Tag: true-blood

  • ‘Code of Silence’ Interview: Stephen Moyer

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    Premiering on Digital and VOD beginning December 20th is the new British crime drama ‘Code of Silence,’ which is based on a true story and was directed by Ben Mole (‘Behind the Line: Escape to Dunkirk’).

    Set in 1960s London, the movie stars Stephen Moyer as Detective Nipper Read, a police officer tasked with bringing the city back to the rule of law as extortion, robbery and murder are terrorizing the city. Everyone knows the gangsters responsible, but no one will go on the record.

    As Nipper faces crooked cops, political backstabbing, and terrified witnesses, he becomes increasingly obsessed with breaking the “code of silence” and will push the rules, his moral compass, and his own sense of who he is, to the breaking point in order to bring the notorious Kray twins (Ronan Summers plays both roles) to justice.

    Actor Stephen Moyer has appeared in several popular films and TV shows including ‘Quills’ with Geoffrey Rush, ’88 Minutes’ with Al Pacino, ‘Priest’ with Paul Bettany, ‘The Double’ with Richard Gere, and Fox’s ‘X-Men’ series ‘The Gifted.’

    But he is probably best known for his work as Bill Compton in HBO’s monster hit, ‘True Blood.’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Stephen Moyer about his work on ‘Code of Silence,’ the true story it is based on, the history of the time period, his approach to his character, helping to cast his friends, filming during the Pandemic, and director Ben Mole’s unique shooting style.

    Stephen Moyer as Detective Nipper Read in director Ben Mole's 'Code of Silence.'
    Stephen Moyer as Detective Nipper Read in director Ben Mole’s ‘Code of Silence.’

    You can read our full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interview with Stephen Moyer about ‘Code of Silence.’

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

    Stephen Moyer: You guys probably know who the Kray twins are, just because there’s been a couple of films about the Krays, and they are like our Al Capone in England. I did not think it was time to make another Kray film, but what I hadn’t seen was a film about Nipper, about the character who brought them down.

    I had worked for the exec producer before on a previous project, and they came to me and said, “Look, we’ve got this really tiny budget, but a really interesting script about Nipper Read.” Then I read it, and I thought, “Oh this is quite nicely constructed. This is clever. This is smart. This is an interesting way of doing it.”

    I got speaking to Ben Mole, the director. He said, “What I’m trying to do is, with all the different corridors, and with all of the different rooms within this building, I’m trying to show you what it’s like inside Nipper’s brain. The labyrinthian corridors of his brain.” I did quite a lot of reading and there’s a famous book about psychology that had just been released in 1962, that Ben referenced, and I thought it was really interesting.

    I went and read that, I read Nipper’s autobiography, and he was using techniques that were very new at that time, ways of using psychology to track criminals, as opposed to how we sort of think of the 1950s and 1960s as a very methodical plotting kind of police work, that only just really discovered fingerprints, and what they could do, and we weren’t at the DNA stages yet.

    But when Ben explained to me what he wanted to do, I thought it was a really interesting way to set it in this one building, but to show it as Nipper’s brain and what was going on. So, I signed on, and I was able to fill some of the surrounding roles with some of my best friends, who came and did it for very little money. So it was excellent.

    MF: The movie is kind of like an English version of ‘The Untouchables,’ which is actually referenced by the characters in the film. Can you talk about the tone of the screenplay and was the idea of playing a British version of Elliot Ness appealing to you?

    SM: You know what’s funny, though, is we look at ‘The Untouchables,’ we look at Eliot Ness, and we look at that stuff as so glossy, fabulous, American, and just so giant. England is so tiny and small, and cheap and working class at this period of time, that that’s almost tongue in cheek when that characters say that, because these guys have got no resources. They’ve got nothing behind them. They’ve actually been given up on by their superior officers. Do you know what I mean? So, it’s almost like the antithesis of that.

    But they would never have thought about themselves like that, these guys. Because they just had no resources whatsoever. But he does end becoming that. He got the grit between his teeth, and he absolutely went completely out of his way to bring those two men down.

    Ronan Summers as Ronnie and Reggie Kray in director Ben Mole's 'Code of Silence.'
    (L to R) Ronan Summers as Ronnie and Reggie Kray in director Ben Mole’s ‘Code of Silence.’

    MF: The film is set in the mid-60s, before you were born. But I assume, growing up in England, you knew some of these British post-World War II men. I’m curious if that helped inform your performance and get inside the head of someone from this generation?

    SM: Yeah, that’s a great question. The Krays were such a part of East London life, and in a similar way to Al Capone, because what the Krays did was the protection racket. So, they got a lot of people to give them money to protect them. It’s that sort of classic thing of, you won’t get a brick thrown at your window, but if you don’t give us your money you’ll get a brick through the window. So, it was very much that.

    My papa, my maternal grandfather, was peers of the Kray twins, and he was actually a member of the same boxing club, so he knew them very well. There’s two big boxing clubs in London, there’s Repton Boys Club and there’s West Ham Boys Club. My grandfather became chairman of West Ham Boys Club, and the Krays were at Repton.

    So, he also became a coach and trained, and was quite a successful man, but so he knew them. We’re talking about working class men who always were in a shirt and tie, always in a waist coat, and always in a jacket. Even though you were working class, it was a very immaculate way of presenting yourself to the world.

    What I found interesting about Nipper when I was reading about him, was that he, too, was very small, actually. He was a very slight man, which is why he became known as Nipper, because he was just a sort of mere nip of a thing. But he was a brilliant boxer. He started off too small to represent the police, because they had a five foot eight minimum, I think the rest of the police was five foot nine, or five foot 10. But because they needed more police in London, when he went for his meeting, he made sure he had his shoes stacked, and ended up becoming an officer. But ended up representing the Metropolitan Police as a boxer.

    So, what I really liked about that was, which is very like my grandfather obviously, that the Krays were very famous boxers, too. Nipper represented the Metropolitan Police, and was a champion as a boxer. So, I really liked this idea that the Krays would’ve known about him, and he would’ve known about the Krays, and there would’ve been a mutual respect in the boxing world for each other even though they were enemies.

    There was a lot of my grandfather’s peers who obviously, were people that I knew when I was a child, that I sort of referenced. When you’re little in England, everybody’s an uncle and auntie. Your best friends’ mom and dad, they’re always uncle and auntie. So, I went to see my auntie Joan, and she had been friends with all of that crowd in the East End. I had a load of questions for her, and that was really interesting. So, it’s a very specific type of old-fashioned way of thinking, where there’s a mutual respect, somehow, even for the villains.

    MF: Can you talk about the dynamics between Nipper and his team, and what was it like working with actors Alec Newman and Andrew Tiernan?

    SM: So, Alec Newman is a dear friend of mine, and when we were casting this thing, we were looking for somebody for that role, and I suggested Alec because he’s a phenomenal actor. We got him, he was available, and we also got Ian Sharp, who is fantastic, and we got Andrew Tiernan, who’s done so much work, but came in because we asked him to. Also Commander Rose, Michael Higgs, is one of my best friends. So, what was lovely was being able to surround us with fantastic actors who came in to do it.

    But there was a real sense of a little repertory company feeling. We all were doing it for the right reasons, because we wanted to work together. Also, this was in the height of lockdown as well. So, a lot of my friends weren’t working. They were happy to come in and do it, because nobody was working. In fact, when we were shooting, we were up in Pontypool in Wales, and everybody was in lockdown. The town was closed, everything was shut down, and there was nowhere for anybody to stay. So, we were completely in our own little bubble doing our little movie. It was a really lovely couple of weeks, where we were just completely all together trying to create something. It was a lovely feeling.

    It’s funny, because during the pandemic, I did a couple of movies like this, where everybody came together at a time when you were wondering what was going to happen, what the rest of the world was going to be like? Especially, we weren’t doing the gigantic budget stuff where everybody was being tested daily, and all living in their bubble with a whole crew sitting off set, who weren’t being used in case somebody got ill so they could come in. That’s what the big productions were doing. So, it was a really exciting time, and I think it’s a really decent little movie, actually.

    Alec Newman as Wright, Stephen Moyer as Detective Nipper Read, and Andrew Tiernan as Peter Brodie in director Ben Mole's 'Code of Silence.'
    (L to R) Alec Newman as Wright, Stephen Moyer as Detective Nipper Read, and Andrew Tiernan as Peter Brodie in director Ben Mole’s ‘Code of Silence.’

    MF: Finally, director Ben Mole uses an interesting storytelling technique in this film. During the flashbacks, Mole inserts your character into the scenes, even though he wasn’t there when they actually happened, as if it is all happening in his head as he is thinking about the scene that is being described to him by another character.

    Can you talk about working with director Ben Mole and how did he describe to you the unique way he was going to shoot those sequences?

    SM: This is threefold, the answer to this question. Because budgetarily, we were not able to go off and create this whole other sequence of events in another location, where we’re out on the street and we’re doing something. So, where a scene may have happened on the street, we placed it interior in a bar, or famously, The Blind Beggar where the shooting actually happened.

    So, Ben said, “Well, what about if we put him in there, so that as he is looking at his incident board and he is working things out, how about if we go, ‘Oh look, here’s this thing, and then we go with him.” Then he does some really smart pieces of camera work where he puts me in the bar, whether I’m playing with the clock and fast forwarding time, or the sequence with the bar maid behind the bar, he’d get it all figured out. We shot the beginnings of those moments before the bar, rather than doing the bar and then fitting those moments into it. We had actually done the interior stuff first.

    It was really interesting, because there was one moment where he was like, “Right, so you’ve got a piece of paper in your hand, and you are putting it down onto the table and then you’re walking forward, and this is when you are going to go and see the girl.” I was like, “Just explain it again.” I said, “So, I’m now in the bar?” He is like, “Yeah, you are in the bar. Literally, you are walking across, you’re going to be looking at her, and you’re going to be in the bar. So, that by the time we’re on the back of your head, the audience won’t realize it, but we will be in the bar.”

    I love that trickery. There’s no CGI, there’s no green screen magic, it’s fabulously simplistic in-camera ideas, where you tell the story in the most simplistic way, but using old techniques in order to do it. So, we are looking at her behind the bar, and then when the camera swings around, I’m sitting next to her.

    I love that stuff. I loved those ideas that Ben Mole had, to try and make it as exciting as possible. There’s the sequence in the urinals, and the character comes over to me and I’m standing in the urinal. He turns around, and you think that he’s going to go to the bathroom, but he turns around and he’s looking at the board, then we pull out of the board, and we’re back in my office. That’s just a simple shot where we play onto the board, and the camera stops, then you pick back up on the board and you pull out and he’s in the office. I’s really simple filmmaking, but it’s very effective.

    So, I love working with people who try to find an ingenious way of doing it, rather than a flashy way of doing it. I often find that with slim resources, people find more artistic ways of telling the story, which I love. It makes it stand out as a different piece of work.

    Stephen Moyer as Detective Nipper Read in director Ben Mole's 'Code of Silence.'
    Stephen Moyer as Detective Nipper Read in director Ben Mole’s ‘Code of Silence.’
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  • ‘True Blood’ Star Stephen Moyer on Possible Revival: ‘I’d Have to Have a Facelift’

    Could “True Blood” come back from the dead? Star Stephen Moyer thinks “it’s very possible” — but probably unlikely, at least with the original actors.

    Moyer told Digital Spy that the cast and crew had an “amazing time” filming the HBO vampire drama based on Charlaine Harris’ novels. But he added, “It was exhausting. I’m not sure Anna [Paquin], myself or Alex [Skarsgård] would go back.”

    Then again, he added, “I don’t think we’d say no, because I think it’d be a giggle.”

    Even if the main stars could be persuaded, there is another barrier. “I’d have to have a facelift or something, because vampires aren’t supposed to age!” Moyer joked.

    “True Blood” may be resurrected in another form, though. Moyer has worked with Nathan Barr on a musical version of the series, with a few songs already recorded. Series creator Alan Ball and Harris have given their approval.

    And there’s always the possibility of a spinoff, and Moyer has an idea for it.

    “I always wanted a spinoff for … my favourite character is Arlene, the redhead waitress,” he said. She’s a phenomenal actress, Carrie Preston. She won Emmys for ‘The Good Wife.’”

    Count us in!

  • Anna Paquin’s ‘True Blood’ Breasts ‘Photoboobed’ BBC News in Hilarious On-Air Oops

    Premiere Of HBO's 'True Blood' Season 7 And Final Season - Arrivals“True Blood” star Anna Paquin got a good laugh — and got to coin the term “photoboobed” — after a topless scene from her HBO show accidentally photobombed a BBC News report. (Tit happens!)

    Someone in the BBC newsroom must’ve been on the “hardly working” side of things during the BBC News at Ten broadcast. The show’s 3.8 million viewers noticed that, in the back left of the frame, you could see a woman’s bare breasts. It turned out to be a scene from “True Blood,” and Paquin recognized those boobs as her own. She tweeted about it, getting responses from her “True Blood” co-stars — including her husband Stephen Moyer (Bill Compton); Robert Kazinsky (Warlow), who shared the scene in question; and Evan Rachel Wood (Queen Sophie-Anne).

    Classic. It’s not clear if the BBC fired that non-working worker. You’d think so, but considering the attention the “photoboob” got, they may instead try this stunt every week.

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  • ‘True Blood’ Stars Mourn Nelsan Ellis, Dead at Age 39: ‘A Terrible Loss for All of Us’

    Premiere Of HBO's 'True Blood' Season 3 - ArrivalsOn July 8, fans were shocked and heartbroken by the news that “True Blood,” had died after complications with heart failure. He was 39.

    Ellis acted in other TV shows and films — including “Elementary,” “The Butler,” “The Soloist,” and “Get on Up” — but Lafayette was an icon, and Truebies were devastated.

    Here are some reactions to Nelsan’s passing from his “True Blood” family, including this beautiful story Stephen Moyer (Vampire Bill) posted to Facebook:

    HBO statement: “We were extremely saddened to hear of the passing of Nelsan Ellis. Nelsan was a longtime member of the HBO family whose groundbreaking portrayal of Lafayette will be remembered fondly within the overall legacy of True Blood. Nelsan will be dearly missed by his fans and all of us at HBO.”

    “True Blood” creator Alan Ball: “Nelsan was a singular talent whose creativity never ceased to amaze me. Working with him was a privilege.”

    According to Variety, Nelsan Ellis is survived by his grandmother, his father, and his son, Breon, as well as seven siblings. In lieu of flowers, his family asks that donations be made to Jenesse.org or RestoreMinistriesChurch.org.

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  • ‘Good Girls Revolt’ Star Anna Camp Is ‘Starving’ for the Perfect Role

    You’ve loved Anna Camp, you’ve hated Anna Camp, you’ve loved to hate Anna Camp.

    The prolific actress has cornered a rock-solid niche in Hollywood in recent years, playing a certain kind of young All-American woman, the type that projects an idyllic, put-together image that leans as frequently toward sweetness and positivity (“The Good Wife,” “The Mindy Project”) as into wicked and treacherous territory (“True Blood,” “Pitch Perfect“).

    With Amazon’s new streaming series “Good Girls Revolt,” Camp gets one of her most multidimensional roles yet as Jane, one of the group of female researchers working at a news magazine in the late 1960s who found themselves taking a revolutionary stand against the patriarchal, sexist treatment they received in the workplace (the series is loosely based on the groundbreaking incident at Newsweek magazine in 1969 in which female staffer rebelled against discrimination).

    As we meet Camp’s character, Jane has utterly bought into stereotypical perceptions of a woman’s role in society, but her ambitions and experiences are just starting to push her toward a greater pursuit of what it is she really wants out of her career and her relationships. It’s clear that she has the potential for radicalization, but does she have the fortitude to fight to the finish line?

    As Camp reveals in a candid conversation with Moviefone, it’s a role that both fits her area of specialty and gives her plenty of new notes to play — and the fact that it feeds into her nostalgic obsession with old films and eras bygone before she was born happens to be a major bonus, too.

    Moviefone: The show is set during such a cultural flashpoint, really, and I feel like that time is really similar to our time. I feel like we’re in the late ’60s right now, with the kind of social revolution that is building.

    Anna Camp: It does. It feels like something epic is coming, am I right? I’ve been feeling that, so much so, where it’s like [Donald] Trump — I couldn’t believe that he kept going as much as he did, the racial things that have been happening lately in the world, the gender issues, Hillary Clinton. I mean, I feel like we’re coming towards something.

    I’m a little scared, to be totally honest. I’m thinking about moving to France. Now, I don’t even know if I should go there! No, there definitely feels to be a build of some sort of revolution going on. I just hope that it doesn’t end in something or come to climax in something violent. But I do feel it’s kind of scary. I’m on the lookout for packages on the road — terrorism. It’s just completely infiltrated all of our daily lives now. It’s a very eerie time to be alive, I’m feeling, these days.

    Because these women were trailblazers for a certain amount of new freedoms that women got — yet we stopped at a certain point and we still have a long way to go — did you feel that you were taking for granted the feeling that you had in your time, in your era, to make choices and do things that you wanted?

    Absolutely, because I didn’t know any differently, but when you see that … You got to where you are because people breaking rules and pushing the envelope, and there’s still so much we have to do. I hope that this show inspires women, and minorities in general, to speak up for their rights, to come together, to not be afraid to gain the confidence because the show is about giving these woman confidence enough to speak their minds and their opinions.

    But, yeah, I grew up in a very pretty privileged lifestyle. I feel like I’ve never not gotten a job because I was a woman. I do feel like I’ve been sexually harassed more because I’m a woman, and I do feel like I’ve probably gotten paid less because I’m a woman, and being in Hollywood, the amount of roles that are meaty for men totally outweigh the roles for woman, still to this day. In big-budget movies, it’s like there’s five men, and then there’s the one female role. So, not that much has really changed.

    Tell me about the culture of the ’60s and what you’ve really responded to — either what you were already a fan of, or you have discovered in this process.

    Well, my dad taught me to listen to really great music growing up, so, I’ve seen Bob Dylan about four times in my life. I had an amazing concert experience with him. I listened to The Doors growing up. I mean, there’s just vibrant, rich amazing music and that’s something that I’ve always been a total fan of, but also this collective experience that people are having that they had, that we’re so independent now.

    We’re on our phone and our computers all the time, and you didn’t have that then. You’d have to get your information and share your information with people, face to face, and really come together as a group to make a statement, not like a Twitter feed that you see how many hashtags or whatever the hell that got. No, this is bodies in a room, or in a march, or whatever it may be, or signing the lawsuit. You know, it’s really about collective experience and coming together to prove a point. I miss that.

    There’s almost an Anna Camp zone of the types of characters that you’ve been asked to play, and some of them are sweet and nice and some of them are evil, but they all are kind of in that certain territory.

    They’re kind of — they all rotate in that world, totally.

    How hungry are you to get something that really lets you run free?

    Totally, I’m starving. I’m starving for that. I’m starving for that, and everybody knows that, and I know I can do it. I just am like “When is that going to happen?” I mean, I’m not a writer. I’ve optioned a script for a book that I’m producing, but the role is kind of in that wheelhouse, but I’m desperate. I’m so hungry for all of that, so I can’t even explain to you what.

    Your Charlize Theron-in-“Monster” kind of role.

    Yes, please! I’m so, so ready for that, and I know that it will happen, because I do have faith in my talent as an actor, and I’ve been doing this for so long. I’ve been acting since I was in second grade. It just takes someone having faith in me to give me that shot. Or, hell, I’ve got to write it.

    Well, I think a lot of actors discover that kind of thing generating it, in some way, for themselves.

    Exactly. My people are all on the lookout. They’re like, “Anna, read books about, like, goth. Go for it, and find it.” But, yeah, I’m desperate for that, for sure.

    That said, everything you’ve done, especially in the last few years, has had to have been a pretty awesome experience. Doing it, and the response to it.

    Wonderful! Yeah, that’s the thing, and I was a bit hesitant when they offered me this role. I was like, “Oh, is it the same? What are we going to be doing and saying differently?” And they really came forward and said she’s going to go through so much, it’s going to be so wonderful to play, and she’s not the bitch.

    And I really worked hard not to play the typical one in any of the roles that I’ve done that are “the bitchy girl.” I try really hard to not play that, hands down, but that there’s a reason why she is, and then you break it down and you see that she’s really not, and she’s actually really vulnerable.

    We’ve talked before about how you were a huge fan of another ’60s drama, “Mad Men,” and why was that your show?

    Man, I don’t know — I just fell in love with the era, the way it was shot. I remember flipping on AMC and thinking it was an old movie, and thinking I’d never seen these actors before! But I have been watching old movies since I was very little, growing up. Katharine Hepburn, just ’40s, ’50s movies, and there’s something nostalgic and beautiful about that time, and I just fell in love with it.

    I thought that the writing was so incredibly well done, and it was operating on such a deep soulful level. It wasn’t just a period piece set in an ad men exec’s office. It was operating on this wonderful, lost, soulful level. All of the characters were so lost, and I just really found that to be so hauntingly beautiful.

    I loved that show to the point when it ended, I thought to myself — and this hopefully is not true — I’ll never love a show again as much as I loved this one.

    That’s what I thought. That’s exactly the way I felt. I watched every episode. I’ve seen every episode more than once. I loved it so much. Matthew Weiner really created something so iconic and beautiful. I mean, the carousel episode — I mean, I still like get chills thinking about it. So, the fact that I even got to walk on that set — I was like, “Oh, thank you.” Like, “I don’t know what’s happening, but thank you.”

    Did you see any touchstones — actresses or characters from old movies, of the ’60s in particular — about which you were able to say “I can draw a little from this, or take a little inspiration from that”?

    Yeah, you know, there’s some Tippi Hedren, a little bit, in Jane. There might be some Kim Novak. You know, I loved “Vertigo” and sort of the way that they are, and act and how they held themselves. I think Jane, especially in the early parts of this season, is like a total Hitchcock blonde. I can see her getting into some trouble, yeah, in one of his movies.

    What fueled that love of old movies?

    My sister. She’s seven years older than me, and she’s also an actress, and she fell in love with “Gone With the Wind” and Vivien Leigh, and we would get together at night, and this little TV with a little VHS tape, and she would just rent all of these old movies from Blockbuster, and we would watch Laurence Olivier, we would watch Bette Davis. I mean, you name it. I’ve seen a bajillion old films, and I just fell in love with all of the women, and all of the men. So classic, romantic.

    And it was subtle acting, too. You forget, when you go back, that they were actually very good. There came a time when everything got very big and broad and kind of weird, but there’s some beautiful acting in a lot of those movies. But really there’s a nostalgia — I’m drawn to period pieces.

    Are you a bit of a student of sorts of Hollywood history now that you live here? Aware of what shot where and who lived where?

    I used to live on Beachwood Drive, which everyone lived there at some point, you know? I know Marilyn Monroe lived there, and Madonna lived there at some point. So, I kind of know my little tiny history around that area.

    I felt like the Hollywood sign was so small. I was driving to an audition, I parked on Larchmont, and in the rearview mirror I saw the Hollywood sign, and I said, “Oh, my god — what? That’s so tiny!” I was shocked at how grand and epic [it was supposed to be], and it was just so real. It just made everything kind of feel very real. It’s just a town, and that’s just a road, and that’s just a sign, and whatever. It’s not that crazy kind of thing.

    “Good Girls Revolt” Season 1 premieres October 28 on Amazon.

  • 13 Scary Movies (and Shows) You Should Watch This Halloween on HBO Now

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    Nothing gets us in the mood for a scary movie like Halloween, the holiest of all horror holidays. But who wants to bother with drunken teenagers at the local Cineplex, or wade through a sea of kids dressed like Pizza Rat to get to a Red Box? No one, that’s who.

    But there’s another option: HBO Now.

    The network’s new platform allows subscribers to view hundreds of movies (and every episode of virtually every HBO series ever made) from the comfort of their own couch. Or bedroom. Or toilet. Or anywhere your preferred device gets Wi-Fi.

    So, here are 13 horror movies (and shows) you can watch this Halloween on HBO Now.