May 29, 2012
ALEXANDER SKARSGÅRD The Sea Inside ~ Bullett Media ~

http://www.bullettmedia.c…karsgard-the-sea-inside/


Photo: Just Jared

In his new film Battleship, Alexander Skarsgård plays a rugged naval chief trying to save the world from evil aliens. But in real life, the devastatingly handsome, quietly captivating, and surprisingly introspective True Blood star would rather command an audience than the USS Sampson. As he sprints through the streets of New York, dodging cars and pedestrians, Idil Tabanca does her best to keep up.

While sipping an espresso at Fat Radish, a dimly lit restaurant on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, Alexander Skarsgård speaks with deep admiration about An Iliad, an off- Broadway restaging of Homer’s Trojan War classic featuring a well-reviewed performance by his True Blood costar Denis O’Hare. “If you’re into acting-acting, this is just the thing for you,” Skarsgård says, sounding like someone who’s into acting- acting. He looks down at his watch, worried that he’ll be late for the performance at the New York Theatre Workshop. “Do you want to run there with me?” he says, as he gulps the espresso like a tequila shot.

Once outside, the 6’4″ actor races across Houston Street, towering over the other pedestrians on the sidewalk. “We shot What Maisie Knew in Chinatown, out on the street,” he says, referring to the upcoming family drama, in which he stars opposite Julianne Moore. “It’s life, it’s real, it’s chaos, but it’s lovely,” says the 35-year-old Skarsgård with an accent that has all but disappeared after years spent embodying all manner of characters. “Let’s go for it, the light is green,” he says. We start to run across Second Street, when a car grinds to a halt inches away from him. “Shit, I’m going to miss the show,” he says, as he checks his watch again, ignoring the car that nearly turned the famous Swede into roadkill.

With broad shoulders, dirty-blond hair, and blue eyes, Skarsgård looks like a superhero—or at least a Homeric warrior—which has served him well in his portrayal of Eric Northman, the darkly sexual vampire of HBO’s True Blood, a supernatural drama loosely based on Charlaine Harris’ popular Southern Vampire Mysteries book series. In Harris’ first installment, Dead Until Dark, Sookie Stackhouse (played in the series by Oscar winner Anna Paquin) describes Eric as a “hunk—kind of like the guys on the cover of romance books.” But Skarsgård brings more to the role than come-hither fangs and a set of killer abs. There’s heft to his character’s brooding, which is no easy task given that he’s playing a 1,000-year-old vampire in a fictional world overrun with werewolves, shape- shifters, maenads, and witches.

At the end of season four, which aired last summer, Sookie, who’d been playing a competitive game of emotional ping-pong with Eric and Bill Compton (Stephen Moyer), suddenly removes herself from the show’s central love triangle when she breaks up with both of them. In the season finale, Eric’s protégée Pam (whom he turned into a vampire) hinted at the plot twist when she said, “I am so over Sookie, and her precious fairy vagina, and her unbelievably stupid name. Fuck Sookie!”

But that doesn’t mean the party is over. “Bill and Eric have to set aside their disputes and team up. They bond in the process; they have no choice. There’s definitely a bit of a bromance going on there,” says Skarsgård, smiling. “It’s a little like Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” referring to the Wild West outlaws immortalized on screen by Paul Newman and Robert Redford.

Their unexpected alliance is not the only surprise bond that Alan Ball—the show’s creator, head writer, and producer—has in store for season five, which begins airing in June: He’ll also welcome a new inhabitant to the topsy- turvy world of Bon Temps, Louisiana. “Eric runs into someone very special,” says Skarsgård, referring to the new character, Nora (played by British actor Lucy Griffiths), Eric’s sister and a member of the Vampire Authority, a council of powerful bloodsuckers who control institutionalized vampire-dom across the globe. “There aren’t a lot of human people who Eric really cares about—he’s only loyal to a few,” Skarsgård says. “We saw his passion with his maker Godric, with Pam, and with Sookie. Nora is definitely just as important; she’s played a significant part in his life. She still does.”

The next day, during his BULLETT photo shoot, Skarsgård swaggers down Canal Street in a blue Bottega Veneta suit, parting the crowded sidewalk like the Red Sea. He walks alone, ignoring the double takes from gawkers who change direction to follow him. As we arrive at the entrance to the Manhattan Bridge, Skarsgård walks up to the gate and waits for the light to turn red, only to leap onto the street with the photographer sprinting after him and snapping away as he tempts fate on the temporarily empty bridge. The light turns green, and they each race back to safety just in time for cars to continue whizzing by.

The oldest of seven children, Skarsgård was born into a Swedish family with strong ties to the film industry. They lived in Södermalm (many of them still do), an artsy area of Stockholm, where the patriarch, Stellan, was already an established actor. Describing his upbringing as “bohemian and artistic,” Skarsgård says, “I grew up in a very secular society. I have atheist parents. My morality never came from religion or from scripture, but that doesn’t mean I can’t have the same values or ethics.” Instead of Sundays in church, family time consisted of playing in Dad’s dressing room while Stellan performed in local theaters. “He would rehearse one play during the day and then perform the other at night, so I didn’t see him much,” he says. “He was on stage working with Ingrid Bergman, and I’d be in the makeup room, playing with all the prosthetic noses and wigs.”

Though Skarsgård initially had no interest in following in his father’s footsteps, at 7 he landed a role in the film Åke and His World. By 13, he was starring in a Swedish TV series, The Dog That Smiled, but the overwhelming attention from its success led him to quit acting. In his late teens, he joined the military, not to defy his liberal upbringing, but because he didn’t know what to do with himself. “I just needed a challenge,” he says. “I come from the city. Growing up, we were never out in the wilderness, and I wanted to do something completely different.” Skarsgård signed up for the anti-sabotage unit. “The stuff they got to do in this unit, it just sounded cool.” The experience came in handy when he later spent months dramatizing the U.S. invasion of Iraq for the HBO miniseries Generation Kill (and later still, while playing a commanding naval officer in his latest film, Battleship). It’s even come in handy in real life: “I definitely complain less,” he says humbly, “and I appreciate more.”

His military days behind him, Skarsgård began putting his life into perspective. While on vacation in the U.S., the then-25-year-old auditioned for Zoolander on a whim. Despite his brief screen time, his portrayal of the dimwitted male model Meekus, with his fashion pout and moronic philosophical debates that resolve themselves in a cry for “orange mocha frappuccinos,” turned heads. With its bumper sticker–ready quotes, the film became an unlikely cult success. Skarsgård returned to Stockholm and kept building his résumé, and was included on multiple “Sexiest Man Alive” lists, including People’s.


His return to American audiences came in 2008 via Generation Kill. “The writing felt so real. There are no cliffhangers—it’s not heightened at all,” says Skarsgård of the project, which required him to live in Africa for seven months. “War is 90 percent waiting, 10 percent action, the same as making movies. It’s the whole concept of hurry up and wait. ‘Get ready!’ And then you sit for hours.”

While working on Generation Kill, Skarsgård became aware of True Blood, a new series being developed by HBO. He auditioned for the role of Bill (which eventually went to Moyer) and instead landed the part of Eric, a Viking vampire who lusts after Sookie. When asked why he cast Skarsgård as Eric, Ball quips, “Aside from the fact that he looks like a Viking god?” The True Blood creator, who recently announced that the show’s fifth season would be his last as showrunner, believed that Skarsgård had the rare ability to bring Eric to life, so to speak. “Eric’s a tricky character,” says Ball. “He’s done some really horrible things, but we still have to like him. Alex can make Eric ruthless but at the same time totally captivating and even sympathetic.”

And he isn’t Eric’s only cheerleader. Of the roughly five million viewers who tune in each episode, a sizeable chunk do so to follow Skarsgård’s brilliantly executed portrayal of the conflicted antihero. Besides T-shirts emblazoned with Eric’s smug mug—“Vikings Do It Better” and “Team Eric: Because Being Dead Never Looked So Good” are some examples—there are countless beer glasses, key chains, action figures, earrings, pens, iPad covers, and other VILF-inspired paraphernalia devoted to the character.

Using the success of the show as a stepping stone, Skarsgård soon began appearing in art-house dramas that would solidify his reputation as a serious actor. “I spend seven months just playing Eric on True Blood,” he says. “But when I’m on hiatus, when I get my five months off, I’m not looking to play the same character again.”

Skarsgård’s determination to escape typecasting was apparent when he accepted the part of Michael, a passive groom-to-be, in Danish auteur Lars von Trier’s critically lauded 2011 apocalypse drama Melancholia. The role proved to audiences that he could excel at playing the victim just as much as the predator. “It was quite far from most characters I’ve played before,” he says of Michael, who gets spurned by Kirsten Dunst’s Justine at the altar. Skarsgård also got to share some screen time with his father, who’d collaborated with von Trier before. “I was waiting for someone to come up and be like, ‘We were just kidding. The real guy is here now so you can just go home.’ It was surreal.” He then took on the role of Charlie, an aggressive alpha male, in Rod Lurie’s retelling of Sam Peckinpah’s 1971 revenge classic, Straw Dogs, where he was tasked with filming a rape scene with his then-girlfriend Kate Bosworth.

Bolder and braver than ever, Skarsgård filled up his recent hiatuses from True Blood with even more diverse projects. Battleship, based on the classic Hasbro combat game of the same name, marks his first attempt at toplining a major studio movie. In it, he plays strong-jawed naval commander Stone Hopper, who—alongside a cast that includes Taylor Kitsch and Liam Neeson—must fight off an alien invasion at sea. Peter Berg, the film’s director, had been ambushed by the women at his office, who’d practically begged him to cast Skarsgård in the film. “I was a big fan of True Blood— that’s why I started thinking about him,” says Berg. “One day, a gang of women who heard that came into my office—there were about seven of them—and told me it was not negotiable.”


Before signing his contract, Skarsgård did some negotiating of his own. He wanted to make sure that the story would take precedence over special effects, and that Berg, who’d sharpened his teeth on less bombastic fare like Friday Night Lights, wasn’t a slave to bottom-line studio executives. “He sat me down and said, ‘The studio trusts me. They know I’m good with actors. If you have ideas, talk to me. We’ll make it work,’” says Skarsgård of their partnership. “Pete cares about the characters and their relationships. He wasn’t like, ‘Just say your lines so we can get to the awesome aliens and explosions.’”

The action flick, which was released on May 18, also marks pop sensation Rihanna’s debut as an actress. “God, I thought I worked a lot,” says Skarsgård. “We would shoot until late Friday night and she would jump on a plane and go to L.A. to perform at the MTV Video Music Awards in front of a billion people, and then get straight back on the plane and fly to Hawaii, and go to set Monday morning with a smile on her face.” It didn’t hurt that she was working alongside Skarsgård, whose most distinctive personality trait is his contagious sense of humor. “Alex is a serious actor, but when the cameras are off, he’s the one making everyone laugh,” says Ball.

According to breakout screenwriter Brit Marling, the actor was constantly cracking jokes on the set of director Zal Batmanglij’s upcoming eco-thriller The East, starring Marling and Ellen Page. Skarsgård can’t hide his fascination with Marling, who recently co-wrote and starred in Another Earth, and has been pumping out some of the most original screenplays in the industry. The East stars Skarsgård as Benji, the strong- headed leader of a radical environmentalist collective that Marling’s character infiltrates. Marling’s search for the key part took an unexpected turn when she saw True Blood. “I remember thinking that the show was so fantastical, and yet he made me believe it,” she says. “He believes, therefore the audience believes—you find yourself willing to accept these completely preposterous things.” She wanted to cast a person who would “make you walk away from your desk job and go into the forest with them to start an insurrection.” Needless to say, it’s a hard role to pull off. “Alex was so ‘it’ from the beginning because he has this gravitas, this deep well of soulfulness and feeling. You would follow him into the woods.” On the second day of shooting, the cast was naked in frigid water, bathing one another for a scene. “When something like that happens on the second day, it cuts through all the insecurities and everyone gets really close, very quickly. The experience was so raw and intense.”

Opting for something entirely different from the theme of eco-anarchy, Skarsgård then took on the multi-plotted Internet drama Disconnect, which explores relationships affected by technology. Skarsgård plays an ex-marine reconnecting with his wife (Paula Patton) as they try to find the cyber criminal who stole their savings. “In the beginning, their marriage is not working,” says Skarsgård. “He feels like he’s not a man because he can’t give her a kid. He feels emasculated. He’s been out of the military for 10 years, but suddenly he has a mission again, so they slowly start to reconnect.”

Shortly after that, he filmed What Maisie Knew, which centers on a 6-year-old girl caught in the middle of a custody battle between her fading-rock-star mother (Julianne Moore) and her father (Steve Coogan). Skarsgård plays Lincoln, the girl’s stepfather. “The story is based on Henry James’ 1897 novel, adapted to contemporary New York,” explains Skarsgård. Although he says Moore’s involvement was his main draw when accepting the part, he admits, “I fell in love with Onata [Aprile], the little girl who played Maisie. In Hollywood, a lot of child actors are so professional that they don’t have the natural raw energy we needed. You meet 6-year- olds who have headshots and can tap dance. They are drilled to memorize the names of every casting director in Hollywood. Onata is just a regular kid with amazing energy.”

Back on set with BULLETT, Skarsgård radiates a similar magnetic energy as he takes off his shoes and sits down on the floor to eat with the team. He nuzzles his face into his photo partner, a baby lamb wearing a blue tie-dye shirt to keep warm during setups. “You’re the cutest!” Skarsgård says, cradling it in his strong arms. Looking her square in the eye, he whispers, “But I just had lamb stew last night.”

Styling by Melissa Rubini.

 Posted by Blue Butterfly @ The Strale Dome

May 26, 2012
Miss Ford's Obsessions: Alexander Skarsgard to the braziliam Preview Magazine!

Reblogged.

tfhh:

I was so happy when I saw that, I bought the magazine because of MIB 3, and when I opened the magazine I saw him, I was jumping like crazy. I translated the interview!!! Enjoy it!!!

There was a time when you used to say that you didn’t want to be an actor. Do you remember when…

May 25, 2012
L.A. Times interview with Joel Kinnaman

Joel Kinnaman gets outside himself for ‘The Killing’ on AMC

He is the typical dashing Hollywood leading man — off the show. On the show, he is the twitchy detective Stephen Holder.

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By Lisa Rosen, Special to the Los Angeles Times

May 26, 2012

Detective Stephen Holder is a twitchy mess. As played by Joel Kinnaman on the AMC crime drama”The Killing,” he’s pale, skinny as a waif, all dark circles and nervous energy — you could catch something just from looking at him.

On the show, now in its second season on AMC, Holder and detective Sarah Linden (Mireille Enos) try to solve the murder of a young girl while keeping their own demons at bay — in Holder’s case drug addiction. AMC has promised to serve up the murderer by the Season 2 finale, but it’s not clear how the detectives will survive the ordeal.

In person, sitting on the patio of a West Hollywood cafe, Kinnaman bears only a passing resemblance to Holder. At 6-feet-21/2 , he is every inch the leading man, with expressive hazel eyes and an easy manner. His costar says that whenever she sees him for the first time after the show wraps for the season she can barely recognize him.

“I’m like, ‘Who are you, pretty man? You’re so shiny now!’” Enos says. “As Holder he allows himself to be unattractive and vulnerable and awkward and not have the right answers.”

Born to a Swedish mother and American father (which explains his pitch perfect American accent in “The Killing”), he made his stage debut in Stockholm as Raskolnikov, in an acclaimed production of “Crime and Punishment.”

From there, he worked on nine films in 16 months. One film, “Snabba Cash,” earned him the 2011 Guldbagge Award, the Swedish equivalent of the Academy Award, for lead actor. The Weinstein Co. is releasing it in Los Angeles on July 13 under the title”Easy Money.”He plays Johan, a man so desperate to fit with the in-crowd that he will go to terrible ends to acquire access.

Kinnaman moved to Los Angeles three years ago in search of bigger challenges. He found them.

“In my first four months here, I got more rejection than a regular person does in two lifetimes,” he points out. Asked to put himself on tape to audition for “The Killing,” “I had fun with it. I improvised a little bit.” “Killing” creator Veena Sud immediately knew he was Holder.

“He accidentally knocked over a box of files and it was so funny — and so like Holder to do something like that, to make a mess in Sarah’s carefully controlled world — that I rewrote the scene to incorporate this action,” she recalls.

Holder does add some comic relief to the proceedings, but it’s “tiny, a crack of the door,” Kinnaman concedes.

The series centers on the investigation into the murder of teenager Rosie Larsen, with repercussions that reach all the way to the mayor’s office. Set in Seattle (by way of Vancouver), the skies pour down so much rain it’s as if the entire world is crying.

The Season 1 finale caused its own storm. Expecting to learn the killer’s identity, viewers instead saw an innocent man framed in a cliffhanger. The resulting outrage may have led to lower viewer numbers this season; last year’s finale garnered 2.3 million viewers, and the Season 2 premiere hit 1.8.

AMC has not yet revealed whether the show will be picked up for a third season, but everyone involved swears that the killer will be revealed by the June 17 finale.

Holder’s gone through a lot of abuse this season, but the worst moment was when his friend, former boss and Narcotics Anonymous sponsor Gil Sloane (Brian Markinson) called him “a lowlife tweaker.” Holder’s reaction is so painful, so small, it’s almost unbearable to watch. “That sent Holder off the rails,” Kinnaman says. “That was the worst thing that could happen to him.”

During the conversation, Kinnaman draws on an electronic cigarette. He first got hooked on dipping tobacco, he explains. “Then I quit that and started smoking, and I quit smoking and then I started chewing gum instead, but my jaws would get all clenched up and I’d wake up with headaches.” He smiles. “I’ve always had an easy time quitting. I’m just really good at starting up again.”

Not shocking, then, that Kinnaman felt his way into Holder’s character was through addiction. His research included visiting NA and AA meetings, and meeting people who struggled with meth.

“He’s got this restlessness within him that comes from this void that he has, that he’s tried to fill with drugs,” Kinnaman notes. “I wanted to feel that restlessness in his body language, that he’s never standing still.” It’s something else the actor shares. He’s in constant motion, tapping his foot against the table leg for the entire interview.

Kinnaman mentions that in European theater circles, “there’s this romanticizing about the wounded artist; you have to be in pain to be able to portray pain,” he says. He waves that off as nonsense. Preparing for Raskolnikov, he set out to be as positive and happy as possible in his real life. That translated to the role in ways he didn’t expect.

“Nobody wants to be depressed — everybody’s trying to feel better; when they strive and fail, it’s all the more poignant.” The audience response was overwhelming. “That made me feel very confident that I could be who I am. I think Mireille comes from the exact same perspective. She’s a bubbly, happy person on-set, because she knows she has complete access to any depths of darkness.”

Kinnaman had a chance to access his lighter side in a supporting role in “Lola Versus,”coming out June 13 from Fox Searchlight. His first romantic comedy was “very relaxing,” he says. He’s also landed the lead in the “RoboCop” remake, due out next year.

“With this script and this director, it’s a very challenging acting piece,” he says, before delving into director José Padilha’s talents. “Yes, I’m going to ride these incredible motorbikes and have guns coming out of my legs, but at the core, it’s a very existential story about what it is to be a human.”

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Copyright © 2012, Los Angeles Times

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Posted by PurpleShadow @ The Strale Dome

May 25, 2012
Joel Kinnaman: “The Killing’s” Scene-Stealer

The Daily Beast (Newsweek)


May 25, 2012 4:45 AM EDT

Whether you like or loathe the AMC mystery, you love Holder, the shifty cop played by Joel Kinnaman. Tricia Romano talked to the Swedish actor who will soon star as Robocop.

Joel Kinnaman 
Joel Kinnaman in The Killing. (Carole Segal / AMC)

The man who portrays the most compelling character on AMC’s murder dramaThe Killing is standing on the docks in Vancouver’s Yaletown neighborhood inhaling an electronic cigarette. Joel Kinnaman, 32, the Swedish actor who stars as Det. Stephen Holder is waiting to shoot a scene with Annie Corley, who plays Regi Darnell, his partner Sarah Linden’s former social worker. Though it had briefly snowed that March morning in Vancouver, which stands in for Seattle, it had not actually rained. Still, the docks had been freshly doused with water to give it that “It’s Always Rainy in Seattle” look the producers of The Killing love so much.

As The Killing winds down its second season, having lost viewers, critics, and possibly even the plot, Kinnaman-as-Holder continues to fascinate. This weekend’s episode—the 10th—finds the actor in a central storyline, while [spoiler alert] his partner, Detective Linden (Mireille Enos), is seriously sidelined.

Ever since he first appeared on screen last season, Holder—a hip-hop-lovin’ former meth addict who has a way with a one-liner—has captivated audiences, at first repelling them, then winning them over. Alternately skeevy and lovable, the critics agree: aside from learning who killed Rosie Larson, he’s the main reason to continue watching the floundering show.

Once an unknown on these shores, he has already appeared opposite Denzel Washington in last summer’s Safe House; can now boast his own Tumblr meme titled, appropriately, Fuck Yeah Joel Kinnaman!; a starring role in a summer blockbuster (as the title character in the remake of RoboCop,slated for summer 2013); and if rumors are to be believed, a hot actress girlfriend, Olivia Munn. In Hollywood terms, he’s arrived.

On that frigid day, I waited for the show’s publicist’s delayed flight to interview Kinnaman. I watched as he and Corley ran through their scene seamlessly—shooting three or four different versions over the course of several hours. In between takes, before heading back to his trailer to warm up, the actor was friendly and forthcoming, but as the witching hour neared, he strolled up in full Holder regalia—thick chain necklace, dark circles under his eyes, and the requisite Holder hoodie—and said, “Yo, we better do this soon.” (I don’t remember if he actually said, “yo,” but I like to think he did.)

In a heated tent, Kinnaman talked about his character’s arc, from hated bad guy to beloved good guy, to possibly shady guy, and back. While the rest of the audience was left scratching their heads at the end of the controversial Season 1 finale in which it appeared that he was a dirty cop who had stabbed his partner in the back, Kinnaman insisted, “Oh, I’ve always known he’s a good guy.”

This season, Holder lovers have rejoiced as he has become even more important—he’s a co-lead character, rather than second fiddle to Linden. “As Sarah is starting to break down, their roles kind of reverse,” he said. “So, he becomes a teacher. And he’s trying to hold her up. So, they have like opposite curves, which I think is really beautifully written.”

“If it’s a character that explores an area where I don’t have any experience by myself, then I try to get myself some experience so I then have something to fantasize about.”
In the original Danish show, Forbrydelsen, the cop was a typical hotheaded macho goon, all guns and glory and ego. Holder is something different: a product of hip-hop’s subculture, he’s effortlessly cool in a way not native to most law-enforcement officers. But he also seems shifty—a trait he uses to his advantage. Holder almost dares you to underestimate him.

That Kinnaman was able to turn what’s usually a stock character into a scene-stealing, star-making turn is testament to his dedication to his craft, not to mention the charisma he naturally exudes. Before The Killing, Kinnaman’s profile was rapidly rising in his native Sweden, starring in Snabba Cash (Easy Money) and the Johan Falk series, when he sent in audition over the Internet to showrunner Veena Sud.

“We had to see a lot of people before we hired the character Holder,” said Sud on the telephone from Los Angeles. Her casting directors emailed her. “They said, ‘There’s this Swedish actor, he’s the Brad Pitt of Sweden. He’s phenomenal, and he’s put himself on tape. And here it is, check it out,’ ” recalled Sud. “And I opened up the file and I was just immediately blown away by Joel. He’s funny. He’s charismatic. He’s everything I wanted Holder to be.”

Once Kinnaman flew out to Los Angeles to do a screen test, Sud said, they knew they’d found their man. “And all of us felt it in the room. We were all just blown away by his charisma and magnetism and his funniness. And the great thing about Joel, too, I think, you know, it’s so hard to have those two qualities of lightness and darkness—to go to the extreme kind of as quickly as the character does. And he does it in a blink of an eye,” said Sud.

“If I play a villain I try to find his lightness and his good side. And if I play a hero or a good guy I’ll try to find his darkness or his flaws. Because I don’t believe in good and evil,” said Kinnaman. “I believe in grays.”

Kinnaman was attracted to Holder’s intricacies—the fact that the same guy can make a great breakfast burrito for Linden’s son, whom he affectionately dubs Little Man, can also have a soul-searching moment during which he nearly goes off the rails, staggering between fast-moving cars on a crowded highway. “I also found it really intriguing that he’s battling with this addiction as the same time as he’s getting this promotion at work,” said Kinnaman. “It’s just a good contrast.”

Displaying a flash of that trademarked humor, he added, “We need to state that anyone who doesn’t like Holder is a bad person. Just a bad person.”

To prepare himself for the role, Kinnaman went all-out. He didn’t change his clothes for five days and he didn’t brush his teeth. He went on a ride along with an undercover cop from Compton whom Sud partially based the character on, and went to NA and AA meetings in character as Holder.

“He committed to being Holder,” said Sud. “He lost weight. He was wearing these super baggy outfits. His hair was greasy. He had dark rings around his eyes—he really went there.”

He hesitates to call what he does method with a capital “m” (“I’m kind of the method of ‘swallow the pill that works,’ ”), but he said, “If it’s a character that explores an area where I don’t have any experience by myself, then I try to get myself some experience so I then have something to fantasize about.”

Unlike many Hollywood ingénues who depend on their dashing good looks, Kinnaman has formal acting training. After a brief stint in acting when he was 10, he didn’t come back to the craft until much later, after he’d graduated from school and traveled for two years, going to Southeast Asia and Argentina. At the encouragement of his longtime friend, Gustaf Skarsgård (True Blood’s Alexander Skarsgård’s younger brother), he applied to The Swedish Academic School of Drama. It took him four tries before he was accepted. “It’s the second most expensive education of Sweden,” said Kinnaman. “It’s fighter pilot and then this.”

After he graduated in 2007, Kinnaman quickly became a working actor. Surprisingly, it was a play that nabbed him his first few movie roles. “It wasCrime and Punishment. It was like a three-hour, 45-minute play where I was on stage the whole time, so I think there were a lot of producers and directors that kind of felt that I could carry things, so because the upcoming 16 months I did nine features. Where I played the lead in all of them. So it was a lot.” He paused. “I’m not doing that again.”

While Kinnaman has never been a strung-out meth addict, there are certain similarities between him and Holder: he spent one year in Texas as an exchange student because he was a misbehaving teen (it’s where he says he got the inspiration for Holder’s distinctive accent, in part, modeling it after his African-American friends down South). And his iPod plays music that he says his character likes—hip-hop (strictly old-school and ’90s) and dancehall.

It seems clear, too, that Holder’s acerbic sarcasm is as much informed by Kinnaman’s generous sense of humor and his crack delivery as it is by the script. (When asked about what qualities he shared with his character, he quipped: “We have the same beard—at least five months a year.”) He tells stories using different voices, recalling that year in Texas, living with a family and their 10 daschunds (“sausage dogs”), he imitated his Southern hosts’ drawl: “She was like, ‘You just look so nice, I snatched you out of the pile!’ “—stretching out the last word—pie-ul.

Self-effacing, he talks about working with Denzel Washington and pokes fun at his own fallibility: “He’s so present in everything he does. I had one scene when he’s sort of walking up and I had a gun to my head, but I’m just watching him walk up. And I caught myself just staring at him in awe, like, Wow, look at how he walks.”

When he tells the story, you can almost see it happening in slow motion. He laughed: “Then I was like, ‘All right, I’m also in this scene.’ ”

As the day ends, and it actually finally begins to rain for real, Kinnaman sits in the makeup trailer getting the fake stitches and bruises removed (left over from his brutal dustup with the casino’s Native American tribe), and ponders his likely very bright future, when he’ll be working with Jose Padilha on RoboCop, a director he called, “sublime.” (“This, is, you know, a big challenge for an actor,” he said. “A real actor piece.”)

Beyond RoboCop, he said he wanted to work with auteurs, including Woody Allen, Alejandro González Iñárritu, and Darren Aronofsky: “I want to do everything, and I want to have the opportunity to do everything. I was getting a little frustrated here when I was meeting with directors and seeing really interesting projects and then you were hearing that, ‘Well, they have to have a name to finance the movie,’ ” said Kinnaman. “So then you can’t do those movies. You have to sort of acquire that to be able to be able to make those choices.”

Perhaps by the end of The Killing’s run, that pesky problem of name recognition will be solved.

“I think he’s got so many directions he can go in,” said Veena Sud. “I’m really excited to see him play the very opposite of Holder and do all sorts of other things. He’s more than capable of it.”

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Tricia Romano is an award-winning writer who has written about pop culture, style, and celebrity for The New York Times, The Village Voice, Spin, and Radar magazine. She won Best Feature at the Newswomen’s Club of New York Front Page Award for her Village Voice cover story, about sober DJs and promoters in the nightlife industry, “The Sober Bunch.”

For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast ateditorial@thedailybeast.com.


Posted by Ohva @ The Strale Dome

May 23, 2012
Gary Oldman to star opposite Joel Kinnaman in Robocop remake!

Gary Oldman has inked a deal to star opposite Joel Kinnaman in MGM’s remake of Robocop.


http://www.geeksofdoom.com/GoD/img/2012/04/2012-04-05-robocop_title.jpg

http://www.hollywoodrepor…ry-oldman-robocop-328774

Gary Oldman has inked a deal to star opposite Joel Kinnaman in MGM’s remake of Robocop.


Jose Padilha is directing the film, which is being produced by Strike Entertainment’s Marc Abraham and Eric Newman.

Kinnaman (The Killing) is the title character, a cop named Alex Murphy who is brought back from the brink of death and turned into a cyborg police officer.
Oldman will play Norton, the scientist who creates Robocop and finds himself torn between the ideals of the machine trying to rediscover its humanity and the callous needs of a corporation.

While no start date has been set, the production is eyeing a shoot in Toronto and has a tentative release date of summer 2013.


Oldman, repped by APA and Douglas Management Group, will next be seen as Commissioner Gordon in The Dark Knight Rises. His period crime movie Lawless, which also stars Shia LaBeouf and Tom Hardy, just premiered in Cannes. With movies such as Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy and the Harry Potter series under his belt, Oldman has the distinction of being the top grossing actor of all time. He also was nominated for an Oscar this year for his performance in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy. 

Email: Borys.Kit@thr.com
Twitter: @Borys_Kit

Posted by Ohva @ The Strale Dome

May 20, 2012

Happy One Year Anniversary Stråle Dome!

Posted by Blue Butterfly

May 18, 2012
skarsgardnews:

Alexander Skarsgard on cover of Swedish King Magazine’s June issue (updated with translation).

skarsgardnews:

Alexander Skarsgard on cover of Swedish King Magazine’s June issue (updated with translation).

(via ohvasparetime)

May 16, 2012

Alexander Skarsgard & Taylor Kitsch Battleship Interview

Source: http://www.reelz.com/trailer-clips/63532/battleship-interview

May 16, 2012

Alexander Skarsgard - Actor Showcase on Reelz

Source: http://www.reelz.com/trailer-clips/63534/alexander-skarsgard-actor-spotlight

May 16, 2012
Looks like they are marketing Kon Tiki at Cannes!

Click on photos for readable size.

Posted by Ohva @ The Strale Dome

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