Posts Tagged ‘24’

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24 season 8

Variety is reporting something we have been speculating for the past month: Fox’s hit television series 24 will likely end after the conclusion of the current eighth season. The studio and network executives have declined to comment. But is this the end of the show? Apparently the studio is considering shopping the series to other networks, but interest will probably be limited due to the high costs involved.

Previously:

Last month it was announced that Billy Ray had been hired to pen the screenplay for a big screen 24 movie. All we know about the planned story for the feature film is that it will be set in Europe. Kiefer Sutherland and producers have said that the big screen movie would be “a two-hour representation of a day.” Ray’s filmography includes State of Play, Flightplan, Suspect Zero, Hart’s War, Volcano and Moon director Duncan Jones’ upcoming much-buzzed about project Source Code. He both wrote and directed Breach and Shattered Glass.

At the time, studio insiders cautioned that a 24 movie “is still very much in the preliminary stages,” and that there are “a number of factors influencing how quickly it moves ahead, including the fate of the TV show.” Fox had not yet decided if they want to order a ninth season of the series, although it has been expected that this will be the final season. 24 has lost over 10% of the show’s total viewership from last year, down over 15% in adults 18-49.

It is hard to imagine that Fox would spend the millions and millions required for a big screen feature if they weren’t impressed with the ratings enough to renew the television series for a tenth season. Stranger things have happened (Arrested Development was canceled and will eventually become a big screen feature). Sutherland is said to be eager in getting the series to the big screen. It would be nice to see a big screen 24, with a big blockbuster budget. But without the real-time structure, won’t it just another action film, but with the characters we’ve gotten to know from television? I wonder how it could/would be different.

A big screen movie would probably guarantee that Bauer will survive his eighth crazy day. Since first discovering the series in 2001, I had hoped that Bauer would someday die on screen, in the possible biggest twist the series could possibly pull. I know a lot of fans would hate for that to happen, but I think it would be the ultimate way to conclude the series — with CTU and Jack’s friends having to save the day without him, in his honor. Sutherland and 24 producers have always said that Bauer’s death was an extreme possibility.

If you’ve been reading /Film for a while, then you know my obsession with minimalistic movie poster design. We’ve featured many of these simple 2-4 color streamlined posters on the site in the past, but never anything having to do with television. Graphic artist Albert Exergian has created a bunch of minimalistic posters for some of television’s most popular shows. And while these aren’t as conceptually clever as what I’m used to, I can still appreciate many of these. I’ve included a sample after the jump. You can buy prints of many of these posters for £50.00 on Blanka.

Check out more of Exergian’s work on exergian.com.

via: Live Feed

24 season 8

The producers  of Fox’s hit action serial television series 24 have been talking about doing a big screen movie adaptation for years now. I just assumed that it was one of those things that would never happen, and that the made for television movie prequel they did last season was an easy out. Well it looks like star/producer Kiefer Sutherland is serious about bringing Jack Bauer to the big screen, as he has convinced Fox to hire Billy Ray to pen the screenplay adaptation. All we know about the planned story for the feature film is that it will be set in Europe. Sutherland and producers have said that the big screen movie would be “a two-hour representation of a day.”

Ray’s filmography includes State of Play, Flightplan, Suspect Zero, Hart’s War, Volcano and Moon director Duncan Jones’ upcoming much-buzzed about project Source Code. He both wrote and directed Breach and Shattered Glass.

But studio insiders cautioned Variety (who broke the story) that a 24 movie “is still very much in the preliminary stages,” and that there are “a number of factors influencing how quickly it moves ahead, including the fate of the TV show.”

Fox has not yet decided if they want to order a ninth season of the series, although it is expected that this will be the final season. According to EW, 24 is down versus last year by 10% in total viewers (11.9 million versus 13.3 million) and by 15% in adults 18-49 (3.9 versus 4.6). It is hard to imagine that Fox would spend the millions and millions required for a big screen feature if they weren’t impressed with the ratings enough to renew the television series for a tenth season. Stranger things have happened (Arrested Development was canceled and will eventually become a big screen feature).

A big screen movie would probably guarantee that Bauer will survive his ninth crazy day. Since first discovering the series in 2001, I had hoped that Bauer would someday die on screen, in the possible biggest twist the series could possibly pull. I know a lot of fans would hate for that to happen, but I think it would be the ultimate way to conclude the series — with CTU and Jack’s friends having to save the day without him, in his honor. Sutherland and 24 producers have always said that Bauer’s death was an extreme possibility.

It would be nice to see a big screen 24, with a big blockbuster budget. But without the real-time structure, won’t it just another action film, but with the characters we’ve gotten to know from television? I wonder how it could/would be different.

slashfilmcast550

The Lovely Bones Movie PosterIn this week’s episode of the /Filmcast, David Chen, Devindra Hardawar, and Adam Quigley offer up a few reflections on the Golden Globes, try to hold out hope for Marc Webb’s upcoming version of Spiderman, and praise The Book of Eli as a decent, post-apocalyptic, B-movie fun. Special guest Katey Rich joins us from Cinemablend.

You can always e-mail us at slashfilmcast(AT)gmail(DOT)com, or call and leave a voicemail at 781-583-1993. Join us in two weeks on Sunday, January 31st on at 9 PM EST / 6 PM PST at Slashfilm’s live page as we review Edge of Darkness.

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Subscribe to the /Filmcast:


Shownotes

Introduction

What We’ve Been Watching

  • David Chen (01:48): Fish Tank, Tub
  • Katey Rich (10:09): Un Prophete, I Am Love
  • Devindra (16:06): Human Target, 24
  • Adam (21:53): The Book of Eli

News Discussion

Featured Reviews

  • (48:45) The Lovely Bones

Credits

24 Cast L-R: John Boyd, Katee Sackhoff, Mykelti Williamson, Mary Lynn Rajskub, Freddie Prinze, Jr., Annie Wersching, Kiefer Sutherland, Anil Kapoor, Cherry Jones and Chris Diamantopoulos.

CTU is now located in New York, Jack Bauer is a grandpa, and once again someone is plotting to assassinate an inspiring political figure. Tonight saw the launch of 24’s eighth season, which continues several months after the events of the previous season. These first two episodes were mainly about setting up the new conflict and the players involved — it was surprisingly devoid of large action set pieces, but quite honestly that’s a good sign when it comes to 24. Anil Kapoor (Slumdog Millionaire) and Katee Sackhoff acquit themselves well to the show, but I’m quite certain that my greatest joy this season will come from the gruesome death of Freddie Prinze Jr.’s character. At least, I’m hoping.

Discuss: What did you think of the 24 premiere? Do you think writers will give us something as good as season seven? Isn’t it sort of sad that Prinze can’t even jog convincingly?

Lost: The Final Season
A bunch of new television spots for the Sixth Season of LOST have started airing, and are now online. And while all of the spots feature no new footage, each tv spot hints at a cliffhanger which will finally be resolved in this final season. Also available after the jump are six new television spots for the new season of 24.

Why Do You Find it So Hard To Believe?

Tell Him He’s Gonna Have To Die

Love Triangle

Chance to Change Things

The Bomb

LOST: Oceanic Air flight 815 tore apart in mid-air and crashed on a Pacific island, leaving 48 passengers alive and stranded on a remote island in the South Pacific. The survivors include a diverse group of people from different walks of life — a doctor, an escaped fugitive, a con man, an Iraqi interrogator, a married Korean couple and a man formerly confined to a wheelchair who is now inexplicably healed. As the castaways attempt to get home, flashbacks (and forwards) illuminate their troubled lives before and after the crash, as the island that they find themselves stranded on begins to slowly reveal its mysterious nature. Faith, reason, destiny and free will all clash as the island offers opportunities for both corruption and redemption… but as to its true purpose? That’s the greatest mystery of all.

The survivors discovered that the island holds many secrets, including a mysterious smoke monster, polar bears, housing and hatches with electricity and hot & cold running water, a group of island residents known as “The Others,” and a mysterious man named Jacob. They’ve found signs of those who came to the island before them, including a 19th century sailing ship called The Black Rock, a downed Beechcraft plane from a failed drug run, the remains of an ancient, four-toed statue, as well as bunkers belonging to the Dharma Initiative — a group of scientific researchers who inhabited the island in the recent past. The survivors also encountered a freighter stationed off the island that some thought would lead to their rescue, but ultimately almost caused their extinction. And Jack, Kate, Hurley, Sayid, Sun and Claire’s son, Aaron — known as the Oceanic 6 - actually escaped the island and made their way back into the world. But their stay turned out to be short-lived since the island wasn’t through with them, yet.

With only 18 original hours left until the final episode airs in 2010, the island’s violent shifts through time were ended by Locke when he traveled off-island in an attempt to persuade the Oceanic 6 to return. Back on the island, the survivors’ stay in late ’70s Dharmaville was over when their covers were blown and they were accused of aiding “The Others,” and Sayid was gravely wounded during their flight. In addition, Ben killed Jacob at Locke’s request. But since Locke’s body was found to still be inside the coffin, exactly who - or what - is John Locke? And if Juliet was successful in detonating the hydrogen bomb, was she able to reset time, allowing Oceanic Air 815 to land safely in Los Angeles, or was the island destroyed along with all of its inhabitants?

The band of friends, family, enemies and strangers must continue to work together against all odds if they want to stay alive. But as they have discovered during their journey, nothing is what it seems, and danger and mystery loom behind every corner, with even those they thought could be trusted turning against them. Even heroes - and leaders — have secrets.

“Lost” stars Naveen Andrews as Sayid, Nestor Carbonell as Richard Alpert, Emilie de Ravin as Claire, Michael Emerson as Ben, Jeff Fahey as Frank Lapidus, Matthew Fox as Jack, Jorge Garcia as Hurley, Josh Holloway as Sawyer, Daniel Dae Kim as Jin, Yunjin Kim as Sun, Ken Leung as Miles, Evangeline Lilly as Kate, Terry O’Quinn as Locke and Zuleikha Robinson as Ilana.

“Lost” was created by Jeffrey Lieber and J.J. Abrams & Damon Lindelof. Abrams, Lindelof, Bryan Burk, Jean Higgins, Elizabeth Sarnoff, Edward Kitsis, Adam Horowitz, Jack Bender and Carlton Cuse serve as executive producers. “Lost,” which is filmed entirely on location in Hawaii and premiered on September 22, 2004, is from ABC Studios.

24:

World Hangs in the Balance

Wake-up Call

The Clock is Ticking

The Suspense Never Ends

Save The Day

Run This Town

24: Katee Sackhoff, Freddie Prinze Jr., Mykelti Williamson, John Boyd, Jennifer Westfeldt and Chris Diamantopoulos have joined the cast of 24 for the series’ eighth season. The Emmy Award-winning drama starring Kiefer Sutherland returns for its next astonishing day with a two-night, four-hour premiere beginning Sunday, Jan. 17 (9:00-11:00 PM ET/PT) on FOX.

Season Eight will unfold in New York City amidst the shadows of the Statue of Liberty and the United Nations. In this new day, CTU has been upgraded and is run by MBA-schooled and razor-sharp head honcho BRIAN HASTINGS (Williamson, “Forrest Gump”). COLE ORTIZ (Prinze Jr.), an ex-Marine who wants to follow in JACK BAUER’s (Sutherland) footsteps, runs the division’s Field Operations. Expert data analyst DANA WALSH (Sackhoff, “Battlestar Galactica”) collaborates with systems analyst ARLO GLASS (Boyd, “The Notorious Bettie Page”) inside CTU. ROB WEISS (Diamantopoulos, “The Starter Wife”) serves as PRESIDENT ALLISON TAYLOR’s (Cherry Jones) new chief of staff, and MEREDITH REED (Westfeldt, “Grey’s Anatomy”) is an ambitious journalist with ties to the unfolding situation.

As previously announced, Sutherland, Jones, Mary Lynn Rajskub and Annie Wersching also return. In addition, Bollywood icon Anil Kapoor (“Slumdog Millionaire”) makes his American TV debut as OMAR HASSAN, a Middle Eastern leader who comes to the U.S. on a peacemaking mission.

Santa Claus 24

Rebel Christmas Card created this mash-up which shows us what happens when Santa Claus is accused of being an international terrorist and is interrogated by Jack Bauer (played by Kiefer Sutherland on the hit Fox television series 24). Watch the video embedded after the jump.

24 season 8

Fox has released a batch of photos to promote Season Eight of 24, including a first look at Battlestar Galactica’s Katee Sackhoff, Freddie Prinze, Jr, Slumdog Millionaire’s Anil Kapoor and other new and returning cast members. Check out all the photos, after the jump.

Cast pictured L-R: John Boyd, Katee Sackhoff, Mykelti Williamson, Mary Lynn Rajskub, Freddie Prinze, Jr., Annie Wersching, Kiefer Sutherland, Anil Kapoor, Cherry Jones and Chris Diamantopoulos.

24 Cast L-R: John Boyd, Katee Sackhoff, Mykelti Williamson, Mary Lynn Rajskub, Freddie Prinze, Jr., Annie Wersching, Kiefer Sutherland, Anil Kapoor, Cherry Jones and Chris Diamantopoulos.

Katee Sackhoff as CTU analyst Dana Walsh

Katee Sackhoff as Dana Walsh in 24

Chris Diamantopoulos as Rob Weiss

 Chris Diamantopoulos in 24

Anil Kapoor as Omar Hassan

Anil Kapoor in 24

Kiefer Sutherland as Jack Bauer

Kiefer Sutherland as Jack Bauer in 24 season 8

Freddie Prinze, Jr. as Cole Ortiz

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Mary Lynn Rajskub as Chloe O’Brian

Mary Lynn Rajskub as Chloe O'Brian in 24 season 8

Annie Wersching as Renee Walker

Annie Wersching as Renee Walker in 24 season 8

Cherry Jones as President Allison Taylor

Cherry Jones as President Allison Taylor in 24 season 8

John Boyd as Arlo Glass

John Boyd in 24

Mykelti Williamson as Brian Hastings

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Series Returns with Two-Hour Premiere Event Sunday, January 17, on FOX

Katee Sackhoff, Freddie Prinze Jr., Mykelti Williamson, John Boyd, Jennifer Westfeldt and Chris Diamantopoulos have joined the cast of 24 for the series’ eighth season. The Emmy Award-winning drama starring Kiefer Sutherland returns for its next astonishing day with a two-night, four-hour premiere beginning Sunday, Jan. 17 (9:00-11:00 PM ET/PT) on FOX.
Season Eight will unfold in New York City amidst the shadows of the Statue of Liberty and the United Nations. In this new day, CTU has been upgraded and is run by MBA-schooled and razor-sharp head honcho BRIAN HASTINGS (Williamson, “Forrest Gump”). COLE ORTIZ (Prinze Jr.), an ex-Marine who wants to follow in JACK BAUER’s (Sutherland) footsteps, runs the division’s Field Operations. Expert data analyst DANA WALSH (Sackhoff, “Battlestar Galactica”) collaborates with systems analyst ARLO GLASS (Boyd, “The Notorious Bettie Page”) inside CTU. ROB WEISS (Diamantopoulos, “The Starter Wife”) serves as PRESIDENT ALLISON TAYLOR’s (Cherry Jones) new chief of staff, and MEREDITH REED (Westfeldt, “Grey’s Anatomy”) is an ambitious journalist with ties to the unfolding situation.
As previously announced, Sutherland, Jones, Mary Lynn Rajskub and Annie Wersching also return. In addition, Bollywood icon Anil Kapoor (“Slumdog Millionaire”) makes his American TV debut as OMAR HASSAN, a Middle Eastern leader who comes to the U.S. on a peacemaking mission.

Read more: Picture 3027 « ‘24? Season 8 Cast & Premiere Episodes Photos « TVOvermind

Actress Stana Katic looking tailored as Detective Kate Beckett in Castle.


STANA KATIC:
STORMS THE WALLS OF CASTLE
By
Alex Simon


Actress Stana Katic is on a roll. After scoring supporting roles in two of last year’s highest-profile films, Quantum of Solace and The Spirit, the statuesque Canadian stunner landed the female lead in ABC’s new police drama/romantic comedy Castle, playing Detective Kate Beckett, a tough-as-nails NYPD officer who finds herself with the regrettable assignment of allowing cocky, best-selling crime novelist Richard Castle (Nathan Fillion) to shadow her for research on his next book. Not only does she find that Castle’s creative instincts for the criminal mind help her solve some of the city’s most challenging murders, she finds her tough exterior melting under Castle’s considerable charms. The show airs Monday nights on ABC.

Stana Katic sat down with us at a local Greek eatery recently to discuss a variety of topics that make this brainy beauty tick. Here’s what transpired:

Let’s start by talking about Castle. It’s very reminiscent of the “banter” romantic comedies of the 1930s and ‘40s, which the ‘80s series Moonlighting later copied. Your character is also very complicated, with a bit of her back-story coming out in every episode. She’s someone who could’ve been anything she wanted, but she chose to become a cop.
Stana Katic: Yes, all true. She was on that typical Manhattan-ite, society girl path, then a personal tragedy struck, and she shifted course, and joined the police force to become a detective. I think she’s driven by her need to see justice prevail and her empathy toward victims and their families. She’s a woman, which means that she’s inherently strong. There are all these other wonderful facets to her, as well: hope, sometimes girlish hope; self-doubt; confidence. There’s a Joan of Arc quality to her, I suppose. There are different ways of communicating with people in different scenarios. In the workplace, you can really only be one kind of person, whereas with Castle, she has to maintain a certain sense of decorum for right now, but as we move forward and he gets to know her more, we get to see her other layers.

You and Nathan Fillion seem to have a good rapport.
He’s funny. He’s very nice, very kind. We didn’t realize that we were both Canadians until we had both been cast. It was nice to sort of bond over these Canadianisms that we would squeeze out every now and then. (laughs)


Stana Katic and Nathan Fillion in Castle.

Like what?
“Eh?” for one. I’m always “eh-ing” all over the place. (laughs) You know what’s strange, is we found that one or two guest stars every episodes was Canadian. It was like “Wow, we’re infiltrating!” (laughs)

I thought you really stood out in The Spirit, which wasn’t easy to do with all the CGI eye candy. What was it like working in a green screen environment with Frank Miller?
I love Frank. I love his creativity. He’s a different kind of a director. He works from pictures and is a true genius. He has so many stories to tell and working with him was a privilege and a real education, because he directs through painting. He can paint the picture and you have to talk to him in that kind of an abstract manner. He’s tremendously open and is not about ego. He’s all about the work, which makes him very exciting to be around. He’s really quite poetic. As a writer and a speaker, he’s really electric and he paints pictures with his words. I’m looking forward to his next project. The way he merges history and visual beauty in something like 300 is really unique. He might do a kind of sequel to 300 that tells the story of the war between the Persians and the Greeks that took place on the water. The character of Zoltes has this fabulous line where he says “Why have all my men become women and my women become men?” The Greeks beat the Persians on the water and the only Persian ship left standing was the one commanded by a female. Frank is really crazy about the history of the ancient Greeks and Sparta, and the stories from that time.

So many of our modern stories can be traced back to the ancient Greeks.
Yes, and there’s also fabulous stuff that came from Persia, India, China. There’s ancient cultures with amazing stories all over the world. A lot of Aboriginal cultures have amazing stories, as well. That being said, Frank is really mad for this specific era and the story of this particular battle—it was decided with a single, very simple maneuver—the Persian ships were very large, and came at the Greeks from all angles, and the Greek ships, which were very small and fast, sort of exploded out of their cluster, like a supernova, and then attacked all the Persians, just crushing them, except for that lone ship, commanded by a woman.

If you look at every other species, save for man, the female is the dominant of the two sexes. And some of the greatest leaders in history have been women, like Cleopatra.
Phenomenal woman! I think she’s fascinating. I’m just beginning to learn about her and her diplomatic capabilities. For someone to keep Rome at bay during her rule, they could’ve easily come through and taken over, but she kept Egypt in tribute to Rome, and she also managed to keep the Egyptians at bay, as well. She’s the only Ptolemaic ruler who learned Egyptian, who took on their ancient religion, thus endearing herself to the people. She fell in love, sort of. (laughs) We’ll see if the truth about that ever really comes to light. At the very least, falling in love with these two powerful men, Caesar and Marc Antony, was a brilliant strategic move. And she wasn’t beautiful, by any means. She was charismatic, incredibly smart: spoke Latin, Greek, Egyptian and God knows how many other languages and dialects, as well. Her whole family, all her brothers and sisters, were out to get her, yet she was the favorite of her father…You know it’s funny, I think Michael Corleone is such an amazing character, but we have a present-day history in our media culture of having those characters only being played by men. I’ve never envisioned myself as playing anything other than those characters.

Sure. You don’t want to be Connie. You want to be Michael.
Absolutely. And it’s not because of the masculine-feminine dynamic. It’s the concept of family, the concept of duty, the concept of individual passions in the face of duty and leadership and what is required in leadership fascinates me. It’s so bloody riveting, man. I was at the Hearst Castle this last weekend, and Mr. Hearst had a female architect working for him named Julia Morgan, apparently the most important architect of her time. She was the one who designed San Simeon for him. They worked together. She was like his “work wife,” and they created this fascinating piece of architecture, and she built over 700 pieces of architecture during her lifetime, which is just mind-blowing when you think about it. During a time when only 20% of North America had access to electricity, the entire castle was electrically run. To supply water, she took the mountain spring water and had it funneled down the mountain into boilers, and those boilers then heated up the water which were used in two huge pools on the premises. Fascinating woman. She’d be a great subject for a film.

Frank Miller seems to have a real affinity for strong women in his work.
Oh, he loves women, and in a very Marcello Mastroianni kind of way. He loves them all shapes, all sizes, all levels of intelligence and sanity. He just loves feminine. And he’s such a boy about it, it’s really gorgeous to see. And The Sprit encompasses a lot of that love of women, because it’s filled with all these amazing, strong female characters. Have you ever read Zorba the Greek?

Stana as Officer Morgenstern in Frank Miller's The Spirit.

Sure. I love the film, too. Do you like the film?
I love the film, but I love the book even more. The book really got to me, because it hits on this rhythm of life and existence with this need and this desire for living, this must for living. It’s like a hand going through the Earth. It’s fighting to exist, but fully, vibrantly, electrically. Zorba was wonderful, this character, and he loved women in that same way. Nikos Kazantzakis is such an amazing writer.

Stana (R) and Selma Blair in Robert Benton's Feast of Love.

You got to work with the great Robert Benton on Feast of Love. What was he like?
He loves what he does. He’s a fantastically delicate, passionate, complicated director. He sees life very vividly. He uses memory to direct his actors very patiently. He was like butter: very rich to work with on what was, in many ways, a first experience on a major motion picture. I think he has more stories to tell. He’s very poetic in his way, too. He and Frank Miller are poetic in two very different ways: Mr. Benton is little more “flower,” whereas Frank is a bit more “thorn.” (laughs)

Yeah, but remember this is also the guy who wrote Bonnie & Clyde so the color of violence and darkness is also a part of his palate. In his films, bad shit just comes out of nowhere and bites people, hard. In Feast of Love, too.
Yeah, that’s true, absolutely. It was a love story, but there were also darker elements, which I wouldn’t say were “bad” necessarily. I just think they’re part of life. Tragedy is a natural part of life. And there’s something wonderful about that, if it’s portrayed honestly, as it was in Bonnie & Clyde and Kramer vs. Kramer. I’d say that’s the best word I could use to describe Mr. Benton’s work: honest.

Stana and Simon Kassianides in the James Bond adventure Quantum of Solace.

You got to be a Bond girl, albeit briefly, in the latest installment of the series, Quantum of Solace. What was that like?
It was a blast! I really wanted to be a part of that film, and was up for the role of Strawberry Fields originally, but they felt I wasn’t right for it, plus I didn’t want to play someone who got killed, and everyone gets killed in that bloody movie! (laughs) But I got to spend three days working on that legendary sound stage in London. Daniel Craig was great, very funny, very charming. And Marc Forster was an amazing director. We’ve become friends and he has such an amazing, light touch as a director, and at the same time, has this incredible core strength, which is a great combination for a director to have. In many ways he reminds me of the way Johnny Depp played the character of Sir James Matthew Barrie in Finding Neverland. I wonder if Johnny modeled his performance after Marc.

You sound like you have a very grounded perspective on life, which you don’t always encounter with people in Hollywood.
It makes it weird to work in this industry sometimes. When I need to get a moment of perspective, when I feel as if I’m getting ridiculous about something, I’ll just go away and try to communicate or become in communion with truth, and then I realize how ridiculous all these worries are. They mean nothing! In 300 years what will any of us or our little problems mean to people. What does someone like William Powell mean to people today? One of the great actors, a benchmark in performance and style, from less than a century ago, and he’s all but forgotten by most people.

I feel that way about a lot of my favorite directors.
Like who?

Oh God…William Wellman, John Sturges, Robert Aldrich, Don Siegel, even John Ford, all the guys who influenced the ‘70s guys, many of whom have been forgotten by the upcoming generation themselves.
Yeah, they’re all amazing, but most people don’t know who they are today, which is really shocking, especially with someone like John Ford, who influenced everyone.

Do you know how Orson Welles prepared for Citizen Kane? He watched Stagecoach something like 47 times in a row.
(laughs) That’s brilliant! I love it.

Stana flashes her badge in Castle.

Let’s get back to you. You were born and raised in Hamilton, Ontario.
And grew up outside of Chicago, as well.

When did you move to the States?
When I was very little, then I would go back and forth to study, and to visit my family. That was the beginning of our emigration to North America, so it was all part of that.

Both your parents are Croatian?
Yeah, from the Dalmatian Coast. My brothers are over there now.

How many siblings do you have?
There’s six of us. I’m the oldest. There’s about seven years between all of us, from top to bottom. We’re all oddballs doing different things in the world, and they’re all on their way to growing into really interesting adults, although I don’t know if any of us will ever really be adults, because we’re all really strange. (laughs)



Promo trailer for Castle.

“Strange” must mean they’re all very interesting.
They are, and they’re all beautiful, really tall, and they’re all adventuresome. They’re wonderful spirits and I’m really honored to have them as my siblings. It’s like walking with an army when we go someplace together. (laughs) I’m really proud of them.

What do your parents do?
We have a family business that we built from the ground up. In typical immigrant fashion, they came with nothing and built an empire. We have real estate and own a furniture business. I remember playing in our furniture warehouse as a little kid, and I think that was the beginning of my imaginative streak. We had a whole warehouse from the 1920s to play around in. Everything was accessible to us. We’d take these huge boxes that furniture was shipped in and make castles out of them. I would play with money: thousands of dollars that would lying on a shelf, at age three, on the floor with customers walking around, and not a single penny would be touched. That’s a really wonderful memory, and it was a tremendously wonderful playground to begin life in. The luxury of creativity wasn’t afforded to my parents because they had to build a life, and they had to survive, so I feel very lucky that I’ve gotten to pursue a creative life.

But they were able to give you and your siblings an upbringing of privilege, it sounds like.
They educated us. They inspired us. They challenged us. We challenged them. They let us travel. They gave us lessons: piano, ballet, karate, and so on. They are ambitious. They’re fabulous parents and I’m really fortunate to have them.

When did you know you were an actor?
When I was four, this lady in a pizza shop asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up, and I said “An actress,” and my dad gasped in horror. (laughs) And that was always an element of my life from then on. I’d wake up at 6:30 in the morning and force them down to the porch and make them do plays, with ballet costumes and random pieces of clothing we’d collect. Whenever family would gather during the holidays, we’d put on a play, although somebody would inevitably argue and be upset with the character they were forced to portray, and the play would fall apart. It was always an element of my life. There’s nothing better than acting.

The creative life.
Not just the creative life. There’s something that is amazing about being an actor because we’re asked to live life as vividly and kinetically and electrically as we possibly can. I remember traveling to New York once with some photographers, and I started to see the world through their eyes, and the way they took photos. Their eyes were constantly taking photos, and what I think an artist does, is frame moments and making that moment noticeable. And by framing that moment and bringing notice to it, they were elevating it, and perhaps even elevating our experience as we walk through the earth and see. I think that actors are blessed with the opportunity to experience all our senses in that way, where we’re asked to frame every moment because one day, perhaps I’ll be able to grab a moment and it will create an echo in a character or it will be a definitive line I can deliver to the audience and maybe it will elevate our experience. There’s nothing better. We could be working in a steel mill, where you’re forced to shut so many of your senses down just to get through your day. So for those hours that we’re in the steel mill, we’re not living. But as an actor, you’re asked to remember it, and live vividly.

The life of the mind, then.
And heart. And gut. The heart is crazy, and as an actor, you always have to keep it open. I feel sorry for artists who have left us early. They deserved to have someone who could help them open their hearts again, and as an actor it’s hard because some actors are more resilient, but some actors need someone around them to help take some the hardness off that formed around their hearts. You can almost feel it in some people, and in yourself, happening on a physiological level. You can see it physically, too. What people do is they crunch in. It’s an animalistic thing where you’re using your ribs to protect your heart. The heart has been injured in some way. When you learn to open yourself up, it’s amazing the transformation that takes place: the breath becomes fuller. The heart becomes open. They’re vulnerable, but there’s something so amazing about brave vulnerability. You always have to fight for that as a creative person because it’s so easy to get clamped down. Sometimes the more sensitive of us, and the more “in moment” we are, the more sensitive we are, sometimes we need help from someone else, so that we can reopen. I’ve been blathering. What else do you want to know? (laughs)

Nathan Fillion and Stana Katic in a publicity still for Castle.

You studied at the Goodman Theater in Chicago. What was that like?
I didn’t realize how great it was at the time I was studying there. (laughs) It was very important to the initial stages of becoming an actor, because you gain tools. I was young and naïve and inexperienced, so many of the tools I received at the time, I didn’t full receive, and it’s only now that I’m learning what those tools meant. But that’s okay, because you receive information, then when your body, mind, and heart are looser, you’re ready to receive it and it will settle in. I don’t think acting is ever a finished trade. Like every creative, we’re always learning more. In fact, I’m taking classes right now, in Suzuki, which is a type of training based on Japanese theater. It’s a mixture of martial arts and theatrical training. It helps an actor learn how to remain open through physical duress, which can come from anything: stress, physical pain, mental pain. It helps you learn how to communicate through all of that, which is really amazing. I’m taking it up again after initially studying it in drama school. I wanted to touch base with it again, because I felt like it was the basis of characters like Russell Crowe’s in Gladiator, Lady Macbeth, or Cleopatra who are powerful entities that experience because of their greatness, experience more than the average person does. In spite of all of that, they still have to express. Did you know there was a part of the ancient Greek theater, which was very spiritual in its original conception, where a priest would come out, call up to the gods, and ask for a blessing. In their beliefs, the blessing would then come down to the priest and he would then conduct that blessing out to the actors, who would then sing back a response, and the play would begin. I thought that was really wonderful, on a number of levels. The characters those actors played were so huge, so bigger-than-life that I think how they dealt with it was to let it leave their shoulders and be the responsibility of the gods, so they were only the conduits of this greatness, this great, insane power, without it overwhelming them in their lives. I feel like I’m blathering, again. Am I making any sense? (laughs)

Completely. When I write, and I’m really in the zone, I feel like I’m channeling. Don’t you feel that way when you play a part?
Yeah, you lose yourself, and it’s the most amazing feeling, really wonderful.

What makes artists different is just that they have different antennae from most people, so they receive and process information differently.
It’s brave to do that, isn’t it?

L to R: Gabriel Macht, Stana Katic and Dan Lauria in The Spirit.

I guess it’s sort of a leap of faith. It’s something we don’t have a choice in.
I feel like we all have it in us, though. Some people are brave enough to give credence to their childishness, and some people shy away from it and choose a safer route.

Some people also let the system beat it out of them, which is what the system was created for: to destroy any shred of individuality or creative thought in us from the time we’re children.
Yes, and then by the time they’re in their early 20s or so, they’ve forgotten it.

But if you give a four year-old a piece of blank paper and a crayon...
Amazing, isn’t it? Everything they can do with just a tiny piece of space is wonderful. That’s why, when someone accuses you of being “childish,” I think you should take it as a compliment.

24 nyc

With a new location, a new hot FBI agent, and a relatively interesting twist on the anti-terror conflict, I actually thought 24: Season 7 was pretty kickass. Certainly, it helped to revive a show whose sixth season was absurdly terrible, and the fact that they actually made the initially laughable Zombie Tony storyline work is a great credit to 24’s creators. In fact, if there’s one thing that 24 does best, it’s unexpectedly bringing back characters from older seasons in crazy, circuitous ways, even those characters that were believed to be dead. EW’s Michael Ausiello has the scoop on who might be back for 24: Season Eight, but be aware: POTENTIALLY MAJOR SPOILERS LIE AFTER THE BREAK.

So who’s the mystery man that will be making a return?

President Charles Logan.

24 afficionados may recall that Logan was last seen in season six, when his mentally unbalanced ex-wife stabbed him with a kitchen knife. Logan was last seen in an ambulance on the way to the hospital, looking in pretty dire shape (the last we saw of him, his cardiac monitor was flatlining). However, we learned this past season that he was still alive and under house arrest.

According to Ausiello, Logan (played by Gregory Itzin) will have a multi-episode arc:

Logan will resurface towards the end of Day 8 when Cherry Jones’ President Taylor reluctantly enlists her disgraced predecessor to assist with an escalating diplomatic crisis. 24 exec producer Howard Gordon says the opportunity to watch Jones and Itzin go head-to-head “was simply too compelling to pass up.”

Logan was last seen in season 6 after being stabbed to near-death by his equally mental former wife Martha. At the time, 24’s then-executive producer Jon Cassar revealed that the initial script called for Logan to die. “I did everything I could not to kill him,” he said. “I wanted to give us the [option] to potentially bring him back.”

Despite the fact that the show strongly hinted at his death, I always suspected we’d see Logan again. After all, having Logan return would be  such a 24 thing to do. Gregory Itzin, who was recently seen as an obstinate prison warden in Law Abiding Citizen, was always able to add a pretty compelling veneer of sliminess to the character of Logan. I can’t wait to see how he fares against the ultra-righteous President Taylor.

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