Tag: linus-roache

  • ‘Billy the Kid’ Season 2 Part 2 Interview: Tom Blyth

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    Premiering on MGM+ beginning June 2nd is the second part of the second season of ‘Billy the Kid,’ which stars Tom Blyth (‘The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes’) as the infamous outlaw, Daniel Webber (‘Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga’) as Jesse Evans and Alex Roe (‘The 5th Wave’) as Pat Garrett.

    Related Article: Executive Producer Michael Hirst Talks MGM+’s ‘Billy the Kid’ Season 2

    Tom Blyth in 'Billy the Kid' season 2 part 2.
    Tom Blyth in ‘Billy the Kid’ season 2 part 2. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Tom Blyth about his work on ‘Billy the Kid’ season 2 part 2, Billy’s role in the Lincoln County War, his friendship with Pat Garrett, his rivalry with Jesse Evans, playing Billy over two seasons, and if it is fun making a Western.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch the interview.

    Tom Blyth in 'Billy the Kid' season 2 part 2.
    (Center) Tom Blyth in ‘Billy the Kid’ season 2 part 2. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.

    Moviefone: To begin with, the Lincoln County War has already begun. Can you talk about Billy’s role in the war and how that will continue in the second half of season 2?

    Tom Blyth: I mean, the Lincoln County War is what Billy is known for really. That’s where he made his name. He was this 20-year-old kid who basically took the county by storm because he was the only person willing to stand up for the injustice that he saw. That is true, he was like a Robin Hood figure in that sense. He really did want to stick it to the man and the man were these politicians in New Mexico who were just basically profiteering off the little people. We pick up at part two, coming out on June 2nd. Part two begins where we left off with Tunstall (Linus Roache) being killed, who was his mentor and father figure. Billy’s grieving. He’s also lost his beloved Dulcinea (Nuria Vega), which ended in a fiery fight where he didn’t want to give up the life and she needed him to give up the life. All he’s got left is the regulators and the guys around him who also want to try and fight to end the corruption in their neighborhood. We see him basically stepping up to become a leader after people for a long time were trying to make him a leader. He’s finally ready to step into those shoes and become a General, basically.

    MF: Can you talk about Billy’s friendship with Pat Garrett and how that will change now that Pat is Sheriff?

    TB: I love what (executive producer) Michael Hirst has done with it because I don’t think any of us before we read the scripts expected that Pat was going to come back so soon because the Lincoln County War was just started. The fact that at the end of part one, we saw Pat come back into Lincoln and announced himself as the new sheriff, it begs the question, whose side is he going to be on? He’s got old friends on both sides. He’s got Jesse’s gang on the side of the house, Billy and his friends on the other side. Pat himself is in a tricky situation where he’s going to want to be an honorable law enforcement member, or at least he thinks he is. He’s got two old friends on either side trying to get him to take their side. It’s a very tricky human situation to be in, except the stakes are life and death.

    Alex Roe as Pat Garrett in 'Billy the Kid' season 2 part 2.
    Alex Roe as Pat Garrett in ‘Billy the Kid’ season 2 part 2. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.

    MF: Obviously, we know how Billy and Pat’s story ended in real life, but has it been fun for you to tease out that relationship in this series?

    TB: Yeah, I mean there’s so much that we don’t know as well. Some people think that Pat maybe colluded with Billy and let him get away. The history books tell us otherwise that Pat killed him eventually. The beauty of the dramatization is that we get to tell our own story. There are these two different truths that everyone thinks they know, and we get to work out what happened in between that. We don’t know where Michael Hirst wants to take it yet, and only he knows that whether he’s going to go with one of the two choices or go somewhere else in entirely. What we do know is that there is a whole massive relationship between Billy and Pat that is rich and troubled and that we don’t really know much about. The one book that is written about this time and about Billy and Pat was from Pat’s perspective. It’s interesting for Michael to write something that is not from Pat’s perspective, and we get to see or imagine what might have happened in the lead up to that.

    MF: Can you talk about the rivalry between Billy and Jesse Evens, how that escalates in the second part of season 2 and what it’s been like working with Daniel Webber?

    TB: I love Daniel. He’s become a very close friend. It’s funny, you can’t help but adopt some of your character’s traits and characteristics and point of view. Daniel and I laugh about it after we wrap. When we’re doing a scene together, we often get quite heated and it’s always good. We do go head-to-head on set and then afterwards we’re like, “What was that?” We’re like, “The characters are coming out in us.” Daniel and I have this kind of healthy competition that comes out naturally when we’re trying to work through a scene and it just fuels the scene, I think. Usually, it means that we do capture that kind of brotherly competition that they have and it’s so much fun. Me and Dan have a lot of love for each other.

    Tom Blyth in 'Billy the Kid' season 2 part 2.
    Tom Blyth in ‘Billy the Kid’ season 2 part 2. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.

    MF: What have you learned about the life of Billy the Kid from playing this character over two seasons and has it been difficult bringing humanity and sympathy to the character?

    TB: He’s a character that everyone thinks they know because he’s a historic legend. Again, the history books are written from people’s perspectives. Like Pat Garrett wrote the main book on Billy. Pat Garrett is also the man who’s supposedly killed him, so I don’t know if we can take his word for it. Because of that, I’ve tried to formulate my own opinions, but really what I must do is not judge him. If I judge him, I can’t really portray him as a full human because then I’m going to be portraying him with a lens of judgment or a lens of was, he good? Was he bad? I’m way more interested in just keeping him in the present and in the decision making and the choices he makes, then the audience can decide for themselves. I don’t think anyone thinks they’re bad. Even people who commit atrocities probably don’t think they’re the bad one. They probably think they’re right somehow. Billy is somewhere on that spectrum and it’s interesting to delve into that.

    MF: Finally, director John Ford once said, “If they knew how fun it is to make Westerns, they wouldn’t let us do it.” Do you agree with that? Is it fun making a Western?

    TB: Wholeheartedly, I think that’s why they keep coming back because it is so much fun to make, unbelievable amounts of fun. It’s just putting on a hat and playing make believe, which is the purest form of TV and filmmaking. I think that translates to the screen. I think that’s why people like to watch them is because you can just sense that there’s like a swashbuckling, they’re like the pirate theme on land. There’s something adventurous about it, which speaks to our inner child. Yeah, it’s so much fun. By the end of season two, I got proficient. I feel comfortable in a saddle. When I’m not doing it, I miss it.

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    What is the plot of ‘Billy the Kid’ Season 2 Part 2?

    In Season 2 of ‘Billy the Kid’, Billy (Tom Blyth) gets caught in the middle of the Lincoln County War, a murderous conflict driven by money, greed and corruption. After enjoying a monopoly, Murphy’s Store is no longer the only player in town when Englishman John Tunstall (Linus Roache) moves to Lincoln and sets off a commercial rivalry. Law-and-order is no match for cowboy gangs and a secret society. Wild chases and shootouts abound. There are innumerable ambushes and killings. No-one is safe. After a pivotal assassination, things get very ugly, leaving Billy the Kid with an uncertain fate. Will he make it out of the Lincoln County War alive?

    Who is in the cast of ‘Billy the Kid’ Season 2 Part 2?

    • Tom Blyth as Henry McCarty / Billy the Kid
    • Daniel Webber as Jesse Evans
    • Alex Roe as Pat Garrett
    • Nuria Vega as Dulcinea del Tobosco
    • Horatio James as Charlie Bowdre
    • Luke Camilleri as Alex McSween
    • Brendan Fletcher as George Coe
    • Mark Krysko as Andrew “Buckshot” Roberts
    • Reilly Dolman as Richard “Dick” Brewer
    • Josh Cruddas as Fred Waite
    • Tom Carey as John Middleton
    • Javier Lacroix as Juan Patrón
    • Pepe Johnson as Tom O’Folliard
    • Guilherme Babilônia as Yginio Salazar
    Tom Blyth in 'Billy the Kid' season 2 part 2.
    (Center) Tom Blyth in ‘Billy the Kid’ season 2 part 2. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.

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  • ‘Billy the Kid’ Season 2 Interview: Producer Michael Hirst

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    Premiering on MGM+ beginning October 15th is season 2 of the popular series ‘Billy the Kid,’ which was created by Michael Hirst (‘Elizabeth’).

    What is the plot of ‘Billy the Kid’ Season 2?

    Based on the real life of legendary American outlaw Billy the Kid, and following the events of the first season, season two sees Billy (Tom Blyth) and his allies squaring off against his oldest friend Jesse Evans (Daniel Webber) and the corrupt powers of the Santa Fe Ring. When shots are fired, the conflict erupts into the bloody Lincoln County War. Amidst the fighting, Billy will struggle to hang onto his soul—and to the love of his life.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Billy the Kid’ Season 2?

    Tom Blyth in 'Billy the Kid' season 2.
    Tom Blyth in ‘Billy the Kid’ season 2. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with show creator and executive producer Michael Hirst about season 2 of ‘Billy the Kid,’ what fans can expect from the new season, why making Westerns are so much fun, working with actor Tom Blyth, casting Linus Roache, Billy and Tunstall’s relationship, and why we as a public are still fascinated by the legend of Billy the Kid.

    Tom Blyth in 'Billy the Kid' season 2.
    (Right) Tom Blyth in ‘Billy the Kid’ season 2. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch the interview.

    Moviefone: To begin with, war is coming to Lincoln County in season 2 of ‘Billy the Kid.’ Can you talk about that and where we will find the characters when the new season starts?

    Michael Hirst: So in a way, the first season of ‘Billy’ is a preparation for the Lincoln County War, because in Billy’s life that was pivotal. It was where he became famous around America and ultimately famous around the world. Strangely enough, I loved Billy when I was a kid of eight years old growing up in the north of England. He was a hero, but I didn’t just want to write about a cliche. I didn’t want to write about an outlaw, someone who just comes in the room shooting everyone, and who many people would regard as probably a pathological killer or there’s something wrong. The more research I did about him, I just discovered this really sensitive, young boy brought up by a mother who told him great stories, but was a very profound Catholic, and gave him a moral compass. That his father kind of stepped out of the family and couldn’t cope with America. The family, they were immigrants, and they were sent by the American government to one of the wildest, most dangerous parts of the country at the time. So, I wanted people to know that story. I wanted to dramatize that story. I wanted people to empathize with him. I was also, of course, introducing along the way other characters like Jesse Evans and the sheriff, who we’re going to crop up later. So we get to the Lincoln County Wars, and this is obviously where the stuff hits the fan. I mean, this is what you might call a real Western because there’s a shooting of a sheriff. There’s a lot of violence and brutality, and all centered around this commercial rivalry between two outfits, one of whom is Murphy’s Store, which has always had a monopoly of trading in that area of New Mexico because they were attached to this thing called the Santa Fe Ring, this group of very rich American businessmen who ran everything in New Mexico. They’re being challenged by an Englishman called Tunstall. Tunstall has problems with his father too, but then he comes to prove himself, but he doesn’t realize what he’s getting into. But he’s happy to hire Billy to be on his team because Billy already has a certain reputation. There are wanted posters for him, and everyone who works for Tunstall really says, “Look, who’s joining us now.” His ex-friend Jesse Evans, is with the House. So we are in a different world now, and it’s darker. It’s edgier. It’s still about the things that Billy cared about when he was growing up, that is to say immigrant issues. He sees what’s happening to the Mexicans. He always identifies with the underdogs. He has a profound sense of the injustices of the world and America at the time, as he was 19, which a lot of young people do. I hadn’t thought about that when I started, I was just concentrating on Billy. But these issues are contemporary. They resonate. They’re real issues now. The Lincoln County Wars, which killed about over 20 people in this nowhere town in New Mexico, became the scene of these horrific and insane murderous acts by people. I mean, the value of life was so low at that point. Billy takes a leadership role in these events, even though he’s 19, and goes through a terrible experience basically. So second season, we’ve upgraded in many ways. It’s a great production, great cast who love the show. It’s a very friendly company of people. But we don’t work at a studio. It’s all on location, and it’s all with real cowboys because Calgary, where it’s shot, is a center for cowboys. They have rodeos there. So our young cast has been riding with real cowboys. It’s just been a blast for them.

    Tom Blyth and Linus Roache in 'Billy the Kid' season 2.
    (L to R) Tom Blyth and Linus Roache in ‘Billy the Kid’ season 2. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.

    MF: Director John Ford once said, “If they knew how fun it is to make Westerns, they wouldn’t let us do it.” Do you agree with that? Is it fun making a Western?

    MH: Well, it is fun making a Western, partly because of your sense of tradition. I don’t feel that I work in genres, and I don’t feel this is a traditional Western particularly. But you are aware of the tropes, and some of the relationships are what I would call sort of classical Western relationships that people have. So all that’s fun. The energy that goes into it and the fact that there are always horses, cattle, and crows on the set all the time, that everyone’s dealing with these things, and it’s very real. The cowboys are teaching the actors how to lasso cows and everything. So it’s incredible.

    Tom Blyth in 'Billy the Kid' season 2.
    Tom Blyth in ‘Billy the Kid’ season 2. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.

    MF: Can you talk about working with Tom Blyth and his charming yet vulnerable performance as Billy?

    MH: It’s been magical. It’s been wonderful. This is his first big role, and he’s only, I think, a year out of college. He was one of the first people to throw his hat into the ring. But I think we saw 400 people for the role. Obviously initially, we thought it’s got to be an American. The very first thing, of course, was he sent us a picture of himself or his agent did, and he looked like Billy. That was really weird. It’s like, “Whoa, wait a minute. This is too good to be true.” So we were going through all these young actors, and of course, many of them were very good, but they didn’t quite have what he had, which you sort of mentioned in a way. It’s a kind of steeliness and a sensitivity that you can tell is going on at the same time. His eyes are steely, but you know he’s sensitive, and I wanted that desperately. As I say, the last thing I wanted was a pathological killer. I wanted someone who was very human, but was capable of doing the things that he actually did. But it went on for quite a while, this process. I was throwing rocks in a way, because this guy, we didn’t know much about him at all. So I would say things like, “You know that Billy was actually famous for singing. He had a beautiful voice, and could play the guitar. He sang and he danced. Who knew?” So the next thing I know, Tom sends me a tape in which he’s playing his guitar and singing beautifully. I said, “All right.” We did go for him, and that was one of the best, obviously, decisions we’ve made in the whole thing, because it’s about him, and he has to carry it. Certainly, in the first season, he was just about in every scene. I mean, that’s quite something.

    Related Article: First Look at Rachel Zegler and Tom Blyth in the ‘Hunger Games’ Prequel

    Linus Roache in 'Billy the Kid' season 2.
    Linus Roache in ‘Billy the Kid’ season 2. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.

    MF: Can you talk about casting Linus Roache as Tunstall and the father/son relationship he creates with Billy?

    MH: That was a big decision at the end of season one, mainly because I knew that meeting Tunstall was going to be a monumental thing for Billy. It was going to change Billy’s life forever. So the relationship between Billy and Tunstall had to be very deep and significant, and we didn’t have long to build it up. We liked the guy who played Tunstall in season one, but he was too young to be the surrogate father. You wouldn’t believe it. And Linus and I actually are great friends. He was in ‘Vikings.’ He played a big role in ‘Vikings.’ We’re great friends, and we talk all the time. I wanted him on the show desperately. I wanted him for many roles in the show, but actually Tunstall fitted him like a glove. It was mainly the fact that he could talk to Billy sensitively, and he could talk about his own family, his father and all the things that concerned Billy, and his sisters and all that. That Billy, whose father just walked out of his life and died because he couldn’t cope with America, had really missed having a father. He saw his mother working herself to death because there was no father. So he did become Billy’s surrogate father. I knew Linus could bring that off. I knew that in the few scenes he had with Billy, they could establish a huge and deep rapport because Linus is a great and understated actor. He was a Shakespearian actor initially. He was so extraordinarily brilliant in ‘Vikings’ that I’ve felt myself very lucky that he came back and was in ‘Billy.’

    Daniel Webber in 'Billy the Kid' season 2.
    (Center) Daniel Webber in ‘Billy the Kid’ season 2. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.

    MF: Finally, there have been countless movies and TV programs over the years based on the legend of Billy the Kid. Why do you think we as a public are so interested in this outlaw’s story?

    MH: Yeah, I’ve thought about this. It may be because he’s not Jesse James. He’s a much younger guy, and he doesn’t rob banks. He’s not actually a conventional outlaw at all. As I say, he doesn’t want to be an outlaw. He wants to go straight. I mean, all the other famous outlaws chose to be outlaws, like Jesse Evans does in the show. He’s a born outlaw. He doesn’t ever want to go straight. Billy desperately wants to go straight. Everyone who knew him absolutely loved him. So I’ve been reading a book by someone who rode with him and repeats some of the things that Billy said. When you hear the voice in your head, you could say, “I like that guy. That guy’s really interesting and nice.” I think there are lots of reasons. That there is something incredibly attractive about a very young guy who can do phenomenal things. Let’s just take it as a Western. He could ride unlike anyone else. He could shoot unlike anyone else. He was as brave as anything. I don’t think he knew fear. There was no jail that could hold him. All those things are true about him, and they make a good myth. But what’s also true about him is, I think, he was very human and a nice guy, and I would’ve liked to meet him.

    Tom Blyth in 'Billy the Kid' season 2.
    Tom Blyth in ‘Billy the Kid’ season 2. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.

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  • ‘The Apology’ Interview: Linus Roache Talks New Thriller

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    Opening in theaters on December 16th and streaming on Shudder and AMC+ simultaneously is the new thriller ‘The Apology,’ from writer and director Alison Star Locke.

    The new movie stars Anna Gunn (‘Breaking Bad’) as Darlene Hagen, a recovering alcoholic preparing for a family Christmas celebration, twenty-years after the disappearance of her daughter.

    On Christmas Eve, Darlene is unexpectedly visited by her estranged ex-brother-in-law, Jack (Linus Roache), who has been keeping a dark secret for decades. When the truth is revealed, and the two are trapped together by a dangerous storm, Darlene must fight for her life to survive.

    In addition to Gunn and Roache, the movie also features Janeane Garofalo (‘Wet Hot American Summer’).

    British actor Linus Roache is probably best known for his role as ADA Michael Cutter on NBC’s ‘Law & Order’ and ‘Law & Order: Special Victims Unit,’ as well as playing Thomas Wayne in Christopher Nolan’s ‘Batman Begins.’

    Most recently the actor has appeared in such critically acclaimed movies as ‘Mandy’ opposite Oscar-winner Nicolas Cage and ‘My Policeman,’ where he played the older version of Harry Styles’ character.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Linus Roache about his work on ‘The Apology,’ his intense character, why he felt like rehearsing a play, and working with Anna Gunn, as well as making ‘My Policeman’ and sharing a role with Harry Styles.

    Linus Roache as Jack Kingsley in the thriller, 'The Apology.'
    Linus Roache as Jack Kingsley in the thriller, ‘The Apology,’ an RLJE Films, Shudder and AMC+ release. Photo courtesy of RLJE Films /Shudder/AMC+.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interview with Linus Roache.

    Moviefone: To begin with, how did you get involved with this project and what was your first reaction to the screenplay?

    Linus Roache: Well, first of all, I got it as a direct offer with a beautiful letter from Alison Star Locke, the writer and director. I think she’d seen my work, and knew my work way back from the early days of a movie I did called ‘Priest,’ but also quite recently from ‘Mandy.’ I think she thought with that range of character that I might be able to do the job.

    I was very honored that she came to me with it, actually. When I read it, I was in a bit of shock. I was just kind of like, “Oh my God, this is very intense. What’s it going to be like to take this on?’ Then I just talked with her and I realized what a great person she is, and what a gifted writer she is. I felt this sense of trust and I thought, “Well, I’ve always liked to push the edge with what I do, try new things and go places I haven’t been. I’m on board.” So, I signed up. That’s why I did it.

    MF: Can you talk about your approach to playing the character, and since it is such an intense role, were you ever exhausted on set?

    LR: That’s a great question and I think there was a lot of anticipation around it. There was a lot of talking. We had a lot of Zoom rehearsals and conversations, and really understood the world that we were in and the dynamics of it. For a while I was chewing on Jack and just dealing with the darkness of his actions. There’s not a thing that you can condone about him as a person, but something broke.

    It was actually my wife who helped me see his pathology, he can only see himself as a good guy. He actually can’t take responsibility. So, the level of denial is so strong that for him, everything is just turned into, “I’m not a bad man, I’m not a bad guy.”

    What happened is it was an accident. So, he’s reinterpreted the past. Once I understood that, it gave me a through line and a key to how to play the role. It kind of kept me steady. Then I think that’s the theme of the movie, isn’t it? What it takes to get someone to be accountable and take responsibility, and she’s doubled down on that idea. It’s a brilliant idea, I think, for a movie.

    MF: Can you talk about Jack and Darlene’s dynamic at the beginning of the movie, and how that changes once he reveals his secret?

    LR: Well, I haven’t seen the movie by the way. I just work and I don’t watch what I do. But based on what we did and what was written, I always thought it should feel a little bit like Jude Law in ‘The Holiday’ turning up. It’s like, Christmas Eve, this nice guy walks in the door and they have this history, and anything could happen kind of feeling.

    It’s just this complex history that Alison did a beautiful job of layering into the script. We have all these touchstones of being an ex-brother-in-law and our children being connected. So, there’s just these layers and the two characters are very much dancing around each other. He’s in such avoidance that he’s willing to sleep with her again and she almost falls for it. So, it’s nicely sort of set up. Then of course, he didn’t come there for that really. He came for a different motive. So, that’s really the setup, I suppose.

    Anna Gunn as Darlene Hagen, and Linus Roache as Jack Kingsley in the thriller, 'The Apology,;
    (L to R) Anna Gunn as Darlene Hagen, and Linus Roache as Jack Kingsley in the thriller, ‘The Apology,’ an RLJE Films, Shudder and AMC+ release. Photo courtesy of RLJE Films /Shudder/AMC+.

    MF: Most of the film features just you and Anna Gunn on screen. What was it like working with her and did it ever feel like you were rehearsing for a play rather than making a movie?

    LR: It was very much like a play. In fact, I think it would make a wonderful play, actually. We rehearsed as much as we could because it was pandemic times. We did a lot of working on Zoom and just making sure we were comfortable understanding the world where we’re coming from. Interestingly enough, when it came to shoot it, you never quite know how things are going to go.

    We very much instinctually just left each other alone, which was actually very cool, because that meant that all the drama, everything just happens on camera. We’re not over talking it, we’re not overthinking it. We’re not trying to look after each other. You know what I mean? It was very much everything we did was on camera and it was happening there, and then we just left it and walked away, which actually is a great way to work. I like working like that.

    MF: Have you worked like that a lot? Is that common or uncommon?

    LR: No. It completely depends who your scene partner is, and what the dynamics are. I remember with Nicolas Cage in ‘Mandy,’ we chatted early on about the two roles. Then very quickly Nic said, “I think maybe it’d be better if we didn’t hang out and talk too much.” It was just such a relief that we would literally sit on set six feet apart from each other and not say a word, and then we’d just go on camera and do it. It brings something. So, I’m actually a fan of that, but only if someone else is too. It depends who you’re working with.

    MF: Can you talk about working with director Alison Star Locke on her debut feature film?

    LR: Ally, I think she’s an incredibly gifted writer, so she’d written something that was so strong. Its foundation was very firm. Then, this is low budget filmmaking and sometimes I think we felt like we could have had a bit more time to do some of the action oriented things, they got cut down.

    That’s always a painful part of movie making sometimes. But nevertheless, again, I haven’t seen it, but I felt like Ally was smart and she had wonderful producers around us, supporting her to make sure that what she’d written could be translated and shot in the time that we had. So, I believe we did that.

    Gina McKee and Linus Roache star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) Gina McKee and Linus Roache star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Parisa Taghizadeh. © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    MF: Finally, I really enjoyed your performance in ‘My Policeman.’ What was it like for you working on that project, and did you have to study Harry Styles, since you were playing the older version of his character?

    LR: Well, thanks for that question. Yes, I was very proud to be part of that project and very happy when Michael (Grandage) asked me to do it. We did talk a little bit about how we were going to connect these two worlds of the 1990s and the ’50s? Was I going to imitate Harry Styles? Michael made a very astute and really valid point that when 40 years have passed, are we really the same person 40 years later? No, we’re not.

    So, it kind of released us of the burden of trying to imitate the younger person, which would’ve been hard. But because they shot mostly in sequence, Michael shot the 1950s stuff first. I got to watch some of Harry’s stuff. What I learned from what Harry was doing was he was just very honest. He’s very simple, very interested and open. I thought, “Well, even though I’m playing the man who’s trapped and shut down for 40 years, I’m playing the result of what happens in the ’50s.”

    I just wanted to bring my own simplicity and honesty to the role. I think it works. It’s interesting. Otherwise, Michael would’ve aged Emma Corrin, Harry Stiles and David Dawson, and they would’ve put lots of latex on them and aged them up. It’s quite nice that you see they’re different people 40 years later.

    Anna Gunn as Darlene Hagen in the thriller, 'The Apology.'
    Anna Gunn as Darlene Hagen in the thriller, ‘The Apology,’ an RLJE Films, Shudder and AMC+ release. Photo courtesy of RLJE Films /Shudder/AMC+.
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  • ‘My Policeman’ Interviews: Michael Grandage and Gina McKee

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    Opening in theaters on October 21st and streaming on Prime Video November 4th is the new romantic drama ‘My Policeman,’ from director Michael Grandage.

    First set in 1950s Brighton, a gay policeman, Tom Burgess (Harry Styles), marries schoolteacher Marion Taylor (Emma Corrin) while being in a relationship with Patrick Hazlewood (David Dawson), a museum curator.

    The secret they share threatens to ruin them all and continues for decades, with a flash-forward to the late 1990s depicting an older Marion (Gina McKee) now caring for the ailing Patrick (Rupert Everett), against Tom’s (Linus Roache) wishes.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with director Michael Grandage and actress Gina McKee about their work on ‘My Policeman,’ why Grandage wanted to make the movie, setting the movie in two separate timelines, the pain and regret that Marion feels, why she chooses to help Patrick, and how McKee worked with actress Emma Corrin to create the character.

    Gina McKee and Rupert Everett star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) Gina McKee and Rupert Everett star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Parisa Taghizadeh. © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    You can read the full interviews below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with director Michael Grandage and Gina McKee about ‘My Policeman.’

    Moviefone: To begin with, as a director, what excited you about this project and what were some of the themes that you wanted to explore with this movie?

    Michael Grandage: Well, it’s always great when you think you can bring something of a personal voice to something. I was born in the England that this movie is set in, and the law didn’t change until I was quite young. When it did, there were years of prejudice left after it.

    I kind of thought it would be lovely to be able to make something quite apart from all of the cinematic reasons I wanted to make it, quite apart from all the thematic reasons, it would also be wonderful to make a movie that might be part of a slightly bigger debate. Because in spite of all of the wonderful advances that have been made, that I’m very proud of over the last 40 years by the LGBTQ+ community, I think for the moment it’s feeling a little fragile.

    I think right now it would be great to have a film in the consciousness of young people that helps them understand a little bit about what it’s like if you live in a society where you can’t be free to be yourself. So, for me, and I haven’t even touched on the answer to your question about all of the aesthetic and creative reasons, but that’s one big reason why I’d love to make a movie that is part of something that I think is important right now.

    MF: Can you talk about the challenges of setting the movie in two separate timelines?

    MG: Yeah, I mean for me, I actually see it almost as three because you can’t help but take the timeline you are in and watch it through the prism of 2022. You watch a film that takes place 23 years ago in 1999, and then beyond that. In a way, you go on some brief moment of time travel right up to the present to see what has changed from a societal point of view. I think that’s also helpful as part of the bigger picture.

    But the biggest reason I wanted to do it was because of the fact that I believe that missing 40 years in the film, I think we change hugely in our personalities in a period like that. I was wanting to explore the whole notion of time and memory and what it does and how, sometimes, it only seems like yesterday. The reason we have that phrase is sometimes it does, and other days it absolutely doesn’t.

    So, there’s a little moment when Rupert Everett’s character in the film is getting his pills from Gina McKee, and he looks up at Gina and just in a tiny flash he sees the younger Marion looking down at him. Because that’s what memory sometimes does, that’s how memory works, that’s how time works. But it’s a brief fleeting moment, and I think you can only do that if you’re playing with the two time periods.

    I knew I wanted to use it very fleetingly, the whole way you bring the one time period into another time period. I barely use it at all, but it’s there as a kind of unspoken thing, if you like.

    David Dawson, Emma Corrin, and Harry Styles star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) David Dawson, Emma Corrin, and Harry Styles star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Parisa Taghizadeh. © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    MF: Gina, could talk about the pain and the regret that Marion has lived with through all these years?

    Gina McKee: I think that’s a really good starting point because as you may have established already, we meet three people in the 1950s, who are brought together by love and divided by prejudice. The things that they experience with each other and the things that they do for and against one another indelibly marks them. So, there’s a lot. All three characters have regret and certainly a huge amount of pain. In Marion’s case, a massive learning curve.

    She also has a huge sense of duty and love. The bond of love brings her together with Tom, and they find solace in that love. But I think ultimately, the courage to face the past is something that completely drew me to the film. What happens when somebody like that doesn’t continue to seek refuge, who says, “No, we’ve got to check this out. We’ve got to look at this.” I think that’s a wonderful dynamic and ultimately for me, a very hopeful thing.

    MF: Why does Marion decide to help Patrick, all these years later, even against Tom’s own wishes?

    GM: Because she has to, there’s no way forward. They’re in a holding pattern and that can’t continue. You’ve got a woman who is now in retirement and it’s now or never. So, I think that there is lots of forms of love and I think Marion’s duty to Tom is absolute. Sometimes, the way she interprets duty is completely screwed up as you see in the movie.

    But that is really the heart of her motivation. Then, what continues for decades is duty. It is a strong bond that they have, but it’s a bond which is about solace as opposed to moving forward. Those elements are really potent.

    MF: Finally, since you are playing the older version of Marion, did you work at all with Emma Corrin, who plays the younger version, to establish a connection between the two performance?

    GM: Emma Corrin and I, because it was COVID protocols, we couldn’t physically meet. We were in separate bubbles. But we did talk on the phone. We also all had a collective Zoom conversation, which was quite extensive and that was really useful. We talked with Michael Grandage, our director, who became a brilliant conduit.

    Also, I had the good fortune to look at about three or four of her scenes that Emma shot already, because they shot the 1950s stuff first. That was a brilliant resource. I also checked out as much as I could of Emma’s work and studied elements of the way she has a fantastic ability to watch and listen, and that comes across in her work enormously. So, those elements absorbed hopefully by osmosis. I found them really useful.

    Gina McKee and Linus Roache star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) Gina McKee and Linus Roache star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Parisa Taghizadeh. © Amazon Content Services LLC.
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  • New Trailer For Romantic Drama ‘My Policeman’

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    His name has been all over the headlines of late, mostly thanks to the behind-the-scenes and press conference drama around ‘Don’t Worry Darling’. But Harry Styles has more than one film looking to grab audiences – and potentially awards – this year.

    And the new trailer for his other drama – forbidden love tale ‘My Policeman’ – has now arrived.

    Spanning two time periods and following its three central characters at different ages, ‘My Policeman’ adapts Bethan Roberts’ novel. With Ron Nyswaner, the man behind such well-regarded movies as ‘Philadelphia’ and ‘The Painted Veil’ writing the script here, and direction from Michael Grandage, it’s certainly positioned as a premium, awards-season possibility.

    The story is initially set in Britain in the 1950s. Police officer Tom (Styles), meets and falls for teacher Marion (Emma Corrin of ‘The Crown’). But while they’re very much in love, there’s a complication. Tom also starts a passionate relationship with museum curator Patrick (David Dawson).

    Though it looks like he might be able to balance the two sides of his romantic life, the pressure it puts on them all threatens to tear their friendship apart.

    And that’s never more evident then when the story moves to the 1990s (with Tom now played by Linus Roache, Marion by Gina McKee, and Patrick by Rupert Everett), where the three are still reeling with longing and regret, but now they have one last chance to repair the damage of the past.

    Harry Styles and Emma Corrin star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) Harry Styles and Emma Corrin star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Courtesy of Prime Video. © Amazon Content Services LLC.

    Possibly even more than ‘Darling’ (where the acting workload is reportedly more on Florence Pugh than Styles), this will be the chance for Styles to prove that he’s got what it takes to carry a drama where he’s at the core of the story.

    It’s hard to argue with the rest of the cast – Corrin has proved she’s got what it takes across screens big and small, while the likes of McKee, Everett and Roach are old hands at both drama and comedy.

    Grandage, meanwhile, is more known for his stage directing, but he’s got some movie work on his resume (including 2016’s ‘Genius’) and from the looks of this, he’s crafted a layered, visually distinctive film. And, of course, he knows how to draw emotive, effective performances from actors.

    With festival dates upcoming (see below), we’ll see how the movie goes over with initial audiences, though given its release being split between theaters and streaming, it’s likely not to have to worry so much about box office.

    The cast for ‘My Policeman’ also includes Andrew Tiernan, Jack Bandeira, Tristan Sturrock, Kadiff Kirwan, Richard Dempsey, Maddie Rice, Dora Davis, and Michael Ayala-Cole.

    Following premieres at the Toronto International Film Festival and the London Film Festival, the movie will be on limited release in theaters from October 21st before arriving on Prime Video on November 4th.

    Harry Styles, Emma Corrin, and David Dawson star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) Harry Styles, Emma Corrin, and David Dawson star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Courtesy of Prime Video. © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Gina McKee and Linus Roache star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) Gina McKee and Linus Roache star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Parisa Taghizadeh. © Amazon Content Services LLC.
    Gina McKee and Rupert Everett star in 'My Policeman.'
    (L to R) Gina McKee and Rupert Everett star in ‘My Policeman.’ Photo: Parisa Taghizadeh. © Amazon Content Services LLC.
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