Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Karellen. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Karellen. Afficher tous les articles

vendredi 11 décembre 2015

Interview in Variety...for subscriers and others videos interviews

"Childhood’s End is more relevant now than in the 1950s," says Game of Thrones vet Charles Dance, who plays Karellen, the alien Overlord and self-proclaimed "Supervisor for Earth" who ushers in the new world order. "We human beings in 2015 are really f---ing things up with our wars, our politics and our pollution, and Clarke saw this happening over 60 years ago."

The author also predicted we’d be incapable of solving this hot mess. "Earthlings try to sort things out, but inevitably we make a pig’s ear of it, don’t we?" says Dance. "You can see why we’d be open to some superbeing coming down here to fix all our problems, since we clearly cannot do it ourselves."

So will Karellen’s appearance. During the alien takeover and for many years afterward, the Overlord does not reveal his true physical self in order to prevent world-wide panic. (You’ll understand why when we finally get a look at him at the end of Night 1!) Even Dance was unnerved when he saw himself under all the heavy Karellen prosthetics. "I fell asleep in the makeup chair and woke up four hours later, looked in the mirror and said, ‘My God!’" Dance recalls. "It was genuinely shockinga brilliant piece of work by some very clever artists."
Inside.tv 
"This was written in 1952, talking about a world of economic crises, wars, famine, here we are in 2015 and nothing’s changed," Dance told ComicBook.com during a recent in-person interview. "I thought there was a lot of resonance for us now, which was reason enough to do it."
 
"Exposition is a killer, it’s deadly. Whenever a television show or a film resorts to exposition, it’s because there are major flaws in the script. This doesn’t resort to exposition."
 
"I’ve never done anything that involved me being buried in layers of prosthetics," Dance said. "I thought it would be an interesting exercise, and indeed it was, in Melbourne at the hottest time of the year!"
 
 "Karellen’s first appearance is really what I’m most excited for people to see," he said with a knowing grin. After spending most of the episode as a faceless voice, audiences will probably be anxious for it, as well.
At Xmas he cooks....give the guy a f...break with Tywin Lannister...he's promoting Childhood's End and Tywin is dead a season ago
listen here :
 
What attracted you to the role of Karellen in “Childhood’s End”?
- It’s a great story, which I was not familiar with. I’ve never been a fan of science fiction, but I certainly knew that Arthur C. Clarke was the godfather of sci-fi. So when I was offered it, I read the book and then the scripts came in and I thought, “These are really good adaptations of a very good story.” To bring humanity to a character that is not human is a pretty nice challenge to have. And I’d never worked with as much prosthetic as I’ve worked with
on this.

What’s the best piece of career advice you’ve been given?
“Know when you’re being bad.” In this business, we’re surrounded by wonderful darlings, and if you can find somebody who you believe in, who has the bravery to say to you, “Listen, that was not very good,” you’re very lucky. There are very few people around who will be able to do that, for fear, rightly, of offending you or upsetting you. Because we’re very fragile creatures, actors. But I think we do need to possess that facility to be objective.

There seems to be more fantasy and sci-fi shows than ever. Why is the genre so popular?
Principally because of the success of “Game of Thrones.” You know what this business is like — something seems to be successful, let’s try to do it again and again. With the advances of CGI and all the really rather clever things we can do, we’ve now given a lie to the phrase “the camera can’t lie.” Of course it can, hugely, tell the most awful porkies.
 
 
 
 
 

dimanche 6 décembre 2015

Interview : A Dance with destiny

                                            

The admired character actor has come to terms with never quite finding the stardom he craved as a younger man

Charles Dance was laughing out loud. It's a great sound, one that moviegoers and television viewers rarely ever hear from the star of Last Action Hero, The Imitation Game and Game of Thrones. Interviewers hear it only slightly more often from the venerable character actor, a dapper fellow who often plays smooth, genteel, well-spoken villains. The 69-year-old Brit plays pricisely such a character, Karellen, in Childhood's End, a three-night, six-hour miniseries that will debut soon on Syfy.

The character is the leader--initially heard but not seen--of an alien race that peacefully invades Earth. The aliens, who come to be known as the Overlords, and Karellen, referred to as Supervisor of Earth, offer an end of poverty, war and all manner of illness.

Karellen comes across as calm, erudite and wise, so - as it was pointed out to Dance during a recent conversation - it's amusing to hear Karellen utter the words "My bad", a thoroughly modern, colloquial phrase. Cue the laughter. "I have to tell you, that's a phrase I had never used before", Dance admitted. " I said, What does this mean ?" They said, "You never heard that ? It means my bad, my fault, my problem". I said, " Oh, really ?"

"Now the odd thing is, I'm doing a film in Prague at the moment, and one of the guys on the crew, the key grip I think it was, got a move wrong. And he said, "My bad". I thought, 'Oh, my God, people do actually say that'.
http://aboutactorcharlesdance.blogspot.fr/
Thruth be told, tough, there's precious little laughter to be had in Childhood's End. The miniseries is based on Arthur C. Clarke's 1953 novel of the same name. In addition to Dance, it stars Julian McMahon, Colm Meaney, Yael Stone and Mike Vogel. Vogel plays Ricky Storm gren, the everyday human Karellen picks as his liaison in dealing with mankind. Meaney portrays Wainwright, a powerful newspaperman who deeply distrusts the Overlords' motives.

Dance, who spoke about Childhood's End on a day off from shooting Underworld 5 in Prague, acknowledged that he'd been unfamiliar with the Clarke novel until the project came his way. Once it did, he sat down and perused the book.

"I never been a particular fan of science fiction", he admitted, " but Arthur C.Clarke is kind of the god of sci-fi. When I read it, I actually couldn't put it down. It's extraordinary. Basically the story says that there's a price to pay for utopia, and I would say the miniseries captures 100% of that.
"If someone comes and promises you a pot of gold or everything you've ever wished for..." he said, and stopped mid-sentence. "You know that saying, Be careful what you wish for ?' That's the crux of this".

Further discussing Childhood's End, and especially Karellen, Dance chose his words carefully. In the book Karellen's true form is described as demon-like, and his appearance in the miniseries is basically a spoiler.


http://aboutactorcharlesdance.blogspot.fr/
"Without giving too much away, the biggest challenge was hopefully retaining some humanity through these layers of latex and various other bits of prosthetics", Dance said. "The make-up was about a four-hour job. For me it's not a question of working against the make-up. It's a question of working with it and using it as a tool. Obviously, if you've got finely detailed, heavy make-up, the kind of visual aspect of one's job has been done for you. And then it's just a question of me making sure that the human being inside it is going to be visible and workable and believable.

"As I haven't seen any footage of the piece yet, I hope I've pulled it off".

Beyond Childhood's End, Dance has an impressive slate of current and upcoming projects. He co-stars with Daniel Radcliffe and James McAvoy in Victor Frankenstein, which comes to Thaïland in the new year. On the way are the features Despite the Falling Snow, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Me before You and Underworld 5, as well as the miniseries And Then There Were None.

"Victor Frankenstein is one of my hopefully telling cameos", Dance said. "I worked with James McAvoy, whom I'd worked with before, and I rate him really highly. I was only on that for a couple of days, but they were pleasurable days because I was working with James.

"Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, that was a hoot. Even the most devoted Jane Austen followers I don't think will be offended. I haven't seen very much of it, but just doing ADR[ post-production dubbing] and seeing stuff on the screen, it looks sensational. When it's supposed to be frightening, it's bloody frightening , and when it's funny, it's very funny. And it's got its tongue planted firmly in its cheek.

"And then Me Before You is Thea Sharrock's first film. Thea is agreat theatre director. I'd never worked with her in the theatre. As I say, it's her first film, and I hope it's not her last. Emilia Clarke from Game of Thrones is the star of it and she's so completely and utterly different to who she is in Game of Thrones".

Dance has been acting on screen and stage for 40-plus years now. He's a respected, go-to character actor, one who's immediately recognisable for his countenance and voice. Early in his career, though, Dance aspired to be a star. He recounted an anecdote about that very topic involving Burt Lancaster, who played his character's father in a 1990 television adaptation of The hantom of the Opera.

"Burt asked me, 'Do you want to be an actor or a star, Charles ?' And I said, 'Both'. He said, "That's really difficult, and I hope you pull it off".


http://aboutactorcharlesdance.blogspot.fr/
A quarter of a century down the line, Dance has come to terms with the fact that he's never quite made it to stardom. "When I started, I wanted to find out how I could be" he said. "After a couple of years, I thought, 'No, you're not cutting the mustard. Get out and do something else'. What else I'd do, I haven't the foggiest idea. I just wanted to be the best actor I felt I could be and to keep working, because I love doing it.
"I'm very lucky to be able to do something for a living that I love doing. I just hope I do it until the day I die."
http://www.bangkokpost.com/