Category Archives: Interviews

Jayson Warner Smith’s Southern roots blossom in “42,” “Rectify” and more

Jayson Warner Smith as Wendell Jelks in "Rectify". Photo by Blake Tyers.

You may not recognize his name yet, but if you watch movies or television at all you may have seen Jayson Warner Smith a time or two. He played a police officer in 2011’s Footloose remake and has a small role as a gas station attendant in 42, the new film based on the life of Jackie Robinson. But when the Sundance Channel debuts its first original series Rectify on April 22, Smith’s acting skills will be showcased on almost a weekly basis as he plays an inmate named Wendell Jelks, who resides miserably in the cell next to Daniel Holden (Aden Young), the show’s main character.

While Daniel takes a more meditative approach to serving his prison sentence, Wendell is a bitter man who wants to make sure that everyone around him is just as despondent as he is.

“I wake up every day and decide what I can do to mess with these guys today,” Smith said prior to Rectify‘s red carpet premiere at the Atlanta Film Festival last month. “That’s basically my job. The six episodes basically encompass the first seven days of Daniel’s life after he gets out of prison. He’s locked up for 19 years from the age of 18 to 37 and he’s dealing with all the things that have happened over the last 20 years that you and I would take for granted. My part is all flashbacks from when he was in The Pen – total isolation, death row, every day we could die.”

During several flashbacks that take place during the first few episodes, Wendell is like the devil on one of Daniel’s shoulders while Johnny Ray Gill provides a more positive outlook from Daniel’s other adjacent cell. The show, which was shopped around for several years, is set in a small Georgia town not far from Smith’s hometown of Atlanta. And when show creator Ray McKinnon started holding auditions, Smith knew he wanted to be involved with the show.

 

Photo by Blake Tyers.

“The nice part was Ray wrote this amazing script three or four years ago,” says Smith. “It got shopped around and was at AMC or a while, then at HBO, then Walton Goggins was going to be the star, then he got on Justified, and now here we are. Ray’s a big believer in doing it real, doing it right and doing it here. I’m an Atlanta native, I’ve lived here all my life, I’ve been acting since I was nine years old. Ray and I have known each other for years and I heard about the audition and called my agent and said, ‘Why am I not reading for this?’ She said, ‘You don’t really fit that part.’ I said, ‘No, I’m going to read for this.’ Ray called me in and spent an hour with me helping me prepare for my final audition for the producers. So I guess he believed in me and I want to kiss him on the lips every time I see him. It’s been a great opportunity.”

You can also see Smith in BET‘s Being Mary Jane, out later this spring, and Anchorman: The Legend Continues, due to hit theaters this December.

www.jaysonsmith.com

Joshua Sasse and Leah Gibson go “Rogue” with new DirecTV series

 

 

 

As has been proven by HBO, Showtime and AMC, television viewers are more than willing to turn to cable channels rather than network stations for riveting programming. And on April 3, DirecTV takes things one step further with the premiere of Rogue, it’s first original series debuting on its Audience Network. Rogue stars Thandie Newton (ER, Crash) as an undercover cop who gets sucked into the criminal underworld while trying to figure out who is responsible for the drive-by that inadvertently killed her son. While her dedication to this vigilante crusade creates problems in every aspect of her life, Rogue gradually reveals similar nuances within the lives of the other characters, giving the show a depth not often seen in cop dramas. And given the often violent and graphic nature of the crime business, when we see into the lives of these criminals and the dirty cops that are after them, we really see what makes these people who they are.

Joshua Sasse and Leah Gibson are two of the up-and-coming stars of DirecTV's "Rogue".

Some of the more polarizing characters are Alec (Joshua Sasse), the eldest son of gang leader Jimmy Laszlo (Marton Csokas), and his wife Cathy (Leah Gibson), who have a home life that is pretty normal considering Alec often goes around killing people in rather brutal fashion. After getting a preview of the first few episodes of Rogue, Wrestling with Pop Culture got to talk to Sasse and Gibson about being part of this innovative new show.

Based on what you’ve seen of the show and the reaction you’ve gotten at promotional screenings, how do you expect viewers to react to Rogue?

Sasse: Based on what we’ve seen already, our expectations are pretty high. The show hasn’t come out yet and we’ve already reached 46 million people, and 2,000 people are liking it a day on Facebook. For a show that hasn’t even aired yet, that’s pretty unprecedented. That combined with the response we’ve had in person at the screenings and from all the reporters who have seen the show, it’s been very, very positive. So our expectations are very high.

Given the fact that there are no huge stars in this show and most of you are relatively unknown, what do you think will attract people to this show initially?

Sasse: It’s much more interesting to an audience to have breakout stars than it is to have established stars rehashing what we’ve seen before. I think Thandie’s decision to move into TV is a really interesting and bold one that is going to pay off.

Gibson: But Thandie is very well loved and very well respected in Hollywood for her past work, so it’s great to see her in a dynamic role like this.

Based on what you’ve done previously, Leah, Rogue seems to cover grittier subject matter than what you might be used to. What attracted you to this role and how did you like being part of something unlike your previous roles?

Leah Gibson plays Cathy, the wife of a high-ranking crime family member, in "Rogue".

Gibson: Oh, yes. This is very different from anything I’ve worked on before. I’m Canadian, so I’ve been working out of Vancouver filming TV for the last six or seven years. I grew as an actor working on indies and that can be a gritty process because there are no real boundaries on indie film. But being that this is DirecTV’s first original scripted show, and being that the medium is cable TV, they were able to take a brilliantly-written script and a great story and express it without the boundaries and limitations that you would see in network television. To be a part of this new front with DirecTV has been an exciting process.

I haven’t really seen much of you previously, Joshua. How did you get involved with Rogue and how does it compare to what you’ve done previously?

Sasse: You haven’t seen much of me because I’ve done mainly theater. I trained classically and worked the last 11 years doing theater in England. I mean, that’s my main love. For me, making the decision to move to TV – especially American TV – was  massive because the saturation that you get can be life changing. There’s a seven-story building with my face on it L.A., so it really changes your life. In the theater maybe 150 people see me and now 150,000, or whatever it is, pass by that building every day. So it’s a really big decision and the reason I did it was the writing. To be able to portray the hothead in a crime family on a U.S. TV show isn’t something I wanted to pass up. I’ve got such scope to create something new and original and, hopefully, lasting. That’s what any actor wants. When the script landed on my desk and I read it, I was actually filming a feature in the Czech Republic at the time called Frankenstein’s Army and I thought I had missed the boat and wouldn’t be able to do it. And three months later they still hadn’t cast. They were searching across the whole of Europe and the U.K., the whole of the United States, so I was really lucky that they liked my work and gave me the job.

Do you know why they were searching in Europe for such an American role?

Sasse: Because there’s a lot of talent coming out of Europe – France, Germany, the Czech Republic, Sweden, Denmark, Great Britain, Spain. How many Oscar winners have come from Europe in the last few years? Javier Bardem, Jean Dujardin – there’s an incredible lot of talent there and I think that’s a well that anyone would seek to draw from.

Your characters seem secondary during the first episode, but develop a little more as the series goes on. What can you reveal about where these characters go, without giving too much away?

Joshua Sasse (left) plays Alec, the oldest son of a crime boss in "Rogue".

Sasse: The thing that’s interesting is that the four co-leads – Matthew Beard, myself, Marton and Thandie – have a real strong development through all those characters’ plots. Mine and Leah’s dynamic is obviously a very prominent one; I’m the eldest son of this crime family and we represent the future there. We really wanted to grow that and sort of bring the audience along,  because we do represent the humanity of the crime family. I think that’s what’s really challenging the audience’s morality. Are we good or are we bad? You see Alec doing these incredibly dark things, then he’s going home and he’s got this loving family, this 4-year-old daughter he’s besotted with and he’s an incredibly caring, loving, loyal man. Seeing the two sides of somebody like that really puts things into question. I think that’s what this show is all about is what’s good and what’s bad.

Gibson: There’s an interesting profile for all the characters from the beginning to the end of the show. They’re all motivated by different things and they’re all trying to find answers and struggling with certain things. All of them change and grow and stumble along the way, so I think it’s an interesting journey for all of the characters in that they’re all on a very dynamic arc.

Sasse: That’s always the question when you go home with a character, isn’t it? You look at some of the detectives like Mitch and Ian Hart’s character and when you see what’s happening behind closed doors you suddenly feel for them so much more. You want to pull for them and you want them to do well, you want us to do well and it’s hard to figure out who you’re going to root for. I think that really keeps audiences on the edge of their seats.

One thing that strikes me about Rogue is that it’s very macho subject matter, yet the main character is a female and the other female characters have prominent roles in what happens. How do you think that balance was struck while making the show?

Gibson: I just like that it’s an interesting take on the crime world. It’s a cop show in a modern-day mafia mob world, but there’s so much more to it. Thandie’s role typically would be a male’s role, yet she’s a mother that’s lost her son and is grieving, and has a family that is struggling to stay together. It’s rooted in heart. It’s not all action and guns, but it’s a very human story. The female energy in the show kind of grounds it into a softer place that shows a different side of the coin.

This is DirecTV’s first original series and there seems to be a growing trend of non-traditional outlets presenting original material. Where do you think that means things are going for TV, with people now going to these non-traditional venues for entertainment?

Joshua Sasse (left) is one of the co-leads in "Rogue".

Sasse: This tradition that’s built clearly wasn’t working for what the audience really wanted. Content is so important and media is so easily accessible to people – whether it’s computer games or feature films on demand – the graphic content of what we’re watching is so hard that, were it not on TV, which it wasn’t, people would go through a period of chronic dissatisfaction with what they are being supplied. They’re paying for this television and what DirecTV wanted to do was just start breaking new ground and take their gloves off. They had the opportunity to do whatever they wanted and I think they’ve chosen a script that really is an amazing vehicle for them to do it. We want people to be entertained, and art mirrors life in that respect. If the glass is frosty we’re not going to be able to see the clear picture. Whether it’s the sexual content, the violent content or even the dramatic content, we’re able to do whatever we need to do to tell the truth and be honest in that situation. I hate watching shows and seeing people have sex with their clothes on or not swearing or not hitting each other properly. All that stuff is clouding and then I’m not hooked and I don’t believe it and I’m not on the edge of my seat. I think if people are paying for television they deserve that quality and it’s important to deliver that.

Gibson: Given the nature of where some of the writing goes and what was demanded of us as actors, I had my questions and had to make my own decisions as an actor because I had never done things of this nature before. But it really all came down to just wanting to honor the character in the most truthful way and knowing that all of us were in this venture together with DirecTV and we were really breaking new ground with it. So it’s been very exciting to be part of this TV show that there’s been nothing like on TV so far.

Things do get pretty graphic very early on in the series for your characters. Was there anything that was difficult for you to do even though you knew it might be best for the show or the character?

Leah Gibson and Joshua Sasse live well at the expense of others in "Rogue".

Sasse: There are a lot of things in this TV series that the audience is going to see that have never been shown on television before, not just in the U.S., but anywhere. When you’re the first one through the fence, you’ve got to get a little bit dirty sometimes. We were all very aware that what we were doing was very groundbreaking and I think we all just knew that and went into it with our arms open and took that challenge on. We all had an incredible faith in the producers and writers, who were present on the set at all times. DirecTV gave us an incredible amount of freedom and leeway to do what we needed to do, so all that was left was for us to have trust and faith in each other. We’re actors at the end of the day, so we try to not have any limitations and have a bit of fun with it. You try and treat it as any other scene. Whether it’s violence or sex or whatever, it’s all there for a reason. We’re not just putting it there as a tagline for the show. It serves a purpose, it’s telling part of the story and that affects the way the actors view it. It’s not just gratuitous or grotesque.

You mentioned that you were filming a movie when you first heard about Rogue. When will that be out?

Sasse: Frankentstein’s Army is a new horror film that Momentum is releasing and it comes out in a couple of weeks at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York. It’s really exciting because all the special effects were done by The Lord of the Rings team, so it was a new venture for them, as well.

Leah, do you have any other projects coming out in the near future?

Gibson: Yeah, I do. I have a miniseries that I filmed over the summer called Eve of Destruction that will be out April 15 on Reelz. I just finished filming a movie called Crook with a Canadian filmmaker named Adrian Langley.

www.directv.com/rogue

Jake Abel and Max Irons are caught in an extraterrestrial love triangle in “The Host”

Ian (Jake Abel) competes for the attention of one of the entities inhabiting Saoirse Ronan's body in "The Host". Photo by Alan Markfield.

Having dazzled legions of readers and moviegoers with The Twilight Saga, Stephenie Meyer takes her supernatural teen romance formula to new realms with The Host. Based on the book of the same name, the film revolves around Melanie Stryder (Saoirse Ronan), whose body becomes inhabited by an alien entity known as Wanderer. Melanie’s love interest is Jared (Max Irons), but Ian (Jake Abel) is attracted to the Wanderer, which creates a rather extraterrestrial love triangle. With the movie in theaters today, Irons and Abel talk to Wrestling with Pop Culture about on-set dynamics, working with writer/director Andrew Niccol and their attraction to the fantasy and sci-fi genres.

You’ve both done fantasy and sci-fi genre films previously, but when you work on something based on a Stephenie Meyer book you never know just how popular it might become. Did the massive hype and possibility for a cult-like following factor in to your decision to do this movie?

Abel: No, not at all. It’s all about the work and it’s all about the material. Any film you decide to do, it’s always about the script, the director and the filmmakers. This one was special and unique; Andrew Niccol’s a fantastic director and writer, Saoirse Ronan’s an incredible actress and there’s something to be said about the way Stephenie Meyer’s able to touch a massive audience. It’s fantastic.

Jared (Max Irons) stuggles with his love for Melanie (Saoirse Ronan) in "The Host".

Irons: Also, there was such a hype around the Twilight books. I heard a story about Robert Pattinson being chased through the streets by loads and loads of girls before he even started filming the first one. That hasn’t happened to either of us, thank God. I know there’s a number of people who love The Host, which is great. But it’s not quite on the same scale.

Abel: It’s a little more grown up in the right ways. It’s a sci-fi flick with obvious romantic undertones, which are important. But I don’t think it’s pigeonholed itself into just being a Twilight crossover. I would completely, in full confidence, recommend this movie to my brother, who’s a 32-year-old guy. I really think he’ll enjoy it, besides having his brother in it. I think that’s great for Stephenie and great for all of us because it broadens the demographic.

Having both done fantasy films previously and now venturing into sci-fi, are these genres you are particularly attracted to or is it just a coincidence that you’ve worked mostly on genre films?

Irons: I personally am much more into science fiction than fantasy. And working with the guy who did Gattaca was kind of a dream and was very cool.

Photo by Alan Markfield.

Abel: I haven’t hunted out the genre films solely, that’s just kind of what’s being made right now for young actors. We’re both very picky about what we do, and what’s happening is there’s a shift in these young adult adaptations where they’re not just these cheesy, quick, slap-it-together, throw-it-out-there things, They’re now hiring people like William Hurt for these movies. I think Kate Winslet’s about to do one, so they’re now surrounding these films with talented actors and really great directors and sort of changing the face of what it means to be a young adult adaptation. That makes a lot of sense to me right now, being a young actor and being able to work with someone like William Hurt, who I may not have ever had an opportunity to work with.

Irons: I think Christopher Nolan’s probably got a lot for us to be thankful for in regard to reminding people that audiences actually want to be challenged and want to see beautiful pictures as opposed to just another title out a year later.

Abel: I’m glad that you mentioned that, actually. Thank you, Christopher Nolan.

What was it like working with Hurt. Like you said, that’s not an everyday opportunity and he brings some serious weight to that set that a hungry young actor would want to feed off of.

William Hurt (right) provided leadership for young actors like Max Irons (left) in "The Host". Photo by Alan Markfield.

Irons: That was sort of it. We were all there together, day in and day out, and William was like our spiritual leader and a professional tutor, for lack of a better word.

Abel: I’ve never seen someone stand up for the actors as much as he does. His ways may be a bit peculiar sometimes, but in the end we were the most protected people on the set because if a scene wasn’t going right he would put his foot down and say, “This is not going right.” He would demand that we did whatever it took to get it right. It would be frustrating and hard, but by the end of it we’d be thanking him. There’s a method to his madness, completely. He was the one that requested two weeks of rehearsal beforehand, which was integral to making this film. It would not have been the same film without that. I really stand by this film and I think that’s from the two weeks of rehearsal and William, as he called it, interrogating the script for the truth. That really stuck with me.

This being a sci-fi film, what other dimensions of the film do you think will attract viewers aside from the sci-fi elements?

Abel: There are the romantic undertones, but what will surprise audiences most is it’s really not about these two motherfuckers fighting over this girl. It is a bit, but there are more relationships than that. She has a relationship between herself and the alien in her head, which is really quite touching. There’s an end scene where she’s by herself, the camera’s on top of her, and she’s speaking out loud to the voice inside her head, which we hear through voice-over. I had to remind myself halfway through that she was doing a scene by herself. She also has a relationship with her little brother and with her uncle, played by William Hurt. So there’s a dramatic tale of loss and coping with loss and what it means to understand your enemy.

Irons: It’s also a story of survival. Everyone’s finding out and questioning the best way to survive and, indeed, should we survive as a species. I think that’s a question we can take away. Unlike most alien invasion films, which involve lasers and spaceships blowing up the White House, this is almost like an intervention – we’re destroying ourselves, they’re going to come to our rescue and, for the betterment of the planet and the whole species, take over. It’s an interesting question, but you’ve got to ask yourself, “If they did successfully take over, would the world be a better place.”

This was the first time you’ve shared a love interest with another actor. What was that relationship dynamic like on set?

Irons: The thing is, we’re all such good friends. So it was never too serious, there’s never too much tension or competition or anything like that.

Abel: Everyone was very professional about it. It’s always strange whether you’re sharing each other or not, that first time you go in and you know you’re going to kiss your co-star and be intimate in front of people, it’s always strange. But after you do it once or twice, you just kind of get a hold of it.

Irons: From an outside point of view, the whole thing is quite confusing and quite complex. But from our point of views it’s quite simple. They are different points of view and that causes us to have a bit of a feud, but they are sort of simple. To me she’s Melanie, who has been taken over, and to him she’s just the alien.

With Niccol writing the script and directing the film, do you think it was easier for him to make the film rather than worrying about someone else’s words? Could he give you more insight into what he wanted from the characters?

Abel: Andrew worked very closely with Stephenie, actually. We got very lucky because this is one of the first things that he’s adapted. Andrew has been so lucky he gets to write his own material and make his own material, but the film doesn’t deviate a lot from the book, which I think fans will like. It’s just a more condensed, tightened version of it. The characters are still as developed as they were in the book, the plot is still as developed as it was in the book; I think what really gave us the insight we needed was two weeks of rehearsal that was gifted to us in the beginning, which never happens.

Irons: And we were allowed to put ideas forward through Andrew to Stephenie, which would come back from Stephenie through Andrew to us, so it felt collaborative. That’s so rare because so often with the studio system practically all the ideas are coming from one direction, which is from above and down to you, and you just have to follow. Whereas this one was very democratic.

If there is a sequel, what would you like to see happen with your characters?

Photo by Alan Markfield.

Abel: I want to shoot a gun, I want to drive a car, I would like to do something a little bit more manly.

Irons: I heard a rumor about the sequel that Ian plays guitar and sings.

Abel: That’d be nice, too. And dancing. [Composer] Antonio Pinto actually wrote something for me to play in the film, I started to learn it and halfway through Stephenie [changed her mind]. It was a lovely score, too.

Did you have much interaction with Meyer? Did you get to ask her about the interesting subtexts she likes to infuse into her romances?

Irons: We did ask about the subtexts of our own characters, but she kind of trusted us and said, “You’re doing OK. If you’re not doing OK, I’ll tell you. But trust your instincts. You’re Jared now, you’re Ian now. Go with it, make him yours. Don’t take it from me, take it from yourself.”

Abel: I think she was probably surprised by the fact that, since the second book may technically not be finished written, and there’s a third book she wants to do, we, as actors, started to influence her visualization of these characters. With the Twilight series, they were already written, so the actors had no room to inspire her. But I think she said a couple of times, “I like to watch you guys because it’s giving me things I hadn’t thought about.” I imagine that was very interesting to her, too. She was very open to that, very collaborative.

Your father, Jeremy Irons, has likely been an influence and given you a lot of advice throughout your life. But now that he is sort of entering the young adult realm where you have more experience, has he, in turn, come to you for advice on any of his recent films?

Irons: He finds the idea of press and Twitter and Facebook and that kind of marketing very peculiar, so I have to explain that kind of thing to him. He can barely work his mobile phone, which is still from the ’90s. He can’t even turn the volume down. I’m his son, he’s my dad, so he doesn’t really give me advice too often because he sort of knows it irritates me, even though I probably should take it.

www.thehostthefilm.com

The Miz goes from WWE superstar to action movie star in “The Marine 3: Homefront”

Jake (The Miz) is a Marine returning home in "The Marine 3: Homefront".

For someone who got his start in the entertainment industry on The Real World, Mike “The Miz” Mizanin has come along way since debuting in WWE. He’s gone from Tough Enough competitor to WrestleMania main eventer, having held almost every title in WWE including the coveted WWE Championship. This week, The Miz adds another accolade to his resume as he stars in WWE StudiosThe Marine 3: Homefront, arguably the best installment in The Marine franchise thus far. Just days after the film’s Blu-ray/DVD release, The Miz talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about his transition to acting, his hopes for WrestleMania and his recent endorsement by “The Nature Boy” Ric Flair.

You transitioned from The Real World to WWE and now you’re starring in your first film. What has that experience been like for you?

It’s incredible. I sit here and look back on my life and I’m like, “Oh, my God. Look at all this stuff you’ve done.” It all started with The Real World. If I had never made it onto The Real World, I don’t think any of this would have been possible. So I always thank Bunim/Murray, as well as MTV, because it opened my eyes to say, “You know what? I can do anything I want with my life.” That started with WWE saying I could do this. No matter what anyone said about me not being big enough or I’m not athletic enough, I was like, “Yes, I can.” Now I get the opportunity to star in an action flick where I play with guns, I have fight scenes and there are cool explosions. It’s amazing and surreal that this is my life.

How would you say being a WWE superstar prepared you for being an action movie star?

Jake (The Miz) enjoys time with friends and family, not knowing he will soon be coming to their rescue.

In WWE that’s what we are, we are action stars. We perform in front of 16,000 people each and every night, whether it’s on Raw, SmackDown or WWE live events. We have WrestleMania 29 coming up at MetLife Stadium April 7 where there’s going to be 80,000 to 100,000 people we’re performing in front of. It’s nonstop everyday that we’re in front of a camera, that I’m being The Miz, where I’m this cocky, arrogant, egotistical jerk, I guess you could say. But now, it’s funny, people are actually cheering me. Normally they’d be booing me, but now I’m their cocky, arrogant, egotistical jerk and it’s been fun. You only get one take in WWE; you don’t get five or six or ten takes like you do in movies. Even though there are five, six, ten takes, I only needed one to be quite honest.

You clearly have become more of a fan favorite as of late. What would you attribute that to the most?

I think it’s the time I’ve spent in WWE. Fans are really starting to respect the fact that I’ve built myself up. I didn’t just walk in and all of a sudden be successful. I had to work for it. I think they like people that are hard workers and that’s what they are drawn to.

Ric Flair has recently given you his endorsement, going so far as to pass his figure-four leglock on to you. How does it feel to have someone like that in your corner?

The Miz utilizes his WWE training as an action hero in "The Marine 3: Homefront".

Um, awesome. Whooo! Are you kidding me? In my wildest dreams as a kid you could have never told me that I’d be strutting, having a whoo-off, putting on a figure-four with Ric Flair right there passing it on to me. It’s incredible and surreal. As a kid, whooing and strutting where what I would do. I loved Ric Flair and now him being my friend and mentor, and coming to my corner to help me out, passing on the figure-four to me, it’s incredible and amazing. I mean, he’s a two-time Hall of Famer.

Last year he was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame for the second time as a member of the Four Horsemen. If he were to assemble a new Horsemen-like faction, who do you think the other members might be?

Ric Flair, myself, clone another version of myself and clone me again. Then there’d be four of me and I’d be the Four Horsemen of just me.

With The Marine 3 out, the fans behind you and Ric Flair supporting you, you definitely have a lot of momentum going into WrestleMania. Yet you don’t currently have a match scheduled for this big event. Do you have any idea who you might be facing this year?

He may be an arrogant jerk in WWE, but The Miz saves the day in "The Marine 3: Homefront".

People are scared of me, bro. What can I say? But I couldn’t agree with you more. I’m on a roll right now and this WrestleMania is one of the biggest ones we’ll ever have. You’ve got The Rock and [John] Cena in the main event. CM Punk vs. ‘Taker – CM Punk‘s been on a hot streak as of late as one of the longest reigning WWE Champions ever and now he’s going up against the Undertaker in his prime. So that’s going to be an incredible match. [Jack] Swagger vs. Alberto Del Rio for the World Heavyweight Championship

Now I’m looking for a spot on that card that will give me the opportunity to steal the show, to be the person everyone’s talking about. That’s what I’m looking forward to. Come one, come all. I don’t care who I’m up against, I’m going to win, I’m going to become undefeated once again, I’ll be 4-0 after this year.

Given the positive response The Marine 3 has been getting, do you think you will be doing any more films in the near future?

I’m actually getting ready to start filming another movie that will be on ABC Family during the 25 Days of Christmas called Christmas Bounty.

You were also in a scene in The Campaign with Will Ferrell and Zach Galifianakis that was cut from the theatrical release. Do you know why it was cut?

I actually had lines in that, but they cut them all so it looks like I’m a featured extra. I was like, “Oh, come on!” But Jay Roach, the director, actually emailed me, which I thought was a tremendous thing because he didn’t have to do that, to say, “Due to time constraints and to move the movie along, we had to cut your scenes.” And that wasn’t a problem. It was cool. It was very, very nice of him to do that. But it was an honor to watch Will Ferrell in action. He’s an incredible actor and I’ve always loved his comedy.

www.wwe.com/superstars/themiz

Ashley Bell squares off with The Miz in “The Marine 3: Homefront”

 

 

In The Marine 3: Homefront, the latest installment in WWE StudiosMarine franchise, Ashley Bell plays the younger sister of Jake, played by WWE superstar Mike “The Miz” Mizanin. Though this is her first film acting alongside a WWE wrestler, it’s not Bell’s first time working with WWE as she was also the star of last year’s The Day (read my reviews here and here). With her horror sequel The Last Exorcism Part II being released in theaters last Friday and The Marine 3 hitting stores last Tuesday, Bell is a busy actress who clearly has a thing for the horror and action genres. Wrestling with Pop Culture had a chance to talk to her just before she heads to South by Southwest for the premieres of her next two movies.

You must be a busy lady right now with The Last Exorcism Part II coming out last Friday and The Marine 3: Homefront being released four days later.

Yes! It’s been really fun and crazy.

When The Last Exorcism was released in 2010 it did really well. How has the sequel been received so far?

I haven’t heard that much about it. I’ve been in this publicity whirlwind; I was promoting The Last Exorcism and flying around doing local press for it, I was in a Mardi Gras parade, I was at Portland Comic Con, now I’m in New York doing press for The Marine and from New York I fly to Austin for the opening of The Bounceback, which is a romantic comedy I did. It premieres at South by Southwest this Saturday.

The Marine 3 is your second movie for WWE Studios. Did that come about because of your performance in The Day?

I did The Day, which was a post-apocalyptic action film, and that premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and WWE acquired it. It was really fun to get to work with them throughout post-production and to do promotion for that. I was at SummerSlam, which was my first ever wrestling event, and it was so much fun. I had a chance to go in the ring with Mike and Wade Barrett, who both couldn’t have been nicer. They were going into production for The Marine and I got a chance to meet with the director, Scott Wiper, and I just loved his take on the story. I read the script and thought it was really compelling and the arguments that Neal McDonough, the villain, has are so crazy because they’re partly true, but then he just goes over the top and takes it too far. When you’re reading the script it’s like, “He does make a point,” then it just goes too far. And I like that character of Lilly. She’s a hostage, but she isn’t a damsel in distress. She fights, she looks for the air holes and I like the spirit she has.

This is also your first time starring in a movie with a WWE superstar, right?

Yes, it is. Mike was amazing, and if I didn’t say that he would body slam me.

But you would say that anyway, right?

Lilly (Ashley Bell) looks for some alone time with her boyfriend (Jeffrey Ballard) before chaos ensues in "The Marine 3: Homefront".

I actually begged him to body slam me but he didn’t because he said it would be very painful. And I do think he’s right about that. But working with Mike was incredible. Here he is playing an American hero, a Marine, and when he was filming he spent so much time working with the troops. I also have spent some time with wounded warriors and when I spent time with former Marines and they found out I was doing The Marine, they said, “Who’s playing the Marine? Is he going to train with real Marines? Is he going to get it right?” Mike actually had real former Marines on set showing him how to hold a gun, showing him how to go through a building, how to de-arm situations. It was really cool to watch that accuracy portrayed.

The Marine 3 is not only your second WWE film, but also your second WWE film with Michael Eklund. You and Eklund had the strongest performances in The Day, and in The Marine you find yourselves once again on opposing sides of the fight. What was it like working with him again?

Michael is an incredible actor. For both scripts, you read that character, then Michael comes to set and brings a completely difference perspective and just electrifies the scene. It’s been great to work with him twice. He’s been a villain in both films we did together.

The Marine 3 is obviously a sequel in a franchise that has also included films starring John Cena and Ted DiBiase and The Last Exorcism Part II is a sequel. Do you foresee there being a sequel to The Day so we can find out what happens to your character?

Lilly (Ashley Bell) welcomes her brother Jake (The Miz) home in "The Marine 3: Homefront".

I do hope for a sequel to The Day. I loved playing that character of Mary. I’d done my own physicality for The Last Exorcism and they said, “You’re going to have to do all your own stunts [for The Day]. You’re going to have to lose weight. You’re going to have to work with a shotgun. You’re going to have to run out of burning buildings in a wet dress in 18-degree weather.” They almost tried to talk me out of it, but I replied back, “You haven’t given me a reason to not do this. This sounds like a dream come true.” I love the character of Mary and I bother the producers and director every couple months to see if there’s a shot of going back to explore that.

Sounds like you don’t mind roughing it up a little bit. Any chance you might consider training to compete in a WWE ring someday?

Oh, I’d get smushed! It was fun to go in the ring for SummerSlam and I like WWE’s films. I like their aesthetic and working with Michael Luisi for The Day, I love that ending, I love the story that the film told, I love the plight of the characters, I love that there were real characters and there was action mixed in with that. With The Marine, this is a fast-paced action movie; it’s cut beautifully, Mike did an incredible job, Neal is remarkable, it’s a fun, entertaining action movie. I grew up watching heroines in action movies, so to be part of this, I really got caught up watching it.

Even though you have no plans to wrestle, given that you’ve enjoyed working with WWE so much on these two films, do you see yourself doing more WWE films? If so, are there any particular superstars you’d like to work with?

What always excites me about a project is the script, especially this time around working with Scott Wiper. If there’s another way to collaborate again, that would be incredible. Being on an action set is a lot of fun. My childhood was spent running around with Nerf guns in the back yard, so to play with grenade launchers and rifles and run around on an abandoned cruise ship was like recess for me. If the right project comes up, that would be great. But I feel like I can’t be anybody but Team Miz. My loyalty is to Mike; he’s my older brother in this film and when he says he’s awesome, he means it.

After this weekend’s premiere of The Bounceback, what else do you have coming out in the near future?

The Bounceback is going to be premiering at South by Southwest as is a film I did called Chasing Shakespeare, which is like a romantic epic. I’m really excited about that film and I’m also stepping behind the camera and directing a documentary called Love and Bananas about the plight of Asian elephants in Cambodia. In Cambodia we were in convoys, had security detail and were up in helicopters going through the jungle, so it was a real-life action movie.

“Beautiful Creatures” stars Thomas Mann and Zoey Deutch talk about love, intolerance and more

Based on the book of the same name, the new supernatural teen romance movie Beautiful Creatures is about a girl named Lena Duchannes (Alice Englert) who moves to the small Southern town of Gatlin just before her 16th birthday. But with strange occurrences following her arrival, it looks like it will be a bittersweet 16, at best. The townsfolk (particularly Ethan, played by Alden Ehrenreich) take notice of this young enchantress and the mystical abilities she begins to conjure. While Ethan’s intrigue is affable, the rest of the town (namely resident mean girl Emily Asher, played by Zoey Deutch) is ready to burn this witch at the stake. As this supernatural love story opens in theaters on Valentine’s Day, Wrestling with Pop Culture talks to Deutch and Project X‘s Thomas Mann, who plays Ethan’s best friend Link.

When superanatural occurences happen in class, Emily Asher (Zoey Deutch, left) and Link (Thomas Mann, center) pay attention in "Beautiful Creatures". Photo courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures.

Did you read the book before filming the movie based on Beautiful Creatures?

Mann: She did, but I did not. When I first met with Richard [LaGravenese, director], he told me about the books and how the script varied a lot from them. When you adapt a 600-page book, you have to consolidate a lot of things and he didn’t want me to get things confused. He was like, “You can read it if you want, but I’m not asking you to read it for the movie because it’s a different take on it.” I didn’t want to get anything muddled in my brain, so I just stuck with Richard’s vision and read the book after.

Having read the book after you finished filming, is there anything you wish you had done differently with your character now?

Link (Thomas Mann) became known as "the hat guy" on the set of "Beautiful Creatures". Photo by John Bramley.

Mann: The appearance of the character in the movie is different from the character in the book. He’s kind of a punk rocker in the book and in the movie he’s just kind of a groovier guy who wears a lot of vintage clothes.

Deutch: He was the hat guy.

Mann: Wardrobe kept trying to put this hat on me and I was like, “I don’t want to wear that. I don’t want to be the hat guy.” I was trying to lose it on purpose, but they’d bring it up every time we started shooting. Then is just became part of the character that I really liked. But it’s just a different thing and I trust Richard’s vision. We had a lot of talks about what kind of person we wanted Link to be and it’s definitely still Link. His personality is there all the same. Link is a total horndog in the book, too. In the movie, not so much so. There were a few differences, but I’m happy with it.

You guys worked with some heavyweights like Jeremy Irons and Emma Thompson in this movie. What was it like working with them and what did they share with you?

Mann: It was really intimidating at first.

Deutch: The idea of them is intimidating. They’re not intimidating.

Mann: Once you meet them and start working with them on set, it really is the best acting class you could ever ask for.

Deutch: We got paid to go to acting class!

Mann: Pretty much. They’re all so smart and have so much life experience to share with you. It was really nice because Emma Thompson would give me direction instead of the director and he’d be like, “Yeah, that sounds good. Let’s do that.” You’re not going to say no to Emma Thompson. It was just amazing getting to be near Jeremy and Viola [Davis] and I just feel very lucky.

The conservative views in the movie, especially with Zoey’s character, seem almost foreign to those of us who haven’t spent time in small Southern towns like this one. Do you feel like that intolerance was exaggerated at all in this movie or do you think that’s how people might really react to a teenage witch today?

Emily Asher (Zoey Deutch) is the mean girl in "Beautiful Creatures". Photo by John Bramley.

Deutch: I’m Jewish, so I had no idea that any of that existed. Emily is evangelical, so she’s religiously extreme. I went to a lot of evangelical churches and talked to a lot of people and tried to understand that perspective. In no way did I judge it because if you judge the character’s viewpoints, feelings and community – that’s what religion is is a community – then it’s not going to feel real to you or the audience. The people I met, it didn’t seem forced or exaggerated.

Mann: I would say the fictional town of Gatlin specifically just seems like it’s stuck in the past. I don’t know if it’s exaggerated for how things were a hundred years ago, but it is a heightened version of that and the movie has a lot of social commentary about fitting in, right or wrong, good versus evil. It helps build a strong, tense atmosphere.

Deutch: The idea is that it’s so closed-minded that it’s been built up to this craziness. It’s not even their fault because they have no other perspective.

Mann: That’s all they know and they’re just so ignorant that they can’t even see it.

There have been lots of movies and books lately that deal with the supernatural and love often gets intertwined along the way. What do you think sets Beautiful Creatures apart from those other stories?

Mann: I haven’t seen the Twilight movies, but I hope this movie stands on its own as something really special. The aesthetic of the movie is very strong and there’s a lot of humor in the movie, which I think people aren’t expecting. It doesn’t take itself too seriously.

Deutch: It’s sophisticated in this weird way. I think there’s something to be said about the fact that there are these incredible actors of such extreme notoriety.

Link (Thomas Mann) and Emily (Zoey Deutch) are somewhat conflicted classmates in "Beautiful Creatures". Photo by John Bramley.

Mann: There’s a real maturity to the movie that you don’t find in a lot of these other teen romance movies.

Deutch: It’s told from the perspective of a teenage boy, and the girl has the powers. So it’s the guy going after the girl finally. I appreciate that and I think that’s what makes it unique and will allow for guys to really like it as well.

Mann: Alden Ehrenreich, who plays the main character Ethan, is not a brooding movie [character]. He’s a typical everyman. He’s so funny and is just not the leading man you would expect, which is really refreshing.

Do you think you’re ready for Twilight-like stardom if this movie launches you into that?

Mann: I don’t know. I hope people like the movie, but I can’t really think about that. I guess the answer is no. But Zoey’s ready for it!

A big theme in the movie is the transition into adulthood. Since you’re both making similar transitions in the acting world, how did working on this film compare to what you’re going through as up-and-coming actors?

Mann: As you grow up, your interests change and when you read a script you start relating to different characters. A script I read four years ago and loved, now I’m like, “I don’t understand this kid anymore.” So you just change as a person and I think that informs your decisions and the kind of roles you want to do. I’m no longer going to school, so a character feeling insecure in high school doesn’t mean as much to me as it did several years ago. You just have to be aware of your life changing.

beautifulcreatures.warnerbros.com

A girl warms up to zombie love in “Warm Bodies”

R (Nicholas Hoult) and Julie (Teresa Palmer) share a touching moment in "Warm Bodies." Photo by Jonathan Wenk.

 

 

As Shaun of the Dead and Zombieland have proven, the undead can sometimes be just as funny as they are terrifying. And while The Walking Dead has exemplified that an almost soap opera-like romanticism can also be at the unbeating heart of a zombie apocalypse, the idea of humans and zombies having such relations is a unique idea. In Jonathan Levine’s new zombie romance Warm Bodies, a Romeo and Juliet-like forbidden love awakens something in the undead, particularly a zombie known simply as R (Nicholas Hoult, whose rotting brain is unable to remember the rest of his human name). After eating her boyfriend’s brains, R stumbles awkwardly into love with Julie (Teresa Palmer). Their unlikely partnership forces the surviving humans to reconsider their prejudices of the living dead and causes a healing process in the other zombies (aside from the vicious bonies, who are too far gone to ever be human again). With the movie hitting theaters Feb. 1, Wrestling with Pop Culture talks to Hoult and Palmer about their experiences with zombies, music and John Malkovich.

What initially attracted you to this project?

R (Nicholas Hoult) stares blankly as Julie (Teresa Palmer) gets tough in "Warm Bodies." Photo by Jonathan Wenk.

Palmer: I read the script and it was so unique, original and refreshing, the fact that you’re hearing from a zombie’s perspective, because something like that had never really been done before. I really cared about the characters and thought it was grounded in reality, in a strange way.

Hoult: Jonathan Levine was a director I wanted to work with, I’ve enjoyed his previous films. I cared about the character, I thought he was funny and endearing and just thought it would be a tricky one to pull off and, if it worked, it could be a good film.

What were some of the challenges of playing these characters, specifically for you, Nicholas, since your character never blinks?

Hoult: The not blinking thing was a tough one. That was a silly decision. I was talking to Jonathan and I was like, “Do you reckon dead people blink?” He was like, “I guess not.” If I was smart about it, they could have cut around my blinking. But I pretty much decided I wasn’t going to blink. I had contact lenses, which helped with that.

Palmer: You were good! It was bizarre. I was like, “It must be those contact lenses.”

The resemblance is uncanny! Photo by Jan Thijs.

Hoult: Also the fact of not being able to communicate verbally made it something difficult to try and emote without emoting too much and connect with Teresa’s character. That was the main thing with my character was he was trying to express himself and failing, like most guys do with girls. But when you’ve got great actors all around you it makes it very easy because you can kind of just watch them and enjoy what they’re doing and they make you look good.

Palmer: Because I have much of the dialogue in the movie, I had never come up against that before. I’m usually playing a supporting character, but this one was my first lead role and I found it quite challenging to balance the initial situation that she finds herself in. At the start she’s petrified by R. Then her fear needs to transition into a place that will organically take her into falling in love with him. So I had to be  fearful, but injecting a bit of curiosity in there as well. Finding that balance was quite challenging as an actor. But a lot of it was really there on the page because the script was so strong, so I just trusted the words and tried to get beneath that. It’s definitely the most dialogue I’ve had in a movie.

What do you think people can learn from zombies?

Hoult: That if you try your best, things can get better and you can change for the better. There’s that moment early on in the film where they’re talking about how the zombies aren’t all that different than humans. So basically we live in such a fast-paced world now with so much technology and things going on that sometimes you need to just stop and notice the smaller things around you.

R (Nicholas Hoult) and his best zombie friend (Rob Corddry) lead Julie (Teresa Palmer) to safety. Photo by Jonathan Wenk.

Palmer: From this movie in particular and the zombies in this film, it’s really that as dark and dismal as your situation may seem, love and the power of human connection can really bring you through to the other side. This, too, shall pass. I always go back to that and I think that’s very prevalent in this film. And you see how love breathes life back into you and we, as people, can really connect with that and learn from that.

One of the most interesting things about the film is it’s music selection. Did you guys have any input into that or was that all set before filming began?

Hoult: In the script, my character listened to a lot of Frank Sinatra. So some of the tracks did change into the edit. But Levine’s got great taste in music and I think he balances some of the newer tunes with Guns N’ Roses and other classics.

Palmer: This film is very eclectic and the music is representative of that. You get old stuff, new stuff, edgy and cool, romantic.

Were all the vinyl records and other things R collects taken from the book the film is based on or was that unique to the film’s script?

Hoult: The book goes into a lot more detail in many respects with the bonies, and my character in the book has zombie children and a wife. All those things couldn’t fit into this film, but I think Levine did a great job of adapting. I don’t think the specific things he collected were in the book.

If a zombie apocalypse actually occurred, do you think you could really fall in love with a zombie?

Palmer: I totally could! R is sweet and wants to take care of me and keep me safe. And he’s a hotty patotty and has great taste in music. He’s a sweet, sensitive guy and he didn’t really smell too bad. I was really surprised about that.

Hoult: Yeah, that was a big bonus. I don’t know if I would be so successful in the falling in love with a zombie thing. It works in the film because she manages to heal me. I don’t know if my love’s strong enough to heal someone.

What was it like working with John Malkovich?

Julie (Teresa Palmer) tries to make her father (John Malkovich) understand that there's hope for the zombies. Photo by Jonathan Wenk.

Palmer: It was fantastic. It was very surreal. At first it was daunting to hear that John Malkovich was going to be playing my dad. Then when I met him, any fears or intimidation went out the window because he’s very humble and he’s a giving, generous person. He’s sweet and soft-spoken and hilariously funny. He really surprised me with his sense of humor. He’s a brilliant actor, so it’s really cool to be halfway through a scene and realize you’re acting opposite John Malkovich.

Why do you think things like zombies and vampires are so popular and prevalent in pop culture these days?

Hoult: They just add a magical or mystical feeling, but all the things they deal with are grounded in very human emotions. In this film, the guy has a hard time talking to a girl and it’s a love that shouldn’t be. Zombies are different from vampires because vampires can run up trees really quick and do cool stuff whereas zombies can’t. They want to look after you and they’re endearing, but they’re the underdogs of the supernatural dating world.

You also have several other films coming out soon. What can you tell our readers about Jack the Giant Slayer, the new Mad Max film and the next X-Men movie?

Hoult: Jack the Giant Slayer is a family adventure movie, basically a riff on the classic Jack and the Beanstalk tale. My character goes up a beanstalk, where loads of giants live who want to eat humans, to try and save a princess. It’s a visual spectacle. Mad Max is going back to that world with George Miller directed again and Tom Hardy playing Mad Max. I can’t say much about it other than the vehicles are really cool and the landscapes and stunts are insane. So I’m very excited about that. And we’re doing another X-Men film later this year.

www.warmbodiesmovie.com