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Posts tagged Gary Oldman

890 Notes


“It can be many things. It normally is the material and the director. But I can give you a specific example. When I read the script for “Dracula,” it had a line in it, he said, “I’ve crossed oceans of time to find you,” I wanted to do the movie for that line. I wanted to say that line to someone. I just thought that was an amazing line, and I thought, Who wouldn’t want to say that to someone they loved? And that hooked me.”

Gary Oldman, on what makes him want to do a film
Read the rest of our interview with Oldman, here.

“It can be many things. It normally is the material and the director. But I can give you a specific example. When I read the script for “Dracula,” it had a line in it, he said, “I’ve crossed oceans of time to find you,” I wanted to do the movie for that line. I wanted to say that line to someone. I just thought that was an amazing line, and I thought, Who wouldn’t want to say that to someone they loved? And that hooked me.”

Gary Oldman, on what makes him want to do a film

Read the rest of our interview with Oldman, here.

4 Notes

Brad Pitt, George Clooney and Ryan Gosling Go Evil for the New York Times Magazine

Excepting ‘Kalifornia,’ Brad Pitt doesn’t normally play the villain — which makes his transformation in the latest New York Times Magazine all the more devilish. Each year, the publication features photos — and accompanying video — of movie stars doing something outlandish. For the 2011 edition, they have brought together Pitt, George Clooney, Ryan Gosling, Rooney Mara, Gary Oldman, Kirsten Dunst, Jessica Chastain and more for a feature called ‘Touch of Evil.’ In it, each actor transforms into a bad-guy archetype or a specific villain. In the case of Pitt, he has, according to him, channeled the late actor Peter Lorre (although, it looks a lot closer to Jack Nance from David Lynch’s ‘Eraserhead’). Oldman plays the menacing dummy (“I used to have one of those dolls when I was a kid. They’re creepy to have in the room”), Clooney goes for British officer William Bligh (“‘I picked Captain Bligh because I liked his hat”), Ryan Gosling is the Invisible Man (“I don’t really know if the Invisible Man is a villain or not, but I just don’t trust the guy. He says he’s going to be somewhere, but never shows up”) and ‘Dragon Tattoo’ actress Rooney Mara as ‘Clockwork Orange’ antagonist, Alex De Large (“There is something off about Alex, something slightly androgynous and something much more fascinating and complex than simply a villain.’”)You can head over to the NY Times to check out all of the videos or click below.

Brad Pitt, George Clooney and Ryan Gosling Go Evil for the New York Times Magazine

Excepting ‘Kalifornia,’ Brad Pitt doesn’t normally play the villain — which makes his transformation in the latest New York Times Magazine all the more devilish. Each year, the publication features photos — and accompanying video — of movie stars doing something outlandish. For the 2011 edition, they have brought together Pitt, George Clooney, Ryan Gosling, Rooney Mara, Gary Oldman, Kirsten Dunst, Jessica Chastain and more for a feature called ‘Touch of Evil.’ In it, each actor transforms into a bad-guy archetype or a specific villain. In the case of Pitt, he has, according to him, channeled the late actor Peter Lorre (although, it looks a lot closer to Jack Nance from David Lynch’s ‘Eraserhead’). 

Oldman plays the menacing dummy (“I used to have one of those dolls when I was a kid. They’re creepy to have in the room”), Clooney goes for British officer William Bligh (“‘I picked Captain Bligh because I liked his hat”), Ryan Gosling is the Invisible Man (“I don’t really know if the Invisible Man is a villain or not, but I just don’t trust the guy. He says he’s going to be somewhere, but never shows up”) and ‘Dragon Tattoo’ actress Rooney Mara as ‘Clockwork Orange’ antagonist, Alex De Large (“There is something off about Alex, something slightly androgynous and something much more fascinating and complex than simply a villain.’”)

You can head over to the NY Times to check out all of the videos or click below.

3 Notes

It’s great. It’s a terrific conclusion to the trilogy. Nolan rounds it off: he brings in a bit of the first one, from ‘Batman Begins,’ and he does some really surprising things with it. I thought his choice of villain was very interesting, to use Bane instead of Riddler or Penguin. He’s not gone with the most obvious choice. The challenge for Chris was always really the story and I think he didn’t want to make a third one for the sake of it. I think there was pressure on him, obviously, because the second was so successful. So there’s always going to be some pressure to keep it going. But he’s too smart and classy, really to just make a third just for the sake of making it, because others are demanding or want it from him and I think he felt that, ‘Let me get the story right.’ So the fans won’t be disappointed.

1 Notes