Showing posts with label rhys ifans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rhys ifans. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Jonny Lee Miller: 'Elementary' Season 2 Spoilers: Has Sherlock's Brother Mycroft Set His Sights on Joan?

LATINOS POST
By Nicole Rojas | First Posted: Sep 21, 2013 01:55 PM EDT



CBS’ hit Sherlock Holmes drama “Elementary” returns for its second season in just a few days with a special London-based premiere. Sherlock (Jonny Lee Miller) and Joan Watson (Lucy Liu) will kick off the new season by leaving New York City behind and heading back to Sherlock’s childhood home.



According to CBS, “Holmes and Watson travel to London to help track down an old mentor and investigate an unsolved mystery.” The two detectives won’t just be solving crimes, they’ll also be delving deeper into Sherlock’s past. CBS teases, “Meanwhile, Mycroft Holmes (Rhys Ifans), Sherlock’s estranged brother, reunites with Sherlock and reveals some secrets of his own.”

The reunion of the two brothers, who don’t appear to get along very well, will allow Joan to find out more about Sherlock’s life before he moved to New York City. But that’s not all. According to TVGuide, Sherlock and Joan make a bet about Mycroft: whether he wants to sleep with her or not.


READ MORE HERE:http://www.latinospost.com/articles/28183/20130921/elementary-season-2-spoilers-sherlocks-brother-mycroft-set-sights-joan.htm

Thursday, July 11, 2013

JONNY LEE MILLER: New Elementary Cast additions (DEN OF GEEK)


Sean Pertwee is to join Jonny Lee Miller, Rhys Ifans, and Natalie Dormer as the latest Brit in CBS' Sherlock Holmes show, Elementary...

Elementary has nabbed itself a bit of a UK acting dynasty (well, dynasty might be somewhat grand a term for the family, but his dad did play both The Doctor and Worzel Gummidge) by casting Sean Pertwee as Scotland Yard detective, Inspector Lestrade.



Absent thus far from Elementary's New York-set proceedings, Lestrade is one of a flurry of Conan Doyle characters introduced at the tail-end of season one and the beginning of season two. First came Sebastian Moran, then Irene Adler, and Moriarty, next is Holmes' brother Mycroft, and with him, Sean Pertwee as Inspector Lestrade. The character, often depicted somewhat mockingly in the Conan Doyle stories, consults Holmes on various cases, and has won his professional reputation based largely on Holmes' deductions.


Read more: http://www.denofgeek.com/tv/elementary/26351/elementary-season-2-casting-news#ixzz2Yk9GG3mY 

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Jonny Lee Miller: 'Elementary' season 2 casting news: Rhys Ifans to recur as Mycroft Holmes TVJUNE 26, 2013BY: MEREDITH JACOBS (EXAMINER)

Actor Rhys Ifans arrives at the premiere of Columbia Pictures' 'The Amazing Spider-Man' at the Regency Village Theatre on June 28, 2012 in Westwood, California.

It's already been announced that "Elementary" is heading to London for its second season premiere, and on Wednesday, June 26, CBS announced some very exciting casting news, especially for those hoping to see some familiar characters on the show.

According to CBS, Rhys Ifans ("The Amazing Spider-Man," "Notting Hill") will be recurring as Sherlock Holmes' older brother, Mycroft Holmes, beginning with the "Elementary" season 2 premiere, which will be shot on location in London. Sherlock (Jonny Lee Miller) heads to London to revisit an old case, which forces him to face Mycroft. The brothers suffered a drastic falling out a few years earlier, but Sherlock and Joan (Lucy Liu) will be staying in his new home, and it should be one that is very familiar to Sherlock fans: 221B Baker Street. Joan will be caught in the middle as the brothers are forced to deal with their very complicated past.

READ MORE: http://www.examiner.com/article/elementary-season-2-casting-news-rhys-ifans-to-recur-as-mycroft-holmes

Monday, June 3, 2013

Rhys Ifans gives 'the interview from hell' and exposes a journalistic farce (THE GUARDIAN)

Rhys Ifans
Rhys Ifans: car-crash of an interview. Photograph: Adrian Sherratt

Billed on The Times's front page as "the interview from hell," Janice Turner's piece on the actor Rhys Ifans is a must-read for journalists and, especially, would-be journalists.

It certainly lives up/down to its billing. It is a car crash. But its most interesting feature is not its uniqueness, but the fact that it is symptomatic of the absurdity of virtually all celebrity interviews.

As a journalistic genre, it has become increasingly clear that the whole process is a waste of time for everyone involved: interviewer, interviewee, PR "minder" and, most importantly, the reader.

As I say, most of the time the system works. But just occasionally the facade collapses to reveal the farcical reality, and that's what happened during Turner's interview with Ifans.

He didn't want to be there and not only made no attempt to compromise but decided to be as rude and offensive as possible.

Turner is an experienced journalist who knows what is required of a one-hour interview, as she explained in her article:

"The game is you listen politely while they plug their film, bang on about their 'method', the brilliance of their co-stars and directors etc. Then in return you hope they will offer up — without you having to prod and pester like some celebrity stalker — the tiniest nugget of anecdote, a shard of light upon their real selves.

Because they hate the game too, and particularly since it is mainly conducted in hotel suites, you feel as if you're engaged in an odd form of prostitution, one where it remains unclear who is the hooker and who the john."

She had been warned by the PR not to touch on certain personal issues, such as his relationships with women. This prior restraint is common.


Believing Ifans to be "a thoughtful man" who might like to discuss "important issues", Turner decided to begin by asking him about his Welshness. That's hardly a controversial subject, but Ifans decided to be obstreperous.

It went downhill from there and Turner soon detected that Ifans was being condescending because he "is one of those actors who believes that he's an 'artist'".

Accepting that he "has a low opinion of journalists" she asked him if he supported Lord Justice Leveson's call for statutory underpinning of press regulation.

After Ifans had consulted the publicist about whether he should talk about the subject, he mumbled something about the press requiring "liberty" but contended "they should also be curtailed when they fucking lie."

He then refused to say whether he had used the Press Complaints Commission and Turner was by now aware that the conversation had gone sour. Evidently, he was glaring at her fiercely.


Monday, July 23, 2012

THE BRIT LIST: TOP TEN BRITISH CHARACTER ACTORS IN MOVIES TODAY By Leah Rozen | Posted on Friday, July 20th, 2012 (BBC AMERICA)



It’s well known among actors that while leading roles may afford the most screen time and biggest pay checks, supporting roles offer the greater acting challenges and often juiciest lines and scenes.

As Britain’s Eddie Marsan, one of the most talented character actors working today, once said, “I have friends who are leading men, and they’re only ever allowed to play leading men of a certain type. But as a character actor, there’s a wider variety of projects available.”

While a few lucky character actors eventually become leading men – think Bob Hoskins, Alan Rickman, Rhys Ifans and Bill Nighy – most, thanks to physiognomy, build or age, are left to shine in secondary roles.

British thespians have always excelled as character actors. Back in the Golden Age of Hollywood, Donald Crisp, C. Aubrey Smith, Roland Young and plenty more regularly brightened studio releases.

The tradition continues today. Just run through the cast list for any of the eight Harry Potter films and you’ll find a veritable Who’s Who of British talent trotted out as characters who either instruct Harry and his adolescent pals or threaten them.

In salute of these supporting stalwarts, here’s a list (in alphabetical order) of the ten busiest British male character actors working in movies today:


READ MORE: http://www.bbcamerica.com/anglophenia/2012/07/the-brit-list-top-ten-british-character-actors-in-movies-today/

Monday, December 12, 2011

Syfy finally finds magic with ‘Neverland’ miniseries: THE SCRIBE

4.5 out of 5

Published: Sunday, December 11, 2011
Updated: Monday, December 12, 2011 08:10

Neverland
syfy.com/neverland
Rhys Ifans (left) and Charlie Rowe (right) star in the Syfy series“Neverland.”


The Syfy Channel, perhaps best known for its D-list monster flicks, deserves rare praise for its most recent endeavor. Surprisingly, it has nothing to do with killer Anacondas.

Following Theatreworks' opening of "The Lost Boys," the Syfy Channel debuted its two-part miniseries "Neverland," yet another adaptation of J.M. Barrie's beloved story of Peter Pan.

Two orbs, which function as portals to Neverland, fall into the hands of two distinct groups of people from similarly diverse eras.

The first finds pirate queen Elizabeth Bonny (Anna Friel) and a crew that terrorizes the 18th-century Spanish Main.

James "Jimmy" Hook (Rhys Ifans), a 20th-century English fencing instructor who also serves as mentor to a ragtag bunch of pick-pocketing orphan boys, finds the second.

Among the orphans is Peter (Charlie Rowe). In hopes of becoming Jimmy's business partner, he'll do anything to please Hooks, but tests his relationships with the other boys because of that very determination.
The two troupes clash upon their arrival in Neverland, and characters grope with a common, daunting question: How do they get home?

Tiger Lily (Q'orianka Kilcher), her Native American tribe, tree spirits and Tinkerbell (voiced by Keira Knightley) assist in the quest.

While Peter thinks that he, Jimmy and his friends can make their own way, Jimmy has other ideas.
Watching Peter's and Jimmy's friendship dissolve into bitter indifference is difficult to watch but extraordinarily well-executed.

The scenes between Rowe and Ifans, in which they struggle to find a solution where they can both be happy and keep their family together, pack power with their desperation.

Jimmy steadily progresses into the power-hungry Captain Hook and the end result is nothing short of chilling, signifying that the humble fencing instructor that Peter once admired has been lost forever.

"Neverland" exhibits an exceptionally strong cast and story, but you're inevitably reminded of Syfy and its notoriously bad special effects when the mythological creatures are introduced.

The crocodiles look especially out of place and stretch the suspension of disbelief to its limit. A crocodile the size of a house chases after a young Native American, yet he somehow manages to outrun the thing.

Nevertheless, the visual effects are still superior to what one may expect and even the crumby ones are at least humorous.

The Neverland wilderness is particularly striking and lends great backdrops to the clashes between the pirates and Native Americans.

Provided that "Neverland" keeps its otherworldly creatures at a minimum, it may be the only Syfy production worthy of a sequel because the end of the miniseries only feels the beginning to a new adventure.

http://www.uccsscribe.com/culture/syfy-finally-finds-magic-with-neverland-miniseries-1.2682307

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Review: 'Neverland'

televisionReview
David Hinckley

                                                                                                                    

Article Rating

‘Neverland’ fantasizes about what went into J.M. Barrie's 'Peter Pan' characters

Originally Published: Thursday, December 1 2011, 8:00 AM




 Q’orianka Kilcher as Aaya and Charlie Rowe as Peter in ‘Neverland’
Syfy
Q’orianka Kilcher as Aaya and Charlie Rowe as Peter in ‘Neverland’
“Neverland,” a new prequel to the beloved story of Peter Pan, weaves a complex, often disturbing tale demanding considerably more of its audience than the breezy musical versions that regularly fly across our theater stages.

It’s also packed with action, much of it violent, and even more packed with special effects — though the visual effects budget for a four-hour TV miniseries falls well below the level available for a “Harry Potter” or Steven Spielberg movie.

In the end it may wear down viewers who have only a passing attachment to Peter Pan. But it should stimulate lively discussion among those with a deeper fascination. Michael Jackson, who named his fantasy estate “Neverland,” is hardly the only boy drawn deeply to Peter’s story.

Like many fantasy tales from childhood, “Peter Pan” originally had an undertone of social commentary that made it much darker than simply the adventures of a boy who can fly and doesn’t want to grow up.

J.M. Barrie’s original 1902 book and 1904 play positioned Peter and the Lost Boys, their older friend Wendy, Captain Hook and other characters as representative figures from contemporary British society. Even the good ones were often selfish and nasty, and Barrie seemed to suggest a couple of things: that innocent children can be cruel and that the larger society could be troublingly indifferent to children left adrift.

“Neverland,” which launches Sunday night at 9 and finishes Monday, plays on these troubling roots while also exploring man’s inability, even in the theoretically carefree world of Neverland, to live in harmony and respect. Even when there’s enough for everyone, someone wants more.
The back story also adds new shades of gray to Barrie’s implicit debate about the desirability of growing up.

The third Syfy collaboration between writer/director Nick Willing and executive producer Robert Halmi Sr., “Neverland” begins like a Dickens story, with Peter and his friends scrambling to stay alive on the streets of London.

Their anchor is James Hook (Rhys Ifans), a fallen aristocrat determined to win back his position in society even while he trains the boys to hustle and steal.

Peter (Charlie Rowe) has good instincts, particularly toward the other boys. He also wants to grow up to be the next Hook.

He’s a kid headed for trouble until Hook steers them to a magical orb that sends them all to
Neverland, a world full of Indians, pirates and woodland spirits — yes, including Tinker Bell, voiced here by Keira Knightley.

Viewers have to start paying serious attention at this point, as a large cast of characters swirl through multiple dramas that stretch over two worlds.

The second half breaks out the full gauntlet of special effects as it steers the story toward the place we previously knew as the story’s starting point, with Hook as a pirate captain and Peter preparing to weigh the merits of growing up against staying a boy forever.

“Neverland” doesn’t presume to settle the question. It does suggest the call might be tougher for Peter than we realized.


Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/neverland-fantasizes-m-barrie-peter-pan-characters-article-1.984499#ixzz1fJCqBPmb

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

10 possible Doctors for David Yates' Doctor Who movie

Mark Harrison

While speculation rages about how much substance there is to talk of a big screen Doctor Who movie, we've decided to offer our casting services...

Published on Nov 15, 2011

Settle down, now. Give your gnashing teeth a rest, and just admit that even if the prospect of Harry Potter director David Yates doing a big-screen reboot of Doctor Who drives you to distraction, you've still thought about it. Admit that you've considered who the Doctor would be in a big Hollywood-backed reboot.

Completely disregarding the argument about whether a new cinematic continuity is a good idea or not, any Whovian is going to have considered the idea before yesterday's scoop. As we're obviously all agreed that Christopher Walken should voice the Daleks (because that would be incredible), we've rounded up some of our favourites to take on the controls of the TARDIS.

There are a few caveats to the list, naturally. It wouldn't be a proper Doctor Who geek list, otherwise. We haven't included any of the stars whose names will inevitably be bandied around, such as Robert Downey Jr, Nicolas Cage or Johnny Depp. In particular, we're sure to hear Depp's name attached to this project from here to eternity, if previous rumours are anything to go by.

We've also discounted Rowan Atkinson, Richard E Grant, Jim Broadbent, Hugh Grant, and even Joanna Lumley, given how they all had a bash at playing the Doctor in the Comic Relief special, The Curse Of Fatal Death. That doesn't rule them out of the running, in the way that it might rule out any of the previous canon Doctors.

Just like the casting of Matt Smith, and David Tennant before him, we'd suspect that the casting of a big-screen Doctor would be a little out of left-field, and so we hope that some of the choices here reflect that. Without further ado, here are ten potential Doctors.

Colin Firth

This is probably the smart-money choice. Aside from Firth's huge international profile, coming off of two consecutive Oscar nominations for Best Actor, the latter of which scored him a win back in February, he's actually interested in being involved in one way or another. While promoting The King's Speech, he said in a Twitter interview: “I’d never rule out a part in Doctor Who or Torchwood – especially Doctor Who.”

If you held to the idea of the Doctor as the eternally British alien, then there are few Brits with a higher profile than Firth right now. Even aside from the star power and goodwill he's accrued over the years, he's a great actor, too. Hell, cast Geoffrey Rush as one of his companions and let the bromance of The King's Speech continue through time and space!

Bill Nighy

A long-held 'could-be' Doctor and fan-favourite, Bill Nighy is another British actor with a high profile on both sides of the pond. 2010's Vincent And The Doctor marked a guest appearance in the TV series, and he was said to be one of the short-listed candidates for the role of the ninth Doctor, back in 2004.
We also shouldn't discount the fact that he has a working relationship with David Yates that goes as far back as the excellent 2003 BBC series, State Of Play. As with the TV series, Nighy would be the ideal choice if they were looking for an older Doctor than the most recent incarnations.
Admittedly, we can't see that happening in a big would-be franchise starter, unless a second-act regeneration gives us a younger Time Lord to put on the posters.

Alan Rickman

If we could consider any actor who worked with Yates on the Harry Potter films to be a potential Doctor, the most intriguing possibility would surely be Alan Rickman.
More noted for his villainous roles, Rickman put in a solid eight films' worth of work as Professor Severus Snape, with his story coming to catharsis in this summer's Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 2. But he also has a certain amount of geek cred for voicing Marvin in the 2005 version of The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy, and playing Nimoy-analog Alexander Knox in Galaxy Quest. We're very much reminded of his role as the Metatron in Dogma, when imagining his spin on the Doctor, world-weary, with sonorous tones and a cool outfit. Rickman deserves a big leading man project like this.

Jason Isaacs


Hello to Jason Isaacs, another Potter alumnus who's proving to be a particular favourite with DoG's readers on Twitter.
Having played the unctuous Lucius Malfoy in five of the Harry Potter films, he has form for working with Yates, but he's also famous for his underrated stab at the dual role of Captain Hook and Mr Darling, in the otherwise mediocre 2003 version of Peter Pan.
He seems more cool than eccentric, but you could imagine him playing an active Doctor in the vein of Jon Pertwee's portrayal. His supporting roles in action films have shown him capable of the running, jumping and, if Abduction is anything to go by, beating the crap out of Taylor Lautner. With just a dab of Lucius Malfoy, we'd get a very traditionally English Doctor, too. Consider Mr Isaacs one of our very top choices.

Rhys Ifans

As well as out-classing pretty much everything about Roland Emmerich's recent conspiracy thesis, Anonymous, Ifans is on his way to major Hollywood cred by replacing Dylan Baker as Dr Curt Connors, aka the Lizard, in next summer's reboot, The Amazing Spider-Man. Plus, he made a brief but memorable appearance in Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 1, as Xenophilius Lovegood.
It's the strength of his work in Anonymous that really convinces us that he'd be good, and he's one of those on the list who we couldn't really measure against any of the TV Doctors - he seems more likely to create something brand new. And aside from any of this, he's Welsh, and it's about time we had a Welsh Doctor.

Hugh Laurie

It might seem strange, to UK fans who don't really watch US television all that much, to think that Hugh Laurie is now more famous for playing Dr Gregory House than for his roles in Blackadder, or his comedy partnership with Stephen Fry. It's been hinted for a while that the eighth season of House will be its last - would Laurie be prepared to move from playing one doctor to The Doctor?
The specific allusions to Sherlock Holmes in the character of House might put him off taking up another iconic English character. But we can dream, and it's really not hard to picture Laurie as a splendidly eccentric version of the Doctor.
Chiwetel Ejiofor

Whenever the lead role in Doctor Who is up for grabs in the TV series, we get the same tabloid reports wondering if they're going to cast a female Doctor or a black Doctor, if only to drag out the same baseless column about prejudice once it turns out to be a white male.
Even with those arguments out of the way, we'd still love to see Chiwetel Ejiofor in the role. He's one of Britain's finest actors, and sadly, his big-screen presence seems to have been relegated to supporting roles in studio fare like 2012 and Salt.

But he made his name on bringing peculiar characters to life, in films like Kinky Boots and Serenity. He's possibly most distinctive in Serenity, as the cold-hearted Operative, a British gent who only seems to kill that which he finds distasteful. Provided he could tone down the violence, and doesn't go around stabbing Cybermen, that character is the stuff from which great Doctors are made.

Andy Serkis

Steven Spielberg and Peter Jackson released Steven Moffat from his contract on Tintin, in order for him to become the head writer on Doctor Who, and both professed themselves to be big fans of the series. In an ideal world, if this film has to be made, it would be great for one or both of them to get behind it as a producer, especially after how enjoyably well The Secret Of The Unicorn turned out.
And if that happened, the logical casting would be Andy Serkis. Probably better known for his performance capture work as Gollum, Caesar and Captain Haddock, Serkis is just as talented an actor when he actually shows his face. His Ian Dury in Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll was astonishing, and it's another of those performances that we really think would suggest great things in the role of the Doctor.

Sharlto Copley


It's only fair to consider that the film version might not cast a British actor, if David Yates intends to reboot the continuity of the series. Certain axioms must remain intact, like the police box TARDIS and the design of the Daleks, so let's not rule out a non-British Doctor just yet. Especially not if that opens up the possibility of District 9's Sharlto Copley in the lead role.
Of all of those we've mentioned, Copley is the actor who typifies the idea of “a madman in a box” best. His hysterical performance as Wikus van der Merwe proved his incredible charisma, as well as his capacity to fling himself around and tangle with aliens. Plus, he claims to be able to do any accent in the world, (although his Howling Mad Murdock from The A-Team might say different) so he could always play British if that's what they wanted.

Sam Rockwell


Let's commit some real heresy. What if the Doctor not only wasn't British, but was cast as American? Because if the best American out there for the job would be Sam Rockwell, we might just be all for it. Then again, some geeks are still stung by his portrayal of Zaphod Beeblebrox in that Hitchhiker's Guide movie, so we understand if you're not warming to the notion.
Rockwell would be a great out-of-leftfield choice, because he's not what the Doctor has come to be represented by in the 21st century version of the series. He's under six feet tall, for starters. But in roles like Moon, he's shown that he can carry a film on his own, and with his sporadic dancing and effortless charisma, he has a lot of screen presence. Call us crazy, but if they cast an American in the role, we'll take him over another monotonously eccentric Johnny Depp performance any day.

And Finally...
If we're all thinking about casting the Doctor here, then surely you have some ideas too. Do you think Depp would be perfect after all? Or are there some other British movie stars we've missed out who you would like to see take over as the Time Lord? Leave your thoughts in the comments, below. And we'll leave you with the face of one more suggestion, a man who would turn the world's perception of Doctor Who entirely on its head...

Over to you, then...

Den of Geeks

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Watch The All New Trailers From ‘Neverland’

Written on by

British-Movie-Neverland-Stills-Image

We have already been able to bring you a preview of the Brit-packed, Peter Pan prequel Neverland courtesy of Sky over in the UK. Now we have a load more great stuff courtesy of The Syfy channel (& RHI entertainemt) that are airing this two part mini-series in the US, next month on December 4 and 5 at 9pm est.

Neverland stars Rhys Ifans (Notting Hill) as James Hook, Keira Knightley (London Boulevard) as the voice of Tinker Bell, Anna Friel (Pushing Daisies) as Captain Elizabeth Bonny, Oscar nominee Bob Hoskins as Smee (who previously played the character in Steven Spielberg’s feature, Hook) and Charlie Rowe (Pirate Radio) as one of literature’s most cherished characters, Peter Pan.
According to the official synopsis the mini series event sweeps in time from the turbulent seas of the pirates of the Caribbean and the back alleys of Dickensian London to a world of pure imagination! Sounds good and looks good, just see for yourself below!

This is our World – Neverland Syfy Trailer

Syfy Teaser Trailer

BritScene

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Joely Richardson Dons Queen Elizabeth's Many Wigs In Anonymous

Cinema Blend


 
Joely Richardson Dons Queen Elizabeth's Many Wigs In Anonymous image
Queen Elizabeth I, the legendary ruler of England, has been the star of any number of films set in the era, portrayed by the likes of Cate Blanchett, Judi Dench, Bette Davis and Sarah Bernhardt. In Anonymous, the new drama in theaters this Friday, Elizabeth takes a supporting role in the story of the Earl of Oxford Edward de Vere, the nobleman who, as this movie theorizes, is the real author behind Shakespeare's famous works. Jamie Campbell Bower plays Oxford as a teenager, when he began an affair with the twentysomething Elizabeth, played by Joely Richardson; later in the film, when Rhys Ifans steps into the central role, Elizabeth has aged as well, played by Richardson's own real-life mother, Vanessa Redgrave.

Anonymous seems on the surface to be about Shakespeare, proving the man from Stratford-- played by Rafe Spall as a power-hungry buffoon-- was not in fact the author of the works. But it's surprisingly concerned with the politics of the time, with one of the many attempts to overthrow Elizabeth's rule and the scheming of her many advisers-- specifically her advisor William Cecil-- to take power for themselves. As a nobleman Edward de Vere had information about all of this, and as one of Elizabeth's lovers he also has a particularly vested interest in seeing the monarchy stand strong.

I talked to Richardson about her role in the film, working hard to let her naturally similarities to her mother link the character, playing one of the most iconic figures of British history, and what she thinks of the "Oxfordian" theory behind the film, that de Vere was in fact that author of Shakespeare's works. You can check out the full video interview below, and see Anonymous in theaters this weekend.


Monday, October 24, 2011

Review: Roland Emmerich’s ‘Anonymous’ Still Manages To Destroy Something—Its Own Authenticity

IndieWire


Combining the life-meets-art origin stories of “Ray” with the history-as-high melodrama of “Braveheart,” “Anonymous” marks a departure from director Roland Emmerich’s previous work as a purveyor of blockbuster destruction, but he still manages to destroy any credible sense of history with his speculative portrait of the man who might have been responsible for the works of William Shakespeare. Emmerich, casting his vote for the “Oxfordian” view of the playwright’s actual identity, turns what could have been an intelligent and provocative examination of fact and fiction into an overwrought and cretinous historical thriller that’s too busy disappearing into flashbacks and other frivolous digressions to bother discovering any actual truth.

Derek Jacobi, an actual Shakespearean actor who reportedly insisted on participating in the film, introduces its premise after bounding out of a rain-soaked cab onto a theater stage: although there is a popular biography for William Shakespeare, there are scholars who believe that the author of the some of the world’s most important and influential literary works was in fact someone else. From there, we’re introduced to Benjamin Jonson (Sebastian Armesto), a middling playwright on the run from Imperial guards; after hiding his mysterious, leatherbound cargo, he’s apprehended, and Robert Cecil (Edward Hogg) threatens to torture him unless he reveals its location. And then, because one flashback isn’t enough, the story dashes back in time yet again to chronicle the introduction of Jonson to Edward de Vere (Rhys Ifans), whom Emmerich and screenwriter John Orloff suggest is the actual author of Shakespeare’s plays.

Thankfully, we get yet another flashback in which we see de Vere’s upbringing as a charge of William Cecil (David Thewlis), advisor to Queen Elizabeth (Vanessa Redgrave in the Ifans era, Joely Richardson here). Although young Edward (Jamie Campbell Bower) is a prodigiously talented playwright and poet, William’s puritanical beliefs prohibit virtually all forms of artistic expression, and before long William manipulates Edward into marrying his daughter. But Edward’s gift for language instead wins the heart of Elizabeth, and the two of them fall into a torrid affair that William ends after she becomes pregnant.


Decades later, with his fortunes in ruins, Edward reaches out to Ben Jonson and agrees to pay him in exchange for putting on his plays, whose titles include “Macbeth,” “Romeo and Juliet,” and “Twelfth Night.” But when an actor named William Shakespeare begins taking the credit for the otherwise anonymous works, their increasing success attracts the attention of Robert, who conspires to take his dying father’s place at Elizabeth’s side.

As fun as it must be for Shakespeare scholars to offer their fan-fiction ideas about the identity of the playwright, it really makes almost no difference who wrote them, although it should be noted that conspiracy theories like the one Emmerich’s story is based on have probably been debunked twice as much as they’ve been supported. But “Anonymous” plays better as a soapy, costume melodrama than an expose of true events, not the least of which because Emmerich coaches his actors through some of the hammiest performances of their careers, short as some of them might turn out to be. Ifans is by far the standout among the ensemble, downplaying his usual manic energy to give an understated portrayal of an artist whose self-expression is as irrepressible as it is completely self-destructive. And Vanessa Redgrave mostly abets herself as the elder Elizabeth, whose advancing senility makes her especially susceptible to William’s, and later Robert’s lies.


Beyond his simultaneous resemblance to James McAvoy, Luke Evans and Orlando Bloom, however, Armesto is the film’s weakest link, especially since his character shoulders the largest responsibility plotwise, and yet makes none of Jonson’s actions remotely interesting. And it’s not just that he spends the whole film glowering from beneath his furrowed brow, or that he delivers every line as if he’s trying to make his voice sound deeper than it actually is; rather, it’s that he oddly lives up to the demands of the role of a playwright with no identity by failing to provide his character with one, so that when Jonson is supposed to come alive and fulfill his destiny at the end of the film, we don’t believe it, or care, for one second.

Meanwhile, as almost all of the other male characters are handsome and heroic or sniveling and unpleasant, Emmerich seems to have cast from a pool of actors who are all best known for replacing one another in films, because they mostly look alike without offering anything that’s too unique or different (Xavier Samuel, Sam Reid, and Jamie Campbell Bower are virtually indistinguishable.) But again, it’s Emmerich who deals the film’s death blow, not just because he cast these totally bland, pretty actors, but because he had them pitch their performances at somewhere slightly above the level of a soap opera. It’s actually a little sad that Edward Hogg didn’t have an actual moustache to twirl, because his hunch-backed malevolence ranks as one of the most cartoonish performances of the year – including the ones in “The Smurfs.”


Orloff’s screenplay, on the other hand, is a disastrously overcomplicated affair, partially because of its wormhole of flashbacks and partially because it frequently overshadows the “author’s identity” question with distracting, melodramatic digressions. For example, it admittedly could have been explained somewhere in the film, but why would Edward de Vere pick Ben Jonson to be the one to stage his plays, if Jonson wasn’t going to take the credit? Jonson is the instrumental figure in concealing/ revealing Shakespeare’s identity, but instead of making him more than a messenger, he spends the first third of the film denying responsibility for the plays, the second trying to manage Shakespeare the actor’s omnivorous greed, and then the third resenting that he can’t get either his own or Shakespeare’s plays produced. And to pay off his many scenes of boozy introspection and professional frustration? Orloff writes a tearful scene in which Jonson confesses his abject adoration of de Vere’s plays, which one supposes might have worked if Armesto hadn’t ruined it with his basso profundo blubbering.

Additionally, there are several other instances in which Orloff and Emmerich indulge in the melodrama and moral outrage of an era where playwriting is forbidden, but it seems like each of them was designed for the audience to go, “Oooh, burn,” rather than react with any sort of emotional identification. Moreover, Orloff contextualizes each play in the story as de Vere’s reaction to some new personal or political development. Like a musical biopic in which a singer-songwriter suffers from some horrible experience and goes, “You know, that would make a good song,” “Anonymous” posits that Shakesepeare’s plays were inspired and expressly designed to incite the theatergoing rabble to social outrage, if not full-fledged revolution. And who knows – maybe they were. But the combination of personal, romantic, artistic, social, and political ideas in a film that fails to lay its bag of snakes out straight is not too much of a good thing, it’s just plain bad.



Ultimately, “Anonymous” may be a fully-accurate depiction of the life and times of Edward de Vere, and a long-overdue expose of the true identity of the author of Shakespeare’s plays. But it fails on its own merits as a messy biopic and even messier historical epic whose authenticity becomes irrelevant when its execution is incompetent. Especially since the film wants to offer the audience all of the convenient and conventional payoffs of a well-told story, not just an accurately-told one: while one of the piece’s villains prevails, his movie punishment is to become advisor to a king that absolutely loves Shakespeare. Get it? After all of that, he’s going to have to watch the plays that he hates! In the meantime, our punishment is having to watch this terrible movie. Unless Shakespeare is something that helps you decide whether to be or not to be, skip “Anonymous.” [D]

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Rhys Ifans from "Notting Hill"

 


I’ve been a fan of Rhys Ifans since watching him steal scenes from Hugh Grant in “Notting Hill,” and (as an imported Euro-kicker) in “The Replacements.”


He’s done period pieces (“Vanity Fair,” “Elizabeth: The Golden Age”) and comedies, straight dramas (Enduring Love,” with Daniel Craig, is his best) and big budget films.

He had a small but crucial role, as Luna Lovegood’s journalist dad in “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.” But his immersion in big budget blockbusters came from the film we will see him in next year. Ifans, 44, is Dr. Curt Connors, “The Lizard,” in “The Amazing Spider Man.” He’s the main villain.

“I dipped my toe into ‘Harry Potter,’ but I put my whole body into ‘Spider-Man.’ It was a thrill to work with Marc Webb [ of "(500) Days of Summer). He's like Roland Emmerich (his "Anonymous" director, famed for spectacles like "Independence Day" and "2012"). He's doing blockbusters, but he has an 'indie' heart, an indie character-oriented sensibility.

"That was a very telling thing on the set. We knew it would be action-packed and epic and all that. But Marc made sure that the human dynamic was paramount, and that’s going to elevate the film possibly to a place that the other [ Spider Man] films got to.”

Like everyone else, Ifans was blown away by Emmerich’s painstaking and spare-no-expense efforts to recreate Elizabethan England for “Anonymous.”

“Often period films have budgets that keep us from seeing London in full. There are several helicopter-like shots which Roland, the master of CGI, made sure our film has. It liberates the film to see that. I really got a sense of London, a very old city that becomes a character in the film, as it was in Elizabethan times.


“Roland does paint with a big brush. But what separates him from blockbuster film contemporaries is his attention to the emotional dynamics between characters. It’s FORENSIC. Very detailed. In his films, the strand you see running across these huge canvases, through these huge universes he creates is that they’re populated by very real human relationships. That’s the ace in his deck of cards.”
One oddball question I posed to Ifans was the connection between playing an artist in the shadows — he is Edward De Vere, whom “Anonymous” says is the “true author” of Shakespeare’s plays — and the last thing we heard him in, as narrator of “Exit Through the Gift Shop,” the documentary about underground artist Banksy.

“It’s purely by chance, that. But there is high irony in that I guess Banksy is that rare artist working today in near total anonymity is Banksy. Perhaps there was some sort of subliminal marriage there that I made.”

“Anonymous” opens Oct. 28, nationwide. More from