View Single Post
Old 11-18-2004, 11:04 AM   #2 (permalink)
EmmaRiddle

Kaplinski Rival
NOT Strange or Evil
Inspirational
Erumpent
 
EmmaRiddle's Avatar
 
Location: Cardiff, Wales, UK
Join Date: Jun 2003
Posts: 13,139

Hogwarts RPG Name:
Marcella Riddle
Graduated
Send a message via MSN to EmmaRiddle
Default

The second interview, which is with Gary Oldman and David Thewlis, can be found here.

Quote:
David Thewlis: I was always a fan of it because it got kids reading again. Every kid I know is crazy about it, and I'm a big reader myself, and I read a lot when I was young, so I just thought anything that gets kids reading is a great thing.
Quote:
David Thewlis: I'd only read a bit of the first book and seen the films and I knew about it from the media.
Quote:
Gary Oldman: Much the same really, I had read the first book. I've got one up on Dave - I'd finished the first book. And I'd seen the first film. Like Dave I think it's a great thing and anything that can drag a kid away from a play station gets my vote.
David Thewlis: Although they now do Harry Potter on play station.
(Oh, the irony David..)

Quote:
Gary Oldman: My son Alf is fourteen, so.
Interviewer: So he's right in the age there.
Gary Oldman: And of the other two, Charlie's four and a half, and Gulliver's six, so they've been here on set. Obviously it's an added thing that they like Harry Potter and their dad's in Harry Potter.
Quote:
Gary Oldman: Yes, I'm a hero at school. I'm a big, big noise at their school.
Interviewer: Suddenly, you are a really cool dad?
Gary Oldman: Yes.
David Thewlis: That's the best thing about it, I think. It's knowing kids go absolutely mental that you're in it. They just get short of breath.
Quote:
David Thewlis: I really like kid's films. I've done quite a few kids films, and I really enjoyed being a part of them, and since this is the biggest of them all, I just thought what fun it would be. And I met everyone involved, and I'm a fan of Alfonso Cuaron.
Quote:
Gary Oldman: Alfonso was a big draw for me. Because the film doesn't look like the other two and was not just a case of let's make another Harry Potter movie because there's another book.
Quote:
Interviewer: But were you surprised to get a character with the sort of dichotomy that Sirius Black has in a children's book? To find a character with that kind of darkness is quite a rare thing in a book.
Gary Oldman: I'm no stranger to darkness and the dark side; so it was nice to be in a movie that my kids could see.
Interviewer: Is this a first?
Gary Oldman: Almost yes. It was great to be asked to do a movie that that my kids could see, and also to play a good guy. I mean he is a good guy, but you think he's a bad guy, and I liked that dynamic, that sort of twist at the end.
Quote:
Interviewer: Were you scared and intimidated by the likes of Maggie Smith, and Alan Rickman.
David Thewlis: No, the funny thing about being in the third film, after you've seen the other two, is that you just look around and it's like being in a film you've already seen. You're in the Great Hall sitting there next to Alan Rickman playing Snape and with Maggie and Robbie Coltrane.
Quote:
David Thewlis: Because I hadn't seen them before starting this, I revised the whole thing by going back and looking at the first two films. And then I'm sat next to Alan Rickman and it's him in the actual film. But they're not at all intimidating people; they're great people.
Quote:
Gary Oldman: And we've known people. I've known Alan Rickman for many years and I'd worked with Robbie in 1980, in Glasgow, in Pantomime.
Quote:
David Thewlis: Yes they're great, all three of them. Daniel's a nice boy, he's a really great guy and he's got me into some very good music, that's the best thing about him.
Gary Oldman: They're up and they're listening to good stuff.
David Thewlis: He's very passionate, and he's got great taste for a kid of his age. He's a really delightful little guy.
Gary Oldman: He's very dedicated, serious about it, and focused.
Quote:
Interviewer: He says he's a big fan of yours, particularly, as an actor, I think you are his his idol. Just to act with a kid when you know you're his hero, is that off putting?
Gary Oldman: Yes, it is somewhat intimidating.
Interviewer: That's good that you got a kid there that really puts you on top of your game.
Gary Oldman: Yes, you think, I've got to be good here.
Interviewer: For the kids?
Gary Oldman: For the kids, you think I've got to do it for the kids, I'm doing it for the kids.
Quote:
David Thewlis: Well, I am now, but I've put a lot of effort into that. It was good to do and I can say at least once in my career I've done the whole werewolf transformation thing. But it wasn't really fun to do; it's really uncomfortable. But was great.

It was a terrible day when we were shooting. You have these lenses in, and you can hardly see anything, and then there's a light that would be blinding to you, and we're on a very dark set and I was let out. They opened the big studio door and the sunlight hit my eyes and I had the teeth still in and I'm thinking, "he's taking it a bit serious, isn't he?"
Quote:
Interviewer: David, with the werewolf thing, I think most men at some time in their lives, particularly when they're boys, were fascinated with becoming a werewolf. Have you ever had a werewolf obsession?
David Thewlis: No, never.
Quote:
Gary Oldman: I've been a werewolf. Dracula. But I don't do transformation in this. You don't actually see it happening. I was very, very happy that David was doing it and not me.
Quote:
Interviewer: How long did it take in make-up?
David Thewlis: Six hours, yes six hours was the longest one. But it was only one day, thank God. But mine was six hours.

What you won't see in the film was that they screwed a day-glo, pink and yellow aerial, that looked like a windmill, on top of my head. So the indignity of it is, I'm in the whole werewolf thing and just to finish it off I had this pink little area on top. And I don't think it served any purpose what so ever.
Gary Oldman: We got a laugh out of it.
Quote:
Gary Oldman: The transfers are terrific. I took some off set for my kids. Just put some in a bag.
Quote:
Interviewer: Have you taken anything off set at all?
David Thewlis: A day glow aerial.
Interviewer: You took the pink aerial?
David Thewlis: Yes, I got that for my mum.
(The Interviewer also asks about what if David had a genuine Animagus ((the assumption being the werewolf is an Animagus)) which is a mistake because Lupin isn't an Animagus at all.)

Quote:
Interviewer: He's a very approachable animal.
David Thewlis: That's touching.
Gary Oldman: I think there's a real softness to David, like a deer, or something. I could see him as a deer.
Interviewer: Now he's said that there is softness to you, how would you reply to that?
David Thewlis: I would say he's like some kind of bird.
Quote:
David Thewlis: That's what's great about the books though, is that dark edge to them. They've all got this kind of undercurrent of something very, very sinister and very profound, which is probably why kids like them so much, because they're not just fairy stories, they're not just a beautiful view of life. It's about a boy whose parents were murdered, that's quite a heavy thing to take on at the outset of the whole story.
Gary Oldman: It's part of their appeal. It's because JK Rowling doesn't patronize; she's not scared to take a kid's book to those places and I think that's why kids like them.
Quote:
Gary Oldman: I think his relationship with Harry is just very touching, and those few scenes that I have with him were part of the appeal. I don't often get the opportunity to play scenes like that. I'm not cast in many romantic comedies. Or children's films. So it was just refreshing to do something like that and to show another side. I don't know how I play bad guys; I don't even know how the whole thing happened.
EmmaRiddle is offline   Reply With Quote