criticism over the amount of advertisements during each episode. One viewer recently declared: ‘Nice of ITV to broadcast a bit of Downton Abbey between the ad breaks.’
Downton Abbey writers have also been criticised for letting characters use ‘modern’ expressions such as ‘get knotted’ and ‘shafted’.
Both expressions are believed to have originated in the 1960s.
Daily Mail
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2053092/Why-todays-men-need-touch-old-fashioned-chivalry-reveals-Downton-Abbey-star-Michelle-Dockery.html#ixzz1eC8st2mB
GERARD BUTLER AND SIR RIDLEY SCOTT SET TO MAKE FACT-BASED MERCENARY THRILLER
With Machine Gun Preacher currently winning over the critics in the cinemas comes the news that Gerard Butler is being tipped to lead a fact-based mercenary thriller for iconic Hollywood director Ridley Scott.
Robert Edwards has been hired to pen the film which will be based on the misadventures of former army officer Simon Mann, and while there isn't a studio attached just yet, with Scott and Butler onboard it's only a matter of time before a deal is done.
While Simon Mann might not ring many bells, he was instrumental in gathering a group of mercenaries in an attempt to launch a coup against the president of Equatorial Guinea in 2004. Upon travelling Zimbabwe to pick up weapons for the job, he was arrested and spent five tough years in prison. After his release, he was sent to Guinea and sentenced to a further 34 years, only to be freed via presidential pardon and cited Mark Thatcher as one of his backers.
Sir Ridley Scott is currently putting the finishing touches on Prometheus which stars Michael Fassbender, Charlize Theron, Idris Elba, Noomi Rapace, Guy Pearce and Patrick Wilson and hits UK screens on June 1, as for Butler, he will next be seen in Ralph Fiennes directorial offering Coriolanus on January 20.
Gerard Butler Photos
PROMETHEUS COMES TO CINEMAS ON JUNE 1
The Fan Carpet
Robert Edwards has been hired to pen the film which will be based on the misadventures of former army officer Simon Mann, and while there isn't a studio attached just yet, with Scott and Butler onboard it's only a matter of time before a deal is done.
While Simon Mann might not ring many bells, he was instrumental in gathering a group of mercenaries in an attempt to launch a coup against the president of Equatorial Guinea in 2004. Upon travelling Zimbabwe to pick up weapons for the job, he was arrested and spent five tough years in prison. After his release, he was sent to Guinea and sentenced to a further 34 years, only to be freed via presidential pardon and cited Mark Thatcher as one of his backers.
Sir Ridley Scott is currently putting the finishing touches on Prometheus which stars Michael Fassbender, Charlize Theron, Idris Elba, Noomi Rapace, Guy Pearce and Patrick Wilson and hits UK screens on June 1, as for Butler, he will next be seen in Ralph Fiennes directorial offering Coriolanus on January 20.
Gerard Butler Photos
PROMETHEUS COMES TO CINEMAS ON JUNE 1
The Fan Carpet
Judi Dench will be featured in Shakespeare and Us, documentary on BBC
Simon Russell Beale, Judi Dench, et al. to Be Featured in BBC Shakespeare and Us Documentary
Simon Russell Beale (© David Gordon) |
The performers will discuss their experiences performing in the Bard's plays. The documentary will also feature appearances and comments by playwright David Edgar and Royal Shakespeare Company artistic director Michael Boyd.
Theater Mania
Alan Rickman's Farewell Letter to "Harry Potter" franchise
POTTER
A new scan from the Potter issue of Empire Magazine reveals a lovely letter Alan Rickman (who plays Snape) wrote to the franchise.
You can see it below. We love how Rickman did this – it’s a nice tribute!
You can see it below. We love how Rickman did this – it’s a nice tribute!
Labels:
alan rickman,
Harry Potter,
Severus Snape
Dan Radcliffe visits Alan Rickman backstage at Seminar - Nice people
Aw, friends! Harry Potter stars Dan Radcliffe and Alan Rickman posed for a photo backstage at the latter star’s Seminar, which recently opened up in New York City.
Entertainment Weekly had the exclusive photo:
Thanks to Alex for the tip!
Entertainment Weekly had the exclusive photo:
Thanks to Alex for the tip!
Labels:
alan rickman,
Daniel Radcliffe,
Harry Potter,
how to succeed in business without really trying,
seminar
Colin Firth on 'Oldboy': 'I Have Been Approached' (Plus video of his return to London after Oscar win)
Posted Nov 19th 2011 12:40PM
On Saturday, Moviefone sat down for a one-on-one interview with reigning Best Actor winner Colin Firth. Firth is promoting his new British spy thriller, 'Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy,' but we asked him about the recent rumors that he's been approached to co-star in Spike Lee's remake of the South Korean film, 'Oldboy.' According to reports, Firth would play the villain, Adrian, opposite Josh Brolin. Firth was fairly mum on the subject, but did confirm that he's been approached and cryptically relayed that discussions are still ongoing.
There is a report that you've been approached to star in Spike Lee's 'Oldboy' remake. Is this true?
They are making a film. And, yeah, I have been approached about it.
Is it confirmed?
No.
So you're talking?
I've just... heard about it. [Smiles] You know.
There is a report that you've been approached to star in Spike Lee's 'Oldboy' remake. Is this true?
They are making a film. And, yeah, I have been approached about it.
Is it confirmed?
No.
So you're talking?
I've just... heard about it. [Smiles] You know.
Check back before the Dec. 9 release of 'Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy' for Moviefone's full discussion with Colin Firth.
[Photo: Focus]
You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter
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Tinker tailor soldier spy
New Immortals TV Spot Takes A Little Dig At Twilight
Immortals has been out for a week now and faces some stiff competition from The Twilight Saga: Braking Dawn, but a new TV add suggests that if you are a real man you will watch Immortals instead of Twilight this weekend.
The brutal and bloodthirsty King Hyperion and his murderous Heraklion army are rampaging across Greece in search of the long lost Bow of Epirus. With the invincible Bow, the king will be able to overthrow the Gods of Olympus and become the undisputed master of his world. With ruthless efficiency, Hyperion and his legions destroy everything in their wake, and it seems nothing will stop the evil king's mission. As village after village is obliterated, a stonemason named Theseus vows to avenge the death of his mother in one of Hyperion's raids. When Theseus meets the Sybelline Oracle, Phaedra, her disturbing visions of the young man's future convince her that he is the key to stopping the destruction. With her help, Theseus assembles a small band of followers and embraces his destiny in a final desperate battle for the future of humanity.
Immortals stars Henry
Labels:
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immortals,
Twilight Saga
Alan Rickman: Truly, deeply appealing
By Patrick Pacheco, Special to the Los Angeles Times
November 20, 2011
Over the years, the British actor has built an impressive gallery of rogues and romantics. To him, it's just storytelling — and a love of language.
Actor Alan Rickman at the Golden Theater in Manhattan, New York. (Jennifer S. Altman / For The Times) |
Reporting from New York ——
Alan Rickman is aroused from a heavy-lidded languor recognizable from so many of his performances when the talk turns to a longtime crush. No, it's not Rima Horton, the economist he's lived with in London for 34 years. Nor is it the stage, which he still finds terrifying. What really excites him — truly, madly, deeply — is the English language."It's so rich and cruel and beautiful, like a fireworks display, and yet it can be so subtle and so crude," says the 65-year-old classical actor and director. "Marry that to the stage and something mysterious happens. Don't ask me what. It's magical."
The actor, once a critical darling who punctuated extensive stage work and art-house movies with scene-stealing supporting roles in commercial films, became an international mainstream figure playing Severus Snape, the tragic antagonist of Harry Potter in the eight-film franchise that concluded this past summer with "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows — Part 2."
Now, he is applying a different brand of dark arts as Leonard, the caustic and embittered novelist at the center of Theresa Rebeck's new play, "Seminar," which opens Sunday on Broadway. With barbed tongue, he terrorizes a group of aspiring writers who've paid a princely sum for him to evaluate their work. . That is, when he's not trying to bed the women in the group despite the yawning age gap.
"I knew the actor playing Leonard had to be irresistible, and Alan is," says Rebeck. "Like Leonard, Alan is a life force, a fighter, someone who is still swinging for the fences with a vitality that is very appealing."
Rickman says the story of an iconoclast bullying his charges into meaningful change attracted him to the play — as well as, of course, the language. "Theresa's writing is incredibly demanding," he says in silky tones that belie his British working-class roots. "She's like a Restoration comedy writer. It's high style. The words are extremely well chosen, and sometimes you wish that word had not been chosen right next to that word because the equipment's a bit rusty."
He conveys a modest vulnerability sitting in his dressing room during previews of a play that will make its world premiere without workshops or an out-of-town tryout. His nervousness is striking from someone who has racked up an impressive gallery of rogues and romantics in action films ("Die Hard," "Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves"), sci-fi satire ("Galaxy Quest"), musicals ("Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street"), romantic comedies ("Love Actually," "Truly Madly Deeply") and period drama ("Sense and Sensibility").
Looming large on his theater resume are his stint with the Royal Shakespeare Company plus two Tony-nominated performances on Broadway: "Les Liaisons Dangereuses," his 1987 debut, and "Private Lives" in 2002. More recently, he starred in Ibsen's "John Gabriel Borkman" at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in January.
"I can only see my limitations," he says with a resigned laugh. "That's just who I am. I was working with [director] Peter Brook once on Shakespeare's 'Antony and Cleopatra' with Glenda Jackson, and he said, 'The thing is, you'll never be as good as the text.' And that came as a kind of relief, really. I'm fascinated by my friends in the acting profession who can't wait to get out there. I'm not on that list."
Rickman's wry insecurity is all the more surprising given his professional image as an assured, sexy and often enigmatic figure with a penetrating gaze and the ability to deliver the most innocuous phrase with sneering contempt. "I don't see it at all like that. They [his characters] are just people to me," Rickman says. "I'm a lot less serious than people think."
Sam Gold, the director of "Seminar," says: "Alan obviously has the ability to play imposing and intimidating characters, but what makes him special is his deep, deep well of empathy. You see the humanity."
Emma Thompson wrote in an email that during her frequent collaborations with Rickman, "It's very difficult not to giggle, we laugh a lot, often in the wrong places." Their most recent one is the BBC teleplay "The Song of Lunch," which aired recently on PBS, in which Rickman plays an alcoholic poet trying to rekindle a love affair. The actress, who wrote the Oscar-winning screenplay for "Sense and Sensibility" and starred with Rickman in that movie, noted that his performance in that film as Col. Brandon "… was everything I wanted for the role — virile yet sensitive, powerful yet quietly, slightly dangerous and miles more interesting than he is in the book…. There's no one like Alan for a rich, mysterious inner life."
That life was first engendered in London public housing, where Rickman grew up as one of four children born to a housewife and a factory worker. Though Rickman was always drawn to acting, he instead pursued a career in graphic art, eventually opening a design studio. Despite its success, he decided at age 26 to take the plunge and was awarded a place at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, among whose alumni are Ralph Fiennes, Timothy Spall and Imelda Staunton, who've all portrayed memorable characters in the "Potter" movies.
He supported himself with odd jobs, including as a dresser for Nigel Hawthorne. A collateral benefit came when the veteran actor was cast in a play opposite the great Ralph Richardson.
"I would watch [Richardson] from the wings every night," Rickman recalls. "He was a magical force onstage. You didn't know where the lines were coming from. Once, a friend visited him at his house. Sir Ralph was doing Pinter's 'No Man's Land' and he had written out the play — just one word on each piece of paper — and they were pasted all around on the walls. And the friend asked, 'What's that for?' and Sir Ralph said, "I just sit and look at them.'"
Rickman worked extensively in regional rep companies, which eventually led to his breakthrough role as the manipulative and cruel Le Vicomte de Valmont in a Royal Shakespeare Company production of "Les Liaisons Dangereuses." When the production transferred to Broadway, his performance drew the attention of Hollywood director John McTiernan, who cast him as the villain opposite Bruce Willis in "Die Hard."
But whether he is playing Hans Gruber, Le Vicomte de Valmont, Severus Snape or John Gabriel Borkman, Rickman sees his primary duty as that of "storyteller." "I suppose with any good writing and interesting characters, you can have that awfully overused word" — here he pauses before adding with a roll of the eyes — "a jouuuuuurney. It might not be great, it might not be perfect, but it does answer the human need to sit there together and to be told a story."
Rickman discovered just how powerful a story can be with the Harry Potter films. He's especially grateful for their youthful following. "I suppose if I plan to work well into my 80s, I'll need them," he quips.
Daniel Radcliffe, the movies' Harry Potter, is now appearing on Broadway in "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying." He calls Rickman "an invaluable and incredibly generous" mentor.
"When I first met Alan, I was completely intimidated by him," he says. "We had some very intense scenes together. At times, he'd actually scare me. But while he was always so strong and powerful, I also came to know him as self-deprecating, vulnerable and silly."
Watching him onstage, says Radcliffe, is to see a "virtuoso" in action. "He's taught me that acting onstage demands a ruthless honesty, listening very carefully in a way that you lose your self-consciousness. When I was in 'Equus,' Alan actually cut short a vacation in Canada to return to see me for a second time and then took me out and gave me some simple, practical and yet profound advice. I've a very self-effacing attitude toward what I do, probably from a place of guilt for having so much success so young, but Alan has a deeply felt respect for the importance of acting."
Rickman says the Potter epic provided a novel acting challenge. "It was tricky, because only three of the books had been written when we started. Though I had a clue about what his final story might be, it was only the smallest clue, and therefore there was a sense of playing two things at once, just in case you have to shift. " Asked whether he was happy with the evolution of his character, Rickman said he thought that "Potter" author J.K. Rowling got it "dead right."
Now, he is looking forward to the release of the comic film caper "Gambit," in which he costars with Cameron Diaz and Colin Firth. "God knows, we put ourselves out on the line with that, comedically," he says a bit nervously. "It'll be interesting to see how that turns out on the screen."
He hopes to do more comedy, seeing the ridiculous as a reflection of the human condition. "I think there should be laughs in everything," he says. "Sometimes, it's a slammed door, a pie in the face or just a recognition of our frailties."
For Rickman, it's all part of the job description. The accompanying fame, money and acclaim all strike him as rather "obscene."
"Our abilities are nothing we can really take credit for," he says. "Yes, there's training. But I've worked with some great actors who didn't train at all. You do your job, push your abilities as far as you can take them and hopefully, you can actually do something with this" — here he again pauses before adding — "this accident."
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Eddie Redmayne: the loneliness of being a hot young actor
Michelle Williams's co-star in My Week with Marilyn is still getting used to sharing the limelight with Judi and Derek Jacobi. Now bring on the 'Redmayniacs'
Eddie Redmayne is rapidly shrinking into the slippery dark brown leather sofa upon which he sits, his head is disappearing under the neckline of his navy blue jumper, and his hands are raised ready to cover his ears. The cause of his discomfort? Me, sadly, as I read aloud some comments I've found on the various fansites dedicated to his very being. "Eddie: Flawless, ethereal, could 'get it' wearing tweed any day of the week," I read out to him.
"Wearing tweed?" he repeats in his very British accent, following it with a huge burst of laughter.
"Eddie is possibly the best human in the world," I continue, as he shrinks further. "Oh GOD!" "Eddie is so charming, and I am legit attracted to him."
"Legit?" he guffaws. "LEGIT?"
For those dedicated fans of Redmayne, 29, of which the most cursory search of the internet would indicate there are thousands, the end of this year is going to be a good one. It sees the release of My Week With Marilyn, an autobiographical account of the week Colin Clark (Redmayne), a recently graduated film obsessive, spent babysitting Marilyn Monroe in 1956 as she filmed The Prince And The Showgirl. It also sees the start of a stint at the Donmar Warehouse in Richard II. Further to that will be Birdsong, the BBC adaptation of Sebastian Faulks's best-selling book. After years of critical acclaim, winning both an Olivier and a Tony award for his performance in John Logan's Red (a play about Mark Rothko) at the Donmar and on Broadway respectively, as well as supporting roles in films alongside Julianne Moore (Savage Grace), Cate Blanchett (Elizabeth: The Golden Age) and Natalie Portman (The Other Boleyn Girl), it feels like Redmayne's "moment" has finally come.
"I see that there's a timing aspect of it all," he says, slightly squirming again (for an actor, he seems to find talking about himself relatively mortifying), "but any one of these things could collapse. I've found in the past that the critical reaction to a piece, if it's damned, will colour my memory of what the experience was. I had a wonderful time on Marilyn, a wonderful time on Birdsong and, hopefully, I'll have a wonderful time on this [he brandishes the yellow highlighter-heavy script for Richard II sitting on the table in front of him] so I'm trying not to think outside of that because it can pollute the experience."
My Week With Marilyn is undeniably Redmayne's highest-profile project to date. The cast reads like a Bafta fellowship guest list. Kenneth Branagh, Dame Judi Dench, Derek Jacobi, his friends Emma Watson and Dominic Cooper, and the piece de resistance, the lone American, Michelle Williams, as Marilyn Monroe. With his gentle disposition – the impeccable manners seem second nature rather than an actorly affectation – you rather wonder how Redmayne will cope with the spotlight. "The word 'buzz' worries me if I'm honest," he says, before pausing, and skilfully steering the conversation on to more familiar ground. "Michelle and I were there in most scenes and, every day, another bastion of the British establishment would come in and play opposite us; it was wonderful."
I bring up that it must have been an exciting prospect for him to act alongside Williams, having confessed in a past interview to being such a fan of … "Dawson's Creek!," he laughs. "That's coming back to haunt me, I should never have fucking said that. But she is extraordinary. She makes the part look effortless."
Since graduating from Cambridge in 2003 (he got a 2:1 in art history), Redmayne has worked almost constantly, playing paedophiles and boys who sleep with their mothers via the odd costume drama across film, television and the theatre. "What's really interesting about actors," he says, in that thoughtful, careful way that envelops all of his answers, "is that we all have opinions on how people's careers look, but I think you never have any idea of your own, or what other people think of you."
Marilyn sees him playing his most "normal" character to date. "I'm six years older than Colin," he agrees, "but I'm an Old Etonian, too. Weirdly, I found it just as challenging as playing the character I did in Savage Grace [the aforementioned mother lover]. What's been lovely is the variety of it all, and America has been very helpful for that. So much of our industry here is period drama, and given my background, that is what you slot into. But in America, because you're English, they send you off to everything because they can't bracket you. They'll go, 'Can you play an adopted native American Indian? OK, go audition for it, why not?'"
Redmayne is not from a clan of actors; he comes from a family of bankers, a world which he attempted to understand with a stint of work experience while at school. "It was the greatest feat of acting ever working there," he says, "having to pretend I knew what a share was when I didn't have a clue."
He's clearly far more at home in the acting world, but maybe there's a hankering for the 9 to 5. "I think all actors have a similar deal," he says. "You want some people who understand. Although it looks great – and is great – there are also shoddy moments when you feel really rotten, and when it's going well, you're not allowed to complain. Your actor friends will understand the nuances of a painful director, or the loneliness of being … OK, in a beautiful hotel room somewhere exotic. But you're by yourself for six months, and you're thinking, 'Oh God, I wish I could share it with someone.' I'm trying to buy a house and set some sense of roots because otherwise you're constantly chasing one job after another, and you look back and you've had all these very extraordinary experiences with extraordinary people, but there's not a line of continuity to it."
Perhaps one of his fans could fill the void the nomadic lifestyle creates? "I have this horrific thing where I'm really bad with names and faces," he grimaces. "I have an appalling memory. Someone will come up to me in the street and go, 'Eddie!', and I'll try and give myself time by going into overdrive, 'Hey, hi! Nice to see you!' and start a whole conversation because I can't distinguish between who I know and who I don't. My worst fear is somebody who I went to school with when I was eight coming up and me going, 'Sorry, who are you?' It's my worst nightmare."
So does he have groupies following him? "No," he laughs. "Benedict Cumberbatch is a mate of mine, and we did a charity show at the Old Vic together. There was this group of women outside the theatre who name themselves 'the Cumberbitches' and follow him round the world. I have nothing like that. I really wouldn't know what to do with the situation." Maybe, but with his "legit" attractiveness, appeal in tweed, and career explosion imminent, it's surely only a matter of time before those Cumberbitches (Redmayniacs?) come Eddie's way too.
The Guardian
"Eddie is possibly the best human in the world," I continue, as he shrinks further. "Oh GOD!" "Eddie is so charming, and I am legit attracted to him."
"Legit?" he guffaws. "LEGIT?"
For those dedicated fans of Redmayne, 29, of which the most cursory search of the internet would indicate there are thousands, the end of this year is going to be a good one. It sees the release of My Week With Marilyn, an autobiographical account of the week Colin Clark (Redmayne), a recently graduated film obsessive, spent babysitting Marilyn Monroe in 1956 as she filmed The Prince And The Showgirl. It also sees the start of a stint at the Donmar Warehouse in Richard II. Further to that will be Birdsong, the BBC adaptation of Sebastian Faulks's best-selling book. After years of critical acclaim, winning both an Olivier and a Tony award for his performance in John Logan's Red (a play about Mark Rothko) at the Donmar and on Broadway respectively, as well as supporting roles in films alongside Julianne Moore (Savage Grace), Cate Blanchett (Elizabeth: The Golden Age) and Natalie Portman (The Other Boleyn Girl), it feels like Redmayne's "moment" has finally come.
'Michelle Williams and I were in most scenes and every day another bastion of the British establishment would come in'
"I see that there's a timing aspect of it all," he says, slightly squirming again (for an actor, he seems to find talking about himself relatively mortifying), "but any one of these things could collapse. I've found in the past that the critical reaction to a piece, if it's damned, will colour my memory of what the experience was. I had a wonderful time on Marilyn, a wonderful time on Birdsong and, hopefully, I'll have a wonderful time on this [he brandishes the yellow highlighter-heavy script for Richard II sitting on the table in front of him] so I'm trying not to think outside of that because it can pollute the experience."
My Week With Marilyn is undeniably Redmayne's highest-profile project to date. The cast reads like a Bafta fellowship guest list. Kenneth Branagh, Dame Judi Dench, Derek Jacobi, his friends Emma Watson and Dominic Cooper, and the piece de resistance, the lone American, Michelle Williams, as Marilyn Monroe. With his gentle disposition – the impeccable manners seem second nature rather than an actorly affectation – you rather wonder how Redmayne will cope with the spotlight. "The word 'buzz' worries me if I'm honest," he says, before pausing, and skilfully steering the conversation on to more familiar ground. "Michelle and I were there in most scenes and, every day, another bastion of the British establishment would come in and play opposite us; it was wonderful."
I bring up that it must have been an exciting prospect for him to act alongside Williams, having confessed in a past interview to being such a fan of … "Dawson's Creek!," he laughs. "That's coming back to haunt me, I should never have fucking said that. But she is extraordinary. She makes the part look effortless."
Since graduating from Cambridge in 2003 (he got a 2:1 in art history), Redmayne has worked almost constantly, playing paedophiles and boys who sleep with their mothers via the odd costume drama across film, television and the theatre. "What's really interesting about actors," he says, in that thoughtful, careful way that envelops all of his answers, "is that we all have opinions on how people's careers look, but I think you never have any idea of your own, or what other people think of you."
Marilyn sees him playing his most "normal" character to date. "I'm six years older than Colin," he agrees, "but I'm an Old Etonian, too. Weirdly, I found it just as challenging as playing the character I did in Savage Grace [the aforementioned mother lover]. What's been lovely is the variety of it all, and America has been very helpful for that. So much of our industry here is period drama, and given my background, that is what you slot into. But in America, because you're English, they send you off to everything because they can't bracket you. They'll go, 'Can you play an adopted native American Indian? OK, go audition for it, why not?'"
'You're by yourself for six months, and you're thinking: Oh God, I wish I could share it with someone'
Redmayne is not from a clan of actors; he comes from a family of bankers, a world which he attempted to understand with a stint of work experience while at school. "It was the greatest feat of acting ever working there," he says, "having to pretend I knew what a share was when I didn't have a clue."
He's clearly far more at home in the acting world, but maybe there's a hankering for the 9 to 5. "I think all actors have a similar deal," he says. "You want some people who understand. Although it looks great – and is great – there are also shoddy moments when you feel really rotten, and when it's going well, you're not allowed to complain. Your actor friends will understand the nuances of a painful director, or the loneliness of being … OK, in a beautiful hotel room somewhere exotic. But you're by yourself for six months, and you're thinking, 'Oh God, I wish I could share it with someone.' I'm trying to buy a house and set some sense of roots because otherwise you're constantly chasing one job after another, and you look back and you've had all these very extraordinary experiences with extraordinary people, but there's not a line of continuity to it."
Perhaps one of his fans could fill the void the nomadic lifestyle creates? "I have this horrific thing where I'm really bad with names and faces," he grimaces. "I have an appalling memory. Someone will come up to me in the street and go, 'Eddie!', and I'll try and give myself time by going into overdrive, 'Hey, hi! Nice to see you!' and start a whole conversation because I can't distinguish between who I know and who I don't. My worst fear is somebody who I went to school with when I was eight coming up and me going, 'Sorry, who are you?' It's my worst nightmare."
So does he have groupies following him? "No," he laughs. "Benedict Cumberbatch is a mate of mine, and we did a charity show at the Old Vic together. There was this group of women outside the theatre who name themselves 'the Cumberbitches' and follow him round the world. I have nothing like that. I really wouldn't know what to do with the situation." Maybe, but with his "legit" attractiveness, appeal in tweed, and career explosion imminent, it's surely only a matter of time before those Cumberbitches (Redmayniacs?) come Eddie's way too.
The Guardian
Friday, November 18, 2011
First Look: Carey Mulligan in costume on “The Great Gatsby” set with Leonardo DiCaprio
by Linda Ge | Tags: baz luhrmann, carey mulligan, images, leonardo dicaprio, set photos, the great gatsby, tobey maguire
Baz Luhrmann’s 3D adaptation of iconic 1920s New York classic “The Great Gatsby” has been filming in Australia for over a month now, and today we finally have our first look at leading lady Carey Mulligan on set and in costume as Daisy Buchanan, thanks to Just Jared. Joining her in the new photos and looking all fancied up and dapper are co-stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Tobey Maguire, who play Jay Gatsby and Nick Carraway, respectively.
Mulligan won the role of Daisy a full year ago after an extensive search that saw the likes of Scarlett Johansson, Keira Knightley and Natalie Portman vying for the part. But Luhrmann was enthusiastic that Mulligan was his Daisy, saying: “Regarding the role of Daisy Buchanan, I was privileged to explore the character with some of the world’s most talented actresses, each one bringing their own particular interpretation, all of which were legitimate and exciting. However, specific to this particular production of The Great Gatsby, I was thrilled to pick up the phone an hour ago to the young Oscar-nominated British actress Carey Mulligan and say to her: ‘Hello, Daisy Buchanan.’” Luhrmann’s impressive – and highly Australian – cast is rounded out by Joel Edgerton as Tom Buchanan, Isla Fisher as Myrtle Wilson, newcomer Elizabeth Debecki as Jordan Baker and Jason Clarke as George Wilson.
“The Great Gatsby” already has a Christmas Day, December 25, 2012 release date. See below for the new images of Mulligan as Daisy, and head to Just Jared for even more.
Mulligan won the role of Daisy a full year ago after an extensive search that saw the likes of Scarlett Johansson, Keira Knightley and Natalie Portman vying for the part. But Luhrmann was enthusiastic that Mulligan was his Daisy, saying: “Regarding the role of Daisy Buchanan, I was privileged to explore the character with some of the world’s most talented actresses, each one bringing their own particular interpretation, all of which were legitimate and exciting. However, specific to this particular production of The Great Gatsby, I was thrilled to pick up the phone an hour ago to the young Oscar-nominated British actress Carey Mulligan and say to her: ‘Hello, Daisy Buchanan.’” Luhrmann’s impressive – and highly Australian – cast is rounded out by Joel Edgerton as Tom Buchanan, Isla Fisher as Myrtle Wilson, newcomer Elizabeth Debecki as Jordan Baker and Jason Clarke as George Wilson.
“The Great Gatsby” already has a Christmas Day, December 25, 2012 release date. See below for the new images of Mulligan as Daisy, and head to Just Jared for even more.
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the great gatsby,
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Kit Harington is the once and future king in “Arthur and Lancelot” opposite Joel Kinnaman
by Linda Ge |
Looks like perseverance has paid off for “Game of Thrones” actor Kit Harington. After emerging as a front-runner and testing for David Dobkin’s “Arthur and Lancelot” only to watch his scene partner Joel Kinnaman land the role of Lancelot, and then asked to re-test for the role of Arthur against more competitors, Variety reports Harington is Arthur after all. A schedule is now being hammered out for the actor to do both the film and the second season of “Game of Thrones”, which is currently filming.
Dobkin’s vision for the film remains vague with no plot details revealed, though he has said: “You know Arthur’s superpower is compassion and vision. I will tell you this, the whole thing is wrapped around the birth of democracy as a concept and it’s positing Arthur as the first man to say all men are created equal.” Variety updates that despite Dobkin’s tendencies towards comedy in the past (he directed “The Wedding Crashers” and “The Change-Up”), “Arthur and Lancelot” will be a “Braveheart”-style action epic. Let’s hope it doesn’t stray too close to that other “Braveheart”-style adaptation of Arthurian legend, “King Arthur.”
Harington, who beat out the likes of Sam Claflin, Luke Evans and Toby Kebbell for the role of Arthur, is back at work on season 2 of HBO’s monstrous hit “Game of Thrones”, after not landing another high profile role, that of Jared in Andrew Niccol’s adaptation of “Twilight” author Stephenie Meyer’s “The Host.”
“Arthur and Lancelot” will begin filming in early 2012 and already has a March 15, 2013 release date.
Up and Comers
Dobkin’s vision for the film remains vague with no plot details revealed, though he has said: “You know Arthur’s superpower is compassion and vision. I will tell you this, the whole thing is wrapped around the birth of democracy as a concept and it’s positing Arthur as the first man to say all men are created equal.” Variety updates that despite Dobkin’s tendencies towards comedy in the past (he directed “The Wedding Crashers” and “The Change-Up”), “Arthur and Lancelot” will be a “Braveheart”-style action epic. Let’s hope it doesn’t stray too close to that other “Braveheart”-style adaptation of Arthurian legend, “King Arthur.”
Harington, who beat out the likes of Sam Claflin, Luke Evans and Toby Kebbell for the role of Arthur, is back at work on season 2 of HBO’s monstrous hit “Game of Thrones”, after not landing another high profile role, that of Jared in Andrew Niccol’s adaptation of “Twilight” author Stephenie Meyer’s “The Host.”
“Arthur and Lancelot” will begin filming in early 2012 and already has a March 15, 2013 release date.
Up and Comers
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Cinemax's explosion-heavy co-production of Sky1's Strike Back shows that Americans do it better … sometimes
Don't get me wrong. I know people who work in American network TV. To a man and woman, their spirits are crushed under tons of illogical notes from executives who neither understand nor enjoy their programmes. Spending 15-hour days sequestered with groups of writers, each desperate to disparage the other's jokes and storylines, has left most of them haggard, twitching insecure wrecks. Not one of them wouldn't rather work in the UK system with its shorter seasons, relative freedom from upstairs interference and licence to curse. Then I tell them the kind of salaries they could expect if they followed their dreams and they shuffle back to the heaping fruit plates of the writers' room.
I don't think low budgets are to blame though for the malaise affecting British TV. If anything, the problem is lack of ambition and imagination. Where's the outlet for a budding UK Seth MacFarlane or Ryan Murphy or Joss Whedon? If you're not writing police procedurals, doctor dramas or period pieces, few opportunities await you. Outside of Russell T Davies and Steven Moffat, I don't get the sense that British schedules are filled with shows made by people who spent their formative years thinking way too much about TV. Whereas, with America's plethora of superstar showrunners, I know for a fact that none of them saw the sun until well into their teenage years.
Imagine if Sex And The City's Darren Star or Desperate Housewives' Marc Cherry had gotten their claws into the late, semi-lamented Mistresses. Imagine the histrionics, the operatic storylines, the cosmetically altered cast: that's right, it would have been awesome! Or what if the makers of Nurse Jackie got their hands on ITV1's Scott & Bailey? There's a show that gets by on the goodwill generated by its two stars. But it could stand to get a whole lot darker and the characters could be a whole lot quirkier.
Just because Sky's version of Trollied didn't realise the full potential of Cheers in a-supermarket, doesn't mean someone else won't
Channel 4's recent paramedic dram-com Sirens could also benefit from a remodel. Good, solid workmanlike show, but missing the grit and gallows humour of a US cable series. Granted, I write this in the knowledge that Rescue Me's Denis Leary snapped up the US rights but my point remains. Then there's Trollied, the first in Sky1's new homegrown comedy roster. I think about NBC's Thursday night lineup of workplace ensemble comedies – Community, The Office, 30 Rock – and I can imagine Trollied fitting right in. If it was about a million times funnier, if it had some memorable characters, and if it didn't serve its leading actor as poorly as the homegrown version does Jane Horrocks. Just because the Sky version didn't realise the full potential of a Cheers-in-a-supermarket, doesn't mean someone else won't.
The above examples share one common characteristic – no one cares too much about them. Which is an insensitive way of saying that these shows aren't part of the national consciousness, in the same way as a Life On Mars or a Skins or an Inbetweeners (the original writers are working on the MTV version and I still fear the worst). There's no magic that's going to get lost in translation.
Beyond the speculative world of what shows might benefit from being remade in America, is there an actual living, breathing example of a British series that has actually improved with American input? I'm glad I asked. Last year, Sky brought to life one of Chris Ryan's in-flight bestsellers, the Special Forces saga Strike Back. It wasn't bad. Lots of gunfights. Lots of brooding from Richard Armitage. Lots of guilt from Andrew Lincoln. This year Cinemax, the HBO subsidiary catering exclusively to consumers of explosions and boobs, took its first steps in the original programming business by becoming a co-producer of Strike Back.
Here's how things changed: season one of Strike Back began with a chaotic military operation in Iraq. Season two (Strike Back: Project Dawn) starts with Richard Armitage being executed, cuts to a Malyasian brothel, then a naked kickboxing stand-off before culminating in a brutal street fight where the series' new co-leads insult each other while blasting off the limbs of their opponents. It's awesome! Everything that's capable of exploding explodes. What was a decent but unexceptional military action show is now Naked 24.
Not every show can or should be lobotomised quite as entertainingly as Strike Back, but if this is an example of how an American network can elevate a British product, I say give them Hollyoaks.
The Guardian
Labels:
cinemax,
Richard Armitage,
Strike back
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