HYPABLE
BY KATIE AWAD
katelynawad
Sherlock fans rejoice! Fantastic Beasts has cast Martin Freeman as Dumbledore, and replaced Johnny Depp with Benedict Cumberbatch.
Oh what a day
When it was revealed Johnny Depp was to play Grindelwald in the Fantastic Beasts series, some people were not happy. They felt it unethical to have Depp cast in the series, because of his personal life controversy.
When director David Yates’ commented on this matter, he did little to appease the critics. People felt he was brushing aside a troubling issue, “In this business, it’s a weird old business. You’re brilliant one week, people are saying odd things the next, you go up and down. But no one takes away your pure talent.”
Heyman continues, “We’re thrilled to have Benedict join the team. Obviously we’re all huge fans of his work in Sherlock. He’s shown time and again how good he is at playing roles similar to that, so we’re really excited to see him bring that smart-guy awkwardness to Grindelwald.”
On the heels of this announcement, it’s also (finally) been revealed who will play a young Albus Dumbledore. In light of the new Grindelwald casting, this is perhaps the most unsurprising surprise to have ever surprised us: Martin Freeman will play the young Albus Dumbledore, alongside Benedict Cumberbatch’s Gellert Grindelwald.
“In addition to the recasting of Grindelwald, we’re also happy to announce that fellow Sherlock star Martin Freeman is set to play Dumbledore,” Heyman states. “It was an obvious choice, really. With Benedict now in the series, we just had to add Martin as well. And knowing Grindelwald and Dumbledore’s history, we hope Johnlock shippers will be just as excited about this as we are.”
http://www.hypable.com/fantastic-beasts-bye-bye-depp-hello-cumberbatch-freeman/
For those who love Jane Austen and all Historical Romance books, movies, or series
Showing posts with label john watson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label john watson. Show all posts
Monday, April 10, 2017
Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman in Fantastic Beasts
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Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Benedict Cumberbatch sports some heavy stubble as he films Sherlock Holmes scenes in a stark contrast to the character's usual clean shaven look
DAILY MAIL
By JJ NATTRASS FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 06:25 EST, 1 June 2016 | UPDATED: 11:46 EST, 1 June 2016
He's busy filming the much-anticipated fourth series of the BBC's hit-series, Sherlock.
But Benedict Cumberbatch's roguish detective appeared to have lost his razor during his latest escapade, as the cast and crew of the detective drama filmed scenes in South Wales.
Shooting scenes in Cardiff City Centre, the 39-year-old actor sported a heavy layer of stubble as he filmed scenes alongside two elder gents - presumably integral to the plot of the episode.

Clad in full-costume, and sporting the character's well worn great coat, a navy shirt, dark trousers and black Oxford shoes, Holmes was instantly recognizable amide the hub-bub of cast and crew.
However, it seems that the latest shoot for the series sees Sherlock at his wit's end, as the appeared slightly weary and exhausted - something further emphasized by his loose stance and open-neck shirt.

In a statement, Steven and Mark said: 'Sherlock series four - here we go again!
'Whatever else we do, wherever we all go, all roads lead back to Baker Street - and it always feels like coming home.
'Ghosts of the past are rising in the lives of Sherlock Holmes and John Watson bringing adventure, romance and terror in their wake.
'This is the story we've been telling from the beginning. A story about to reach its climax.'
Benedict said he was 'thrilled' to be back as the detective.
He said: 'I can't wait for everyone to see season four. But you will have to wait... though not for long... And it will be worth it.'
Series four will return to BBC later this year with three feature length episodes.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-3619671/Benedict-Cumberbatch-sports-heavy-stubble-Sherlock-Holmes-stark-contrast-character-s-usual-clean-shaven-look.html#ixzz4ANWmQg64
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
By JJ NATTRASS FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 06:25 EST, 1 June 2016 | UPDATED: 11:46 EST, 1 June 2016
He's busy filming the much-anticipated fourth series of the BBC's hit-series, Sherlock.
But Benedict Cumberbatch's roguish detective appeared to have lost his razor during his latest escapade, as the cast and crew of the detective drama filmed scenes in South Wales.
Shooting scenes in Cardiff City Centre, the 39-year-old actor sported a heavy layer of stubble as he filmed scenes alongside two elder gents - presumably integral to the plot of the episode.

Clad in full-costume, and sporting the character's well worn great coat, a navy shirt, dark trousers and black Oxford shoes, Holmes was instantly recognizable amide the hub-bub of cast and crew.
However, it seems that the latest shoot for the series sees Sherlock at his wit's end, as the appeared slightly weary and exhausted - something further emphasized by his loose stance and open-neck shirt.

In a statement, Steven and Mark said: 'Sherlock series four - here we go again!
'Whatever else we do, wherever we all go, all roads lead back to Baker Street - and it always feels like coming home.
'Ghosts of the past are rising in the lives of Sherlock Holmes and John Watson bringing adventure, romance and terror in their wake.
'This is the story we've been telling from the beginning. A story about to reach its climax.'
Benedict said he was 'thrilled' to be back as the detective.
He said: 'I can't wait for everyone to see season four. But you will have to wait... though not for long... And it will be worth it.'
Series four will return to BBC later this year with three feature length episodes.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-3619671/Benedict-Cumberbatch-sports-heavy-stubble-Sherlock-Holmes-stark-contrast-character-s-usual-clean-shaven-look.html#ixzz4ANWmQg64
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Wednesday, May 4, 2016
Has Sherlock got a new sidekick? Benedict Cumberbatch seen on set with four-legged friend
THE MIRROR
BY NATALIE CORNER
4 May, 2016
Sherlock 's squad might be growing if these set pictures are anything to go by.
Actor Benedict Cumberbatch - who plays the titular character - was spotted filming new scenes for the next series of the drama alongside a dog.
The bloodhound looked very professional and calm as it was kept on a lead held by the Dr Strange star.
Benedict seemed thrilled to have the animal on set and spent time petting it in between takes.
Unfortunately we're going to have to wait until Christmas before we find out what role the four-legged best friend will have.

Martin Freeman, who plays John Watson, was also on set alongside his co-star and spent time coo-ing over a baby.
It's not known whether the young tot was in scenes with John but according to Digital Spy the baby could play a big role.
Watson's wife Mary, played by Martin's actual wife Amanda Abbington, was pregnant in the last series so perhaps she gives birth.
READ MORE HERE: http://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/sherlock-new-sidekick-benedict-cumberbatch-7898082
BY NATALIE CORNER
4 May, 2016
Sherlock 's squad might be growing if these set pictures are anything to go by.
Actor Benedict Cumberbatch - who plays the titular character - was spotted filming new scenes for the next series of the drama alongside a dog.
The bloodhound looked very professional and calm as it was kept on a lead held by the Dr Strange star.
Benedict seemed thrilled to have the animal on set and spent time petting it in between takes.
Unfortunately we're going to have to wait until Christmas before we find out what role the four-legged best friend will have.

Martin Freeman, who plays John Watson, was also on set alongside his co-star and spent time coo-ing over a baby.
It's not known whether the young tot was in scenes with John but according to Digital Spy the baby could play a big role.
Watson's wife Mary, played by Martin's actual wife Amanda Abbington, was pregnant in the last series so perhaps she gives birth.
READ MORE HERE: http://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/sherlock-new-sidekick-benedict-cumberbatch-7898082
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Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Benedict Cumberbatch is back in his detective's overcoat as Sherlock Series 4 starts filming in Cardiff
DAILY MAIL
By EMILY SHERIDAN FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 09:34 EST, 25 April 2016 | UPDATED: 11:39 EST, 25 April 2016
It's been over two years since the last series of Sherlock, with fans treated to just one 90 minute New Year's Day special in the meanwhlie.
So no doubt self-confessed 'Cumberb**hes' will be counting down to until the release of the long-awaited Series 4, which has started shooting in Cardiff.
Leading man Benedict Cumberbatch was spotted back in the detective's familiar navy overcoat as he filmed scenes in South Wales.

'Whatever else we do, wherever we all go, all roads lead back to Baker Street - and it always feels like coming home.
'Ghosts of the past are rising in the lives of Sherlock Holmes and John Watson bringing adventure, romance and terror in their wake.
'This is the story we've been telling from the beginning. A story about to reach its climax.'
Mark has been teasing fans every few days on his Twitter account by posting photos of the back of the castmembers' heads, with Benedict, Martin Freeman and Amanda Abbington included.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-3557832/Benedict-Cumberbatch-detective-s-overcoat-Sherlock-Series-4-starts-filming-Cardiff.html#ixzz46wCMKoKH
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
By EMILY SHERIDAN FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 09:34 EST, 25 April 2016 | UPDATED: 11:39 EST, 25 April 2016
It's been over two years since the last series of Sherlock, with fans treated to just one 90 minute New Year's Day special in the meanwhlie.
So no doubt self-confessed 'Cumberb**hes' will be counting down to until the release of the long-awaited Series 4, which has started shooting in Cardiff.
Leading man Benedict Cumberbatch was spotted back in the detective's familiar navy overcoat as he filmed scenes in South Wales.

'Whatever else we do, wherever we all go, all roads lead back to Baker Street - and it always feels like coming home.
'Ghosts of the past are rising in the lives of Sherlock Holmes and John Watson bringing adventure, romance and terror in their wake.
'This is the story we've been telling from the beginning. A story about to reach its climax.'
Mark has been teasing fans every few days on his Twitter account by posting photos of the back of the castmembers' heads, with Benedict, Martin Freeman and Amanda Abbington included.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-3557832/Benedict-Cumberbatch-detective-s-overcoat-Sherlock-Series-4-starts-filming-Cardiff.html#ixzz46wCMKoKH
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
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Friday, October 10, 2014
Martin Freeman for Funny Cow film
NETFLIX
PUBLISHED
10/10/2014 | 11:06

Martin Freeman has joined the cast of Funny Cow - a film set in the world of stand-up comedy.
Maxine Peake - best known for her roles in TV dramas Shameless and Silk - is starring in the British indie flick charting the rise of a female stand-up comic in the male-dominated clubs of northern England in the 1970s and 80s, according to Screen Daily.
The Hobbit star Martin has signed up to the cast along with Boardwalk Empire's Stephen Graham and rebus star John Hannah.
The script has been written by Peaky Blinders and Hyena actor Tony Pitts, who will also appear in the film, with Junkhearts' Tinge Krishnan attached to direct.
READ MORE HERE: http://www.independent.ie/entertainment/movies/martin-freeman-for-funny-cow-film-30653794.html
PUBLISHED
10/10/2014 | 11:06

Martin Freeman has joined the cast of Funny Cow - a film set in the world of stand-up comedy.
Maxine Peake - best known for her roles in TV dramas Shameless and Silk - is starring in the British indie flick charting the rise of a female stand-up comic in the male-dominated clubs of northern England in the 1970s and 80s, according to Screen Daily.
The Hobbit star Martin has signed up to the cast along with Boardwalk Empire's Stephen Graham and rebus star John Hannah.
The script has been written by Peaky Blinders and Hyena actor Tony Pitts, who will also appear in the film, with Junkhearts' Tinge Krishnan attached to direct.
READ MORE HERE: http://www.independent.ie/entertainment/movies/martin-freeman-for-funny-cow-film-30653794.html
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Monday, September 8, 2014
Benedict Cumberbatch Brings His Sherlock Persona To The Brainy, Brilliant The Imitation Game
CINEMA BLEND
BY SEAN O'CONNELL 2014-09-07 19:30:50

Morten Tydlum’s The Imitation Game is a first-rate biopic, a thrilling espionage game that’s beautifully crafted and acted. To speak the film’s language – one of codes cracked by mathematicians – the movie equates. It’s also every bit as touching, tragic and romantic as it is intelligent and compelling. And yes, for those who keep track of these annual marathons, it is (or should be) an Oscar contender. Picture, director, screenplay, supporting actress and actor all seem to be in play.
Particularly Best Actor – yes, "Cumberbitches" – for Benedict Cumberbatch's calculated, lean, strong and confident portrayal of brilliant mathematician Alan Turing, who is recruited by the British government during time of war to help decipher Enigma, the machine the Germans use to encode their messages. To crack Enigma might mean to drastically shorten the war. But there is a lot more happening in The Imitation Game then the war effort.
"Pay attention," we are warned, in a Sherlock-y, Khan tone. Alan Turing has secrets. Everyone has secrets at play in The Imitation Game, from the military brass who recruit Turing to the MI6 agent (Mark Strong) who shadows his progress. But few are quite as damaging, as life-altering as Turing’s secrets can (and will) be. If you know history, you know the progressing of this story. The Imitation Game guards its reveal until the one-hour mark, so I’ll steer clear of it for now. It will be a major talking point as the film begins to roll out and play to larger audiences. For now, here’s what I’m comfortable telling you.
Turing -- much like Benedict Cumberbatch’s iconic Sherlock Holmes portrayal -- is a hyper-intelligent, internalized sociopaths with little patience for inferior folks and a laser-focus on task. The task, in this case, could save thousands of military lives and, possibly, turn the tide in a global conflict. But Turing is supposed to be part of a team, and the men he’s supposed to collaborate with (personified by Matthew Goode, Matthew Beard and Allen Leech) can’t stand his aloof arrogance.
Before you bringing in the ever-suffering John Watson, The Imitation Game dangles a bit of a bait and switch. Keira Knightley – the staple of period dramas such as this – is introduced as Joan Clarke, an equally brilliant mathematician whose gender costs her a spot on Turing code-breaking team. In a conventional film, she’d be a love interest. The Imitation Game is not a conventional film. At the moment where a normal biopic would detour into possible romance, the "Pay attention" warning come back, and takes us down a different, more sobering path
READ MORE HERE: http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Benedict-Cumberbatch-Brings-His-Sherlock-Persona-Brainy-Brilliant-Imitation-Game-67095.html
BY SEAN O'CONNELL 2014-09-07 19:30:50

Morten Tydlum’s The Imitation Game is a first-rate biopic, a thrilling espionage game that’s beautifully crafted and acted. To speak the film’s language – one of codes cracked by mathematicians – the movie equates. It’s also every bit as touching, tragic and romantic as it is intelligent and compelling. And yes, for those who keep track of these annual marathons, it is (or should be) an Oscar contender. Picture, director, screenplay, supporting actress and actor all seem to be in play.
Particularly Best Actor – yes, "Cumberbitches" – for Benedict Cumberbatch's calculated, lean, strong and confident portrayal of brilliant mathematician Alan Turing, who is recruited by the British government during time of war to help decipher Enigma, the machine the Germans use to encode their messages. To crack Enigma might mean to drastically shorten the war. But there is a lot more happening in The Imitation Game then the war effort.
"Pay attention," we are warned, in a Sherlock-y, Khan tone. Alan Turing has secrets. Everyone has secrets at play in The Imitation Game, from the military brass who recruit Turing to the MI6 agent (Mark Strong) who shadows his progress. But few are quite as damaging, as life-altering as Turing’s secrets can (and will) be. If you know history, you know the progressing of this story. The Imitation Game guards its reveal until the one-hour mark, so I’ll steer clear of it for now. It will be a major talking point as the film begins to roll out and play to larger audiences. For now, here’s what I’m comfortable telling you.
Turing -- much like Benedict Cumberbatch’s iconic Sherlock Holmes portrayal -- is a hyper-intelligent, internalized sociopaths with little patience for inferior folks and a laser-focus on task. The task, in this case, could save thousands of military lives and, possibly, turn the tide in a global conflict. But Turing is supposed to be part of a team, and the men he’s supposed to collaborate with (personified by Matthew Goode, Matthew Beard and Allen Leech) can’t stand his aloof arrogance.
Before you bringing in the ever-suffering John Watson, The Imitation Game dangles a bit of a bait and switch. Keira Knightley – the staple of period dramas such as this – is introduced as Joan Clarke, an equally brilliant mathematician whose gender costs her a spot on Turing code-breaking team. In a conventional film, she’d be a love interest. The Imitation Game is not a conventional film. At the moment where a normal biopic would detour into possible romance, the "Pay attention" warning come back, and takes us down a different, more sobering path
READ MORE HERE: http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Benedict-Cumberbatch-Brings-His-Sherlock-Persona-Brainy-Brilliant-Imitation-Game-67095.html
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Saturday, August 2, 2014
Jude Law: With maturity comes complication
SCNOW.COM
Posted: Thursday, July 31, 2014 3:05 pm

LONDON — Jude Law feels his work options are widening as he gets older, and he revels in the complications.
The 41-year-old British actor — best known for his roles in "The Talented Mr Ripley," ''Cold Mountain" and more recently "Sherlock Holmes" — says there is now "less emphasis on playing romantic leads."
"You get over a certain age, and you're more complicated anyway," he said in an interview. "So, I guess characters written for that age are more complicated, you know."
Law said he likes to take risks by picking roles that terrify him, such as his much-acclaimed stint in "Henry V" in London's West End last year.
"There's this moment when you haven't quite learnt your lines, the play doesn't feel like it's coming together or at least you don't feel that you've fully understood the role or indeed the piece yet and everyone's looking around for a way out, an excuse," he said, recalling the rehearsal period.
"And yet you know that you have a set day ahead of you when you are going to open to the press — and indeed to the public — and it's nothing short of terrifying."
"It's usually at that moment you question yourself, your job, why you're doing this," he added, "but it's also an opportunity to sort of face failure and fear."
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Tuesday, June 10, 2014
First picture of Martin Freeman in rehearsals for Richard III
RADIO TIMES
Susanna Lazarus
10:43 AM, 10 June 2014

God bless Martin Freeman and his jazzy dress sense. The Sherlock actor has been pictured for the first time rehearsing for his upcoming performance in Richard III and he certainly looked regal, dressed in a royal blue jacket.
The Sherlock actor is treading the boards from 1 July until 27 September as part of the second Trafalgar Transformed season, taking on the role of Shakespeare's ruthless monarch opposite co-star Gina McKee who will play Queen Elizabeth, mother of the Princes in the Tower.
Directed by Jamie Lloyd, tickets for the production range from £15 - £52.50 and can be found on the Trafalgar Transformed website (if you're lucky enough to get your hands on them).
READ MORE HERE: http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2014-06-10/first-picture-of-martin-freeman-in-rehearsals-for-richard-iii
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Thursday, April 3, 2014
From Hobbit to hunchback - Martin Freeman set to appear in Shakespearean role
MAIL ON LINE
By BAZ BAMIGBOYE
PUBLISHED: 18:03 EST, 3 April 2014 | UPDATED: 18:25 EST, 3 April 2014
By BAZ BAMIGBOYE
PUBLISHED: 18:03 EST, 3 April 2014 | UPDATED: 18:25 EST, 3 April 2014

Sherlock and Hobbit star Martin Freeman will play his first Shakespearean role, Richard III, on the London stage this summer.
The actor has made a pact with Benedict Cumberbatch (Sherlock to his Dr Watson) about treading the boards in plays by the Bard.
Cumberbatch will give his Hamlet at the Barbican — as this page was first to report — in August of 2015.
However, Freeman’s Machiavellian monarch will be in rehearsal by late May or early June of this year, and in performance by July.
Richard III will run through till September.
Freeman will be leading the first play in the second season for Jamie Lloyd Productions, which performs under the Trafalgar Transformed banner at the Trafalgar Studios in Whitehall.
Lloyd set up his company with Howard Panter and the Ambassador Theatre Group.
Tickets for Richard III, the first of four plays in the new season, are expected to go on sale in the next seven to ten days.
Director Lloyd is still casting other roles for Richard III.
Freeman was last on stage at the Royal Court in Bruce Norris’s powerful play Clybourne Park. His career has taken off like a rocket since the success of The Office and Sherlock on BBC television.
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Friday, March 14, 2014
‘You’re extremely short and well-mannered’: Wacky Norwegians parody Sherlock in style
METRO
Caroline Westbrook

Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman have found themselves no stranger to parody since Sherlock began.
And the latest spoof of the detective duo comes courtesy of a couple of Norwegian lookalikes, who have taken their obvious resemblance to Holmes and Watson – not to mention the duo’s bromance – to new levels of silliness.
‘Vidar Magnussen (Sherlock Holmes) and Bjarte Tjøstheim (John Watson) in the Entertainment Department at NRK (Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation) are both fans of the BBC series “Sherlock,’ the pair explain on YouTube.
‘When they realised the similarity they decided to make a parody.’
The ensuing clip sees the duo delivering oddly accurate portrayals of Cumberbatch and Freeman’s protagonists, even going as far as a romantic liason.
Caroline Westbrook
Entertainment Reporter
Friday 14 Mar 2014 10:37 am
Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman have found themselves no stranger to parody since Sherlock began.
And the latest spoof of the detective duo comes courtesy of a couple of Norwegian lookalikes, who have taken their obvious resemblance to Holmes and Watson – not to mention the duo’s bromance – to new levels of silliness.
‘Vidar Magnussen (Sherlock Holmes) and Bjarte Tjøstheim (John Watson) in the Entertainment Department at NRK (Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation) are both fans of the BBC series “Sherlock,’ the pair explain on YouTube.
‘When they realised the similarity they decided to make a parody.’
The ensuing clip sees the duo delivering oddly accurate portrayals of Cumberbatch and Freeman’s protagonists, even going as far as a romantic liason.
READ MORE HERE: http://metro.co.uk/2014/03/14/youre-extremely-short-and-well-mannered-wacky-norwegians-parody-sherlock-in-style-4573027/
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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

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
by Roth Cornet JANUARY 14, 2014

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
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Saturday, January 11, 2014
Sherlock: His Last Vow – 11 spoiler-free finale teasers
METRO
Tim Liew
Friday 10 Jan 2014 10:18 am

Ahead of Sherlock’s series three finale, here’s a spoiler-free preview of 11 things to watch out for on Sunday evening.
His Last Vow draws on two of Conan Doyle’s original short stories.
The Adventure of Charles Augustus Milverton features a notorious and unpleasant blackmailer. His Last Bow is Holmes’ final case before he retires.
The bespectacled villain glimpsed fleetingly at the end of The Empty Hearse was named before the series as Charles Augustus Magnussen. He’s played by Lars Mikkelsen, star of Danish dramas Borgen and The Killing.
Like his literary counterpart Milverton, Magnussen is a notably unpleasant character. In the BBC trailer for this episode, a disgusted Sherlock declares, ‘I’ve dealt with murderers, psychopaths … none of them can turn my stomach like Charles Augustus Magnussen.’
There’s much less humour than in the first two episodes. His Last Vow is arguably the darkest and most intense episode of Sherlock ever.
As the episode begins, John and Mary have not seen Sherlock for a while. He’s been keeping some unusual company in the meantime.
READ MUCH MORE HERE: http://metro.co.uk/2014/01/10/sherlock-series-3-finale-his-last-vow-11-spoiler-free-teasers-4249800/
Tim Liew
Friday 10 Jan 2014 10:18 am

Ahead of Sherlock’s series three finale, here’s a spoiler-free preview of 11 things to watch out for on Sunday evening.
1. Two adventures in one
His Last Vow draws on two of Conan Doyle’s original short stories.
The Adventure of Charles Augustus Milverton features a notorious and unpleasant blackmailer. His Last Bow is Holmes’ final case before he retires.
2. ‘Magnussen’, not ‘Milverton’
Like his literary counterpart Milverton, Magnussen is a notably unpleasant character. In the BBC trailer for this episode, a disgusted Sherlock declares, ‘I’ve dealt with murderers, psychopaths … none of them can turn my stomach like Charles Augustus Magnussen.’
3. A darker tone
There’s much less humour than in the first two episodes. His Last Vow is arguably the darkest and most intense episode of Sherlock ever.
4. Where’s Sherlock?
As the episode begins, John and Mary have not seen Sherlock for a while. He’s been keeping some unusual company in the meantime.
READ MUCH MORE HERE: http://metro.co.uk/2014/01/10/sherlock-series-3-finale-his-last-vow-11-spoiler-free-teasers-4249800/
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Tuesday, January 7, 2014
(video) Sherlock’s Amanda Abbington on the “infuriating thing” about Martin Freeman (spoilers)
RADIO TIMES
Emma Daly
12:28 PM, 07 January 2014
After joining the cast of Sherlock as John Watson's wife Mary Morstan, Amanda Abbington admits there’s one “infuriating” thing about working with her real-life partner Martin Freeman.
He probably embarrasses her? Teases her? Tells everyone what she’s really like at home…? Oh, wait. It’s nothing like that at all. He’s just good at learning lines.
“Working with Martin is a joy, it really is," says Abbington. "The infuriating thing about Martin is he will get his sides, his script, and he’ll say ‘right, go over it with me’. He’ll read it once, he’ll read it twice and then he’ll say ‘test me’ and he’ll know his lines verbatim.
Emma Daly
12:28 PM, 07 January 2014
After joining the cast of Sherlock as John Watson's wife Mary Morstan, Amanda Abbington admits there’s one “infuriating” thing about working with her real-life partner Martin Freeman.

He probably embarrasses her? Teases her? Tells everyone what she’s really like at home…? Oh, wait. It’s nothing like that at all. He’s just good at learning lines.
“Working with Martin is a joy, it really is," says Abbington. "The infuriating thing about Martin is he will get his sides, his script, and he’ll say ‘right, go over it with me’. He’ll read it once, he’ll read it twice and then he’ll say ‘test me’ and he’ll know his lines verbatim.
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Monday, January 6, 2014
Jude Law: My children keep me sane
STV ENTERTAINMENT
Bang 5 January 2014 00:15 GMT

Jude Law's children keep him sane.
The actor - who is currently starring on stage in Shakespeare's 'Henry V' in London - claims his four children; Rafferty, 17, Iris, 13 and Rudy, 11, with ex-wife Sadie Frost and four-year-old daughter Sophia Lee with model Samantha Burke, are ''in equal parts delighted and embarrassed'' by his job but also the force which keeps him grounded.
He told USA Today newspaper: ''[Acting] is what I get to do only in the hours I'm not [parenting], which is everything to me. My children keep me sane in what is a mad world - particularly mad if you choose to be an actor.''
'Henry V' runs until February, at which point 'The Talented Mr. Ripley' star is looking forward to being able to take some time off.
He added: ''I'll be unemployed as of then. It's not like I want to stop working - it's not like I can. You've got to pay the bills, like everyone else. [But] I'm not desperate. ''There's a certain physical demand to doing eight shows a week, and I haven't had a break in 18 months. By February I'll be quite ready for a break, and I'm going to take one.''
READ MORE HERE: http://entertainment.stv.tv/showbiz/332538-jude-law-my-children-keep-me-sane/
Bang 5 January 2014 00:15 GMT

Jude Law's children keep him sane.
The actor - who is currently starring on stage in Shakespeare's 'Henry V' in London - claims his four children; Rafferty, 17, Iris, 13 and Rudy, 11, with ex-wife Sadie Frost and four-year-old daughter Sophia Lee with model Samantha Burke, are ''in equal parts delighted and embarrassed'' by his job but also the force which keeps him grounded.
He told USA Today newspaper: ''[Acting] is what I get to do only in the hours I'm not [parenting], which is everything to me. My children keep me sane in what is a mad world - particularly mad if you choose to be an actor.''
'Henry V' runs until February, at which point 'The Talented Mr. Ripley' star is looking forward to being able to take some time off.
He added: ''I'll be unemployed as of then. It's not like I want to stop working - it's not like I can. You've got to pay the bills, like everyone else. [But] I'm not desperate. ''There's a certain physical demand to doing eight shows a week, and I haven't had a break in 18 months. By February I'll be quite ready for a break, and I'm going to take one.''
READ MORE HERE: http://entertainment.stv.tv/showbiz/332538-jude-law-my-children-keep-me-sane/
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Monday, December 30, 2013
Martin Freeman ALMOST missed out on Sherlock role - because he was mugged before the audition!
HEATWORLD
CELEB NEWS
Posted by Emmeline Saunders on 28 December 2013 20:43

Speaking to Radio Times ahead of the third series of the hit BBC1 show, Martin explained that his first ever meeting with the casting team was almost ruined when he was attacked in the street for his wallet.
"I'll admit maybe I was a bit stressed. But a week later my agent rang and said, 'Listen, this Sherlock thing, they're sort of under the impression you weren't that into it.'
"And I said, 'Oh … I am really interested. Please call them and let them know that I am interested.'"
Luckily for every fan of the show, Martin's next audition went much better.
"So I came in again, read with Benedict and it instantly worked, it seemed to me … I thought he was a fantastic actor and there was something about our rhythms, similarities and differences that meant that it just happened."
READ MORE HERE: http://www.heatworld.com/Celeb-News/2013/12/Martin-Freeman-ALMOST-missed-out-on-Sherlock-role---because-he-was-mugged-before-the-audition/
CELEB NEWS
Posted by Emmeline Saunders on 28 December 2013 20:43

Speaking to Radio Times ahead of the third series of the hit BBC1 show, Martin explained that his first ever meeting with the casting team was almost ruined when he was attacked in the street for his wallet.
"I'll admit maybe I was a bit stressed. But a week later my agent rang and said, 'Listen, this Sherlock thing, they're sort of under the impression you weren't that into it.'
"And I said, 'Oh … I am really interested. Please call them and let them know that I am interested.'"
Luckily for every fan of the show, Martin's next audition went much better.
"So I came in again, read with Benedict and it instantly worked, it seemed to me … I thought he was a fantastic actor and there was something about our rhythms, similarities and differences that meant that it just happened."
READ MORE HERE: http://www.heatworld.com/Celeb-News/2013/12/Martin-Freeman-ALMOST-missed-out-on-Sherlock-role---because-he-was-mugged-before-the-audition/
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Friday, December 27, 2013
"Sherlock" Season 3 Exclusive Photos Hint At Trouble For Television’s Favorite Bromance
BUZZFEED
BY Jace Lacob
And the moment of truth: Can Sherlock make a best man speech at the wedding reception that won’t humiliate John or Mary entirely? Only time will tell…
READ MORE HERE: http://www.buzzfeed.com/jacelacob/exclusive-sherlock-season-3-photos-the-sign-of-three
BY Jace Lacob
PBS and Masterpiece have given BuzzFeed an exclusive look at four images from Season 3 of the British mystery, which returns to Masterpiece on Jan. 19, 2014. Wedding bells!
posted on December 26, 2013 at 7:00pm EST

It looks like there’s a chasm between John and Sherlock, and we’re not just talking about the distance on this park bench. I mean, faking your death will do that to a friendship.
And the moment of truth: Can Sherlock make a best man speech at the wedding reception that won’t humiliate John or Mary entirely? Only time will tell…
READ MORE HERE: http://www.buzzfeed.com/jacelacob/exclusive-sherlock-season-3-photos-the-sign-of-three
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Friday, December 20, 2013
Sherlock: 15 best moments from Benedict Cumberbatch's BBC Holmes
DIGITAL SPY
By Emma Dibdin
Wednesday, Dec 18 2013, 5:00am ES
The wait is almost over, Sherlock fans. While the two-year hiatus has felt like a cruel eternity to just about everyone who watched Benedict Cumberbatch's Sherlock plummet to his faux-death in 'The Reichenbach Fall', consider this: fans in 1893 were forced to wait an entire decade for Arthur Conan Doyle to resurrect their hero on the page.
A decade. So with the gap put in perspective, and third series premiere 'The Empty Hearse' now confirmed to air on New Year's Day in the UK and January 19 in the US, we can relax and look back on our favorite moments from the series so far, in chronological order...
It's surprising just how rarely the first meeting of Holmes and Watson has ever been portrayed on screen - most adaptations begin with the pair already established in their odd couple dynamic - but Steven Moffat's first script picked up on an even rarer aspect of Doyle.
In the book A Study in Scarlet, Stamford warns Watson that Holmes's eccentricity takes the strange form of "beating the subjects in the dissecting-room with a stick". Cut to 2010, and Cumberbatch's Sherlock is introduced for the first time in the morgue, whipping a corpse with a riding crop. Like so many of the show's finest moments, it's at once outlandish, brash and utterly faithful to its source material.
"Sherlock does love to be dramatic," drawls Mark Gatiss's Mycroft. "Well, thank God you're above all that," John replies, having just been abducted and driven to an abandoned warehouse in order to have this meeting. It's a witty, enormously tense scene that's firing on more dramatic cylinders than you can take in on first viewing.
It works beautifully as psychological exposition for John, it shows off Mycroft's deductive skills, and it gives John the first of many opportunities to prove his steadfast loyalty to Sherlock, as Mycroft offers him money in return for information on his wayward brother. A masterclass in character-building.
The scene that launched a thousand shippers – if Sherlock and John's first meeting hadn't already done it. This is one of the first actual conversations the pair share, as they await a murderer in a cosy candlelit restaurant, and Moffat wastes no time in addressing the homoerotic subtext that has been an aspect of Holmes fandom for decades.
It's a scene steeped in intrigue and deadpan wit, beautifully played by Cumberbatch and Freeman, and on a personal note it's exciting for us because the Digital Spy offices are visible behind John's head throughout.
John gets into a fight with a self-checkout machine ('The Blind Banker')
Many, many more: http://www.digitalspy.com/british-tv/s129/sherlock/news/a535406/sherlock-15-best-moments-from-benedict-cumberbatchs-bbc-holmes.html#ixzz2o1et1Bmw
Follow us: @digitalspy on Twitter | digitalspyuk on Facebook
By Emma Dibdin
Wednesday, Dec 18 2013, 5:00am ES
The wait is almost over, Sherlock fans. While the two-year hiatus has felt like a cruel eternity to just about everyone who watched Benedict Cumberbatch's Sherlock plummet to his faux-death in 'The Reichenbach Fall', consider this: fans in 1893 were forced to wait an entire decade for Arthur Conan Doyle to resurrect their hero on the page.
A decade. So with the gap put in perspective, and third series premiere 'The Empty Hearse' now confirmed to air on New Year's Day in the UK and January 19 in the US, we can relax and look back on our favorite moments from the series so far, in chronological order...
Sherlock whipping a corpse ('A Study in Pink')
It's surprising just how rarely the first meeting of Holmes and Watson has ever been portrayed on screen - most adaptations begin with the pair already established in their odd couple dynamic - but Steven Moffat's first script picked up on an even rarer aspect of Doyle.
In the book A Study in Scarlet, Stamford warns Watson that Holmes's eccentricity takes the strange form of "beating the subjects in the dissecting-room with a stick". Cut to 2010, and Cumberbatch's Sherlock is introduced for the first time in the morgue, whipping a corpse with a riding crop. Like so many of the show's finest moments, it's at once outlandish, brash and utterly faithful to its source material.
John meets Mycroft ('A Study in Pink')
It works beautifully as psychological exposition for John, it shows off Mycroft's deductive skills, and it gives John the first of many opportunities to prove his steadfast loyalty to Sherlock, as Mycroft offers him money in return for information on his wayward brother. A masterclass in character-building.
"So you've got a boyfriend?" ('A Study in Pink')
The scene that launched a thousand shippers – if Sherlock and John's first meeting hadn't already done it. This is one of the first actual conversations the pair share, as they await a murderer in a cosy candlelit restaurant, and Moffat wastes no time in addressing the homoerotic subtext that has been an aspect of Holmes fandom for decades.
It's a scene steeped in intrigue and deadpan wit, beautifully played by Cumberbatch and Freeman, and on a personal note it's exciting for us because the Digital Spy offices are visible behind John's head throughout.

"Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson" ('A Study in Pink')
We've had the introduction of Sherlock Holmes, sharp and cruel and mesmerising. We've had the introduction of John Watson, battle-torn and stoical and lonely. But as the series' first episode comes to its triumphant conclusion, we get the introduction of Sherlock Holmes and John Watson, the unassailable yin-yang unit that was already, after 90 minutes, the heart of the show.
John shoots a man dead to save Sherlock's life from a hundred-yard distance, they share a poorly-hidden giggle at the crime scene afterwards, and in that instant their bond is sealed for life. Hero shots don't come much more glorious than this slow-mo climax.
John gets into a fight with a self-checkout machine ('The Blind Banker')
Because we've all been there. As extraordinary and heightened as most of Sherlock and John's adventures are, a huge part of the show's charm comes from its being rooted in a very recognizable, very contemporary London. And in contemporary London, unexpected items in the bagging area are an unavoidable part of life.
The introduction of Freeman's hardened, traumatised John in the first episode left viewers in no doubt about his dramatic chops, but this moment – from the show's weakest episode to date – spotlights his comedic timing.
Follow us: @digitalspy on Twitter | digitalspyuk on Facebook
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Friday, August 23, 2013
Martin Freeman to play his dad in autobiographical Christmas comedy Little Crackers

RADIO TIMES
Paul Jones
4:39 PM, 22 August 2013
Sherlock star Martin Freeman is to write, direct and star in an autobiographical comedy short as part of Sky1's Little Crackers series this Christmas.
Set during the festive period in 1977, the 15-minute film will see Freeman playing his dad and will be accompanied by a behind-the-scenes look at how the tale made it to the screen.
Sky's director of entertainment, Stuart Murphy, announced the news this afternoon at the Edinburgh Television Festival, where the great and good of the TV industry are gathered for the next few days.
READ MORE HERE: http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2013-08-22/martin-freeman-to-play-his-dad-in-autobiographical-christmas-comedy-little-crackers
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Thursday, June 13, 2013
Benedict Cumberbatch, Martin Freeman - Sherlock & John (excellent video)
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Saturday, May 4, 2013
Martin Freeman Wants to Keep Going with Sherlock Beyond Season Three (411 MANIA)
Posted by Jeremy Thomas on 05.03.2013
He loves doing it...
Martin Freeman may be making the transition toward film like his Sherlock co-star Benedict Cumberbatch, but he doesn't want to leave the series behind either. Freeman, who is currently filming season three of the series with Cumberbatch, told Empire that he would like to keep going beyond a fourth season.
"I believe in doing things for as long as people love them, and all I can say is that I really love the show," he said. "I feel very loyal to it and I like doing it… for as long as they want to do it and as long as we all want to do it....I don't know if I'll be doing it at the age of 90 but for the foreseeable I'm a huge fan of the show."
Read more at http://www.411mania.com/movies/news/282878/[TV]-Martin-Freeman-Wants-to-Keep-Going-with-Sherlock-Beyond-Season-Three.htm#PBM0W3c11vMVCwHf.99
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