Tag: stephen-fry

  • Netflix’s ‘The Sandman’ Season 2 Adds Steve Coogan and More

    (Left) Steve Coogan to play Barnabas in season 2 of 'The Sandman'. Photo: Thomas Laisne. (Right) Douglas Booth to play Cluracan in 'The Sandman' season 2. Photo: Simon Annand.
    (Left) Steve Coogan to play Barnabas in season 2 of ‘The Sandman’. Photo: Thomas Laisne. (Right) Douglas Booth to play Cluracan in ‘The Sandman’ season 2. Photo: Simon Annand.

    Preview:

    • Steve Coogan, Jack Gleeson and more are joining ‘The Sandman’.
    • Adrian Lester and others are already aboard.
    • The Neil Gaiman adaptation is returning for a second season at Netflix.

    Given the expansive (and clearly expensive) scope of ‘The Sandman’s first season of Netflix, there was naturally wondering –– and worrying –– over whether a second would even be ordered.

    Fortunately, fans and more general audiences turned out in droves for that initial run of stories adaptation from the sprawling, iconic graphic novel series originated by Neil Gaiman from a heady stew of myths, legends, folklore and original ideas.

    With shooting long under way on Season 2, now we know who will be joining the cast, including Steve Coogan, Jack Gleeson, Indya Moore and others.

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    What’s the story of ‘The Sandman’?

    Tom Sturridge as Dream in 'The Sandman.'
    Tom Sturridge as Dream in ‘The Sandman.’ Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2021.

    In Season 1, the Sandman, aka Dream (Tom Sturridge) — the powerful cosmic being who controls all our dreams — was unexpectedly captured and held prisoner for over a century. Once he escapes, he must journey across different worlds and timelines to fix the chaos his absence has caused.

    In Season 2, the King of Dreams will come face-to-face — and go toe-to-toe — with the formidable rulers of Hell, Asgard, Faerie, and the realms beyond.

    Related Article: TV Review: ‘The Sandman’ 

    Who are the newest additions to ‘The Sandman’ Season 2?

    (Left) Ruairi O'Connor to play Orpheus in 'The Sandman' Season 2. (Center Left) Freddie Fox to play Loki 'The Sandman' Season 2. (Center Right) Clive Russell to play Odin in 'The Sandman' Season 2. Photo: Sally Mais. (Right) Laurence O'Fuarain to play Thor in 'The Sandman' Season 2. Photo: Joseph Sinclair.
    (Left) Ruairi O’Connor to play Orpheus in ‘The Sandman’ Season 2. (Center Left) Freddie Fox to play Loki ‘The Sandman’ Season 2. (Center Right) Clive Russell to play Odin in ‘The Sandman’ Season 2. Photo: Sally Mais. (Right) Laurence O’Fuarain to play Thor in ‘The Sandman’ Season 2. Photo: Joseph Sinclair.

    Here’s the most recent cast:

    Ruairi O’Connor is Orpheus, the poet, musician, and oracle, is the only child of Dream and the muse, Calliope (last seen in ‘The Sandman,’ Episode 111). Orpheus is an idealistic, romantic, young man – and very much his father’s son – until tragedy strikes and reveals to him the true nature of love.

    Freddie Fox (he/him) is Loki, the god of chaos. Loki is a charming, seductive shapeshifter. The smartest and most dangerous person in any room, Loki is utterly irresistible and never to be trusted.

    Clive Russell is Odin, the father of Thor, and blood-brother to Loki. He is a longtime ally of Dream’s, but finds himself driven to desperate extremes in his efforts to stave off Ragnarök.

    Laurence O’Fuarain is Thor, the storm god. With his hammer Mjollnir, Thor is brusque, rude, and driven entirely by his appetites –– for food and drink, for battle, and for sex.

    Ann Skelly is Nuala and Douglas Booth is Cluracan, royal emissaries from the court of Faerie. Nuala and Cluracan are siblings who are opposites in every way. Nuala is responsible, empathetic, and principled. Cluracan is an impulsive rogue who lives for pleasure. They disagree about everything, except their devotion to one another.

    (Left) Ann Skelly to play Nuala in 'The Sandman' Season 2. Photo: Misan Harriman. (Center) Jack Gleeson to play Puck in 'The Sandman' Season 2. Photo: Yellow Belly. (Right) Indya Moore to play Wanda in 'The Sandman' Season 2.
    (Left) Ann Skelly to play Nuala in ‘The Sandman’ Season 2. Photo: Misan Harriman. (Center) Jack Gleeson to play Puck in ‘The Sandman’ Season 2. Photo: Yellow Belly. (Right) Indya Moore to play Wanda in ‘The Sandman’ Season 2.

    Jack Gleeson is Puck, a malevolent hobgoblin who serves as the royal jester to King Auberon of Faerie. Puck is fascinated by mortals and enjoys nothing more than making sport of them for his own amusement. He’s also the inspiration for Shakespeare’s Puck in ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’.

    Indya Moore is Wanda, a professional driver and security agent for an exclusive travel firm. Wanda proves herself to be an indispensable guide on an Endless road trip to the waking world.

    Steve Coogan is the voice of Barnabas, the canine companion of the Endless’ prodigal brother. Barnabas is loyal and loving, but an outspoken cynic. He’s man’s best friend and man’s sharpest critic.

    We’ll also meet other members of Dream’s Endless family, including Adrian Lester as Destiny, Esmé Creed-Miles as Delirium, and Barry Sloane as The Prodigal.

    Who is returning from Season 1?

    Tom Sturridge as Morpheus / Dream and Kirby Howell-Baptiste as Death in Netflix's 'The Sandman.'
    (L to R) Tom Sturridge as Morpheus / Dream and Kirby as Death in Netflix’s ‘The Sandman.’

    Alongside Sturridge, returning cast includes other Endless such as Kirby as Death, Mason Alexander Park as Desire and Donna Preston as Despair.

    We can also expect to see (or hear) Patton Oswalt, Vivienne Acheampong, Gwendoline Christie, Jenna Coleman, Ferdinand Kingsley, Stephen Fry, Asim Chaudhry, Sanjeev Bhaskar, Vanesu Samunyai, and Razane Jammal.

    When will ‘The Sandman’ Season 2 land on Netflix?

    The streaming service has yet to announce when Season 2 might arrive, though we can’t imagine it’ll be before 2025.

    Comic book creator Neil Gaiman from Netflix's 'The Sandman' at San Diego Comic-Con 2022.
    Comic book creator Neil Gaiman from Netflix’s ‘The Sandman’ at San Diego Comic-Con 2022.

    Other Neil Gaiman Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Neil Gaiman Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Treasure’ Exclusive Interview: Lena Dunham

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    Opening in theaters on June 14th is the tragicomedy ‘Treasure’, which is based on the novel ‘Too Many Men’ by author Lily Brett and was co-written and directed by Julia von Heinz (‘And Tomorrow the Entire World’).

    The film stars Lena Dunham (‘Girls’ and ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’), Stephen Fry (‘Gosford Park’ and ‘Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows’), and Zbigniew Zamachowski (‘Proof of Life’).

    Related Article: Moviefone’s 2024 Theatrical and Streaming Summer Movies Preview

    Lena Dunham in 'Treasure'.
    (Center) Lena Dunham in ‘Treasure’. Credit: Bleecker Street and FilmNation.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Lena Dunham about her work on ‘Treasure’, her first reaction to the screenplay, working with Stephen Fry, the relationship between their characters, collaborating on set with director Julia von Heinz and the emotional challenges of filming scenes at Auschwitz.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Dunham, Stephen Fry and director Julia von Heinz.

    Lena Dunham Talks 'Treasure'.
    Lena Dunham Talks ‘Treasure’.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your first reaction to this screenplay, how it affected you emotionally, and what you wanted to explore with this movie?

    Lena Dunham: It’s a great question. I think my first response to the screenplay was that I felt insanely lucky that it was being sent to me. I think anytime that you’re an actor in Hollywood who doesn’t necessarily fit the norm in all kinds of ways, especially in my experience, I’ve often had to write interesting roles for myself. So, it’s so rare for me to be handed a script that isn’t the sassy best friend, or the crazy coworker, or a woman who wants to eat all the buffet. I was just so amazed. I loved Julia’s previous film, ‘And Tomorrow the Entire World’, and I was so touched that she felt that I was someone who could capture this role that’s so dear to her. Growing up with Eastern European Jewish grandparents, it felt to me, like maybe their dream wasn’t necessarily seeing me naked on ‘Girls’, but their dream would’ve been to see me explore something like this. I think that was my first response. Also, because my family on my mother’s side is originally Polish from Łódź, which is one of the places where we shot, I simply wanted to go on the ride. The ride was so incredibly close to the one that my character was taking of going back and learning about a place that was her home in so many ways but was also not her home at all. So, the experience of making the movie fulfilled all the promise of the screenplay and more.

    Lena Dunham and Stephen Fry in 'Treasure'.
    (L to R) Lena Dunham and Stephen Fry in ‘Treasure’. Credit: Bleecker Street and FilmNation.

    MF: Can you talk specifically about Ruth and Edek’s relationship, their journey together on this trip, and what she hopes to gain from it?

    LD: Well, I think what I loved about the script was that it was so subtle in the way that it talked about incredibly serious issues. Edek is a Holocaust survivor, and he is someone who, like many people who have been victims of generational violence and like many immigrants, it’s something he’s really tried to protect his child from, but her experience has been one of him withholding from her. So, it’s all about that subtle push-pull, which is at times comic and at times tragic, of her wanting so deeply to understand where he comes from and him wanting so deeply to protect her from the things that he’s experienced. I loved that Julia was able to capture that with a level of comedy, but also the deep seriousness that it required. I’m such an admirer of Stephen’s and I honestly feel like he does such a heavy emotional lift in this movie, that my job was just to be there, watch him, learn from him, and be the best scene partner to him I could so that he could do the beautiful work that he does. I do think he’s had so many career-defining performances. Watching him play Oscar Wilde (in ‘Wilde’) was an important performance for me growing up. I feel like this is up there with his iconic roles and he’s doing a different kind of character than we’ve seen him do before. I mean, he quite literally learned Polish for this film. He was, by the end of the trip, speaking in such fluent Polish that people thought that I was the only non-native on the set. He is a remarkable mind. He’s a remarkable actor, and my job was just to be there and try to hold up my side of the bargain. I mean, my mom wrote him an email the other day and she said, “I think that should the need arise, you’re a really good replacement father for Lena.”

    Stephen Fry and Lena Dunham in 'Treasure'.
    (L to R) Stephen Fry and Lena Dunham in ‘Treasure’. Credit: Bleecker Street and FilmNation.

    MF: Finally, can you talk about the emotional experience of filming scenes at Auschwitz? What was that like for you both personally and professionally?

    LD: I had been to Poland before, but I had gone to visit friends who were abroad in college. We were young and not necessarily looking to examine the history of the culture, more looking to examine the vodka of the culture. So, this was my first time at Auschwitz. I had done a lot of reading to prepare, but I don’t think any reading can truly prepare you for the experience of being there and the complexity of being there. I was lucky in that our crew had a beautiful dialogue, everyone from Julia to Stephen to Zbigniew, who is an incredible Polish actor who plays Stefan, our taxi driver. We were in a beautiful, open dialogue with each other about the experience and we learned things about each other. Zbigniew’s grandfather had been interned at Auschwitz, not as a Jew, but as a kind of radical who was interned because of his anti-fascist beliefs, and he had never been before. So being there was profound for all of us in different ways, and we were able to support each other through that experience because while there was a lot of emotion, we also had to get through the day-to-day work of making a movie. It was a huge honor to shoot there. They take very seriously who they let in. I think the whole crew felt the weight of wanting to honor the fact that we were being allowed to use the space in that way. I have never seen a film crew be quieter, be more respectful, or be more thoughtful. We all know film crews can be sort of rowdy, quick and fast-paced, and I was amazed by how everybody just honored the location and stayed in dialogue with each other. Everyone was in dialogue with each other about what it was bringing up for them, and that was an unusual and very valuable filmmaking experience. Julia was very insistent in a very loving way about having quiet, especially for Stephen, so that he could take that in because my character’s a tourist. She’s going as someone who wants to understand, and his character is going back to the site of such immense trauma, that Julia was very careful about making sure that the environment was conducive to Stephen being able to play that. I remember at one point she said to me, “I know you and Stephen love to talk, but don’t talk to him right now. Really step back,” and it hurt to do that because my instinct, loving him as his scene partner, loving him as his daughter in the scenes, is to want to go up and hug him and comfort him. But I understood that to be able to do what he was doing, which was a performance that was important to him because of his family history, he needed that quiet and he needed that space, and everybody was so respectful in giving it to him. It is an experience, as painful as it is to see, it is something that I would recommend to any person, not just a Jewish person, because I think that they have done a really amazing job of creating an educational atmosphere that is helpful to anyone who just really wants to understand history, the conditions that create fascism, and think about anti-fascism. It’s a really important place to go and to see.

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    What is the plot of ‘Treasure’?

    Poland, 1990 – American music journalist Ruth (Lena Dunham) takes her father Edek (Stephen Fry), a Holocaust survivor, on a journey to his childhood haunts, hoping to make sense of her family’s troubled past. When Edek, reluctant to face his trauma, undermines their trip with his unpredictable and more eccentric than usual demeanor, Ruth is forced to challenge him and the values with which he raised her.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Treasure’?

    Stephen Fry and Lena Dunham in 'Treasure'.
    (L to R) Stephen Fry and Lena Dunham in ‘Treasure’. Credit: Bleecker Street and FilmNation.

    Other Lena Dunham Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Treasure’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Lena Dunham Movies on Amazon

     

  • ‘The Sandman’ Teaser Finally Confirms a Release Date

    Jenna Coleman as Johanna, Tom Sturridge as Dream in 'The Sandman.'
    (L to R) Jenna Coleman as Johanna, Tom Sturridge as Dream in ‘The Sandman.’ Photo: Liam Daniel/Netflix © 2022.

    Netflix is running its annual “Geeked Week” this week, making announcements, and releasing trailers for a host of shows and movies all themed around genre.

    One of the most exciting pieces of news is word that the long-awaited adaptation of Neil Gaiman’s classic comic series ‘The Sandman’ will launch its first season on the streaming service this coming August.

    To boil it down to the basics, the story is this: “When the Sandman, aka Dream (Tom Sturridge) — the powerful cosmic being who controls all our dreams — is unexpectedly captured and held prisoner for over a century, he must journey across different worlds and timelines to fix the chaos his absence has caused.”

    Of course, this being Neil Gaiman, there is a lot more to it than that. A lot more.

    ‘Sandman’, for those who might be unfamiliar, was a 75-issue DC/Vertigo comics series published in the 1990s. Gaiman’s own one-line synopsis was: “The lord of dreams learns that one must change or die, and makes his decision,” yet the sprawling series takes in pantheons and mythologies from across the globe, via threads about fantastical quests, serial killers, road trips, and short stories only tangentially connected to the core narrative. Many tales featured Dream’s siblings, the Endless: Destiny, Death, Destruction, Despair, Desire, and Delirium. There are some characters – such as members of his own family – who are happy to see Dream return, while others are not so sure this is a good thing.

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    Gaiman himself has noted that the first, 10-episode season of the Netflix show only covers to the end of ‘The Doll’s House’, the second collected trade paperback of the comics. There are 10 in all, and that doesn’t even include the many spin-off stories.

    Attempts have been made in the past to turn this one into a movie, though the streaming series format (not to mention the budget and scope afforded by the likes of Netflix) most certainly feels the natural home for something so sprawling. It’s hard to imagine a film franchise even the size of, say, ‘Harry Potter’ doing justice to what Gaiman and his various collaborators brought to the page.

    Though the writer has directly overseen adaptations of his work before (‘Good Omens’ particularly), here he was more of a consultant, with Allan Heinberg and David S. Goyer developing the series with Gaiman and then running the show.

    Alongside Sturridge, the cast includes a batch of reliable performers, genre stalwarts and new faces: Boyd Holbrook, Patton Oswalt, Vivienne Acheampong, Gwendoline Christie, Charles Dance, Jenna Coleman, David Thewlis, Stephen Fry, Kirby Howell-Baptiste, Mason Alexander Park, Donna Preston, Vanesu Samunyai, John Cameron Mitchell, Asim Chaudhry, Sanjeev Bhaskar, Joely Richardson, Niamh Walsh, Sandra James-Young, Razane Jammal and, announced as part of the news on this one, Mark Hamill, who voices fan-favorite character Merv Pumpkinhead.

    ‘The Sandman’ will return to his kingdom on August 5th via Netflix.

    Tom Sturridge as Dream in 'The Sandman.'
    Tom Sturridge as Dream in ‘The Sandman.’ Photo: Courtesy of Netflix © 2021.
    Gwendoline Christie as Lucifer Morningstar in 'The Sandman.'
    Gwendoline Christie as Lucifer Morningstar in ‘The Sandman.’ Photo: Laurence Cendrowicz/Netflix © 2022.
    Charles Dance as Roderick Burgess in 'The Sandman.'
    Charles Dance as Roderick Burgess in ‘The Sandman.’ Photo: Ed Miller/Netflix © 2022.
    Stephen Fry as Gilbert in 'The Sandman.'
    Stephen Fry as Gilbert in ‘The Sandman.’ Photo: Courtesy Of Netflix © 2022.
    Boyd Holbrook as The Corinthian in 'The Sandman.'
    Boyd Holbrook as The Corinthian in ‘The Sandman.’ Photo: Liam Daniel/Netflix © 2022.
    Vivienne Acheampong as Lucienne in 'The Sandman.'
    Vivienne Acheampong as Lucienne in ‘The Sandman.’ Photo: Laurence Cendrowicz/Netflix © 2022.
    Tom Sturridge as Dream in 'The Sandman.'
    Tom Sturridge as Dream in ‘The Sandman.’ Photo: Courtesy Of Netflix © 2022.
    Jenna Coleman as Johanna, Tom Sturridge as Dream in 'The Sandman.'
    (L to R) Jenna Coleman as Johanna, Tom Sturridge as Dream in ‘The Sandman.’ Photo: Liam Daniel/Netflix © 2022.