By Thom Yorke
It seems like a lot more than seven years have gone by since Benedict Cumberbatch first donned his deerstalker as Sherlock Holmes, the alarmingly incisive yet socially inept detective in the BBC series that catapulted his Hollywood career. That’s because, in the ensuing time, the London-born actor has graduated from fan-girl obsession to franchise superstar, while steadily appearing in a succession of prestige projects in theater, film, and television. His mix of gravitas and humility works exceptionally well in fantastical worlds: as Khan in Star Trek Into Darkness (2013); as Smaug the dragon and the Necromancer in The Hobbit film series (2012, 2013, 2014); and as Dr. Stephen Strange in Marvel’s Doctor Strange (2016), a role to which he will return in next year’s Avengers: Infinity War. Back on planet Earth, Cumberbatch has a knack for inhabiting the minds of geniuses, empathetically depicting WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in The Fifth Estate in 2013; Alan Turing in The Imitation Game the following year (for which he earned Golden Globe and Academy Award nominations); and, most recently, Thomas Edison in The Current War, in theaters next year.
Now 41, Cumberbatch is considered one of the most accomplished and ambitious actors of his generation. It would be an understatement to suggest that he has a serious streak, but as his friend, the legendary Radiohead rocker Thom Yorke, is determined to prove, all men—no matter how focused—contain multitudes.
THOM YORKE: I don’t have any chronology to my questions. My approach is a bit more random, a bit more Just Seventeen [an out-of-print British teen magazine]. I actually want to start with the year you taught in a monastery in Darjeeling when you were 19. How was that experience?
BENEDICT CUMBERBATCH: It was in an exiled Tibetan community, just outside of Darjeeling, on the border. It was a little hill station town. I was one of five teachers who had done a training course. It was extraordinary, but it was quite an isolated experience.
YORKE: How long did you do that?
CUMBERBATCH: It was five months. I spent half a year working odd jobs to build up funds for the airfare and to pay for the course. You’re not paid for the teaching; you’re paid in experience. You’re surrounded by the monks and their lives. It was a small monastery, and the top floor was the temple. I was living on the bottom floor, which was pretty damp and had huge spiders. I think it was just near the end of the rainy season; I can’t remember, but it was cold. And because it was so high up, you would open your window, and the clouds were like dry ice rolling across your desk. Nature was ever present; that was gobsmackingly beautiful, as was the spirit and nature and philosophy and way of life of these monks.
YORKE: It sounds like you absorbed a lot of that, just by being there. You didn’t have to study it.
CUMBERBATCH: Exactly, it just seeped in. The personalities of the monks were louder than any lesson.
READ MUCH MORE HERE: https://www.interviewmagazine.com/film/benedict-cumberbatch-november-2017-issue
For those who love Jane Austen and all Historical Romance books, movies, or series
Showing posts with label smaug. Show all posts
Showing posts with label smaug. Show all posts
Thursday, November 2, 2017
Benedict Cumberbatch Interview
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Monday, December 22, 2014
Richard Armitage finds his inner Thorin
LA TIMES
HERO COMPLEX
Dec. 22, 2014 | 12:51 p.m.
English actor Richard Armitage shares some interesting traits with his “Hobbit” alter ego, valiant dwarf Thorin Oakenshield.
“I had to be pretty honest with myself because you do get asked that question a lot, ‘Where are you like the character?'” Armitage said earlier this month. “I’m very stubborn and pigheaded like Thorin… I’m a little bit taller than him. And I can grow a beard at an astonishingly weird rate.”
Armitage’s confession was one of the highlights of the special Imax preview screening of “The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies,” which took place Dec. 11 at New York’s AMC 34th Street 14 & Imax.
Armitage was joined on stage for a Q&A following the movie by his “Five Armies” costar Lee Pace, who plays the Elven King Thrandruil.
The final installment in Jackson’s epic “Hobbit” trilogy, “Five Armies” handily won the box-office competition this weekend — the film has grossed upward of $90.6 million since its Wednesday release.
It picks up where last year’s “The Desolation of Smaug” ends, with Thorin and company, accompanied by Martin Freeman’s good-natured hobbit Bilbo Baggins, having reclaimed the treasure of their lost homeland Erebor from the evil dragon Smaug (Benedict Cumberbatch).
A vengeful Smaug heads to Lake-town to decimate the nearby village, and the destruction the dragon causes leaves the townspeople insisting upon recompense from the dwarfs who disturbed his resting place, setting into motion the conflict that will grow to include the armies of the title.
READ MORE HERE PLUS VIDEO: http://herocomplex.latimes.com/movies/hobbit-battle-of-five-armies-richard-armitage-finds-his-inner-thorin/#/0
HERO COMPLEX
Dec. 22, 2014 | 12:51 p.m.

English actor Richard Armitage shares some interesting traits with his “Hobbit” alter ego, valiant dwarf Thorin Oakenshield.
“I had to be pretty honest with myself because you do get asked that question a lot, ‘Where are you like the character?'” Armitage said earlier this month. “I’m very stubborn and pigheaded like Thorin… I’m a little bit taller than him. And I can grow a beard at an astonishingly weird rate.”
Armitage’s confession was one of the highlights of the special Imax preview screening of “The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies,” which took place Dec. 11 at New York’s AMC 34th Street 14 & Imax.
Armitage was joined on stage for a Q&A following the movie by his “Five Armies” costar Lee Pace, who plays the Elven King Thrandruil.
The final installment in Jackson’s epic “Hobbit” trilogy, “Five Armies” handily won the box-office competition this weekend — the film has grossed upward of $90.6 million since its Wednesday release.
It picks up where last year’s “The Desolation of Smaug” ends, with Thorin and company, accompanied by Martin Freeman’s good-natured hobbit Bilbo Baggins, having reclaimed the treasure of their lost homeland Erebor from the evil dragon Smaug (Benedict Cumberbatch).
A vengeful Smaug heads to Lake-town to decimate the nearby village, and the destruction the dragon causes leaves the townspeople insisting upon recompense from the dwarfs who disturbed his resting place, setting into motion the conflict that will grow to include the armies of the title.
READ MORE HERE PLUS VIDEO: http://herocomplex.latimes.com/movies/hobbit-battle-of-five-armies-richard-armitage-finds-his-inner-thorin/#/0
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Saturday, August 2, 2014
Benedict Cumberbatch Talks Moriarty Return, Mark Gatiss Trying to Recruit 'Avengers' Tom Hiddleston
LATIN POST
By Kevin Li (staff@latinpost.com)First Posted: Aug 02, 2014 01:56 PM EDT

In a recent interview with MTV, Benedict Cumberbatch hinted that Moriarty will be coming back in the next season. The actor who plays the role of the popular detective also expressed his excitement to return the filming and production of the modern day adaptation of the Sherlock Holmes mysteries.
Cumberbatch was asked if the role of Moriarty, portrayed by Andrew Scott, will be returning again next season, and he answered by saying that he thinks so. He also added how he casually chooses to forget so that he could rediscover it again later on, KpopStarz reported.
While the cast members do not have copies of the script yet, Cumberbatch mentioned how they get a rough idea of where the show would be going.
By Kevin Li (staff@latinpost.com)First Posted: Aug 02, 2014 01:56 PM EDT

In a recent interview with MTV, Benedict Cumberbatch hinted that Moriarty will be coming back in the next season. The actor who plays the role of the popular detective also expressed his excitement to return the filming and production of the modern day adaptation of the Sherlock Holmes mysteries.
Cumberbatch was asked if the role of Moriarty, portrayed by Andrew Scott, will be returning again next season, and he answered by saying that he thinks so. He also added how he casually chooses to forget so that he could rediscover it again later on, KpopStarz reported.
While the cast members do not have copies of the script yet, Cumberbatch mentioned how they get a rough idea of where the show would be going.
The role of Moriarty did not appear as much in the last season with a minimal appearance in the first episode and another appearance in the third episode in Sherlock's mind-palace as well as the last episode in the third season.

Also, another character may be joining the show next season, as co-creator Mark Gatiss is reportedly trying to get Tom Hiddleston to join as Holmes' third brother in the fourth season.
Rumors about the casting of Loki from "Thor" and "Avengers" as Sherrinford Holmes have been going around online. However, the star has not given his comments regarding the matter, relegating the status of these reports to mere speculations.
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Friday, April 25, 2014
‘Sherlock’ One-Off Special Episode May Air Before Season 4
SCREEN RANT
Published 9 hours ago by Araceli Roach

Between Doctor Who, Downton Abbey and Sherlock, there’s no denying that the popularity of British TV series around the world has been on the rise the last five years. So much so, in fact, that the actors on those series have become increasingly in demand, leaving many of them with the decision to either stay on their current series or make the leap across the pond for greater success in Hollywood.
Luckily, Sherlock stars Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman have made the choice to continue filming their hit BBC series abroad while also pursuing their careers in the United States. Freeman currently stars in FX’s new series Fargo, and both he and Cumberbatch will next appear in the recently renamed The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies.
So for the moment at least, there seems to be little time for the two actors to film the highly anticipated season 4 of Sherlock. Yet, thanks to Cultbox, we know that in an upcoming appearance on British talkshow Alan Carr: Chatty Man, Freeman hinted there could still be hope for fans to see something sooner rather than later
Here’s what Freeman said:
“Mark Gatiss may beat me up, but there is an idea for this one-off special that’s such a good idea, and as I was listening to it I thought ‘we’ve just got to do this.’ And I don’t know when we are going to be able to do it, unfortunately. It’s a fantastic, really mouth-watering idea. But I really don’t know when we are going to get to do it.”
READ MORE HERE: http://screenrant.com/sherlock-one-off-special-before-season-4/
Published 9 hours ago by Araceli Roach

Between Doctor Who, Downton Abbey and Sherlock, there’s no denying that the popularity of British TV series around the world has been on the rise the last five years. So much so, in fact, that the actors on those series have become increasingly in demand, leaving many of them with the decision to either stay on their current series or make the leap across the pond for greater success in Hollywood.
Luckily, Sherlock stars Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman have made the choice to continue filming their hit BBC series abroad while also pursuing their careers in the United States. Freeman currently stars in FX’s new series Fargo, and both he and Cumberbatch will next appear in the recently renamed The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies.
So for the moment at least, there seems to be little time for the two actors to film the highly anticipated season 4 of Sherlock. Yet, thanks to Cultbox, we know that in an upcoming appearance on British talkshow Alan Carr: Chatty Man, Freeman hinted there could still be hope for fans to see something sooner rather than later
Here’s what Freeman said:
“Mark Gatiss may beat me up, but there is an idea for this one-off special that’s such a good idea, and as I was listening to it I thought ‘we’ve just got to do this.’ And I don’t know when we are going to be able to do it, unfortunately. It’s a fantastic, really mouth-watering idea. But I really don’t know when we are going to get to do it.”
READ MORE HERE: http://screenrant.com/sherlock-one-off-special-before-season-4/
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Saturday, December 14, 2013
Benedict Cumberbatch steals the movie: ‘Smaug’ fires up second ‘Hobbit’
THE EDGE
Thursday, December 12, 2013
By:James Verniere
“The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug” is not the first Peter Jackson film with a scene-stealing performance by a digital character. In this second installment in the “Hobbit” trilogy based on J.R.R. Tolkien’s “The Hobbit, or There and Back Again,” the standout creature is Smaug, a hoard-guarding giant lizard that speaks in the dulcet tones of ubiquitous Englishman Benedict Cumberbatch. Cumberbatch transforms a fire-breathing dragon into a Middle-earth Hannibal Lecter with wings and fangs and talons, oh my, and the results are scary, seductive, insinuating and sibilant. He even knows how to pronounce “precious.”

Back in their quest to reclaim the Lonely Mountain of Erebor, ancestral homeland of the dwarves, are 13 heavily armed and heavily bearded dwarves, led once again by the regal Thorin Oakenshield (the gifted Richard Armitage), rightful King of the Dwarves, accompanied by wizard Gandalf the Grey (Ian McKellen) and “burglar” and ring-bearer Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman), a hobbit from the Shire. Still endeavoring to hunt the journeyers down is the white Orc Azog (Manu Bennett), who commands a hellish Orc posse and rides a slavering white Warg.
In opening scenes, the band is rescued from the Orcs and taken captive by warrior “woodland elves” Legolas (LOR’s Orlando Bloom) and ginger-haired Tauriel (Evangeline Lilly), who enjoys a flirtation with “surprisingly tall” dwarf Kili (Aidan Turner). Also back are Buster Keaton-inspired action set pieces and a Rube Goldberg device in the form of the dwarves’ reignited furnaces and smelting operations.
READ MORE HERE: http://bostonherald.com/entertainment/movies/movie_reviews/2013/12/smaug_fires_up_second_hobbit
Thursday, December 12, 2013
By:James Verniere
“The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug” is not the first Peter Jackson film with a scene-stealing performance by a digital character. In this second installment in the “Hobbit” trilogy based on J.R.R. Tolkien’s “The Hobbit, or There and Back Again,” the standout creature is Smaug, a hoard-guarding giant lizard that speaks in the dulcet tones of ubiquitous Englishman Benedict Cumberbatch. Cumberbatch transforms a fire-breathing dragon into a Middle-earth Hannibal Lecter with wings and fangs and talons, oh my, and the results are scary, seductive, insinuating and sibilant. He even knows how to pronounce “precious.”

Back in their quest to reclaim the Lonely Mountain of Erebor, ancestral homeland of the dwarves, are 13 heavily armed and heavily bearded dwarves, led once again by the regal Thorin Oakenshield (the gifted Richard Armitage), rightful King of the Dwarves, accompanied by wizard Gandalf the Grey (Ian McKellen) and “burglar” and ring-bearer Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman), a hobbit from the Shire. Still endeavoring to hunt the journeyers down is the white Orc Azog (Manu Bennett), who commands a hellish Orc posse and rides a slavering white Warg.
In opening scenes, the band is rescued from the Orcs and taken captive by warrior “woodland elves” Legolas (LOR’s Orlando Bloom) and ginger-haired Tauriel (Evangeline Lilly), who enjoys a flirtation with “surprisingly tall” dwarf Kili (Aidan Turner). Also back are Buster Keaton-inspired action set pieces and a Rube Goldberg device in the form of the dwarves’ reignited furnaces and smelting operations.
READ MORE HERE: http://bostonherald.com/entertainment/movies/movie_reviews/2013/12/smaug_fires_up_second_hobbit
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Thursday, December 12, 2013
Benedict Cumberbatch Interview: Did He Get Naked For ‘The Hobbit: The Desolation Of Smaug’? Dragon Voice Caused A Bloody Throat
K POP STARZ
By Sara Guaglione | December 12, 2013 12:45 PM EST

Did Benedict Cumberbatch get naked for his role as the dragon in "The Hobbit: The Desolation Of Smaug"?
Benedict Cumberbatch revealed new details about his role as Smaug the dragon in the latest "Hobbit" installment in a new interview.
Benedict Cumberbatch explained in an interview what it felt like while in his role as Smaug the dragon in "The Hobbit: The Desolation Of Smaug," while sitting atop a huge stack of gold coins in the dragon's mountain lair, The Star reports.
"I was like, bow chicka wow wow, there's going to be a little bit of dragon porn up here! But I didn't strip off, despite what Peter says," Cumberbatch joked from Los Angeles.
According to The Star, "Hobbit" director Peter Jackson has teasing Cumberbatch that he was "rolling around naked on a bearskin rug while doing the voice and motion-capture (or mo-cap) work needed to conjure Smaug," The Star writes.
"Peter loves to exaggerate, as we know," continued Cumberbatch, 37.
READ MORE HERE: http://www.kpopstarz.com/articles/69307/20131212/benedict-cumberbatch-interview-hobbit-smaug-dragon.htm
By Sara Guaglione | December 12, 2013 12:45 PM EST

Did Benedict Cumberbatch get naked for his role as the dragon in "The Hobbit: The Desolation Of Smaug"?
Benedict Cumberbatch revealed new details about his role as Smaug the dragon in the latest "Hobbit" installment in a new interview.
Benedict Cumberbatch explained in an interview what it felt like while in his role as Smaug the dragon in "The Hobbit: The Desolation Of Smaug," while sitting atop a huge stack of gold coins in the dragon's mountain lair, The Star reports.
"I was like, bow chicka wow wow, there's going to be a little bit of dragon porn up here! But I didn't strip off, despite what Peter says," Cumberbatch joked from Los Angeles.
According to The Star, "Hobbit" director Peter Jackson has teasing Cumberbatch that he was "rolling around naked on a bearskin rug while doing the voice and motion-capture (or mo-cap) work needed to conjure Smaug," The Star writes.
"Peter loves to exaggerate, as we know," continued Cumberbatch, 37.
READ MORE HERE: http://www.kpopstarz.com/articles/69307/20131212/benedict-cumberbatch-interview-hobbit-smaug-dragon.htm
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Friday, October 25, 2013
Just Another Day’s Work For Benedict Cumberbatch

BBC AMERICA
By Fraser McAlpine | Posted on October 25th, 2013
Acting is not like other professions. There are days when you are pretending to be a man (or woman) of enormously high status (or breeding), dressed in the finest clothes available to humankind, sucking in your cheeks and looking regal. And then there are days when someone glues Cheerios all over your face and invites you to puff your cheeks out like you’ve just swallowed a hot bullet made of jam.
Benedict Cumberbatch is not immune to days like these, especially when he had to get ready to play the dragon Smaug in the Hobbit movies, and thankfully, there was someone there to record every glorious moment.
Flickr user Tolkienerd has a gallery of shots, taken from backstage footage of Benedict pulling some astonishing Smaugfaces so that the graphics department could animate his face and body language to the words coming out of his mouth. And of course, each one is astonishing: a veritable smaugasbord, if you like.
READ MORE HERE:http://www.bbcamerica.com/anglophenia/2013/10/just-another-days-work-benedict-cumberbatch/
Thursday, October 17, 2013
Benedict Cumberbatch: USA Today video - the many voices of Benedict Cumberbatch


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Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Richard Armitage hopes "The Hobbit" film will stand ‘test of time’ March 19, 2013 | 2:30 p.m. (LA TIMES)
For his turn as dwarf king Thorin Oakenshield in Peter Jackson’s “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey,” actor Richard Armitage drew inspiration from a very different regal figure created not by J.R.R. Tolkien, but rather William Shakespeare.
“I was in a production of ‘Macbeth,’” Armitage told Hero Complex on the occasion of the film’s release last December. “So I went back to all my notes about ‘Macbeth,’ because I just felt there was something about that character unwinding that was relevant to Thorin unwinding in this story.”
Thorin, of course, plays a key role in the first of Peter Jackson’s planned three-part adaptation of Tolkien’s beloved 1937 children’s novel, “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey,” which makes the trek to Blu-ray and DVD this week.
Audiences have a new opportunity to enjoy Armitage’s performance as the mighty warrior who joins forces with an initially reluctant Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman) to reclaim his homeland and the treasure that’s been stolen by the dragon Smaug.
READ MORE: http://herocomplex.latimes.com/movies/hobbit-star-richard-armitage-hopes-film-will-stand-test-of-time/
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Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Exclusive Video: Martin Freeman on The Hobbit The star of The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey has some NSFW words for his co-star Benedict Cumberbatch. (CRAVE ON LINE)
March 5th, 2013 William Bibbiani
Bibbs grills the star on his personal history with J.R.R. Tolkien's fantasy series, how the ending of The Hobbit changed when the film split from two films into three, and Andy Serkis's first turn behind the camera as Peter Jackson's 2nd Unit Director. Freeman also has some decidedly choice words for his "Sherlock" co-star, and the future voice of Smaug, Benedict Cumberbatch. You can see them on-screen together (sort of) in The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, which hits theaters on December 13, 2013.
READ MORE: http://www.craveonline.com/film/interviews/453879-exclusive-video-martin-freeman-on-the-hobbit
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Saturday, March 2, 2013
Benedict Cumberbatch: Brilliant ‘Star Trek Into Darkness’ Fan Art For Benedict Cumberbatch’s John Harrison (FLICKS AND BITS)
Natural Shocks has drawn this stunning graphite pencil drawing of Benedict Cumberbatch as John Harrison in ‘Star Trek into Darkness.’ Head on over to Natural Shocks deviantART or tumblr to feast your eyes on more top-notch artwork. In related ‘Star Trek Into Darkness’ news, I’ve also posted four hi-res pics from the film that first arrived online in low-res/watermarked form. Set for release on May 17th (May 15th in IMAX), ‘Star Trek Into Darkness’ is directed by J.J. Abrams with a script by Alex Kurtzman, Roberto Orci and Damon Lindelof. Abrams is producing with Bryan Burk through Bad Robot Productions, along with Lindelof, Kurtzman and Orci.
Besides the briefest of glimpses of his Smaug the Dragon in ‘The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey,’ Benedict Cumberbatch can next be seen on the big screen in ‘Star Trek into Darkness,’ alongside the likes of Chiwetel Ejiofor, Michael Fassbender, Michael Kenneth Williams, Ruth Negga, Brad Pitt, Quvenzhané Wallis and Adepero Oduye in Steve McQueen’s ‘Twelve Years a Slave,’ and as Julian Assange in ‘The Fifth Estate.’ Steve Moffat, the co-conceiver, producer and screenwriter of BBC’s ‘Sherlock,’ recently revealed that the third ‘Sherlock’ series would begin production shortly, reuniting Cumberbatch as the eponymous Sherlock Holmes with his fellow ‘The Hobbit’ star, Martin Freeman, as Dr. John Watson. The actor is also said to be in negotiations to play the English mathematician Alan Turing in ‘The Imitation Game.’
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Friday, February 8, 2013
Benedict Cumberbatch: Star Trek (HUGE SPOILER from EW???) (FLICKERING MYTH)
New Star Trek Into Darkness images, and Benedict Cumberbatch's bad guy finally revealed?
Thursday, 7 February 2013
Yes, according to the description for this week's EW cover, Cumberbatch will be portraying none other than the 20th century warlord Khan Noonien Singh, who was of course portrayed by Ricardo Montalban in the Star Trek: TOS episode 'Space Seed' and 1982's Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. Naturally, there is the possibility that EW has made a mistake (and either way, I imagine that's the line that Paramount Pictures will take), but of all the rumours about the identity of the film's antagonist, Khan's name has popped up most frequently, and considering the hints in the theatrical trailer, it shouldn't come as much surprise if this does turn out to be the case. So, does this mean the mystery has finally been solved, and if so, what the hell is Khan doing in a Starfleet uniform?
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Wednesday, February 6, 2013
Benedict Cumberbatch on Vanity Fair Video
Star Trek into Darkness Star Benedict Cumberbatch on How J. J. Abrams Cast Him (Using iPhone Video)
The English actor in The Hobbit will star in J. J. Abrams’s nextStar Trek installment. He tells senior West Coast editor Krista Smith how he landed the shrouded role.
- TOPICS:
- HOLLYWOOD
- THE HOBBIT
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Sunday, February 3, 2013
Benedict Cumberbatch - Pretty Near Perfect (I'm on the Edge)
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Friday, February 1, 2013
The Rise and Rise and Rise of Benedict Cumberbatch 31 JANUARY 2013 Not to be confused with Hubert Cumberdale. by Charlotte Meredith (PALATINATE)
As 2013 opens, Benedict Cumberbatch must be reminiscing about the last three years with a considerable amount of personal satisfaction. From 2010 onwards, his career has seen a meteoric rise from his small-time television drama roles to the plum offerings as the villain in the newest movie franchises: Smaug (and the Necromancer) in The Hobbit and Khan in Star Trek. Yet both his fans (including myself) and his detractors must be pondering on the same question: how did he come so far so quickly?
I believe the answer lies in one word: Sherlock. Benedict had had leading parts in television miniseries before 2010; he was the dramatic lead in both ‘To the Ends of the Earth’ (2005) and ‘The Last Enemy’ (2008). But, in spite of the critical acclaim he received for such roles his career might well have drifted into television obscurity and occasional theatrical success if it were not for his hugely popular depiction of the eponymous hero of Sherlock.
READ MORE: http://www.palatinate.org.uk/?p=34600
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Friday, January 25, 2013
Benedict Cumberbatch Wants to Meet WikiLeaks Founder He'll Portray Onscreen 9:00 AM PST 1/24/2013 by Merle Ginsberg & Gary Baum (HOLLYWOOD REPORTER)
Television’s Sherlock star Benedict Cumberbatch has gotten into a bad-guy groove, playing Khan in the upcoming Star Trek Into Darkness and Smaug in the next Hobbit film. But he certainly doesn’t think his lead gig as notorious WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in The Man Who Sold the World is part of this bent.
READ MORE: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/benedict-cumberbatch-wants-julian-assange-414703
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Thursday, January 17, 2013
Sherlock series 3: what do we know so far – and what can we deduce? A year after The Reichenbach Fall, Paul Jones assesses what the clues might tell us about the what, when and who of the upcoming new episodes...(RADIO TIMES)
Filming and air date
Sherlock made superstars of Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman, the result being that their other movie and TV commitments – most notably Cumberbatch's part as the villain in Star Trek sequel Into Darkness and Freeman's starring role in The Hobbit trilogy – have pushed back filming on series three.
Originally planned to begin this month, shooting has since been postponed until March. The good news? Co-creator Steven Moffat and his producer wife Sue Vertue say that will not impact the intended transmission date of autumn 2013.
The episodes
In August, Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss revealed three key words, one relating to each episode of the new series. They've also dropped other clues, and even a few facts. Here's what we know so far, plus a great deal of educated speculation...
http://www.tumblr.com/tagged/the%20reichenbach%20feels
Episode 1 – The Empty House/”Rat”
This is the episode we know the most about. Written by Mark Gatiss, it will answer the question every Sherlock fan is asking – “How did he survive the fall?” The solution was filmed at the same time as the setup and the detective’s death-defying plunge, and Martin Freeman tells us "All the clues were on screen. It's not going to be a cheat – everything that we saw on that final episode offers hints as to how he did it."
But how will Sherlock reveal himself to his friend, and how will John react? We already know from Gatiss (and common sense) that the episode will be based in part on The Adventure of the Empty House, the story in which Sir Arthur Conan Doyle resurrected Holmes. In the original, the detective bumps into Dr Watson while disguised as a stooped, elderly book seller and only reveals himself once he’s finagled his way safely inside 221B Baker Street. We’ve already seen Benedict Cumberbatch's Sherlock do a bit of character acting (in The Blind Banker and A Scandal in Belgravia) so a disguise-and-reveal is a possibility. We also know Sherlock enjoys a bit of drama, which he can then puncture by acting aloof. And it’s such an iconic moment it would be a shame if Gatiss didn’t recreate it in some way.
What might be John’s reaction if he does?
READ MORE: http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2013-01-16/sherlock-series-3-what-do-we-know-so-far--and-what-can-we-deduce
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Saturday, January 12, 2013
NTAs 2013: You’d expect Benedict Cumberbatch to stroll it for best actor...(RADIO TIMES)
"... but if there’s a Doctor in the house the smart money might be on last year’s winner, Matt Smith," says David Butcher ahead of this year's National Television Awards
David Butcher
12:28 PM, 11 January 2013
Television can be a snooty business. When the National Television Awards started in 1995 there were those who muttered that having the public decide on industry prizes was akin to letting the barbarians through the gates and offering them canapés.
After all, what did ordinary punters know? Much better, some thought, to do things in the traditional Bafta style, with juries of the great and the glamorous making decisions behind closed doors. Preferably the closed doors of a plush hotel, with nice goody bags to take home afterwards.
That year, Bafta anointed Between the Lines as its best drama. You may or may not remember it – Neil Pearson, police thriller, dark and moody? No, I thought not. I loved every minute and I can’t remember it, either.
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Benedict Cumberbatch on fame, science and his new Radio 3 play, Copenhagen (RADIO TIMES)
EXCLUSIVE: we talk to the Sherlock star as he tackles Michael Frayn's modern classic with Simon Russell Beale and Greta Scacchi
Jack Seale
2:50 PM, 11 January 2013
Benedict Cumberbatch is at a point in his career where he needn't say yes to any project if he doesn't fancy it. The star of the biggest drama on British TV, Sherlock, he's proved himself on stage in Danny Boyle's innovative, award-sweeping reinvention of Frankenstein, and will become a proper Hollywood star this summer thanks to a major role in feverishly anticipated nerdgasm Star Trek into Darkness – a casting that director JJ Abrams says was "a formality" after one viewing of a Sherlock DVD.
At this rate, by 2014 Cumberbatch will simultaneously be playing Batman, Superman and James Bond – but even if that happens, on present form you can bet he'll still be a regular presence on good old BBC radio.
Christmas Day on Radio 4, just before the Queen's speech: there he was as the young Rumpole of the Bailey. Then on Wednesday, the Radio 4 sitcom Cabin Pressure came back for series 4 with Roger Allam, Stephanie Cole and, yes, Benedict Cumberbatch all returning as the staff of a tiny airline.
Now he's on the wireless yet again, playing German nuclear scientist Werner Heisenberg in a new version of Michael Frayn's modern classic play Copenhagen (Sunday 8.30pm Radio 3). The three-hander has a cast from the velvet-lined box inside the top drawer: Simon Russell Beale is Heisenberg's Danish former mentor Niels Bohr, while Greta Scacchi takes the ultimately crucial role of Bohr's wife Margrethe. Exalted company, but Cumberbatch is the big name.
The play premiered in 1998 and is a famously knotty beast, concerned with the details of atomic physics and the insoluble question of whether, when Heisenberg visited Bohr in 1941, he was trying to glean info that might help the Nazis get the bomb, or warning Bohr that Hitler wanted it. The three protagonists discuss this meeting after their deaths.
"I never saw a production of it," says Cumberbatch when RT visits during a break in recording at Broadcasting House in London. "So I'm probably going to piss a lot of people off who want to hear it the way they last heard it. There's no way I can impersonate that.
"These are such extraordinary people with so much on their shoulders. So much of what they did affected so many people. It's a ripe topic for drama and he's just a master, Crazy Phrasey Frayn. He's brilliant."
READ MORE:http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2013-01-11/benedict-cumberbatch-on-fame-science-and-his-new-radio-3-play-copenhagen
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Monday, January 7, 2013
Henry Cavill and Benedict Cumberbatch Are Stars To Watch In 2013 (FORBES)
Dorothy Pomerantz, Forbes Staff
Another star we’re keeping an eye on this year is Benedict Cumberbatch. The British actor already has legions of fans from his work on Sherlock, an update of Arthur Conan Doyle’s detective series. This year he’ll co-star in one of the most anticipated movies of 2013: Star Trek Into Darkness. There’s been a lot of speculation that the character Cumberbatch is playing is Khan, the bad guy from the second Star Trek movie in 1982. But the star has said his character’s name is John Harrison.
Fans will also be able to hear (but not see) Cumberbatch in the upcoming sequel to The Hobbit. Cumberbatch voices the dragon, Smaug.
Speaking of superheroes, Henry Cavill also makes our list of Stars to Watch. The young actor, best known for his work in The Immortals, is the latest to take on the role of Superman. Brandon Routh tried in 2006 with Superman Returns but the film didn’t live up to expectations, earning $390 million at the box office on a budget of $270 million. Warner Bros. is hoping to see better results with Man of Steel, which hits theaters this summer. You can check out the trailer here. With his square good deeds, Superman has become a tough sell in the age of tortured superheroes like Batman. But if the film is a hit, Cavill could be on his way to becoming the next Christian Bale.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KVu3gS7iJu4
Follow me on Twitter at DorothyatForbes.
READ MORE:http://www.forbes.com/sites/dorothypomerantz/2013/01/07/nicholas-hoult-and-benedict-cumberbatch-are-stars-to-watch-in-2013/
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