Showing posts with label darcy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label darcy. Show all posts

Saturday, February 9, 2019

How Colin Firth and Hugh Grant devised their 'ineffectual' fight in Bridget Jones's Diary




Every day until Valentine’s Day, Entertainment Weekly is celebrating our special romantic-comedy-themed Untold Stories issue. Check out all our behind-the-scenes tidbits, reunions, and oral histories — and follow #LoveEWstyle on Twitter and Instagram.
It is a truth universally acknowledged that there’s nothing more swoony or hilarious than Hugh Grant and Colin Firth having an inept fistfight over everyone’s favorite verbally incontinent spinster.
But the famous brawl in Bridget Jones’s Diary between Daniel Cleaver (Grant) and Mark Darcy (Firth) — so beloved it even earned a retread in the 2004 sequel — only came after much deliberation. “We couldn’t think of a way to bring that end-of-act-2 climax. We spent ages on it,” director Sharon Maguire recalls to EW. “[Screenwriter] Richard Curtis said, ‘In Westerns and in the old days, it would have been a fight or a duel.’ We both thought, ‘Well, that’s it.’ Middle-class men fighting — they just don’t have a clue.”
The shooting script had few specifics, merely noting that “a fight ensues.” Maguire called in a stunt coordinator to choreograph, but Firth and Grant found that rang false, since their characters wouldn’t know any fighting moves. “I said, ‘Well, what would your characters do?’” Maguire says. “Then [Hugh] said, ‘Well, he would probably just bitch-slap him.’ And Colin said, ‘I’d probably kick him in a rather ineffectual way.’”
They ditched the stunt coordinator and let Grant and Firth infuse the scene with their own feeble attempts at violence. “We shot it with lots of action shots, but really the funniest bits were just the wide shots of them bitch-slapping each other,” Maguire says with a laugh. “All of it is the comedy of humiliation, really.” No stunt doubles were required, except for the final moment when the two crash through a restaurant window. (The stunt used sugar glass and was done in one take.)

Maureen Lee Lenker

Saturday, October 14, 2017

Actor Colin Firth gets dual British-Italian citizenship

BBC
September 23, 2017



British actor Colin Firth has become an Italian citizen, the country's authorities have confirmed.

His wife - film producer Livia Giuggioli - is Italian, making the Oscar-winning Bridget Jones star eligible for citizenship there.

The 56-year-old now has dual citizenship and can therefore keep his British passport.

Firth said he had applied for an Italian passport because of "the uncertainty around".

The actor said that he has been connected to Italy "for more than two decades now".

"I was married there and had two children born in Rome," he added.



http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-41374020


Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Is Matthew Macfadyen attached to new MI5 Spy comic thriller Mindhorn?

CHORTLE



Julian Barratt is writing his first feature film.

The Boosh star has teamed up with comedian Simon Farnaby, best known for Horrible Histories and Yonderland, to write the comic thriller Mindhorn.

It revolves around a former MI5 spy whose eye has been replaced by an ‘optical lie detector’, which means he can literally see the truth. He now lives in the Isle of Man, where he is a crack plain-clothes detective.



BBC Films have developed the project, which is being produced by Ridley and Tony Scott’s company Scott Free in association with Boosh programme-makers Baby Cow.

Filming starts on July 27 on the Isle of Man, which has a development fund run through Pinewood Studios to attract such projects.

No casting has yet been announced, although Ripper Street and Spooks actor Matthew Macfadyen has been rumoured to be attached to the film.


READ MORE HERE: http://www.chortle.co.uk/news/2015/06/24/22725/julian_barratt_writes_a_movie

Monday, June 22, 2015

Matthew Macfadyen joins Michael Gambon, Ramola Garai in cast of ITV's 'Churchill's Secret'

UPI
By Karen Butler   |   June 22, 2015 at 10:02 AM



LONDON, June 22 (UPI) -- Romola Garai, Matthew Macfadyen, Daisy Lewis, Rachael Stirling and Tara Fitzgerald have joined the cast of the small-screen movie Churchill's Secret, ITV announced.

Garai will play nurse Millie Appleyard and the others will play former Prime Minister Winston Churchill's adult children.


"Set during the summer months of 1953, Churchill -- now Prime Minister for the second time and in his late 70s -- suffers a life-threatening stroke, which is kept secret from the world," a synopsis said. "Told from the viewpoint of his young nurse, Millie Appleyard, the drama follows his battle to recover as his long suffering wife Clemmie, desperately hopes the stroke will force Winston to retire while his political friends and foe scheme to plot who will succeed him. Meanwhile, his adult children descend on Chartwell, unsure if he will pull through, as tensions within his family begin to surface."

Filming is to begin this month in London, Hayes and at Churchill's principal family home, Chartwell in Kent. Churchill's Secret will be co-produced with Masterpiece where Rebecca Eaton is executive producer and will air in the United States on PBS in 2016


READ MORE HERE: http://www.upi.com/Entertainment_News/TV/2015/06/22/Romola-Garai-Matthew-Macfadyen-join-cast-of-ITVs-Churchills-Secret/3341434977459/

Friday, June 5, 2015

Matthew Macfadyen - "The Von Trapp Family – A Life of Music" Heading to the Screen This Christmas

PLAYBILL
By Adam Hetrick
04 Jun 2015



"The von Trapp Family – A Life of Music," a new film from Dutch filmmaker Ben Verbong based on Agathe von Trapp's autobiography, promises to tell the story behind the Sound of Music legend.

Currently shooting on location in Salzburg and Bavaria, the new film stars Eliza Bennett, Matthew Macfadyen and Tony Award winner Rosemary Harris. The film is expected to arrive in theatres this Christmas.


Lionsgate acquired U.S., Canada and U.K. rights on the film. Christoph Silber and Tim Sullivan penned the screenplay based on Agathe von Trapp's "Memories Before and After The Sound of Music."

Here's how the film is billed: "'The von Trapp Family – A Life of Music,' tells the fascinating and exciting story of Agathe von Trapp (Eliza Bennett), who has been searching for her path in life since her youth: She is the eldest daughter among many siblings, and her relationship with her father, the distinguished marine officer Georg von Trapp (Matthew Macfadyen) and his second wife Maria von Trapp (Yvonne Catterfeld), is often difficult. She develops her beautiful voice and stimulating musical talent together with her family and with the support of the famous singer Lotte Lehmann (opera singer Annette Dasch). She constantly struggles for the love of her childhood sweetheart Sigi (Johannes Nussbaum) and, not least, she must confront the menacing rise of fascism in Germany and Austria. Emigration to the U.S. finally brings a decisive step toward freedom and world success.




READ MORE HERE: http://www.playbill.com/news/article/the-von-trapp-family-a-life-of-music-heading-to-the-screen-this-christmas-350645

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Cannes: Lionsgate Nabs U.S. Rights to 'Genius' With Colin Firth

HOLLYWOOD REPORTER
by Rebecca Ford 5/13/2015 12:41am PDT

Colin Firth

On the first official day of the Cannes film festival, Lionsgate has nabbed U.S. rights to hot project Genius, starring Colin Firth.

Directed by Michael Grandage, the film, also starring Nicole Kidman, Jude Law and Guy Pearce, has been considered one of the hottest projects going into the festival.

The film, now in postroduction, is an adaptation of A. Scott Berg's biography about renowned book editor Max Perkins, who worked with Thomas Wolfe, Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald. Kingsman: The Secret Service actor Firth stars as Perkins, while Law plays Wolfe.




Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Poldark-style six-packs 'smack of vanity', says Matthew Macfadyen

THE GUARDIAN
John Plunkett
@johnplunkett149
Tuesday 5 May 2015 05.47 EDT

Matthew Macfadyen as Mr Darcy in the 2005 version of Pride and Prejudice.

The actor Aidan Turner’s topless scenes in Poldark were some of the most talked about TV moments of the year but the Ripper Street star Matthew Macfadyen has criticised attempts by TV and film studios to make their male stars increasingly hunky.

The former Spooks actor said the growing obsession for male actors to have a six-pack was not true to life and “smacks of vanity”.

Macfadyen, 40, was told to undergo a rigorous diet and fitness regime when he landed the role of Mr Darcy in the 2005 adaptation of Pride And Prejudice.



“You do the deal and then the personal trainer gets in touch,” he told the new issue of Radio Times.

“When I see it on screen, it immediately smacks of vanity because I know what’s happened – they’ve been doing crunches, 50,000 press-ups before breakfast and a character in a period drama wouldn’t have done that.

“Darcy would have been quite fit because he rode horses and all that stuff, but if I ripped off my shirt to show a six-pack... well, that’s a gym thing.”

The former Spooks star added: “I remember when we did Warriors [a 1999 BBC drama about the conflict in former Yugoslavia], we were shooting with squaddies from the Royal Green Jackets – they were the real thing, they’d just come back from Bosnia.



Macfadyen is set to play Georg von Trapp in a new film about the family who served as inspiration for The Sound of Music. He also stars in the drama The Enfield Haunting.

He said of his Victorian crime drama Ripper Street being axed by the BBC: “I think there was a new person and anything that wasn’t their baby was ... I don’t know, I really don’t know ... but it’s been a rocky old ride.” The drama has since been picked up by Amazon’s on-demand TV service, and will be repeated on the BBC.


READ MORE HERE:  http://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/may/05/poldark-six-pack-smack-vanity-period-drama-macfadyen


Thursday, April 9, 2015

Timothy Spall: I was terrified making new poltergeist drama The Enfield Haunting

RADIO TIMES
By Ben Dowell
Tuesday 7 April 2015 at 10:50AM

Timothy Spall: I was terrified making new poltergeist drama The Enfield Haunting

Playing a man who investigates ghosts can have its drawbacks, according to Timothy Spall – especially when it comes to going to bed at night.

Spall is starring alongside Ripper Street actor Matthew Macfadyen in The Enfield Haunting, Sky Living’s upcoming drama about the supposedly genuine haunting of a small house in north London in the late 1970s.

In preparation for the role, the Mr Turner actor met parapsychology investigator Guy Lyon Playfair who is played by Macfadyen in the series and who wrote the book This House is Haunted on which the drama is based.



According to Spall, the encounter calmed his terrors about taking on the job which he initially turned down because it “frightened the life out of me”.

“I asked him, ‘didn’t you worry that when you came back there would be demons sitting on your bed or something?’ and he said, ‘oh no, made a nice cup of tea, went to bed’.


READ MORE HERE: http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2015-04-07/timothy-spall-i-was-terrified-making-new-poltergeist-drama-the-enfield-haunting

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Pictured: Colin Firth got quite the drenching as he filmed in Manchester city centre

MANCHESTER EVENING NEWS
Oct 20, 2014 12:23 By Emma Flanagan



Oscar winner Colin Firth has been spotted in Manchester city centre this morning, as the Northern Quarter was transformed into 1920s New York for his new film Genius.

The King’s Speech star was getting quite a soaking in his grey three-piece suit and matching overcoat.


The rain was likely to be a blessing for the film makers who were let down by Manchester’s reputation as a rainy city yesterday. They were forced to fake the rain while filming with Firth’s co-star Jude Law.

In between takes the 54-year-old actor was seen sheltering underneath a blue and black golf umbrella.

While Firth, who is playing legendary publisher Max Perkins, looked extremely dapper his co-star Jude Law, looked a little more bedraggled as they climbed down a fire escape.



The 41-year-old actor, who starred in the 2009 Sherlock Holmes film, is playing Thomas Clayton Wolfe who is considered to be one of the most difficult writers Max Perkins had to work with.

The Northern Quarter back street has doubled for early 20th century New York before in the blockbuster Captain America, and this time the dingy alley was bedecked with old fashioned washing lines and a laundry sign.



As yet there have been no signs of the two lead actors' co-stars Nicole Kidman, who plays Wolfe's love interest Aline Bernstein or Dominic West who is playing Ernest Hemingway.

Filming is set to continue in Manchester until the end of the week.




READ MORE HERE:http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/whats-on/film-news/pictured-colin-firth-quite-drenching-7964865

Saturday, October 18, 2014

'He is an amazing actor': Kevin Hart on working with Colin Firth on 'The Intouchables'

SUNDAY EXPRESS
By: Stephanie Takyi
Published: Fri, October 17, 2014



The Pint-sized Philadelphia native, who measures up at just 5ft2, will co-star opposite Colin Firth in a film that tells the story relationship between a wealthy white aristocrat who becomes a quadriplegic after a paragliding accident, and the young "street-tough" black man he hires to take care of him.

Talking about working alongside Colin, Kevin said: "He is an amazing actor, I think that's a movie that did amazing numbers and so we're excited about doing the remake and switching it up.

"I've always been into drama, I just believe that everything happens when it's supposed to. You don't rush it because when you're patient the right thing comes along."



Despite beating the likes of Chris Rock, Jamie Fox and Idris Elba for the coveted role, Kevin denied his ego was inflated after warding off the stiff competition.

"We never know who else is up for it, you just know they've offered it to you. All those guys are so talented so It's not about beating anyone, it's the directors deciding who is right for the part," he told Express.co.uk.

He added: "I guess they thought I was right for it, so I'm happy and thankful that I have the opportunity to do it."


READ MORE HERE: http://www.express.co.uk/news/showbiz/524139/Kevin-Hart-Colin-Firth-Intouchables-film



Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Colin Firth will edit your manuscript now

MELVILLE HOUSE
by Sal Robinson
October 13, 2014

Image via Wikipedia.

Though Hollywood regularly makes movies about writers, with regularly dicey results, it rarely turns its gaze to editors. Which is fair enough: since most movies about writers could safely be retitled “Frowning & Scribbling,” I understand why producers would be loath to back a movie that lacks even the scribbling part.

A newspaper or magazine editor will turn up from time to time, made momentarily dramatic by a deadline or a controversy: William Shawn (played by Nicholas Woodeson) cautiously trying to suggest edits to Arendt (Barbara Sukowa)’s articles on the Eichmann trial for the New Yorker in last year’s “Hannah Arendt” was a recent instance.

But book editors don’t get much screen time. With one notable upcoming exception: filming is underway on “Genius,” a movie based on A. Scott Berg’s biography of the legendary Scribner’s editor Maxwell Perkins, Editor of Genius. 



According to the Hollywood Reporter, the movie, directed by British theater director Michael Grandage, “will chart the real-life relationship between literary giant Thomas Wolfe and renowned editor Max Perkins, who developed a tender, complex friendship that changed the lives of both men forever.” Wolfe will be played by Jude Law (after Michael Fassbender dropped out) and the role of Perkins has been taken by Colin Firth.

Perkins, who had discovered and published F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway, received a draft of Wolfe’s Look Homeward, Angel (then called “O, Lost”) in 1928 and immediately recognized Wolfe’s talent, writing in his first letter to Wolfe that “it is a very remarkable thing, and no editor could read it without being excited by it and filled with admiration by many passages in it and sections of it” (quote from Editor to Author: The Letters of Maxwell Perkins). This was just the start of one of the most famous 20th-century editorial tug-of-wars: Perkins would go on to cut 90,000 words from the book, and he had to wrestle Perkins hard to keep his next novel, Of Time and the River, at a manageable size.


Saturday, October 4, 2014

Matthew Macfadyen Ripper star is dying to quit

MAIL ON LINE
By CHARLOTTE GRIFFITHS FOR THE MAIL ON SUNDAY

Ready to Rip it up: Matthew Macfadyen as DI Edmund Reid on Ripper Street, far right, with Adam Rothenberg as Captain Homer Jackson and Jerome Flynn as Detective Sergeant Bennet Drake

Matthew Macfadyen is set to kill off his Ripper Street character – so he can become a house-husband.

With his wife Keeley Hawes filming a three-part TV adaptation of J. K. Rowling’s novel The Casual Vacancy, Matthew, 39, wants his role as Detective Inspector Edmund Reid in Ripper Street to end.

Friends say he will spend more time with the couple’s children – Maggie, ten, Ralph, eight, and Keeley’s 14-year-old son Myles.

A pal says: ‘Matthew asked producers for his character to be killed off. He’s leaving on amicable terms.

'He’s been away filming a lot and he and Keeley take their acting roles in turn so the other can look after the kids.’

Are you kidding me?


READ MORE HERE: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2780819/GIRL-ABOUT-TOWN-Rita-Ora-write-Burberry-song-help-fashion-brand-kids.html

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Colin Firth & Kevin Hart Are 'Intouchables,'

THE PLAYLIST
By Kevin Jagernauth | The Playlist
October 1, 2014 at 11:14AM

Before I Go To Sleep

The long-brewing remake of the French hit dramedy "Intouchables" seems to be coming back to life. Colin Firth, long attached to the project, now has Kevin Hart in the co-starring role. The movie tells the heartwarming, based-on-true-story tale of the relationship of a wealthy quadriplegic and his immigrant caregiver. Paul Feig was once linked to helm the project, but it's not clear if he's still involved. We presume more news will arrive shortly. [Allocine]



READ MORE ARTICLES HERE: http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplaylist/casting-colin-firth-kevin-hart-are-intouchables-quvenzhane-wallis-is-counting-by-7s-and-more-20141001

Saturday, September 27, 2014

5 Reasons Matthew Vaughn's 'Kingsman: The Secret Service' Makes Colin Firth An Action Star! [WATCH]

MSTARS
By Jorge Solis (j.solis@mstarsnews.com) | Sep 26, 2014 09:02 PM EDT

Kingsman: The Secret Service

Ever since the latest trailer was released, we are more than excited to see Colin Firth and Samuel L. Jackson in Matthew Vaughn's Kingsman: The Secret Service. Based on the comic book, The Secret Service, a veteran secret agent takes his stubborn his young protege and trains him in the double-crossing world of espionage.



Here are five reasons why audiences should be excited to see Colin Firth as an action hero in Kingsman: The Secret Service.

5) James Bond


Both the movie and comic are a satire on the spy thriller genre, especially the James Bond movies. Notice how the Pride and Prejudice actor looks pristine in his expensive suits. Though the role asks the English actor to be an action, he also has to bring in his comedic timing.

4) Kick-Ass

Comic book fans will recognize Mark Millar's name from the gritty and hyper-violent Kick-Ass movies. Though there have been name changes, such as Jack London to Harry Hart, the spirit of the book is still the same. Vaughn is back adapting another one of Millar's books and returning to the genre itself, after X-Men: First Class.





Previous Colin Firth Bar Fight - he's gotten better

3) The Bar Fight

In the trailer, we see Hart (Firth) locking up the doors, just to make sure no one leaves. Hart then takes on the entire gang, using his fists and super-gadgets. As soon as the brawl is over, Hart sits down apologizes and explains he was letting "off some steam."

2) Samuel L. Jackson

In the footage, the Pulp Fiction actor shouts to his sword-legged assassin, "If you get blood on the carpets, you have to take the carpets up!" You want someone to go up against the Oscar-winning The King's Speech actor, this is your guy.


AND THE NUMBER ONE REASON IS:  http://www.mstarz.com/articles/37917/20140926/5-reasons-matthew-vaughns-kingsman-secret-service-colin-firth-samuel-l-jackson.htm

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

The New ‘Kingsman’ Trailer: You Wouldn’t Like Colin Firth When He’s Angry

MTV
by john walker 10 hours ago



Not to get all Stefon from “Saturday Night Live,” but the new trailer for “Kingsman: The Secret Service” that premiered during tonight’s episode of “Gotham” has everything.



Explosions? Check. Colin Firth being all scary-sexy-serious? Check. A new song by Iggy Azalea featuring Ellie Goulding? Check. A morbidly practical Samuel L. Jackson warning that “If you get blood on the carpets, you have to take the carpets up!”? Check. Ummmmm, LEGS THAT ARE ALSO SWORDS?! Oh my god, check.


Thursday, September 18, 2014

Matthew Macfadyen: Lost In Karastan heads to Filmfest Hamburg



NOMINATED FOR HAMBURG PRODUCERS AWARD FOR EUROPEAN CINEMA CO-PRODUCTIONS

Independent film-maker Emil Miller is in the middle of a creative block and on top of that his wife has left him. So the invitation to a film festival in the newly independent Caucasian republic of Karastan is perfectly timed. That the country is a model dictatorship doesn't bother the burnt-out director. He gladly accepts an offer from the president to make an epic film about a Karastanian folk hero from the Middle Ages. But shooting huge battles with several thousand extras soon starts to go wrong: first the leading actor disappears, then the president is toppled by a military junta. Welcome to Karastan is a highly amusing grotesque, whose outrageousness is occasionally reminiscent of Sasha Baron Cohen's mockumentary Borat.


Website: http://www.stealthmediagroup.com/films/lost_in_karastan/

TO BUY TICKETS for Filmfest Screenings http://www.filmfesthamburg.de/en/programm/Film/21947/Welcome_to_Karastan

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Watch! TEN talks to Colin Firth and Emma Stone

RTE TEN
September 16, 2014

Colin Firth and Emma Stone

TEN's Sarah McIntyre caught up with Colin Firth and Emma Stone to chat about their new film Magic in


Check out TEN's interview with the actors, where they chatted about being intimidated working with Woody Allen, stifling laughter while filming scenes with the hilarious Hamish Linklater and wanting to take home the incredible costumes.



Plus, we find out which famous actress Colin named his pet cat after!

Saturday, September 13, 2014

Matthew Macfadyen's Lost in Karastan: Montreal Festival features culturally diverse cinema




Will this be the last year for the Montreal World Film Festival? God forbid. There are those in Quebec who have been announcing its demise for awhile, but the hue and cry was especially loud this year. The MWFF has lost most of its public funding, in a city that prides itself on its public festivals, for reasons I won’t attempt to go into here. (Let’s just say that the pugnaciousness so many Québécois display toward the rest of Canada can just as often be directed at each other.)

Unlike the Hollywood launching pad for the next crop of Oscar hopefuls that the Toronto Film Festival has largely (if not entirely) become, Montreal remains what a film festival ought to be, a showcase for films from around the world that North Americans probably wouldn't otherwise get to see. It concentrates less on movies made for international distribution than on those made for viewers in their home countries. As such they provide a much better reflection of different cultures as they see themselves, which more than makes up for the occasional reference that goes over your head.

I still have a few more days to spend here, and hope to be returning next year. Some of the best of what I’ve seen so far:


LOST IN KARASTAN—This bone-dry British comedy about Emil Forester, in which a blocked filmmaker (Matthew Macfadyen) accepts an invitation to a film festival in a small central Asian republic, was inspired by actual events in the careers of director Ben Hopkins and his friend Pawel Pawlikowski (whose Ida recently enjoyed an extended run in Buffalo theaters). That presumably does not extend to the part where our hero is hired by Karastan’s dictator to film his country’s national epic, a project that only Emil takes at face value. And I doubt that either Hopkins or Pawlikowski has ever made a film whose tag line (per one of Emil’s posters) calls it “electroshock therapy for the cinematically brain-dead empire.” You have to love filmmakers making fun of their own inability to recognize reality when a camera gets in the way.


READ MORE HERE: http://artvoice.com/issues/v13n35/film_feature