Showing posts with label shadow dancer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shadow dancer. Show all posts

Friday, August 30, 2013

Brendan Gleeson: Domnhall Gleeson, a star in his own time



THE IRISH TIMES
Tara Brady
August 30, 2013

Julian Lennon. Paul Dalglish. Cameron Douglas. It’s never easy following in your father’s footsteps when dad happens to be really, really good at his job. How is it, then, that Domhnall Gleeson, son of Brendan, makes it look so damned easy? The sometime star of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows and True Grit, has, aged 30, already been exposed to squillions of movie-going punters. In sheer bums-on-seats terms, he’s a huge star.

“But they’re not going for me,” he shrugs. “It doesn’t count. Even if I signed a Harry Potter thing I don’t think you’d get anything for my autograph on Ebay.”

What if Brendan added a Mad Eye Moody signature?

“Maybe two euro. At most. But by the time you add in postage and packaging. You know.”

He’s being modest. But any film-maker who has been lucky enough to direct Domhnall Gleeson will tell you that he’s as whip-smart as he is gifted. A versatile talent, the actor has effortlessly transitioned between Hollywood gigs and home turf. He’s appeared in sci-fi (Dredd), Tolstoy (Joe Wright’s Anna Karenina), alternate history (Never Let Me Go), political drama (Shadow Dancer) and one Irish sex comedy that we know of (Sensation). He has worked with the Coen Brothers, with Charlie Brooker (for the incoming Black Mirror) and with Lenny Abrahamson (on Frank). He has sidestepped with ease between media: he was nominated for a Tony for his work on the Broadway production of Martin McDonagh’s The Lieutenant of Inishmore and he took home an IFTA for playing Bob Geldof in the TV movie When Harvey Met Bob.

He has, as the varied CV attests, no plans to settle down in Tinseltown.

“I like that home is, erm, home,” he says. “I don’t really want to be too far away. And I hate driving. So LA definitely doesn’t suit me.”



The oldest of the four Gleeson brothers, Domhnall’s fate was sealed when he went to the IFTAs, aged 16, to pick up an award on behalf of his father. An agent, impressed by his amusing speech, came a-calling and, by 19, the youngster was appearing on London’s West End in The Lieutenant of Inishmore.

“I wanted to be a writer in my teens,” he says. “And when I got an agent I thought: ‘Oh great. Extra work. I might make a bit of money’. Then I read Martin McDonagh’s script and that changed everything. It was the funniest thing I had ever read. I thought it was a masterpiece. I still think so.”

Does he remember Brendan’s transition from teaching to professional acting?

“Yes and no. From early on, I remember dad coming home with strange haircuts. I remember him dyeing his hair black. I remember him doing a Garry Hynes play and looking really menacing for about a month. Which was weird. But I don’t remember the transition. And I often think about that now. Because my parents had four kids and it must have been an intensely worrying and anxious time for them. But it was completely hidden from us.”



And was it cool knowing that dad was touched by glitz and glamour?

“That never mattered to us at all. He was always still busy being a good dad and mam was always busy being a good mam. And that’s what I remember most.”

Fittingly, father and son will soon share screen time in Calvary, John Michael McDonagh’s dark good-priest-gone-bad drama.

“I haven’t got a huge amount to do in that,” explains Gleeson the Younger. “That’s my dad’s film. He is the centre of it. There are all these local people who are taking strips off him and we are all in orbit around him. I am only in it for one scene. But it did take us to different level of working together. And it’s another level for John. It feels very, very strong.”

 READ MORE AT: http://www.irishtimes.com/culture/film/domnhall-gleeson-a-star-in-his-own-time-1.1509690?page=3

Monday, June 24, 2013

‘Ripper Street’ Adds ‘Love/Hate’ and 'Jump' Actors (IFTN) 24 Jun 2013 : By Kevin Cronin


Season two of ‘Ripper Street’, currently filming in Dublin, continues to expand its cast with ‘Jump’ actor Martin McCann and Love/Hate’s Charlie Murphy, both past IFTA winners, set to feature in upcoming episodes.


Recent weeks have seen filming extend beyond Clancy Barracks, which doubles for police headquarters in Whitechapel, London, to the Natural History Museum on Merrion Row and North Great George’s Street.



Charlie Murphy won the IFTA for Best Actress at this year's awards; recently starred in BBC’s ‘The Village’; and will appear in ‘Quirke’, starring Gabriel Byrne, this autumn.

Martin McCann was nominated for an IFTA for his performance in ‘Jump’ this year and previously won the IFTA for Best Actor in 2011 for ‘Swansong: Story of Occi Byrne’.

He also starred in ‘Shadow Dancer’ and appeared in Steven Spielberg’s critically-acclaimed World War II mini-series ‘The Pacific’ in 2010.

Filming in Dublin on ‘Ripper Street’ will continue until 31st August and return to BBC screens in 2014.


Saturday, May 4, 2013

Katherine Heigl and Clive Owen Set for Survivor Source: Screen Daily May 4, 2013



Katherine Heigl and Clive Owen are set to headline an action project titled Survivor, Screen Daily reports. James McTeigue (V for Vendetta, The Raven) is attached to direct.

The film follows an American woman working in London for the U.S. State Department. When her offices are bombed, she, the lone survivor, finds herself caught up in a conspiratorial plot, leading to her becoming a fugitive from the law. She only has until New Year's Eve to clear her name and stop another targeted attack.


Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Clive Owen bags lead role in Richard Levine's Blue Angel! (BOLEGAINDIA)



No one is unbeknownst to the fact that Britain has been drooping all over in the education department; however cinema rarely talks about the real-life scenario.  May be because, it reveals something about everyone from the student to the government funding it.

However, one of Hollywood’s next novel adaptations will be a good step in the scandalous direction. Sources say that the international sales are going on for Richard Levine’s Blue Angel adapted from Francine Prose’s wicked novel of the same name, which stars Clive Owen in the leading role.

READ MORE: http://www.bolegaindia.com/gossips/Clive_Owen_bags_lead_role_in_Richard_Levines_Blue_Angel-gid-25400-gc-15.html

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Clive Owen Will Lust For Younger Student In Novel Adaptation Blue Angel 2013-02-09 11:00:58 Author: Nick Venable (CINEMA BLEND)



According to Variety, international sales are going on for Richard Levine’s Blue Angel adapted from Francine Prose’s wicked novel of the same name, which stars Clive Owen in the leading role. Owen’s career has been steady, with the action Killer Elite and the creepy Spanish horror Intruders as two of his more recent efforts. He’ll soon be seen in the brotherly Brooklyn crime drama Blood Ties. None of that sounds anything like what his Blue Angel character is in for.

Owen will play Swenson, a New England college’s creative writing professor brought down by jadedness and dead-end students. Then someone with writing skill joins his class, and she happens to be attractive, tattooed, and everything Swenson needs in his life. And then they develop a completely platonic relationship and go about their separate lives. Or maybe something a little more controversial actually happens.


READ MORE: http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Clive-Owen-Lust-Younger-Student-Novel-Adaptation-Blue-Angel-35654.html

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Clive Owen is 48 years old & sideburn-y in Paris: could Clive still get it? (CELENEWS)



I will never stop talking about Clive Owen, even if he isn’t in my current Forever Dong rotation. My current rotation is: Benedict Cumberbatch, Kevin Bacon (has anyone else been watching The Following?!?) and Michael Fassbender. It’s been a while since I’ve had a good, dirty fantasy about Clive. It’s been even longer since he wrote me a dirty letter! But even in his absence… Clive could still get it, right? He’s 48 years old, by the way. Aging like a fine wine.

Anyway, these are new photos of Clive at the Paris premiere of his film Shadow Dancer. I believe we had photos of London premiere last year, so I guess this film is coming out in not-so-steady drips. Maybe they’re having distribution problems. Clive looks good, right? He always wears the hell out of a suit, his hair looks decent, and I’m enchanted by his late-in-life sideburns. He still knows how to eye-f—k a camera too.

READ MORE: http://celebdailynews.com/clive-owen-is-48-years-old-sideburn-y-in-paris-could-clive-still-get-it/

Friday, January 18, 2013

Clive Owen On Avoiding The British Agent Cliche In 'Shadow Dancer' And His Own Memories Of Irish Troubles The Huffington Post UK |


Clive Owen plays Mac in 'Shadow Dancer', here seen recruiting Collette McVeigh (Andrea Riseborough)

Clive Owen is a Brit undoubtedly done well in Hollywood, acclaimed for his versatility ('Closer', 'Children of Men', 'The Bourne Identity'), most recently for his Golden Globe-nominated turn with Nicole Kidman in the HBO telemovie 'Hemingway and Gelhorn'.

But he was persuaded to return to the genre he's probably most associated with, that of the political thriller for the lead role in 'Shadow Dancer', adapted by ITN News Correspondent Tom Bradby from his own novel.


Owen plays Mac, a weary British agent, responsible for running informers at the height of the Troubles in 1990s Northern Ireland. This brings him into contact with Collette (Andrea Riseborough on top form), who is tasked with betraying her family if she wants her own freedom.

Here, Owen explains how the Irish Troubles affected him personally, and the sympathies he feels for his own character caught in a no-win situation...

What were your views on the British-Irish conflict as a young man, living in the UK at the time the film is set?

Well, obviously I grew up with it being part of our lives and that threat being in the air and every night hearing some report on the news about the Troubles in Northern Ireland. I actually went to Belfast during that time. I did a play and stayed in Belfast for a week during the Troubles and it was rough, it was a war zone. And it was only when I went into the production office for this film and saw all the pictures they'd put on the wall from that time that I was like, "Wow, they've come a long way." Because it's not that long ago and it was a very different place then.


READ MORE: http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2013/01/18/clive-owen-shadow-dancer-northern-ireland_n_2501532.html?utm_hp_ref=uk

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Dames Helen Mirren and Judi Dench battle for best actress award (TELEGRAPH)

Dame Helen Mirren will battle with Dame Judi Dench for best British actress at the London Critics' Circle Film Awards, as Daniel Craig gets nod for best actor for 007 role


Dame Helen Mirren will vie with Dame Judi Dench and Emily Blunt for best British actress at the London Critics' Circle Film Awards.

Actress Dame Helen is nominated for her role as the filmmaker's wife in the movie Hitchcock, while Dame Judi is up for two films, as MI5 boss in Skyfall and The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel.

Blunt is also shortlisted for two films, Looper and Your Sister's Sister, while the other nominees are Andrea Riseborough (Shadow Dancer) and Alice Lowe (Sightseers).

Bond star Daniel Craig is up for British actor of the year, competing against Daniel Day-Lewis for his role as the former US president in the Steven Spielberg film Lincoln.

Skyfall has been nominated for five awards, including British film, supporting actor (Javier Bardem), and supporting actress (Dame Judi).




Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Clive Owen & Juliette Binoche Locked For ‘Words & Pictures’ By DOMINIC PATTEN | Wednesday November 7, 2012 @ 11:13am (DEADLINE HOLLYWOOD)


After months of rumors, Clive Owen and Juliette Binoche have signed on to play the leads in the romantic drama Words And Pictures. Fred Schepisi is directing from a screenplay by Gerald DiPego. The film follows the uneasy relationship between two very different teachers at a New England prep school.

READ MORE: http://www.deadline.com/tag/clive-owen/

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Morgan Freeman And Clive Owen Are the Last Knights (FEMALE FIRST)




The 'Invictus' actor and the 'Inside Man' star have signed up for the forthcoming adventure drama, which is to be helmed by Japanese director Kazuaki Kiriya from a screenplay by 'Barney's Version' writer Michael Konyves.


Clive is currently filming 'Sin City: A Dame to Kill For' - which sees him reprise his role of Dwight McCarthy from the original movie in 2005 - with Jessica Alba, Rosario Dawson and Mickey Rourke.

He is then due to star in forthcoming thriller 'Blood Ties' alongside Mila Kunis, Marion Cotillard and Zoe Saldana.

READ MORE: http://www.femalefirst.co.uk/movies/movie-news/Morgan+Freeman-264645.html

Monday, November 5, 2012

Clive Owen for “King Of The Castle” comedy (PANARMENIAN)



PanARMENIAN.Net - Establishing himself as an actor capable of both dramatic heavy lifting and action movie flexibility, one thing Clive Owen hasn't done very often is comedy. Sure, there was "Duplicity" and "Shoot 'Em Up" (not to mention a cameo role in "The Pink Panther" redo), but Owen is not a guy you would typically expect to lead a big screen laffer. But in a nice change from the everyday, Owen is going to give it a shot, Indie Wire reported.

The actor is set to star in "The King Of The Castle," written by "The Sitter" scribes Alessandro Tanaka and Brian Gatewood, in a project that will also serve as their directorial debut. According to the LA Times, the script has been earning some attention in Hollywood circles, and Owen will take the lead role a philanderer who is blackmailed by a teenager.

READ MORE: http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/129546/ 

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Clive Owen: James Marsh’s 'Shadow Dancer' Wins Dinard Prize 11:46 AM PDT 10/6/2012 by Stuart Kemp (THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER)


LONDON – James Marsh’s Shadow Dancer won the Golden Hitchcock Award as this year's Dinard British Film Festival came to a close.


A star-studded jury including Celia Imrie, Stephen Dillane and jury president Patrick Bruel under the watchful eye of this year's 'hommage' recipient, Brit acting legend Tom Courtenay, plumped for Marsh's film starring Clive Owen and Andrea Riseborough.

The Golden Hitchcock nod comprises of financial help to the French distributor and the filmmaker and also The Cine+ Award, which offers a promotional campaign on France's Ciné+ channels at the time of release.

Shadow Dancer also won the Prix Public chosen by the festival’s audiences.

READ MORE: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/james-marsh-shadow-dancer-dinard-win-clive-owen-andrea-riseborough-376894

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Brendan Gleeson will star alongside his son Domhnall when he teams up next month with director John Michael McDonagh to shoot new movie Calvary.


Shadow Dancer star Domhnall Gleeson (29) has landed a part opposite his dad's lead role in the €5m production which will be filmed over five weeks in Sligo and the east coast of Ireland.

Gleeson - probably best known for his role as Mad-Eye Moody in the Harry Potter films - will portray Fr James Lavelle, who is tormented by various members of his Sligo parish.

READ MORE: http://www.rte.ie/ten/2012/0825/gleesonb.html