Tag: laura-birn

  • TV Review: ‘Foundation’ Season 3

    Jared Harris in 'Foundation,' premiering July 11, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Jared Harris in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 11, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    ‘Foundation’ Season 3 receives 7.5 out of 10 stars.

    Released on Apple TV+ on July 11th with its initial episode, ‘Foundation’ returns us to the multi-storyline tale of an Empire’s fall and a dedicated –– some might say obsessed –– scientist’s drive to steer the future.

    With David S. Goyer (‘The Dark Knight’) as its showrunner, the series stars Jared Harris (‘Chernobyl’), Lee Pace (‘Bodies Bodies Bodies’), Lou Llobell (‘Voyagers’), Pilou Asbæk (‘Ghost in the Shell’) and Terrence Mann (‘Critters’).

    Related Article: TV Review: ‘Foundation’ Season 2

    Initial Thoughts

    Lee Pace in 'Foundation,' premiering July 11, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Lee Pace in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 11, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    We are long past the point where Isaac Asimov’s ‘Foundation’ stories are considered “unfilmable” –– the team behind this Apple series have been putting the lie to that since 2021.

    Yet, the source material’s endlessly layered and complex themes have not always proven so easy to transition to screens, and the third season of the show continues that. There are storylines and characters who pop (the returning ones), while others struggle to make themselves stand out.

    And some serious production issues (strikes, budgetary squabbles) have led to delays on this one –– but fortunately the quality is unaffected.

    Script and Direction

    Lou Llobell in 'Foundation,' premiering July 11, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Lou Llobell in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 11, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    While Goyer had been serving as both head writer and initial director for the first three episodes, he was swapped out –– on the directing front, at least, by Tim Southam, who has worked on the likes of ‘One Piece’ and ‘Lost in Space’. Partly that was to allow Goyer to focus on the writing side, and partly to curb budgetary overruns.

    And it’s not hard to see why –– ‘Foundation’ remains a visually dazzling, clearly expensive series that manages to balance intimate, intense character moments with sweeping star-scapes and big location shoots.

    But none of that is worth it if the scripts don’t work, and while the series sometimes loses itself in esoterica, it still delivers on the ‘Game of Thrones’-esque machinations of competing political, scientific, and particularly this season, criminal dynamics looking to dominate the galaxy.

    There’s real scope and scale here, but the writers also don’t forget to narrow down to a more human level (even if the character is, say, a humanoid robot who can tear her own face open with a fingertip and seal it back up again like someone else shutting a Ziploc.

    On the directing side, Southam and the other directors keeps up the style of the show, all grand architecture and vibrant costumes, and the effects remain impressive.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Cassian Bilton, Lee Pace and Terrence Mann in 'Foundation,' premiering July 11, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    (L to R) Cassian Bilton, Lee Pace and Terrence Mann in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 11, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    As I mentioned above, the veteran cast are, for the most part, the characters who pop. Jared Harris continues to own every scene he’s in as “psychohistory” expert Hari Seldon, the deep thinker with a planet-sized ego whose math-based theories have predicted the end of empires and how civilizations can speed up the chaotic periods in between interstellar calm.

    Harris is measured and fantastically smug in equal measure and despite his character’s seeming death last season, he’s not letting that stop him make pronouncements.

    If there’s anyone who can match Harris for sheer presence it’s Lee Pace as Brother Day, one of the three clones who rules the Empire in endless succession, a new one decanted when one dies, and always three hanging around arguing (Pace’s scenes with co-stars Terrence Mann as Brother Dusk, the older variant and Brother Dawn, played by Cassian Bilton, are always good).

    Pace, never knowingly fully clothed, is handed yet more solid material to play here, and while it’s less showy than other season, it deepens his character as his flaws really start to play on him. Plus a mano-a-mano duel late in the season we won’t spoil here is excellent.

    Pilou Asbæk in 'Foundation,' premiering July 11, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Pilou Asbæk in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 11, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    Rounding out the standout veteran characters is The Mule, with ‘Game of Thrones’ veteran Pilou Asbæk taking over the role for this third season. A psychic warlord who can influence the brain of almost anyone he meets, he’s like a violent, vulgar crossbreed of Han Solo and Luke Skywalker, a man who believes he’s destined to rule worlds and isn’t above slaughtering people to achieve his aims.

    Asbæk gives him just the right amount of sneer mixed with charisma, and The Mule is a highlight of the new season.

    No less impactful but much humbler is Lou Lobell’s Gaal Dornick, one of Hari’s main followers who has long since evolved into her own person with her own mission. Lobell makes her believable and empathetic.

    And Laura Birn, who plays synthetic lifeform Demerzel, an aide to Pace and co’s emperors who is much more –– and much more powerful/influential than anyone suspects continues to impress.

    Of the new characters this year, there is good work from Alexander Siddig (back on the science fiction beat after his first big role in ‘Star Trek: Deep Space Nine’ decades ago). While Siddig had a small role in Season 1 of the show, he’s back playing Dr. Ebling Mis here.

    Finally, there are three other newcomers who pop –– Synnøve Karlsen and Cody Fern as Bayta and Toran Mallow, a spoiled rich couple on their honeymoon who get swept up into the Mule’s storyline and Tómas Lemarquis as a hypnotic musician who works with the criminal character.

    Final Thoughts

    Alexander Siddig in 'Foundation,' premiering July 11, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Alexander Siddig in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 11, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    ‘Foundation’ might seem impenetrable to some. But if you give it a chance to wrap its tendrils around your brain, you’ll appreciate the magic trick it is pulling off bringing one of the most complicated and thoughtful novel series to life.

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    What’s the plot of ‘Foundation’?

    Set 152 years after the events of the second season, The Foundation has become increasingly established far beyond its humble beginnings while the Cleonic Dynasty’s Empire has dwindled.

    As these galactic powers forge an uneasy alliance, a threat to the entire galaxy appears in the fearsome form of a war lord known as The Mule whose sights are set on ruling the universe by use of physical and military force, as well as mind control. It’s anyone’s guess who will win, who will lose, who will live and who will die.

    Who stars in ‘Foundation’?

    • Jared Harris as Hari Seldon
    • Lee Pace as Brother Day
    • Lou Llobell as Gaal Dornick
    • Laura Birn as Demerzel
    • Cassian Bilton as Brother Dawn
    • Terrence Mann as Brother Dusk
    • Pilou Asbæk as The Mule
    • Cody Fern as Toran Mallow
    • Synnove Karlsen as Bayta Mallow
    • Alexander Siddig as Dr. Ebling Mis
    Laura Birn in 'Foundation,' premiering July 11, 2025 on Apple TV+.
    Laura Birn in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 11, 2025 on Apple TV+.

    List of David S. Goyer Movies:

    Buy David S. Goyer Movies On Amazon

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  • Movie Review: ‘The Crow’

    Bill Skarsgård in 'The Crow.' Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate. Copyright: © 2022 Yellow Flower LLC.
    Bill Skarsgård in ‘The Crow.’ Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate. Copyright: © 2022 Yellow Flower LLC.

    Opening in theaters August 23 is ‘The Crow,’ directed by Rupert Sanders and starring Bill Skarsgård, FKA Twigs, Danny Huston, Josette Simon, Laura Birn, Sami Bouajila, and Jordan Bolger.

    Related Article: ‘The Crow’: First Images of Bill Skarsgård and FKA Twigs in the Remake

    Initial Thoughts

    Here’s a little secret: this writer has never been a huge fan of the original 1994 movie ‘The Crow.’ At the time, it seemed dreary, gratuitous, and largely a case of style over substance, with simplistic characters and a reactionary, nihilistic narrative. But the death of lead actor Brandon Lee — who was accidentally shot on the set and died later from his injuries, just a few days before the end of filming — cast an unmistakably somber pall over the film that one would have to be a robot not to feel. Lee is great despite the movie around him, but there is also a ghostly aura around his presence onscreen that permeates the entire movie and lifts an otherwise ho-hum revenge thriller into a different light that has since made it a cult classic.

    Fairly or not, taking the mystique and legend of Lee out of the equation, as the new remake of ‘The Crow’ does, leaves you with nothing but the ho-hum revenge thriller. Despite the best efforts of star Bill Skarsgård (who’s cornering the market on movie monsters with his past portrayal of Pennywise the Dancing Clown in ‘It’ and his upcoming title turn in ‘Nosferatu’) and a few inspired moments, this long-in-development reboot from director Rupert Sanders (‘Snow White and the Huntsman’) is dull, derivative, and predictable, lacking in energy both from its direction, its style, and even its cast.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) Bill Skarsgård and FKA twigs in 'The Crow.' Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Bill Skarsgård and FKA twigs in ‘The Crow.’ Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.

    The new ‘Crow,’ written by Zach Baylin and William Schneider, keeps the bones of the story (based on the original 1989 graphic novel by James O’Barr) but adds a convoluted new set-up to get us to the main plot. Skarsgård’s Eric Draven is in a rehab facility in a rather vague location (it appears to be out in relatively sunny countryside, while the unnamed city where the primary action takes place is perpetually dark and rainy) for rather vague reasons (a flashback reveals he watched a treasured animal die as a child) when he meets fellow resident Shelly (FKA Twigs), a musician who allowed herself to get arrested for possession of drugs and sent to the facility to avoid an even darker fate.

    This is where ‘The Crow’ 2024 diverges sharply from the 1994 film: whereas the villains in that movie were local Detroit thugs (yes, that movie was set in Detroit; the new one is supposed to be set in an American city but was shot in Germany and Prague) who were looking to take over the apartment building where Eric and Shelly make their home, the antagonist here is Vincent Roag (a bored Danny Huston), who is apparently immortal thanks to a deal he made with the Devil ages ago. That deal involves using a demonic voice to whisper in people’s ears and make them either kill themselves or someone nearby, thus corrupting their soul and sending them to hell. Shelly has been used in this fashion by Roag to murder someone, thus damning her, but she has the whole thing on videotape (although how it’s going to bring him down remains frustratingly unclear).

    It’s a needlessly complicated back story that diminishes the power of Eric himself becoming a supernatural being. Which, of course, is what eventually happens. He and Shelly rather easily escape rehab just ahead of Roag’s goon squad (led by ‘Foundation’ star Laura Birn, who deserves better) and enjoy an inexplicably idle montage of hanging out at a lake with their friends or making sweet love and/or music together (the timeline in this film is really murky). But Roeg’s minions catch up with them again at Eric’s apartment, suffocating both of them in a harrowing sequence as they watch each other die.

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    Eric is sent to a gray CG afterlife that looks like the outside of an abandoned railyard, where ghostly mentor Kronos (Sami Bouajila) provides the necessary exposition for the film to move forward. Eric is dead, but he can return to the land of the living and avenge Shelly’s death, or “put the wrong things right.” His physical body can heal from any wound, as long as his love for Shelly remains “pure.” And he can save her damned soul as well – but at a much higher cost.

    From there, it becomes a rather standard stalk-and-kill scenario, albeit with copious amounts of CG blood (God, how we miss karo syrup sometimes) and some enjoyably bonkers deaths, particularly in one extended battle in an opera house that leaves Eric standing amidst a pile of severed limbs and heads (two of which he dispatches in unintentionally hilarious fashion). But while Eric faced distinctive villains like Michael Wincott’s Top Dollar and his moll Myca (Bai Ling) back in 1994, his enemies here are just a bunch of the usual burly, vaguely Eastern European-looking security guys in nice suits, whom Roag seems to have in endless supply. The title bird, a sort of spirit guide in the first film, just kind of tags along in this one.

    There’s an overall lack of suspense, energy, or tension in the proceedings, as everyone seems to know that they’re going through some predictable paces. The eventual confrontation between Eric and Roag, after just about everyone else has been killed, is as disappointingly flat as everything else on display here. The Goth aesthetic and alternative/metal soundtrack of the original film have been replaced with a generalized gray-brown murk and actually some pretty good songs from the likes of Foals, Enya, and Traitrs. But the overall style that made the first film such a cultural touchpoint of its time simply cannot be channeled in the same way.

    The Cast

    (L to R) Bill Skarsgård and FKA twigs in 'The Crow.' Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.
    (L to R) Bill Skarsgård and FKA twigs in ‘The Crow.’ Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.

    We very much enjoyed Bill Skarsgård as Pennywise the Dancing Clown in the ‘It’ movies, as well as his turns in films like ‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ and ‘Barbarian.’ And while it’s unfair to judge him against Brandon Lee, the latter is such an integral part of the ‘Crow’ legacy and a dominant presence in the original film. It’s not possible to disregard the fact that while Lee was able to transcend the material, Skarsgård can’t. He gives it his best shot, but the emotional undercurrents simply aren’t there, while his patchwork look of random tattoos, choppy hair, and disheveled clothing doesn’t do anything to build his character.

    There is also no chemistry between him and FKA Twigs, who gives a dead-eyed, monotone performance in a crucial role. Some of the scenes between Twigs and Skarsgård simply lapse into silence, as if they have nothing more to say to each other, and Twigs is not a strong enough actor to flesh Shelly out. A subplot involving her relationship with her mother (Josette Simon) goes largely unexplored and mostly forgotten, but based on this we’re not sure Twigs can handle anything too complex anyway. In a movie already existing on a purely surface level, an actor needs all the tools they can muster, and Twigs falls short.

    Danny Huston mostly phones in his villainous role as Roag, a character whose own back story and methodology is confusing to say the least. Is he a vampire? A demon? Both? It’s never quite clear. Laura Birn remains a striking presence (her work as the android Demerzel on ‘Foundation’ is one of that series’ strong points) but is underused, while the rest of the cast doesn’t get enough to do to stand out here.

    Final Thoughts

    Bill Skarsgård in 'The Crow.' Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.
    Bill Skarsgård in ‘The Crow.’ Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.

    This is IP mining at best, an attempt to cash in on a brand name that still has some resonance 30 years later (a string of poor sequels kept it in public view for a while as well), and sheer exploitation at worst. But above all, it’s mediocre: too much of ‘The Crow’ has the kind of bland feel that one gets from watching direct-to-video thrillers. Whatever aura Brandon Lee brought to the original is no longer there, and even the love story at the heart of the movie pales in comparison.

    The original 1994 ‘The Crow’ remains a testament to a promising actor and career tragically lost far too soon, as well as a snapshot of a particular moment in youth culture. Lacking either of those aspects, 2024’s ‘The Crow’ is a testament to what happens when story material is resurrected and rebooted without wondering if it should be in the first place.

    ‘The Crow’ receives 3 out of 10 stars.

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    What is the plot of ‘The Crow’?

    Damaged souls Eric (Bill Skarsgård) and Shelly (FKA Twigs) fall deeply in love, only for Shelly’s dark past and demonic benefactor to catch up with her. After the couple are brutally murdered, Eric is sent back from the realm of the dead to “put the wrong things right” – even if it means it will cost him the one thing he wants most of all.

    Who is in the cast of ‘The Crow’?

    • Bill Skarsgård as Eric
    • FKA Twigs as Shelly
    • Danny Huston as Vincent Roeg
    • Josette Simon as Sophia
    • Laura Birn as Marian
    • Sami Bouajila as Kronos
    • Isabella Wei as Zadie
    • Jordan Bolger as Chance
    Bill Skarsgård in 'The Crow.' Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.
    Bill Skarsgård in ‘The Crow.’ Photo Credit: Larry Horricks for Lionsgate.

    Other Movies and TV Shows in ‘The Crow’ Franchise:

    Buy ‘The Crow’ Movie on Amazon

  • TV Review: ‘Foundation’ Season 2

    Leah Harvey, Jared Harris and Lou Llobell in 'Foundation,' premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Leah Harvey, Jared Harris and Lou Llobell in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    Returning to Apple TV+ on July 14th , the second season of ‘Foundation’ builds on the first, stretching even further forward through time and visiting some new places while checking in on familiar faces.

    Those who enjoyed the first season will find more of the ambitious, weighty science fiction they enjoyed, but newcomers who were daunted by the colder tone will latch on to some more humorous, human characters this time out.

    What’s the story of ‘Foundation’s second season?

    Cassian Bilton, Lee Pace and Terrence Mann in 'Foundation,' premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Cassian Bilton, Lee Pace and Terrence Mann in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    More than a century after the season one finale, tension mounts throughout the galaxy.

    As the cloned emperor Cleons (Led by Lee Pace’s Brother Day) unravel, a vengeful queen plots to destroy Empire from within. Hari (Jared Harris), Gaal (Lou Llobell) and Salvor (Leah Harvey) discover a colony of “Mentalics” with psionic abilities that threaten to alter psychohistory itself. The Foundation has entered its religious phase, spreading the Church of Seldon throughout the Outer Reach and inciting the Second Crisis: war with Empire.

    The new season chronicles the stories of four crucial individuals transcending space and time as they overcome deadly crises, shifting loyalties and complicated relationships that will ultimately determine the fate of humanity.

    Who else appears in ‘Foundation’?

    Ella-Rae Smith in 'Foundation,' premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Ella-Rae Smith in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    Season two also stars returning cast members Laura Birn, Cassian Bilton and Terrence Mann and introduces new characters and stars, including Isabella Laughland (Brother Constant), Kulvinder Ghir (Poly Verisof), Ella-Rae Smith (Queen Sareth of Cloud Dominion), Holt McCallany (Warden Jaegger Fount), Rachel House (Tellem Bond), Nimrat Kaur (Yanna Seldon), Ben Daniels (Bel Riose) and Dimitri Leonidas (Hober Mallow).

    Related Article: Series Creator David S. Goyer Talks Apple TV+’s ‘Foundation’ Season 2

    Is ‘Foundation’ worth watching?

    Lee Pace in 'Foundation,' premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Lee Pace in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    Whether you enjoy this adaptation of the ‘Foundation’ stories, which re-define the term “sprawling” might depend on your tolerance for high-minded science fiction and treatises about the human condition, war, ethics and more.

    But don’t let that turn you away: because the series also manages to be very entertaining and, in this latest season, has struck more of a balance between the complex and down to Earth (even if Earth is just a memory at this point).

    It still has the big clashes between the Empire and Seldon’s prediction that the galaxy-spanning authority will fall, but it also finds time for quieter moments between characters and developments on their journey.

    Big highlights this time come from three new characters. Ghir plays the grown version of Poly Verisof, who we first met as a child on the planet Terminus (settled by the followers of Hari decades ago after he and they were exiled from the Empire). The adult Poly, a holy man who preaches Seldon’s wisdom, is a delight, introduced lying in a messy, hungover heap on his bunk. And through the season, he’s a constant source of laughs, whether he’s overindulging or finding his faith enough to be a hero.

    Playing perfectly off of Poly is fellow monk Brother Constant (Laughland), a devout follower of the Church of Seldon, who is witty and eager for adventure beyond her home. She gets far more than she ever imagined, including a flirtatious relationship with swaggering scoundrel Hober Mallow (Leonidas).

    Hober is effectively ‘Foundation’s Han Solo, a thief who pulls scams, but who is eventually dragooned into the effort against Empire. He’s crafty, vulnerable and relatable.

    Of course, the returning cast wouldn’t be complete without Lee Pace as the imperious Brother Day. The current ruler of Empire (who in his line’s tradition, all clones of the original Cleon, has a younger Variant named Dawn, played by Bilton and the older Dusk, brought to life by Mann) is a pouty, feather-puffing pleasure who is re-introduced to us during a bout of particularly passionate lovemaking with female robo-servant Demerzel (Birn) before assassins arrive to try and take him out. A fight scene featuring a totally nude Pace is quite the way to ensure that this isn’t all stuffy sci-fi.

    His storyline as Brother Day this year revolves around his decision to change the lineage from the endless cycle of clones to finding a wife who can give him children. And the choice found for him, Smith’s Queen Sareth, is a great counterpoint to his energy. She’s burning with vengeful fury following the murder of her family and has no truck with his pompous, childish ways.

    Elsewhere, as the synopsis suggests, the story builds to a conflict, so if you’d been hoping that things would kick off more this season, you certainly get your wish towards the end. And this is still a show that looks like the team spent every dollar of the considerable budget bringing it to life –– beautiful landscapes merge with artfully designed palaces and spaceships.

    ‘Foundation’ fumbles

    Leah Harvey and Lou Llobell in 'Foundation,' premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Leah Harvey and Lou Llobell in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    Not everything works as well. The storyline between Seldon, Gaal and Salvor is frequently over-serious, carrying over its weight from the first season. Which is not to say it doesn’t function, since Harris, Llobell and Harvey are all convincing enough in their roles, it’s just that their story –– at least, until it intersects with the likes of Brother Day –– doesn’t quite hold your attention in the same way.

    And there will certainly be those who feel like they need an encyclopedia handy to keep track of everyone, the timelines and the arcane terms used by the various characters. But turning to Issac Asimov’s books is likely to be no help in this case, since show developer David S. Goyer and his team have made considerable changes in order to have the story be digestible for this different medium.

    Plenty of potential viewers will be turned off by the feeling that the show is stuffy, worthy and slow, but our advice is to stick with it –– ‘Foundation’ builds in this season to something satisfying. Though we would definitely advise starting with the first season if this is your initial watch of the show.

    ‘Foundation’ receives 7.5 out of 10 stars.

    Lee Pace and Terrence Mann in 'Foundation,' premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Lee Pace and Terrence Mann in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    List of David S. Goyer Movies:

    Buy David S. Goyer Movies On Amazon

     

  • ‘Foundation’ Season 2 Interview: David S. Goyer

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    Premiering on Apple TV+ on July 14th is the second season of the popular series ‘Foundation,’ which is based on the stories of author Isaac Asimov, and was created David S. Goyer (‘Batman Begins’) and Josh Friedman (‘Fantastic Four’).

    What is the plot of ‘Foundation’?

    ‘Foundation’ chronicles “The thousand-year saga of The Foundation, a band of exiles who discover that the only way to save the Galactic Empire from destruction is to defy it.”

    What is the plot of ‘Foundation’ season 2?

    More than a century after the season one finale, tension mounts throughout the galaxy in ‘Foundation’ season two. As the Cleons (Lee Pace, Terrence Mann and Cassian Bilton) unravel, a vengeful queen plots to destroy Empire from within. Hari (Jared Harris), Gaal (Lou Llobell) and Salvor (Leah Harvey) discover a colony of Mentalics with psionic abilities that threaten to alter psychohistory itself. The Foundation has entered its religious phase, promulgating the Church of Seldon throughout the Outer Reach and inciting the Second Crisis: war with Empire. The monumental adaptation of ‘Foundation’ chronicles the stories of four crucial individuals transcending space and time as they overcome deadly crises, shifting loyalties and complicated relationships that will ultimately determine the fate of humanity.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Foundation’ season 2?

    Jared Harris (‘Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows‘) as Hari Seldon, Lee Pace (‘Guardians of the Galaxy‘) as Brother Day, Lou Llobell (‘Voyagers‘) as Gaal Dornick, Leah Harvey (‘Fighting with my Family‘) as Salvor Hardin, Laura Birn (‘A Walk Among the Tombstones‘) as Eto Demerzel, Kulvinder Ghir (‘Blinded by the Light‘) as Poly Version, Terrence Mann (‘Big Top Pee-wee‘) as Brother Dusk, and Cassian Bilton (“Shoal’) as Brother Dawn.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with showrunner and executive producer David S. Goyer about the second season of ‘Foundation,’ what he learned from making the first season, Lee Pace’s compromising scene, adapting Isaac Asimov’s work, and what fans of the series can expect from the new season.

    'Foundation' season 2 showrunner and executive producer David S. Goyer.
    ‘Foundation’ season 2 showrunner and executive producer David S. Goyer.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Goyer, Lou Llobell and Kulvinder Ghir.

    Moviefone: To begin with, what did you learn from working on the first season of ‘Foundation’ that you were able to apply to the new season?

    David S. Goyer: To introduce a little more levity. The show was very serious with a capital “S.” I think that the show is big enough that we could broaden our palette a bit to just make sure that we were staying true to these humanistic themes, and to introduce a little bit more romance as well, just all the stuff that makes for good television.

    MF: There is a fight scene in the new season where actor Lee Pace must appear in the nude. How did he react when you pitched him that scene?

    DSG: I was nervous. I pitched it to him, and he said, “Well, let me read it.” I wrote the first draft, and I said, “What do you think?” He’s completely in his birthday suit. He said, “So I’m naked this whole scene.” I said, “Yeah, and it involves a fight as well.” He said, “It’s going to be really hard to double me for this scene.” I said, “Yeah, I don’t think we can double you at all.” But fortunately, he was game and he completely committed himself. He worked out like hell for it. But more importantly, he learned the fight choreography. He did not use a stunt double for that sequence at all, and he had to do the entirety of it, which we filmed over four days, completely nude. That is commitment.

    Lee Pace in 'Foundation,' premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Lee Pace in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    MF: Can you talk about adapting author Isaac Asimov’s work and how you decide what needs to change and what needs to remain cannon?

    DSG: I have a gut instinct, but we have a healthy writers’ room where we encourage debate, we talk about it and we try things out. Every once in a while, we’ll try things out, we’ll write it, and we’ll say, “No, that’s too far. That didn’t work.” Sometimes we say, “We need to go farther.” Then occasionally, I will bounce things off Robyn Asimov, Isaac Asimov’s daughter, who’s an executive producer on the show. But over the years largely, I’ve come to primarily trust my gut. I try to wear both hats as a fan and a broader audience member. If we just made the show for the people that have read the books, I don’t think the audience could support the show. So it’s important to remember that those are a very passionate group of fans and audience members that we cherish. I count myself amongst them, but it’s a small subset of our audience. The show’s in over 100 countries, and it’s got to work on a very broad scale. It’s got to work for people that have never read the books or don’t consider themselves fans of science fiction.

    MF: Finally, what would you say to ’Foundation’ fans to prepare them for the new season?

    DSG: Well, in season one, we did a couple of episodes that I like to call short films, where we do some extended flashbacks. It turned out those were very popular with the audience, and so we did a few more of those in season two. We get to peel back some of the layers of Harry’s backstory, how he came to be in the employ of Empire, and how he came to Trantor. Near the tail end of the season, we get to peel back some of the layers of Demerzel, and how she came to be employee of the Empire. I think that’s very surprising, and it ends up completely recontextualizing pretty much everything you know about Demerzel and Empire. I like to be able to turn things on its head, and so I was really excited for the audience to get to those two episodes in particular.

    Leah Harvey, Jared Harris and Lou Llobell in 'Foundation,' premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.
    Leah Harvey, Jared Harris and Lou Llobell in ‘Foundation,’ premiering July 14, 2023 on Apple TV+.

    List of David S. Goyer Movies:

    Buy David S. Goyer Movies On Amazon