Showing posts with label billy Bob Thornton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label billy Bob Thornton. Show all posts

Thursday, June 19, 2014

Martin Freeman: The Shocking ‘Fargo’ Finale: Creator Noah Hawley Breaks Down the Epic Bloodbath (SPOILERS)

THE DAILY BEAST
ByKEVIN FALLON


FX’s pitch-perfect 10-episode TV adaptation of ‘Fargo’ came to a bloody conclusion Tuesday. The show’s creator and writer, Noah Hawley, breaks down the brilliant finale.

Well, there was no wood chipper.



But you betcha that the explosive finale of FX’s Fargo limited series wasn’t lacking in spewed blood, comeuppance, and the kind of understated intensity that’s made the risky adaptation of the Coen Brothers film classic at once menacing and suspenseful, pulpy and fun, and—in turn—cable’s must-watch drama of this past spring.

The high-octane finale featured retribution, surprising acts of heroism, expected deaths in unexpected fashions, and even a snowmobile chase scene. (WARNING: Stop reading here if you have not seen Tuesday night’s Fargo finale. SPOILERS lie ahead.)

We get what appears to be a climax about halfway through the episode when Billy Bob Thornton’s hitman Lorne Malvo and Martin Freeman’s in-over-his-head insurance salesman turned prime suspect Lester Nygaard finally reunite. Whether you considered them heroes, villains, antiheroes, protagonists, or antagonists depended on the episode and, frankly, your mood. 

Regardless, that their reunion ended so unexpectedly was satisfying given how atypical the season-long cat-and-mouse chase between the two characters was—they started out strangers, became complicit partners in crime, and, eventually, enemies in their own right. At the end of the adrenaline-packed scene, they both end up getting away.




Thursday, May 29, 2014

Martin Freeman, Benedict Cumberbatch compete against each other for Critics Choice Awards

LOS ANGELES TIMES
MEREDITH BLAKE
May 28, 2014



BEST ACTOR IN A MOVIE OR MINI-SERIES

David Bradley, "An Adventure in Space and Time" (BBC America)
Benedict Cumberbatch, "Sherlock: His Last Vow" (PBS)
Chiwetel Ejiofor, "Dancing on the Edge" (Starz)
Martin Freeman, "Fargo" (FX)
Mark Ruffalo, "The Normal Heart" (HBO)
Billy Bob Thornton, "Fargo" (FX)


The Broadcast Television Journalists Assn. announced nominations for the 4th Annual Critics' Choice Television Awards on Wednesday. "Fargo," "Masters of Sex," "The Good Wife," "The Big Bang Theory" and "The Normal Heart" were the most-nominated programs of the year, with five nods apiece.

Other programs picking up multiple nominations include "Orange Is the New Black," "Sherlock: His Last Vow," "The Americans" and "Breaking Bad."



On the strength of the limited series "Fargo," adapted from the Coen brothers' 1996 movie, the offbeat comedy "Louie" and the Cold War drama "The Americans," FX has the most nominations of any network. It is followed closely by awards heavyweight HBO (18), which scored nods for the film adaptation of Larry Kramer's play "The Normal Heart" as well as fantasy epic "Game of Thrones," political satire "Veep," Brooklyn-set "Girls," tech-world comedy "Silicon Valley" and gay drama series "Looking."


READ MORE HERE: http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/envelope/tv/la-et-st-critics-choice-television-award-nominees-20140528-story.html

Sunday, April 6, 2014

(video) Martin Freeman and Billy Bob Thornton in the first seven minutes of ‘Fargo’

HERO FIX
By Kevin Melrose, Comic Book Resources   Saturday, Apr 5, 2014 3:02 PM



CBR) If, despite the stellar cast, you’re still skeptical of "Fargo," the upcoming television adaptation of Joel and Ethan Coen’s acclaimed 1996 film, then FX may have something that will ease your mind: the first seven minutes of the series.


Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/news/martin-freeman-and-billy-bob-thornton-in-the-first-seven-minutes-of-fargo#u7GEgC0ZSwTysdRd.99

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Teaser trailers for Fargo TV series, starring Billy Bob Thornton, Martin Freeman and Oliver Platt in stellar comic cast

MAIL ON LINE
By CANDACE SUTTON
PUBLISHED: 02:05 EST, 17 March 2014 | UPDATED: 12:42 EST, 17 March 2014



Two men struggle with a sack out on a windswept frozen lake until one protests, in deaf sign language, that the hole in the ice is too small, and the other grasps the leg of the body protruding from the bag and signs, 'guy's too fat'.

The solution? Get a chainsaw.

A truck rumbles along a frozen highway, and as it passes an icy breeze loosens the snow on the side bank to reveal a pair of human nostrils protruding from the drift.

Soothing piped music is playing as a man pushing a shopping trolley along the aisle of a hardware store throws in his purchases: an axe, duct tape, a crow bar, a hunting knife, boxes of ammunition, and a rifle bag.



The Coens acted as producers of the new ten-episode TV series, which was developed by screenwriter Noah Hawley (Bones),and stars Martin Freeman as Lester Nygaard, a man who has his life drastically changed when he encounters a mysterious man who arrives in town.

Billy Bob Thornton, a Coen brothers favourite, plays Lorne Malvo, a boastful and manipulative crook who FBI agents Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele are obsessed with tracking down.

In one of the teasers, the scene where the 'fishermen' who speak sign language as they attempt to stuff a body down an ice hole, would seem to reference the famous scene in the original film when Marge happens upon one of the hit men feeding the body of the other into a woodchipper.



In the FX spin-off, Freeman as Nygaard plays a henpecked insurance salesman who is based loosely on the Macy role.

The series also stars Oliver Platt (The Big C) and Bob Odenkirk (‘Better Call Saul’ in Breaking Bad), Kate Walsh (Greys Anatomy), and tom Hank's son Colin Hanks (Mad Men, Orange County and Parkland). 

The dark humour and Midwest setting remains, but the series has an entirely new plot. It was filmed in Canada and premiers in the US on April 15.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2582470/Dark-humour-new-Fargo-teasers-upcoming-Coen-brothers-TV-series-starring-Billy-Bob-Thornton-The-Hobbits-Martin-Freeman-Oliver-Platt-large-comic-cast.html#ixzz2wKVV0tZN
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook


Friday, March 7, 2014

Latest Fargo Teaser Shows Martin Freeman Under Stress And Over A Washing Machine

CINEMA BLEND
BY KELLY WEST   2014-03-06 17:42:58




Each of the recently released teasers for Noah Hawley's Fargo series seems to offer some nod to the Coen Brothers' film on which this FX drama is loosely based. At face value -- somewhat literally -- I'm not sure the latest teaser does, unless anyone can link the sight o Martin Freeman atop a rumbling washer with some scene from the 1996 film. With that said, the mounting tension within the teaser and the sight of a man who seems on the verge of unraveling does sort of throw a general nod at the film, if we consider Jerry Lundegaard's self-inflicted conflict and how it affects him throughout the movie.




Fargo is set up as a 10-episode limited series in which Martin Freeman stars as a guy whose life is drastically changed by the arrival of a mysterious man to his snowy town. Billy Bob Thornton plays Lorne Malvo, and we know Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele are on board to play FBI agents who are determined to track him down.


Friday, January 17, 2014

FX's Reimagined Fargo Series Features Sherlock's Martin Freeman as We've Never Seen Him

IGN
by Roth Cornet JANUARY 14, 2014

Martin Freeman and Billy Bob Thornton in Fargo.

FX's new limited series, Fargo, is set to premiere in April. The 10-part limited series from producers Noah Hawley, Warren Littlefield, Joel and Ethan Coen, and Geyer Kosinski exists in the same universe as the original film, but tells an entirely original story.

Stars Martin Freeman (Lester Nygaard), Billy Bob Thornton (Lorne Malvo), Allison Tolman (Molly Solverson), and Colin Hanks (Gus Grimly) were on hand at today's TCA (Television Critics Association) press tour along with Littlefield and Hawley, who serves as showrunner and is writing all ten episodes, to discuss their Fargo-inspired drama.


"The movie is about the tension between comedy and tragedy, so it’s 'cragedy,'" Hawley joked when asked about the tone. His Fargo will operate in a similar vein, though rather than following the events that lead up to a tragedy, it will trace the aftermath.

"You know, Joel and Ethan said something about polite society as often being the most violent," Hawley recalled. "I was really interested in this idea of taking a man like Lester Nygaard, Martin’s character, who is so squeezed by life, and, you know, pushing him to the point where he might snap."

Freeman's Nygaard, a mild-mannered salesman, is only briefly exposed to Thornton's Malvo, a mysterious drifter who Hawley says, "is someone who represents wilderness." Yet it only takes that momentary interaction for an "infection" to take place in Nygaard's heart, head, and soul. The series is in some ways about the fallout of that one - seemingly chance - encounter wherein Malvo opens a portal to all of Nygaard's pent up rage.



Though the show opens with a bang, Hawley assures that they're, "heading toward a collision, a big collision, at the end of the thing" as well.

Thornton feels that Malvo is, "a little bit God, a little bit the devil" and stressed that he's not afraid to "take on a character who starts at a ten." For his part, Freeman was drawn to the strength of the script and the opportunity to do something entirely different.

"It wasn’t the idea of making a Fargo spinoff at all," Freeman said. "Enjoy the movie as I do and enjoy the Coens as I do. It could have been a terrible Fargo spinoff. Do you know what I mean? It could have used that as an inspiration and I could have read the script and it’s awful. It has to stand on its own, and I felt it did."


READ MORE HERE: http://www.ign.com/articles/2014/01/15/fxs-reimagined-fargo-series-features-sherlocks-martin-freeman-as-weve-never-seen-him 





Saturday, September 8, 2012

RAY STEVENSON: Toronto; Anchor Bay Acquires ‘Jayne Mansfield’s Car’ By MIKE FLEMING | (DEADLINE NEW YORK)



BREAKING: Anchor Bay Films has acquired North American and UK rights to Jayne Mansfield’s Car, the Billy Bob Thornton-directed which which makes its North American premiere on September 13th here at Toronto. Thornton stars with Robert Duvall, John Hurt, Kevin Bacon, Katherine LaNasa, Ray Stevenson, and Robert Patrick. Thornton co-wrote it with Tom Epperson. Alexander Rodnyansky produced with Geyer Kosinski.

An ensemble drama about families and the effects of combat on the complicated relationships between fathers and sons, Jayne Mansfield’s Car looks at two colorful clans in 1969. Brought together by the death of a woman who was married, first to the Alabaman Jim Caldwell (Duvall) and then to the British Kingsley Bedford (Hurt), her families meet for the first time at the Caldwells’ home with uneasy curiosity. The result is a culture clash of the Sixties, and of the Old World versus the Old South.

READ MORE: http://www.deadline.com/2012/09/toronto-anchor-bay-acquires-jayne-mansfields-car/

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Ray Stevenson: Jayne Mansfields Car trailer BY KEVIN JAGERNAUTH | JULY 18, 2012 5:22 PM (THE PLAYLIST)



http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=bi8cN_Um3Vs#

Despite boasting a strong ensemble cast including Robert Duvall, John Hurt, Frances O'Connor, Ray Stevenson, Kevin Bacon (with an amazing hairpiece) and Robert Patrick, with writer/director Billy Bob Thornton also featuring, and slotting a premiere at the Berlin Film Festival earlier this year, it seems distributors stateside haven't been quick to bite on the drama "Jayne Mansfield's Car." But over in Australia, the movie will be landing on DVD and Blu-ray in early 2013 and the first trailer to get the word out has arrived.

No word on when we'll get to see the movie for ourselves over here, but for now, you can check out lengthy trailer below. [Le Blog Du Cinema]

read more: http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/watch-international-trailer-for-billy-bob-thorntons-jayne-mansfields-car-starring-robert-duvall-kevin-bacon-more-20120718#.UAdSLbRSSHQ

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Hugh Grant teased Billy Bob Thornton during 'Love Actually'about his Disraeli phobia By KAREN BUTLER, United Press International (UPI)



NEW YORK, April 26 (UPI) -- British actor Hugh Grant admits to taunting his "Love Actually" co-star Billy Bob Thornton about his phobia of former British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli.

 In the 2003 romantic comedy, Grant played the prime minister of Britain, while Thornton played the president of the United States.

 Grant said he couldn't resist teasing his co-star when he heard Thornton suffered from numerous phobias, including European antique furniture and silverware, as well as images of Disraeli.

 Grant recalled his interaction with Thornton when asked by reporters in New York last week how he felt about the silly, sinister ways Queen Victoria and scientist/writer Charles Darwin are portrayed as characters in his new animated movie, "The Pirates! Band of Misfits."

 "Oh, that was a big plus. I hate those two. I've always hated those two," Grant joked.  


READ MORE:  http://www.upi.com/Entertainment_News/Movies/2012/04/26/Grant-teased-Thornton-about-Disraeli-phobia/UPI-23351335464518/

Monday, February 20, 2012

Ray Stevenson: Jayne Mansfield's Car, directed by Billy Bob Thornton (CHARLOTTE OBSERVER)



Set in Alabama in 1969, it depicts the clash of culture and personalities that arises after a woman who left her American husband for an Englishman years earlier dies, and her English family goes to America to fulfill her wish to be buried in her homeland.

Feeding the tensions are disagreements over the conflict in Vietnam.

 Thornton said the meeting of the two families offers a way into "the real subject, which is how different generations view war, how different generations are affected by war, and how that affects the family."

 "I was complaining a lot about the state of movies in America," Thornton told reporters at the festival. So "instead of complaining, I decided to just write one and direct it, and it's a story that I'd had in my head for a long time."

"One of the things that's wrong with movies today is they try to squeeze people into roles who don't belong there simply because of their popularity," Thornton said, adding that he may now go on to direct more films. "If I can keep making movies like this I will do it, but I probably won't direct the next Star Trek movie or anything like that."


Read further:  http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2012/02/13/3009002/after-long-break-thornton-back.html



Thursday, February 16, 2012

A cringe moment with Billy Bob Thornton and how he, you know, loves British people, the English, Irish and Scotch (oh my)

Billy Bob Thornton: 'I love British people. I always have. Fact of the matter is, my people came from you guys.'






Photograph: Gabriella Meros/Focus / eyevine


Billy Bob Thornton fixes me with a laser-eye stare, and briefly bares a mouthful of teeth in his southern-genteel grin. "I love British people," he says. "I always have. Fact of the matter is, my people came from you guys. The south was settled by the English, Scotch and Irish. You get into Minnesota and Wisconsin, that's German and Swedes, but our area is predominantly from the British Isles."

 Overlooking the fact that few use "Scotch" any more, and that many Irish people would object to being lumped in with the British Isles, you get his drift: from Arkansas, where Thornton grew up, it probably all looks pretty similar. But it also explains the oddest aspect of his new film, Jayne Mansfield's Car: after 20 minutes or so of blood-heat, southern-gothic drama, up pop John Hurt, Ray Stevenson and Frances O'Connor as a family of plummy-voiced types all the way from England.




Thornton, who co-wrote the film as well as directed it, makes great play out of the culture clash between these three and his Alabama-residing clan (which number Robert Duvall, Kevin Bacon, Robert Patrick and Thornton himself). Thornton expands the theme. "There's a real kinship. Let's say you go to Atlanta. They have the British thing, it's a proper southern culture, the old south money. The accent isn't even that different, if you really listen. Here's an analogy: I'm on my best behaviour with a proper English gentleman, we're talking and we're respectful to each other. Then we have a few beers and, basically, we're the same guy.

 "People in the US have a wrong idea about the English. They think they're so uptight – but the Bafta awards last night were so loose."

You may or may not buy Thornton's basic premise of brotherhood between the old south and the old world, but that last remark reminds you that this soft-voiced, rail-thin man operates in the highest echelons of film-industry celebrityhood.



Read the article:  http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2012/feb/16/billy-bob-thornton-about-english?newsfeed=true

Today Thornton is presenting the world premiere of his very American art movie at the Berlin film festival, but yesterday he was yukking it up on stage in London, being flattered by Stephen Fry and presenting Hurt with his Bafta lifetime achievement award.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Ray Stevenson: Photo session for "Jayne Mansfields Car" (Zimbio)


In This Photo: Alexander Rodnyansky, Billy Bob Thornton, John Hurt, Ray Stevenson, Katherine La Nasa (from 3rd L) Actors Ray Stevenson, producer Alexander Rodnyansky, acotr John Hurt, actress Katherine LaNasa and director Billy Bob Thornton attend the "Jayne Mansfield's Car" Photocall during day five of the 62nd Berlin International Film Festival at the Grand Hyatt on February 13, 2012 in Berlin, Germany. 





http://www.zimbio.com/photos/John+Hurt/Ray+Stevenson/Jayne+Mansfield+Car+Photocall+Session+62nd/uC_f1lHAKhS

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Ray Stevenson: Jayne Mansfield's Car (Variety)


Russia invades Hollywood by 'Car'



"The Russians are coming!" is no longer a cry of Red-scare panic. At least not in Hollywood, where -- for filmmakers struggling to raise funds for adult dramas -- it's now an exclamation of relief.
The unlikely film launching this Russian invasion is tonight's Berlinale competition world premiere of "Jayne Mansfield's Car," Billy Bob Thornton's tale of a Vietnam War-era culture clash between Southern and British step-families forced to meet at a funeral in a small Alabama town.
Robert Duvall, Thornton, John Hurt, Kevin Bacon, Robert Patrick, Ray Stevenson and Frances O'Connor star in the darkly-comic drama, which marks Thornton's return to narrative directing and screenwriting after more than a decade, as well as his reunion with writing partner Tom Epperson.
"Car" is the first collaboration between Russia-based film finance, production and distribution outfit AR Films, led by Alexander Rodnyansky ("Elena") in his English-language producing debut, and U.S.-based management-production firm Media Talent Group, led by Thornton's longtime manager and producing partner Geyer Kosinski ("The Tourist").
AR and MTG's work on "Car" and D.J. Caruso's upcoming "Goat Island" inspired them to team for a just-announced $120 million fund to develop and produce up to six more U.S.-based features (capped at $20 million each) over the next two years.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Ray Stevenson: John Hurt set to receive Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema BAFTA Award (The Fan Carpet)



BAFTA chairman Tim Corrie said "John Hurt is an actor it is both exciting and fascinating to watch. He has extraordinary screen presence and brings utter conviction to every role he undertakes.
He is one of a kind, an iconic figure, and BAFTA is delighted to take this opportunity to honour his outstanding contribution to cinema."


While Hurt, who voices the Dragon in BBC favourite Merlin added "I know that film means a great deal to me but I had no idea that I meant so much to film. I feel very honoured."

Hurt will appear in Billy Bob Thornton's drama Jayne Mansfield's Car with Ray Stevenson and has also secured roles in Lorenzo DeStefano's Hypergraphia and Snow Piercer from filmmaker Joon-ho Bong.


Read more:  http://www.thefancarpet.com/NewsPage.aspx?n_id=5472

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Ray Stevenson: Billy Bob Thornton's 'Jayne Mansfield's Car' Leads Competition Slate In Berlin; 'In The Land Of Blood And Honey' Gets Special Screening (Indiewire)

News by Kevin Jagernauth | January 9, 2012 |





Billy Bob Thornton and
Angelina Jolie...together again? Okay, not quite, but both filmmakers are headed to Berlin next month to present their latest films as the Berlinale has unveiled their competition slate, which does contain a couple of interesting titles to take note of.

First off is "Jayne Mansfield's Car," Thornton's first narrative feature behind the camera in over a decade (he directed the Willie Nelson doc "The King Of Luck" which premiered at SXSW last year). Robert Duvall, John Hurt, Kevin Bacon, Robert Patrick and Ray Stevenson star in the film that last year, Duvall described thusly: “It’s about a guy in between WWI and WWII who raises a family after his wife left him for an Englishman and moved to England…When the wife dies, she asks to be brought back to Alabama to be buried, and at that point the character hasn’t seen her in 20 or 30 years. The two families — her original family she abandoned and her English family — meet and then things get really interesting.” Indeed.








Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Tom Hiddleston up for Rising Star gong

 


War Horse's Tom Hiddleston and The IT Crowd's Chris O'Dowd have been shortlisted for this year's Rising Star award at the film Baftas.

The prize, which goes to a relatively new face who is tipped for the top, has previously been won by Tom Hardy and Twilight's Kristen Stewart.

Also on the all-male shortlist are Adam Deacon, Eddie Redmayne and Chris Hemsworth.

Tom has also appeared in films such as The Deep Blue Sea and Thor in recent months.

Chris is known for his role in the Channel 4 sitcom, but has also branched out into movies such as Gulliver's Travels and Bridesmaids, as well as Judd Apatow's forthcoming This Is 40.

The shortlist for the The Orange Wednesdays Rising Star Award was drawn up by filmgoers from a jury selection. Members of the public will vote for the winner which will be announced at the Baftas on February 12.

Eddie's work includes My Week With Marilyn and the soon-to-be-screened BBC adaptation of Birdsong, while Adam became known for roles in films such as Kidulthood and Adulthood before co-writing, directing and starring in Anuvahood. Australian actor Chris Hemsworth took the title role in Thor and will play Formula One legend James Hunt in Rush.

Tom said of his nomination: "It's absolutely amazing to be up for it. The list is an incredible group of young actors, most of whom are already stars - they're not rising, they're burning brightly in the firmament."

Eddie confessed he found awards ceremonies daunting.

"I've presented awards once or twice, which is my worst nightmare. Actors were not built to read autocues... It's terrifying because you're at a theatre in front of Hollywood, girls fall over dresses, skirts unravel, we slip on our new borrowed shoes, the whole thing can be a bit of a disaster."


http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ALeqM5jt0tE2WqjPaRWbTCzyMf4I0FUC0Q?docId=N0917581326280340109A

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Kenneth Branagh: Titan of stage, screen, tube

BIFAs 2011/The Variety Award: Kenneth Branagh

Jaimie Alexander and Kenneth Branagh on the set of 'Thor'Jaimie Alexander discusses a scene with director Kenneth Branagh on the set of 'Thor,' the director’s first blockbuster after years in charge of lower-key projects.

'Wallander''Wallander'


Kenneth Branagh has had, in his own words, "a hell of a year," one of the busiest and most productive in a 30-year career packed with remarkable achievements.
 
The Variety Award winner, who will be honored at the British Independent Film Awards, was the surprise choice to direct Marvel's "Thor," his first Hollywood blockbuster, which went on to gross $449 million worldwide -- by far his biggest commercial hit.

Then he played Blighty's theatrical knight Laurence Olivier, a man to whom Branagh was often compared in his youth, opposite Michelle Williams as Marilyn Monroe in the Weinstein Co.'s "My Week With Marilyn." Next he returned to his hometown of Belfast to appear on stage with comedian Rob Brydon in an acclaimed production of Francis Veber's French farce "The Painkiller."

Finally, he flew off to the wilds of northern Sweden, where he's shooting the third season of "Wallander," the BAFTA-winning BBC TV series based on Henning Mankell's detective novels, in which Branagh both stars and serves as exec producer.

"It's been a lot of work," says Branagh, who turned 50 last December. "I'm taking a moment to thank my lucky stars that I'm fit and well and enjoying myself so much."

It's not exactly a comeback, because he's never been away. But having devoted much of the past decade to directing a string of passion projects that didn't spark with audiences, and having stepped away from major screen acting roles to do so, Branagh is clearly relishing being back in the limelight.
That started with 2008's first series of "Wallander," which reconnected him with his fans worldwide.
"It's very pleasing, gratifying and rewarding to realize the impact that a series like 'Wallander' has in many countries," he says. "Frankly, when you leave the game to go behind the scenes as a director and a producer for a long time, that takes you away from the hustle and bustle of the marketplace as an actor."

Then, in an inspired leap of lateral thinking, Marvel offered him the chance to prove that his skills as a populist storyteller stretched beyond the upscale adaptations of Shakespeare that made his original reputation.

"I have been led by my passion for individual projects," he says. "But there's no question that having put my heart, body and soul into 'As You Like It,' 'The Magic Flute' and 'Sleuth,' and finding that the world wasn't that interested, there was definitely a sense with 'Thor' that this time I'd like to put heart, body and soul into a movie people would want to go and see."

He leapt at the chance to be involved in a big vfx movie, to handle a huge crew and to work in Hollywood. "Across 20 years of making films, I hadn't spent a significant amount of time in that community, and I wanted to do that," he says.

"Of all the American comics, 'Thor' was the only one I was really familiar with from my childhood, and it intrigued me, maybe because it was a bit more European, with those Viking helmets and its basis in Norse myth. The scale was exciting, and I did love the character and the story. It had depth and gravity in addition to being an entertaining ride."

His approach, he says, was "to bring to it a sense of fun, but also to take the process of making it as seriously as I would doing Shakespeare."

He describes the whole experience as " a joy" and says he only turned down "Thor 2" due to timing. "I certainly wouldn't rule out a return to Marvel; we had an excellent collaboration," he says.
He has a couple of other directing gigs in development, but his immediate priority is to feed his renewed appetite for film acting following "My Week With Marilyn."

"I'm very excited about doing more acting on film," he says. "Harvey Weinstein is keeping me very busy promoting the 'Marilyn' movie, which I'm delighted to do. I'm hoping that it may just nudge a few people in the direction of offering me more film roles."

Branagh believes he has stretched as an actor over the past decade. Partly through tough stage roles in David Mamet's "Edmond" and Chekhov's "Ivanov," he has moved away from the heightened Shakespearean style toward something more raw and personal.

"Playing Wallander onscreen was something of a watershed," he says. "I felt more exposed as an actor. It takes a while to become comfortable with being uncomfortable, and to enjoy it. But I feel now I'm a little braver, more ready to leap into the unknown."

This combination of experience and appetite made him feel ready to take on Olivier. He was drawn by the fact he was surrounded by long-term collaborators, including producer David Parfitt and director Simon Curtis, who offered him the chance to shape the role according to his own deep knowledge of Olivier's career and character.

Now he's raring for the next challenge.

"This is a very interesting time for me," he says. "I don't just want to work for its own sake, but to focus on quality, to strike while the iron's hot creatively. I feel very lit up with the joy of what I'm doing."

Monday, October 31, 2011

Ray Stevenson in 'Jayne Mansfields Car' - Billy Bob Thornton's a Writer-Director Again

NBC LA


Mmm-Hmmm: Billy Bob Thornton's a Writer-Director Again

Remember the good ol’ days when Billy Bob Thornton’s name was accompanied by the title “writer-director” instead of “Angelina’s ex?” They’re back.

“I just finished directing again for the first time in eleven years,” says Thornton, who most recently voiced a character in this weekend's box office champ "Puss 'N Boots." “It's a movie called 'Jayne Mansfield's Car.’ It takes place in the 1960s and we're hoping that it will come out sometimes late spring or in the fall of next year. We literally just finished it, so we're still working in postproduction on it. It's a movie that stars myself and Robert Duvall, John Hurt, Kevin Bacon, Ray Stevenson and Frances O'Connor. It's a very nice bunch of folks, and a great experience.”

“Tonally it’s 'Sling Blade'-like,” he explains, harkening back to his first feature behind the camera, for which he won an Oscar for original screenplay. “I think there's probably more humor in it than 'Sling Blade' but, once again, very dark humor – as usual. And just so you know, Jayne Mansfield is more of a metaphor for the movie. It's not about Jayne Mansfield's death or anything like that. It's mentioned, but that's not what it's about. It's really about how war affects different generations, and done in sort of a darkly humorous way. And about the examination of life and death and the fear and fascination with both.”
“There aren't many movies right now that are my style of movies,” he explains of what motivated to self-generate a new project. “The old days are kind of whimpering a little. And I said, ‘Well, instead of complaining, I used to write my own stuff – Do it again.’ And I'm right now in my career just looking at it like I'm starting all over. Like I'm a young filmmaker.”

Thornton tells PopcornBiz getting back behind the camera wasn’t exactly like getting back on a bicycle. “It's so hard,” he says. “There's so much preparation that goes into it. We're shooting Georgia in a hundred degree weather all the time. You don't really have time to get nervous much, to tell you the truth. You get nervous when you're done and they're going to throw it out there to the public. That's when I get nervous. But I've got to say we're very proud of this movie. So if it falls on its ass, I know we did it – you know what I mean?”
BY Scott Huver // 4 minutes ago | Print