mercredi 20 janvier 2021

January 2021 - news - Charles Dance

 Nikolaj Coster-Waldau and Joe Cole are leading the cast of Against The Ice, a survival movie ...
In 1909, Denmark’s Alabama Expedition led by Captain Ejnar Mikkelsen (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) was attempting to disprove the United States’ claim to North Eastern Greenland, a claim that was rooted in the idea that Greenland was broken up into two different pieces of land. Leaving their crew behind with the ship, Mikkelsen sleds across the ice with his inexperienced crew member, Iver Iversen (Joe Cole).
The under-the-radar project recently wrapped filming in Iceland and Greenland. Additional cast include Charles Dance (The Crown) and Heida Reed (Poldark). Danish director Peter Flinth is helming.
Netflix will release in 2021.
Charles Dance is Roderick Burgess, Charlatan, blackmailer and magician
The highly-anticipated Netflix adaptation of Neil Gaiman’s popular comic book series The Sandman is coming together. Tom Sturridge, Gwendoline Christie, Vivienne Acheampong, Boyd Holbrook, Charles Dance, Asim Chaudhry and Sanjeev Bhaskar have been set to star in the dark fantasy series based on the DC comics.
The series is described as a rich blend of modern myth and dark fantasy in which contemporary fiction, historical drama and legend are seamlessly interwoven”. The Sandman  follows the people and places affected by Morpheus, the Dream King, as he tries to fix all the cosmic and human mistakes he’s made during his vast existence.

dimanche 8 novembre 2020

November 2020 - news - Charles Dance

Louvre Abu Dhabi announced today the screening of its fi
rst-ever short film, The Pulse of Time, coinciding with the museum’s third anniversary on 11th November, 2020. The 40-minute audio-visual journey brings the story of humanity to life through an exploration of works of art from the museum’s collection.
The film will premiere on YouTube on 11 November, 2020 at 7 pm in Arabic, 8 pm in English and 9 pm in French (Gulf Standard Time).
The Pulse of Time is available in three languages....Charles Dance, narrates the English....
Charles Dance On ‘The Crown,’ ‘Game Of Thrones’ And Aging In Hollywood
Well before his best-known character Tywin Lannister was shot on the loo at the end of “Game of Thrones” Season 4, Charles Dance was contemplating his career. Sure, he was getting older, but the British actor knew there were plenty of substantial roles yet to come his way, despite the film industry’s long-standing focus on youth and beauty.
People may age, Dance told me last week as he sipped tea and snacked on a cinnamon bun, but they don’t ― or rather shouldn’t ― age out of Hollywood. 
If actors retire, there would be nobody to play the old, wrinkly people,” the 74-year-old said with a chuckle. 
Dance applauded the late French actor Simone Signoret, whose 1979 autobiography, “Nostalgia Isn’t What It Used To Be,” featured a closeup photo of her face on the cover. “There were these wonderful lines around her eyes and around the corner of her mouth. She was puffy. But she looked fantastic. On her face was the story of her life,” he recalled. “Our faces, if we let them, get more interesting as we get older.” 
..................
Dance ― who, I can assure you, is much more charming over the phone than Tywin might be if he were pushing his latest project ― said, “I’m very lucky, especially at the moment when the world’s turned upside down and people from all walks of life are struggling in one way or another.” 
When Dance and I spoke over the phone, it was a “wintery, blustery” day in London and he and his countrymen were back in quarantine after Prime Minister Boris Johnson issued a second national lockdown amid spikes in COVID-19 cases. Dance is tested frequently for the coronavirus while he’s currently in production on a top-secret Netflix project, although he notes that isn’t the case for his fellow citizens. 
We claim to have this world-beating test and trace system in this country. Well, it’s a shambles,” he said. “People maybe have to drive 100 miles to just test and wait for five days before they get a result and it’s chaotic. Whereas, if you’re prepared to pay for it, you can have a rapid test and get your result in an hour. That’s how we are able in this industry to keep going.” 
Dance said the Netflix set observes all the rules and regulations, including mask-wearing and social distancing. “We have lunches prepacked and not very nice, usually,” he said, laughing. “But the job remains the same. We just have hurdles to jump every day.” 
........Although he played James Bond creator Ian Fleming in 1989’s “Goldeneye,” he turned down the opportunity to screen test for Fleming’s famous character years prior. Dance said his agent urged him to stay out of the fold. 
In hindsight, she was probably right because I think I would have blown it,” he said. “I didn’t have nearly enough experience to go into a franchise like that and suck it up. That would have really killed my career.” 
 ... He was never individually nominated for “Thrones,” but received Emmy nods for his narration work on National Geographic’s “Savage Kingdom.”Of awards, Dance said, “Well, you can’t win ’em all.” 
He is interested, however, to see what accolades come for “Mank,” Fincher’s ambitious new movie in which Dance stars as William Randolph Hearst, newspaper mogul and the real-life inspiration behind “Citizen Kane.”.......
Because of the opinion I have about Fincher, which is basically I think he’s a genius, I just have this feeling all the time that the end result is going to be a really good movie,” Dance said. “I did his first film years ago, which is ‘Alien 3,’ and I thought at the time, ‘Well, this guy’s clever.’”
“Mank” is only his second project with Fincher, but Dance confirmed the 58-year-old director’s intense working method hasn’t changed much since 1992. 
He has a reputation for being demanding,” Dance said. “He goes through a lot of takes and actors moan a bit about that, but it’s not a very deep moan. With success comes a degree of power, so he’s able to put his foot down and basically tell people to ‘fuck off’ and ‘this is what I’m gonna do and if you don’t like it, tough shit.’ Forgive my language.” 
He’s a film animal from the top of his head to the soles of his feet,” the actor added. “He is a perfectionist and he will strive for it, no matter how long it takes.” 
Dance appreciates that mindset, even if it’s hard to keep energy levels up after countless calls of “action” and “cut.” For a particular party scene in “Mank,” he said he was impressed by Oldman’s stamina and commitment to his character as Oldman brought new vigor take after take after take. 
We were pretty close to 50 takes,” Dance remembered. “That scene is one long monologue with Mankiewicz vomiting halfway through. And David was covering that scene like he’s covered all the scenes, with four cameras.
Dance said composition is what the director is focused on. It’s only after he is satisfied with that element that he’ll turn his attention to the actors’ performances. Fincher wants his full artistic vision realized, from start to finish, while Netflix, of course, is probably more interested in the economic side of the business and attracting audiences. 
Although it’s quite a while ago, and Hollywood was a different place, the way the industry was run [during the ‘Citizen Kane’ era] is really not that dissimilar to the way it’s being run now, is it?” Dance said. “It’s this continual trying to please all of the people, all the time, while knowing that we can’t.”
On the note of pleasing people, how does Dance feel about that polarizing eighth and final season of “Game of Thrones”? I have to say, personally, I was underwhelmed,” he observed of the show’s lackluster conclusion. “It was decided by committee and I thought, ‘Oh, no, no, no, no, no.’ I wanted it to go out with a bang.”“Anyway, it’s just nitpicking,” Dance quickly added. “I wouldn’t have continued to watch it if the show hadn’t been good. It raised the bar when it came to television drama.” 
“Thrones” surely paved the way for series like Netflix’s royal family saga “The Crown,” which, when it launched in 2016, was reportedly “the most expensive TV show ever made.” Now, budgets are even bigger as premium content continues to shift from cable networks to streaming platforms. That might explain why Dance has primarily worked with Netflix over the last 18 months.
Television, both physically and metaphorically, was something that you looked down to ― it was this little box that used to sit in the corner of your living room. Film was something that you looked up to, by virtue of the fact that you went into a cinema and there was an enormous screen. Now, of course, the dividing line between television and film has totally blurred,” Dance said. “People can stream a movie into their television, which is as big as the cinema screen, rather than go to the cinema and listen to the noise of others chomping on popcorn. They can watch it in their home whenever they want to see it, rather than the times a distributor says they have to see the film.”
I think it’s sad, of course, because there’s a community experience of going to the movies that we’re missing out on,” he continued, “but we’re getting close to emulating that [at home].” 
For now, Dance ― whose brilliant Lord Mountbatten, aka Uncle Dickie, meets his end on Season 4 of “The Crown” ― is taking advantage of his working relationship with Netflix, which has allowed him the chance to not only make a living but examine his own country’s monarchy. 
I have no idea whether they ever watch it,” he said, laughing, of Queen Elizabeth and company, “but I fear probably not.”
As for the entrance of Diana, Princess of Wales (Emma Corrin) in the new batch of episodes debuting Nov. 15, Dance believes her story gives viewers a glimpse into the never-ending pressure the royals endure. 
There comes a point where I think one has to be kind and leave them alone, you know? Obviously, they have a life of enormous privilege, but I would hate to be a member of that family. You’re in a goldfish bowl, you’re on show, all the time ― it’s much worse than being a movie star.”
Dance gets his fair share of recognition from passersby, although in pandemic times, that in-person attention has certainly waned a bit. For now, he’s focused on his current Netflix project, which he predicts will get people talking, and set to direct his second feature, “The Inn at the Edge of the World,” whenever the world picks up its pace again.
In terms of a role he can sink his teeth into, I did mention that Hollywood is still on the hunt for a new James Bond. 
I’m too old,” he insisted. “Bond has to be 40 or below.” 
THE PULSE OF TIME (English) - An original film by Louvre Abu 

"Mank": Charles Dance im Interview

from The crown season 4
with the real Crown

The TV special Master Moley By Royal Invitation is available to stream on BT Player and Sky Go.

dimanche 4 octobre 2020

October 2020 - news - Charles Dance

 https://aboutactorcharlesdance.blogspot.com/2020/09/september-news-charles-dance.html

about Diana Rigg
Front Row - Mark Gatiss & Charles Dance

As part of its expanded growth in digital native programming, AJ Digital's audio section, Al Jazeera Podcasts, launched a docudrama podcast series called, Hindsight on October 5. The series is narrated by acting legend Charles Dance...
Hindsight capitalises on Al Jazeera's unique position at the crossroads of Arab and Western cultures. In one episode, ruler and one-time ally of the West, Saddam Hussein defiant and indignant speaks directly to the listener: 'I bet you couldn't wait for that noose to be wrapped around my neck. Other characters include ‘Lawrence of Arabia', Zaha Hadid, Ashraf Marwan, Dalida and Mohamed Morsi. With six narrated and actor-read episodes, Season One delivers sharp scripts in an immersive soundscape of archival footage and cinematic scoring.
MANK | Official Teaser | Netflix

Oct 10, Mr Dance is 74
actress Elisabeth Tran :
Weren’t you awestruck to be working with such big names as Jane Horrocks and Charles Dance?
I’m always nervous taking on a role where it’s so far away from myself and I’m acting with such talented people. Charles Dance said, ‘I bet the camera really loves you.’ He was trying to encourage me and put me at ease.
A festival, bringing world class music to historic venues in and around West Malling , will celebrate its 10th anniversary online this week.....
It has also worked with renowned arts names such as actor Charles Dance, who narrated The Soldier’s Tale.
Thomas said of his performance: "The atmosphere was electrifying and it was fabulous to see such a living legend in West Malling. He even made some selfies with star-struck members of the audience."
"Society without art is doomed. It's a horrible nasty place"

new adaptation of Rebecca  with Armie Hammer on Netflix : pure waste of time.....
remember