Showing posts with label Richard Armitage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard Armitage. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Richard Armitage: 'Berlin Station' Is Back, And Tackling The Rise Of The Far-Right In This Season 2 Exclusive Clip

Movie Pilot
By Ricky Derisz


Berlin Station's debut season provided a modern twist on the espionage genre, depicting the stealth, double-crossing attempts of the CIA's attempt to discover the identity of whistleblower, Thomas Shaw. Returning for Season 2, the EPIX show will this time turn its attention to a wider and painfully topical issue of the rise of far-right political parties across Europe.

Under the direction of new Station Chief BB Yates (Ashley Judd), Daniel Miller (Richard Armitage), Robert Kirsch (Leland Orser), Valerie Edwards (Michelle Forbes) and the rest of the team will return, tasked with another covert and arguably higher-stakes mission — to investigate the root of a conspiracy to swing the election in the far-right's favor.

In Movie Pilot's exclusive clip below, Valerie is joined by fresh CIA recruit April Lewis (Keke Palmer). The pair are preparing to bug the home of Katerina Gerhardt, the charismatic leader of the German Alt-Right political party. As part of the conspiracy, the #BerlinStation team will be tasked with an unsanctioned mission to prevent a potential terrorist attack from the far-right.





Friday, June 26, 2015

Richard Armitage Goes Medieval in First 'Pilgrimage' Images (Exclusive)

THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER
JUNE 08, 2015 7:23am PT by Austin Siegemund-Broka

Tom Holland, who's in the running for the Marvel Spider-Man role, co-stars in the upcoming action release.

Jon Bernthal and Richard Armitage quest through medieval Ireland in the upcoming film Pilgrimage.

The Hollywood Reporter exclusively debuts the first images from the feature, which has just wrapped production in Europe following seven weeks of shooting in Belgium and Ireland.

The film from Brendan Muldowney centers on a group of monks who undertake a pilgrimage to transport their monastery's holiest relic to Rome. When the true significance of the relic is revealed, the journey becomes much more treacherous, and the group's faith and loyalty to one another are tested.

Bernthal (Fury, The Walking Dead) and Armitage (The Hobbit, Hannibal) star with Tom Holland, who played one of Naomi Watts' sons in The Impossible and currently is in contention for the role of Spider-Man in Captain America: Civil War and upcoming Marvel movies.

READ MORE HERE; http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/jon-bernthal-richard-armitage-go-800384

Friday, May 29, 2015

Richard Armitage Praised By 'Hannibal' Showrunner

MOVIEPILOT
by Patricia D ⋅ Posted on May 29th, 2015 at 4:10pm

Richard Armitage in 'Hannibal' (NBC)
Richard Armitage in 'Hannibal' (NBC)

When fans found out that British actor Richard Armitage would be playing the Francis Dolarhyde, the Red Dragon, in Season 3 of Hannibal they were super excited and now we are hearing how much Bryan Fuller, the showrunner, loved working with Richard.

The Armitage Army had no doubt that their idol could undertake this challenging role and it appears they were right. In a recent interview to promote Hannibal, Fuller sang Richard's praises.

When he was cast in the show -- which stars Mads Mikkelsen, as the lead character, Gillian Anderson as Hannibals's psychotherapist Bedelia Du Maurier, and Hugh Dancy who plays the serial killer hunter Will Graham -- Richard Armitage really didn't know who the feared Red Dragon was.



In an interview with Den of Geek, the showrunner discusses Armitage's role in depth.

"Oh! I can’t speak highly enough about the man as a professional and how he has brought this character to life in such a unique way. The tragedy of Francis Dolarhyde in the literature, I find to be so poignant and so romantic—you have this man who is capable of horrible things in that he’s a murderer of families, yet he is eloquent enough to take a blind woman on a date to the zoo where she can’t see the animals, but he has arranged for her to feel the animals—it’s one of the most romantic things I’ve ever read, ever!"

"To be able to allow the audience to meet that man first and see the tragedy of his situation and then be exposed to the horrors of what he is capable of, and then be able to return again to the story of a tortured man whose mind is eating him from the inside out, takes a very particular actor to navigate and garner sympathy from the audience."


READ ENTIRE ARTICLE HERE: http://moviepilot.com/posts/2015/05/29/richard-armitage-praised-by-hannibal-showrunner-3264341?lt_source=external,manual

Friday, May 22, 2015

Richard Armitage Hannibal season 3: First look at Francis Dolarhyde (video)

DIGITAL SPY
By Ben LeeFriday, May 22 2015, 8:22am EDT

Richard Armitage

 A new Hannibal trailer has given the first look at Francis Dolarhyde.

Richard Armitage plays the serial killer known as The Tooth Fairy in the NBC drama, which returns to TV next month.


"I didn't know about him until I received the information from everyone else, who gasped and said, 'Oh, you're playing the Red Dragon', and I sort of said, 'I don't really know what it means'," Armitage says in the promo.

"And then I went in search of the book and found out what it really meant."

The trailer also provides rather spoilery glimpses at Hannibal Lecter (Mads Mikkelsen) and Bedelia du Maurier (Gillian Anderson) in Europe.


Read more: http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/s225/hannibal/news/a648807/hannibal-season-3-first-look-at-richard-armitage-as-francis-dolarhyde.html#ixzz3av5w6NDZ 
Follow us: @digitalspy on Twitter | digitalspyuk on Facebook

Monday, April 13, 2015

Mark Strong and Penelope Wilton scoop top prizes at Olivier Awards 2015

RADIO TIMES
By Huw Fullerton and Kasia Delgado
Sunday 12 April 2015 at 10:28PM

Mark Strong and Penelope Wilton scoop top prizes at Olivier Awards 2015

Downton Abbey's Penelope Wilton and veteran film actor Mark Strong have topped the list of winners at this year's Olivier Theatre Awards, winning Best Actress and Best Actor, respectively.

Wilton was honoured for her critically-acclaimed portrayal of the mother of German lawyer Hans Litten – the man who put Hitler on the witness stand in 1931 – in Mark Hayhurst's Taken At Midnight, while Strong won his accolade for playing troubled dock worker Eddie Carbone in the revival of Arthur Miller's 1950s-set A View from the Bridge.



Other screen stars making waves at Britain's biggest theatre awards were Murder She Wrote actress Angela Lansbury, whose return after nearly 40 years to the UK stage in Noël Coward's Blithe Spirit earned her a Best Supporting Actress gong. The Inspector Lynley Mysteries' Nathaniel Parker won Best Supporting Actor for playing Henry VIII in the theatre production of Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall and Bring Up the Bodies.



Still, not all the big-name nominees were so lucky – Strong beat James McAvoy, Richard Armitage and Tim Pigott-Smith in the Best Actor category, while Wilton was up against hotly-tipped Gillian Anderson, Kristin Scott Thomas and Imelda Staunton. Elsewhere, Gemma Arterton and Nicole Scherzinger were beaten to the Best Actress and Supporting Actress in a Musical by Katie Brayben and Lorna Want from Carole King-based musical Beautiful.


READ MORE HERE: http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2015-04-12/mark-strong-and-penelope-wilton-scoop-top-prizes-at-olivier-awards-2015

Friday, March 27, 2015

Richard Armitage Joins Pilgrimage

EMPIRE
23 March 2015  |  Written by James White  |  Source: Screen International

Richard-Armitage-Pilgrimage

The story of a group of monks transporting a holy relic might not sound like the basis for an action thriller. But throw Richard Armitage, Jon Bernthal and Tom Holland into the mix, plus the possibility of trouble from barbarians on the road to Rome, and you have a good chance of a little violence ahead. That’s the basic set-up behind Pilgrimage.



Brendan Muldowney is set to start directing the film next mouth, working from a script by Jamie Hannigan. The basic story, as mentioned, finds a group of 13th century monks who must escort a monastery’s holiest relic to Rome and find their faith severely tested en route.

With assistance from the Irish Film Board and Creative Europe, Muldowney and primary producers Conor Barry and John Keville have tracked down the cash for a shoot that will take in the West Coast of Ireland and Ardennes in Belgium.


READ MORE HERE: http://www.empireonline.com/news/story.asp?NID=43774

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: Hobbit Star Richard Armitage on the Digital Theatre Release of The Crucible

THEATER MANIA
Mar 6, 2015
David Gordon • New York City

Richard Armitage as John Proctor in Yaël Farber's production of Arthur Miller's The Crucible at the Old Vic Theatre in London.

In the summer of 2014, South African director Yaël Farber became the toast of London with her revelatory revival of Arthur Miller's seminal drama The Crucible for the Old Vic Theatre. Staged in the round, with the scent of incense filling the auditorium, Farber's three-and-a-half-hour production starred the stage and screen actor Richard Armitage as John Proctor, Miller's tragic hero, whose extramarital love affair with a young woman leads to the deaths of several people amid the Witch Trials of 1692 Salem.

For Armitage, whose screen roles include Thorin Oakenshield, King under the Mountain, in Peter Jackson's Hobbit film trilogy, and an upcoming six-episode arc as Francis Dolarhyde, a serial killer known as The Tooth Fairy, on the television series Hannibal, it was an experience that pushed him to his limits, both as a person and as an actor. And now, more people will get to see it.

Digital Theatre, the U.K.-based organization that partners with leading West End theater companies to capture live performances for screen broadcast, has added The Crucible to its collection, and it will be available for download starting March 17 at 9am (EST). On a break from shooting an episode of Hannibal in Toronto, TheaterMania caught up with Armitage to discuss the release and his experiences during the filming of a live stage show.


Can you describe the production from your perspective?
Yaël describes her work as "visceral." She's into not making an audience feel uncomfortable, but she likes to drag them forward in their seats. The theater was in the round and she worked hard to conceal the beauty of the Old Vic. She covered the theater with cloth so there were no distractions in the room. It was quite a stark, austere look, even down to the women's costumes. They were trussed up to the neck. It revealed the beauty of the face and actually removed any sort of sensual or sexuality, which was reflective of that tough Puritan existence. It had a very abrasive feel to it. There was burning incense [live onstage]. Sound was very present. There was a pitch that the composer found that could make the seats vibrate with what they call a sonic pulse. I feel like the play had an accusatory feel to it.

What was your first thought when you heard that The Crucible would be filmed for Digital Theatre?
I was hesitant, actually. I wasn't that familiar with Digital Theatre's work. It was late in the run when the decision was made. We had nine five-star reviews and were full every night. There was such an urge for people to see it, [who] couldn't see it. I was very pleased that it would have an afterlife. One of the conditions I had in allowing it to be filmed was that Yaël be part of the edit, because what she was seeing, and what she wanted the audience to be seeing, was very specific. She storyboarded the entire play, so her presence in the filming of it is very acute.

What was the filming process like?
It was simple for us. It was shot over three nights with six or eight cameras in the theater in different positions. Luckily, because the play was in the round, it was easy to get the reverses in certain shots, and you could cross-shoot across the stage. The only difficulty was that we were wearing radio mics and it was difficult for me, because there's a part where my character is washing and to conceal a mic on a bare torso is virtually impossible. We didn't want to put it on clothing. Those technical things were tricky. I was conscious that the audience would be aware of the filming, but of course they weren't. It was very sensitively approached.

How was it to finally watch it?
I had my arm twisted into watching it in a movie theater, because I really didn't want to see it. I'm glad I did. They did a good job. One of the things that surprised me was how much my face had changed from the first day of rehearsal to that point twelve weeks into a run. My face had become weary and weighed down with his troubles. All of the triggers I found during the run were retriggering me in the cinema. It was like a catharsis going through it.


READ MORE HERE: http://www.theatermania.com/new-york-city-theater/news/richard-armitage-the-crucible-interview_72009.html/




Monday, March 9, 2015

Olivier Awards 2015: Nominations in full from Wolf Hall to Beautiful - The Carole King Musical

THE INDEPENDENT
 JESS DENHAM  Author Biography   Monday 09 March 2015



 Lesley Manville and James McAvoy have announced the nominations for this year's Olivier Awards, celebrating the best in theatre.

Memphis The Musical has picked up the most nods with nine, while Beautiful - The Carole King Musical has earned eight.

Here is the list in full:



Best Actress

Gillian Anderson, A Streetcar Named Desire

Kristin Scott Thomas, Electra

Imelda Staunton, Good People

Penelope Wilton, Taken At Midnight



Best Actor

Richard Armitage, The Crucible

James McAvoy, The Ruling Class

Tim Pigott-Smith, King Charles III

Mark Strong, A View From The Bridge





Best Actress in a Supporting Role

Phoebe Fox, A View From the Bridge

The Girls playing Iris, The Nether

Angela Lansbury, Blithe Spirit

Lydia Wilson, King Charles III



Best Actor in a Supporting Role

David Caldar, The Nether

Richard Goulding, King Charles III

John Light, Taken At Midnight

Nathaniel Parker, Wolf Hall and Bring Up The Bodies





READ MORE HERE: http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-dance/news/olivier-awards-2015-nominations-in-full-from-wolf-hall-to-beautiful--the-carole-king-musical-10095566.html

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Will Richard Armitage become the new star of Hannibal?

FANSIDED
by Josh Hill 2h ago



We are months away from the premiere of Hannibal Season 3, and with the new season comes new characters that will play larger roles than we may have originally thought.

One of the new characters is Francis Dolarhyde — aka The Tooth Fairy. Actor Richard Armitage will be stepping into the big role, which has been most recently played by Raph Fiennes, and we could see the role blow up into something larger than we thought.



Francis is a major player in the novel Red Dragon and is a central character in both film adaptations of the story. So, naturally, it’s assumed that he will be playing a large role on the series. But will that role be larger than that of the lead character — Hannibal?


READ MORE HERE: http://hannibalfannibals.com/2015/03/03/will-richard-armitage-new-star-hannibal/

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Hear love poems recited by Richard Armitage – for free

THE NATIONAL
February 10, 2015



With Valentine’s Day fast approaching, what better way to get you in the mood than to have some of the world’s great love poems read aloud – for free?

Audible Inc, the world’s largest seller of download­able audiobooks, is offering a 30-minute collection of some of the most cherished love poems narrated by actor Richard Armitage, including Sonnet 116 by William Shakespeare and Andrew Marvell’s To His Coy Mistress.

The 15 poems are now available as a free download.



The list also includes She Walks in Beauty by Byron, How Do I Love Thee? by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Maud by Alfred Tennyson, Bright Star by John Keats, Annabel Lee by Edgar Allan Poe, I Carry Your Heart by E E Cummings and Love’s Philosophy by Percy Bysshe Shelley.

“These are some of the most beautiful and most romantic verses ever written in the English language,” said Armitage, a stage and film actor who played dwarf leader Thorin Oakensheld in The Hobbit trilogy.

Richard Armitage reads The Night Watch

(This may not be one of the romantic poems offered, but the voice is... unbelievable ** Karen Wasylowski)


Friday, February 6, 2015

‘Hobbit’ Star Richard Armitage to Play Toothy Killer on NBC’s ‘Hannibal’

THE WRAP
TV | By Travis Reilly on January 13, 2015 @ 12:34 pm

Richard Armitage

“The Hobbit” star Richard Armitage has joined the cast of NBC’s “Hannibal,” a spokesperson for the network told TheWrap.

He will play Francis Dolarhyde, a.k.a. the Tooth Fairy, on Season 3 of the psychological horror series, adapted from Thomas Harris’s popular novels “Hannibal,” “Hannibal Rising” and “The Red Dragon.” He is slated for a six-episode run.



“The Hobbit” star Richard Armitage has joined the cast of NBC’s “Hannibal,” a spokesperson for the network told TheWrap.

He will play Francis Dolarhyde, a.k.a. the Tooth Fairy, on Season 3 of the psychological horror series, adapted from Thomas Harris’s popular novels “Hannibal,” “Hannibal Rising” and “The Red Dragon.” He is slated for a six-episode run.

READ MORE HERE: http://www.thewrap.com/hobbit-star-richard-armitage-to-play-toothy-killer-on-nbcs-hannibal/


Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Richard Armitage, Peter Jackson attend 'Hobbit' film premiere in Beijing

CTV
The Associated Press
Published Tuesday, January 20, 2015 7:34AM EST
Last Updated Tuesday, January 20, 2015 10:06AM EST

The Hobbit Beijing premiere

BEIJING -- Director Peter Jackson attended a red-carpet premiere of the final "Hobbit" film in Beijing on Tuesday, saying that he has been having a hard time getting used to the nickname "Peter the Great" affectionately given to him by Chinese fans.


Jackson was joined at the event by actor Richard Armitage, who said he would miss playing in the "Hobbit" trilogy and would now focus on his role in TV drama "Hannibal."

The New Zealand ambassador to China also gave a speech welcoming fans to visit his country, where the films were made.





"The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies" ends Jackson's massively successful six-film franchise that started with the 2001 release of "The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring."


Read more: http://www.ctvnews.ca/entertainment/peter-jackson-richard-armitage-attend-hobbit-film-premiere-in-beijing-1.2196840#ixzz3PVQ10ck7


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

Sunday, December 14, 2014

Richard Armitage on Thorin’s Madness: The Hobbit Interview

CRAVE ON LINE
December 13th, 2014
William Bibbiani

Thorin Oakenshield- Knock knock Gif by Goldie4224

Richard Armitage brought the sexy back to Middle Earth. The star of Peter Jackson’s The Hobbit trilogy plays Thorin Oakenshield, the heir to the throne of the dwarves, who is on a mission to recapture Erebor and the treasure hoarded by the dragon Smaug. It’s a character Richard Armitage has had an opportunity to expand from the novels, delving into the heroic nature of Thorin and transforming him into a more dashing figure than he was in J.R.R. Tolkien’s original book. But in this weekend’s The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, Thorin has achieved his goals and fallen prey to the madness that stems from acquiring untold riches. (And STILL he’s charismatic!)

I talked to Richard Armitage on the phone about the differences between the novel and the motion picture trilogy, and the seemingly rapid descent into paranoia that befalls his character in the final film in the series. We also talked about the influence Benedict Cumberbatch’s performance as Smaug had on his own performance in The Battle of the Five Armies, how Tolkien’s life story impacted his portrayal of Thorin Oakenshield and his favorite scene from all of the films.



CraveOnline: I know a lot of people who never thought they would be attracted to a dwarf from a Tolkien movie until they saw you.

Richard Armitage: [Laughs.] Yeah, I still find it a bit weird to think of it in that way, but hey, I’ll take it.

You get to take a character who, in the original book, is a bit more allegorical, and you get to turn him into a heroic figure. That must have been an interesting job to do.

Yeah, in those first few chapters of the book, Tolkien really has him as a bit of a fuddy-duddy, someone who’s quite stoic and a bit boring. Then he turns on a little bit. So we took some elements of that and tried to feed into something that was going to play over three films that the audience will be able to engage with. Because really, the character is really the spine of the story and all of the villains that come up, in way, they just hang off his story. They just hang off the spine, which is the quest to Erebor. So it was important that we created something that was aspirational, you know?

Yeah, his motivation is much more about his people than about gold in this trilogy. Which is why it’s interesting to watch the third film, to see him go a little crazy. It seems to come on very quickly. That must have been a challenge.

It has been a bit of a split focus, because the thing that sets him on the road is to try and reclaim the wealth, because with wealth comes the reestablishment of his kingdom. But when he actually gets in the presence of the gold, it has this corrupting effect on him, and takes him down that path he watched his grandfather tread. It’s got a fatalistic taste to it.



What’s that like, creating a character who has all of these deep emotional connections with the supporting cast, and then all of a sudden you have to get very paranoid about it? How do you know when you’re going too far?

You know, I think in every actor there’s a certain amount of paranoia anyway. There’s just something you [latch] into. It was about making the character as inconsistent as possible. Normally when you make a film and you put a character together you try to keep them consistent, so I sort of deliberately didn’t do that. I let him have really quite extreme mood swings, and so one moment he seems very clear and lighthearted, and then the next minute he goes to a very dark place. So I wanted to him to feel a little bit schizophrenic. But it was something Peter [Jackson] has sort of chosen in the edit, so really the final shape of the character is in Peter’s hand.

So how was it different on the day? Did you try different shadings?

Yeah, we tried all kinds of extremes. We tried quite softer readings of the scene and then he’d really push you to a place that felt sometimes abstract, and what’s really interesting me is that the takes chosen are all of the extremes that we went for. There’s a version of the scene where you think it’s much too far… the moment where Thorin starts to become a dragon a little bit. I’d gone into the soundstage and watched Benedict [Cumberbatch] recording Smaug’s voice, so I made some of the sounds he was making, I did some of the movements he was making. So it was good. It was fine-tuning, which I really enjoyed.




CraveOnline: I didn’t know Benedict Cumberbatch’s performance would have been such an influence on you. Was that your idea or did Peter Jackson encourage that?

 Richard Armitage: It just happened by chance. He just happened to be down, recording. Peter actually showed up and said, “Why don’t you watch Benedict recording some of his stuff? Because in the stage direction I want you to kind of follow him.” I sort of heard his voice and saw what he was doing, and it felt like I could just let it rub off on me a little bit, just for one scene. Just a tiny shade of that, which I just thought was interesting.


READ MUCH MORE HERE: http://www.craveonline.com/film/interviews/800035-hobbit-richard-armitage-thorins-madness/2

Friday, December 5, 2014

David Tennant, Tom Hiddleston, and Richard Armitage to Battle for the Hearts of WhatsOnStage Awards Voters

WHAT'S ON STAGE
By Bethany Rickwald • Dec 5, 2014 • New York City

The WhatsOnStage Awards offer West End audiences a chance to vote for their favorite performers each theater season. Big musicals dominate the nominations this year, with 12 nominations for Miss Saigon, which is closely followed by Memphis the Musical with 10 and Urinetown the Musical with seven. In the musical performance categories Eva Noblezada (Miss Saigon) and Beverley Knight (Memphis) compete against Madalena Alberto, Gemma Arterton (Made in Dagenham), and Jenna Russell (Urinetown the Musical). The Best Actor in a Musical category, meanwhile, features Alistair Brammer and Jon Jon Briones, both from Miss Saigon, up against Killian Donnelly and Robert Lindsay for Dirty Rotten Scoundrels and Marti Pellow for Evita.



The Best Actor in a Play category is chock-full of fan favorites, with David Tennant, Tom Hiddleston, and Richard Armitage battling for the recognition. Hiddleston, known for playing Loki in the Avengers films, is nominated for leading the cast of Donmar Warehouse's Coriolanus, while Doctor Who's David Tennant is also receiving a nomination for Shakespeare with his performance as Richard II at the Barbican. Tom Bateman is nominated for playing a heartthrob version of William Shakespeare himself in Shakespeare in Love.

Sunday, November 30, 2014

Richard Armitage Dresses Like James Bond For 'Da Man' Cover

JUST JARED
SUN, 30 NOVEMBER 2014 AT 6:20 AM

Richard Armitage Dresses Like James Bond For 'Da Man' Cover

Richard Armitage is the perfect gentleman in a tuxedo on the cover of Da Man magazine’s December 2014/January 2015 issue, out on newsstands now!

Here’s what the 43-year-old English actor had to share with the mag:

richard armitage james bond da man cover 07

On his upcoming film The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies: “It’s the last piece of Peter Jackson’s explorations of Tolkien’s works about Middle Earth, so expect the big finale before the curtain falls. There is a big clue in the title, but rest assured that a pretty spectacular battle is coming your way. As for my character Thorin, he is spiraling downwards but will rise again like all the best tragic heroes in literature.”



READ MORE HERE: http://www.justjared.com/2014/11/30/richard-armitage-dresses-like-james-bond-for-da-man-cover/



Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Ahna O’Reilly, Richard Armitage Rise To Thriller ‘Sleepwalker’

DEADLINE HOLLYWOOD
by Jen Yamato
November 18, 2014 2:45pm

Sleepwalker Ahna O'Reilly Richard Armitage

EXCLUSIVE: The Help’s Ahna O’Reilly and The Hobbit’s Richard Armitage are in the midst of filming Sleepwalker, a psychological thriller from writer Jack Olsen and director Elliott Lester (Nightingale). O’Reilly leads the cast as a grad student who goes to a campus sleep clinic to treat her insomnia and nightmares, but instead starts experiencing unsettling changes in her waking reality every time she wakes up. With the help of a doctor, she attempts to find her way back to normalcy by unraveling the tangled knot of her dreams, reality, and shockingly tragic past.



English actor Armitage is hot off of ruling Middle Earth under heavy beard and armor in Peter Jackson’s nearly-completed Hobbit trilogy. He stars in Sleepwalker as the handsome sleep researcher who develops a unique relationship with O’Reilly. After leading New Line’s summer disaster actioner Into The Storm, Armitage returns to theaters this December as the dwarf king Thorin in finale The Hobbit: Battle Of The Five Armies.



READ MORE HERE: http://deadline.com/2014/11/richard-armitage-ahna-oreilly-cast-sleepwalker-haley-joel-osment-1201288242/

Friday, November 14, 2014

10 Years Later, ‘North & South’ Remains the Greatest Period-Drama Miniseries of All Time

FLAVORWIRE
By Sarah Seltzer on Nov 14, 2014 12:00pm




Ten years ago tonight, the BBC premiered a four-part miniseries, North & South (not to be confused with the Patrick Swayze-starring civil war drama of the same name), adapted from Elizabeth Gaskell’s 19th-century novel of cross-class romance in the industrial North of England. The BBC didn’t harbor huge expectations for the series, coming as it did in the midst of a glorious decade of nonstop adaptations of major works by Austen, Brontë, and Dickens. But then, a few weeks later, the fourth installment of North & South ended with a tender, long-awaited kiss (now known to viewers as “The Kiss”). Immediately, so many people flooded the BBC’s online message boards that they crashed and shut down. It’s been enshrined in fangirl lore as “the infamous night that period drama fans broke (a small part of) the BBC (dot com).”

Richard Armitage, who played the brooding hero John Thornton, became a star and heartthrob — move over Colin Firth! — and the show was enshrined as a fan favorite.



I had a similar reaction to those first viewers’ when I watched North & South on DVD across the pond a few years later. I tracked down an email I sent eight years ago after a binge-watching frenzy:

“We watched the final three hours of North and South... you must must must must watch it. I literally couldn’t breathe at the end it was so good.

Literally. I literally couldn’t breathe! Yet somehow I lived! In all seriousness, what about the miniseries sends so many viewers into apoplexy the moment it ends? It’s hard to see at first: North & South has the marriage plot of an Austen adaptation but with no witty repartee, and the social strife and coughing deathbeds of a Dickens adaptation yet without any broad humor. In addition, it’s filmed in a mostly muted register of colors to signify the dark, industrial vibe of “Milton” (a stand-in for Manchester). We enter very few polished drawing rooms, witness not a single ball or country dance, and everyone speaks with accurately indecipherable Northern English accents. Over the course of four installments, quite a few main characters die of various lingering illnesses. The downtrodden working people of Milton get supplanted by even more desperate, literally starving Irish strike-breakers, and then they almost murder the strike-breakers, which is not something you see very often on TV. It’s bleaker than Bleak House.

nands3

But all these qualities make North & South so unforgettable, too. Like the best “prestige TV,” its concerns are with social justice, moral ambiguity, and individual responsibility. Everyone is rendered sympathetically, to some degree, even those who stand in opposition to each other. Surrounded by the conflicts of this complex world, we have the love story between Thornton, who transcended his modest background to become a mill owner (a boss with principles, but a boss nonetheless), and the refined, socially liberal Margaret Hale (played by a radiant Daniella Denby-Ashe), who comes from the gentler South and thinks him an oppressive brute. It’s one of the most explosive, chemistry-rich misunderstanding-laden romances that’s ever graced the small screen. Their courtship has a structure that clearly imitates Pride and Prejudice, but each step along the way is ten times as dramatic.




Thursday, November 13, 2014

Richard Armitage teases “whatreallyhappenstoThorin” (SPOILERS - don't look if you don't want to know)

THEONERING.NET
NOVEMBER 12, 2014 at 8:46 PM BY DEMOSTHENES   -



THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF FIVE ARMIES Richard Armitage has taken to his twitter account to drop some obscure allusions to the end of The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies using the hashtag #whatreallyhappenstoThorin.

RICHARD ARMITAGE TWITTER ACCOUNT




If you prefer to remain oblivious, we suggest you not read down any further!

MOVIE SPOILER SPACE
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LAST CHANCE!



Thorin’s death scene has been filmed — Richard Armitage has alluded to the scene on a few occasions, including during this interview with TORn:

GD: With all that you bring to Thorin, people — especially those who don’t know what’s coming — will be devastated in Film 3!

RA: If they haven’t read the book… I know. [with gleeful excitement] Oh it’s so good. I can’t even begin to tell you — it’s so good… The way that’s structured — I know we’re not supposed to talk about it, but it’s… at every level it surpassed my expectation.


READ MORE HERE: http://www.theonering.net/torwp/2014/11/12/94544-richard-armitage-teases-whatreallyhappenstothorin/