Showing posts with label round table interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label round table interview. Show all posts

Interview with Asa Butterfield from "The Space Between Us"



The Space Between Us
Director: Peter Chelson
Writers: Allan Leob (screenplay), Stewart Schill (story)
Starring: Britt Robertson, Asa Butterfield, Gary Oldman
MPAA Rating: PG-13
Official Socials: Site | Facebook Twitter | Instagram | IMDb
Hashtag: #TheSpaceBetweenUs
The first human born on Mars travels to Earth for the first time, experiencing the wonders of the planet through fresh eyes. He embarks on an adventure with a street smart girl to discover how he came to be.
As I mentioned in my review of “The Space Between Us”, I became a fan of Asa Butterfield when I saw him as Jake in Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, so when I was given the chance to interview him I was very excited. He was a complete sweetheart and we got to talk a bit about London (I loved it when I went there!) and about the Miami weather. Without further ado…Here’s Asa’s interview:

First of all, how are you liking Miami so far? 
Asa: It’s nice. I went to the beach yesterday. London is just cold and gray all the time.

What’s your dream role?
Asa: My dream role? I get asked this a lot and I can never give a good answer because I never really think about it. I kind of just play it as it comes, what roles and scripts I read.

Do you have a preference? For example, do you prefer sci-fi since you’ve done “Ender’s Game” and “The Space Between Us”.
 Asa: I like doing all sorts of films actually. I don’t tell my agent that I want to do sci-fi or western, it really depends on the script and the character. I do like fantasy and sci-fi because it gives more freedom to do a lot of things.

So what drew you to do this movie? 
Asa: It had a lot of different things going on, a lot of different genres. I felt the character was very interesting: playing someone that is experiencing everything we take for granted, experiencing it for the first time and the wonders of it, and making all those mistakes. I thought it’d be very funny, different, and challenging –which it was.

How did you prepare for this role? 
Asa: There was the walk since coming from Mars to Earth you’d feel a little heavier, so I practiced with weights on my ankles and waist to see how much more difficult it’d be to walk and run around, and it affected the way I moved. I also watched films of people coming from space and I tried to recreate it but without the weights.

What do you hope people take away from this movie?
Asa: I hope they open their eyes to what we have as a planet, which we are very lucky to have and a lot of people ignore or don’t realize.

Is there something specific you want people to open their eyes to?
Asa: Well, yeah, the landscape, I think the natural side of it, like you see in the film some mountain views, but also the human aspect of it. Like going to see hot air balloons which Gardner sees for the first time, which most of us don’t even give a second glance to because we are all on our phones now.
What do you think you have in common with Gardner and what did you learn from playing that character? 
Asa: We are both very curious and interested in things. I really like learning about weird things and I can spend a whole evening reading. Just like how Gardner is fascinated by everything he sees.

Did you practice to be surprised since there are a lot of moments in which you have to act surprised?
Asa: I did my surprise face in the mirror all day (laughs). No, I’m joking. I don’t know. People ask me how I prepare to be a certain character and I can’t explain, because it’s more than acting, it’s mental, it’s what’s inside your head and you can’t really explain that. So, I don’t know is my answer (laughs).

You haven’t done a lot of romantic scenes in the movies you’ve been in, so how was doing the romantic scene with Britt Robertson? Was it awkward? 
Asa: No, it’s not awkward. When you have that type of relationship that you have to sell on screen, it’s always a lot easier when you get along with that person. Britt is very sweet, very chilled out, which is great because I kind of felt anxious and she was very relaxed. And, in those kind of scenes, you just can’t take it too seriously or otherwise it does get awkward, and then on camera you’ll go ‘why do these guys look so awkward?’ when you’re watching the film.

Gardner grows up having everything he needs, but he wants more; he just wants to connect. Do you believe that there is anything more valuable than human connection because, at the end of the day, that’s what the movie is about. 
Asa: I’m glad you got that because it is about science fiction, but it’s ultimately about these connections and relationships between these characters. And I do lean towards human contact, someone to talk to. I do like being by myself, having alone time, but I do believe it’s important to have that connection, so living on Mars would be a struggle for me.

If given the opportunity to live on Mars, would you take it?
Asa: No. I would like to go into space; I would like to go into zero gravity because I have pretended to be in zero g so many times. It would be awesome to experience that, do different types of experiments. But Mars is a little bit too far away.

How did you feel working with Gary Oldman?
Asa: Uh, Gary Oldman is an amazing actor to work with, as an actor. But, as a guy, he’s so kind of…normal, and funny. He doesn’t take himself too seriously at all, which is great to see in someone like that because, again, it relaxes the whole atmosphere on set. Because no one is going like ‘Oh, Gary is coming, let me do my tie up’, because his hair is a mess and yeah, it’s great.

Which director would you like to work with next? 
Asa: I don’t know; I’m open. I don’t like to set myself any goals because I feel bad if I fail to reach them, so I just go with the flow. I’ve worked with some incredible directors that no one has ever heard of, so I think it’s not fair to set those goals.

Can you tell us a bit about any new roles you’re working on now? 
Asa: Yes, I was filming last year; it’s called “The House of Tomorrow”, which is an independent American film. I played with Alan Wolf, which we are sort of in this punk rock band, and it was incredible.

You’ve played a lot of characters throughout the years, is there one that stood out to you the most?
Asa: I really like Gardner, really. It was fun bringing him to life because he is so different character than all the other ones I’ve played.

Since you started acting so young, do you feel like you missed out on things? 
Asa: I think I may have missed out on little things, but it didn’t really faze me. I’d come back to school and it didn’t really make a difference. It didn’t feel like I’d been away. But I did mature pretty quickly, which I am still not sure if it’s good or bad thing. I mean, I still act pretty immature, so I guess it balances out.

Were there any other space movies you watched to get into that mode? 
Asa: It does have some references to E.T., which I think is quite sweet. And they make a lot of references to Wings of Desire.

If you wouldn’t be into acting, what do you think you’d be doing? 
Asa: I’d be out with a camera in a forest or some type of savannah, just filming the animals. I love nature, I love animals –always have, and I really love photography as well.

Do you ever want to be on the other side of the camera? 
Asa: I would love to be a cameraman. Directing, maybe, but cameraman definitely.

If you were told today is your last day on Earth because tomorrow you are leaving to Mars, what would you do? 
Asa: Oh my God, what am I going to do? So many things. I will have to say I would spend it with my family, do the nice thing. And stash as many things as I can to steal to Mars.

So, what’s your favorite thing about Earth? 
Asa: Music. I love hip hop, but classic hip hop. From early 2000s: Eminem, Tupac, Biggie Smalls. I also like reggae and soul music.

An Interview with Matt Smith, Lily James and Douglas Booth of #PPZMovie


A zombie outbreak has fallen upon the land in this reimagining of Jane Austen's classic tale of the tangled relationships between lovers from different social classes in 19thcentury England. Feisty heroine Elizabeth Bennet (Lily James) is a master of martial arts and weaponry and the handsome Mr. Darcy (Sam Riley) is a fierce zombie killer, yet the epitome of upper class prejudice. As the zombie outbreak intensifies, they must swallow their pride and join forces on the blood-soaked battlefield in order to conquer the undead once and for all.
Pride, Prejudice, and Zombies
Director: Burr Steers
Writers: Jane Austen (characters), Seth Grahame-Smith (novel), Burr Steers (screenplay)
Cast: Lily James, Lena Headey, Matt Smith
Office Sites: Facebook | Twitter | Instagram



How often is one blessed to interviewed their idol? As a fan, not too often. So you can only imagine how my heart felt when I received the invitation to participate in a roundtable interview with Matt Smith?! Not only is he The Doctor but he is super amazing! My heart could not contained the excitement. To top it off, with Lily  James and Douglas Booth. Can you say, lucky?

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies movie is based on Seth Grahame-Smith's novel of the same name. The story stays true to the original story by Jane Austen. The story still focuses on the love story, but this time, it has a twist of some walking dead, amazing kickass moves and lots of girl power. Here is what Matt, Lily and Douglas shared with us:

WHAT MADE YOU DO THIS ROLE?

Douglas: When you're an actor you get scripts sent to you and the title came up. Some of us quite were confused. I actually heard of the book, since it was a NY Bestseller and some friends talked about it. And I saw it was written by, well the original draft, David O. Russell and he's pretty great. So I read it and it was brilliant and fun.  So that's how I got hold. Eventually, down the line, we are actually really good friends, we all got attached and it was great making it.
Lily: When I saw that title, I thought the title sounded ludicrous and i was very intrigued slash mortified. Then i read it  and it is one of those rare times when you read a script that you actually really really want to do and be part of. I thought the script was just brilliant. I think Pride and Prejudice always needed some zombies.  I was so excited after I subscribed with the director and became attached.
Matt: I just had all my friends doing it and it was a chance to do a movie with all my friends.
Lily: I was like, Go on Matt, please do it.
Matt: And here we are talking about it.


HOW HARD OR EASY WAS THE TRAINING FOR THE FIGHT SCENES?

Matt: Well, I didn't have to do any fight scenes.
Lily: He didn't do anything!
It was really hard but fun. I was very unfit. I haven't done any exercise in any way of shape and form for a long time. First, I would have to get strong. Then, I did boxing. The park where I lived in South London, I would be with my pad on, the gloves, and I did whipping. Like my trainer would bring a baseball bat and a huge bunching bag and I would be waking up the whole apartment block, like at 6 in the morning. I would be smashing this bunch bag. Then also, beyond that, for couple of months, the Bennet sisters would start training together and it was a deathly version of the Spice Girls. We became close and bonded. They are the coolest girls I've ever met. It was great to be part of this "girl gang" that we are focus on beating the crap out anyone that cross us.

HOW DID YOU APPROACH THIS ROLE, DID YOU VIEW THEM AS THEIR PRIDE & PREJUDICE CHARACTERS FIRST & FOREMOST THEN INCORPORATE ALL THE ELEMENT AFTERWARDS? 

Douglas: I think it was important for Burr that we existed in that world as the characters and the zombies were circumstances than would affect them. It was fun to explore how these characters that you kind of knew and loved, are interpretation of how would react to these circumstances. And how the scenes from the original novel would actually then translate and change. Have you seen the film?
YES

Douglas: In the proposal scene, how that turned out. How all those things come out in a physically way.
Lily: Yeah, I felt like my Bennet is very angry. You know that internal conflict within her and how dissatisfied she is with life and having to marry, being a woman. And suddenly everything is life and death and she gets to physically express herself in a way. In a sort of process where she can beat that frustration, and that really comes out in a physical way. Just because the stake is so much higher, Ms. Bennet is so focus in finding her daughters husbands, when in any minute, they can all be dead. I think that's when the human comes in and that's what's really cleaver about combining these worlds.
Matt: It's weird. When you considered, I never really thought of it like that. When you considered it, you can sort of put them in any story. Do you know what I mean?
Lily: Zombies and see what happens.
Matt: Yeah. Something that would happen will happen to the nature of the drama. Imagine Jaws with Zombies.
Lily: Sharks as zombies. It's too much!
Matt: It's like, I can't go anywhere. I'm going to live on a tree.
Lily: Can zombies climb?
Matt: Yeah. The ones I know.


HOW WOULD YOU SELL THIS TO A JANE AUSTEN ENTHUSIASTS, LIKE SOMEONE WHO WOULD BE SPECTACLE ABOUT THE ZOMBIES?

Lily: The story reminds completely true and I think the center of it is this love story. Like you were saying, WHY NOT? You know with Shakespeare criticizes it, well it's been criticized, but it is enjoyable to watch. I think it only brings out some part of the story and highlights one bit. Character traits, we know and love from Jane Austen are really sort of exaggerated  and sort of heighten in this new setting.
Douglas: I think, if you really love the story, if you really are an enthusiast of that story... You would've seen it on BBC version, here and there, how cool it is to see a different take on it. We respect the story, we love the story, there is no disrespect to Austen. We play it true and we do the characters justice. It's just a way to see it in a different light. It's like OMG, there were zombies in it. How cool would that be?
Matt: I think it's a testament to this universality and timelessness of this story and the whole that it stands up to the zombie apocalypse. The love story, there is a timelessness to it. Which it's really strong in this. I think Same and Lily have a really strong chemistry and there's a real, you know... by the end you're still going please get together. Please get together and don't get kill.


WHO IN THE CAST IS MORE LIKE THEIR CHARACTER IN THE FILM?

Lily: [points at Matt] He's exactly like Parson. Absolutely no acting required.
Matt: Me.
Douglas: I think you're a strong, independent female woman.
Lily: Female, what?
Douglas: Sorry, I meant... yeah. Female.
Matt: I wouldn't want to be in a room with Lily and a sword.
Douglas: I think the cast if full of strong and independent woman.
Matt: Like me.
Lily: Doug is, in real life, is this horrible, mean man.
Matt: OHHHHH...
Douglas: No, that's really a stretch.
Matt: He's a nice, warm, open and kind and charming...
Lily: Yeah, charming.
Douglas: I know, basically.

FOR YOU LILY, AS A ROLE MODEL FOR YOUNG GIRLS, GOING FROM CHARACTERS LIKE CINDERELLA TO A HEROINE IN THIS FILM. WHAT KIND OF MESSAGE DO YOU WANT TO GET OUT THERE TO YOUNG GIRLS IN MAKING SURE THEY BECOME STRONG, INDEPENDENT WOMEN AS THEY GET OLDER?

Lily: Well, Cinderella and Bennet are so different but they are both equally strong. Their strength come from different places. That's important, you don't need to have a sword to be strong. There are so many ways to be in control of your destiny and contemplate who you really are. I have to say, with this Bennet, she is such a strong character anyways in Jane Austen. She was so forth thinking, brave and challenged the way things were done. With this is taking even further because she can fight. Being part of this gang of girls that are push aside and took down zombies by themselves was just so brilliant. That's how it should be. I hope, like when I mentioned that we were like Spice Girls, it's like GIRL POWER. I hope that's really the message of the movie.


WHAT'S NEXT FOR YOU GUYS?

Douglas: I'm playing Percy Shelley in a film about the love affair between Shelley and Mary Shelley
Lily: With an incredible director.
Douglas: Mary Shelley is played by Elle Fanning, which is a result of Mary writing Frankenstein. And it is directed by an amazing female director called Haifaa Al-Mansour. Who directed the first ever film that got made in Saudi Arabia
Lily: By a woman
Douglas: By a woman. She's really incredible. Woman can't be seeing working, so she had to directed from a van and walkie talkie. It was hard to make this movie but she was determined to make this movie and she's extremely talented and made this movie. She's the perfect woman to tell Mary's tale. Again, with the same theme: fierce, independent woman. It's exciting for it to be done now. About time.
Lily: I'm doing a film called Baby Driver, which I do not wear a corset. I'm playing an American waitress.
Matt: I don't know what I'm doing.
Lily: But you're still doing something.
Matt: I'm still doing something. I finish that next month. (this month). Then, I don't know.
Douglas: Prince Philip, in the new big Netflix series, call The Crown, about the royal family. It's going to be a big show.



Pride and Prejudice and Zombies is out today! Go watch it!
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