Category Archives: Interviews

Interview: Dowdle brothers find ‘No Escape’ from Coen comparisons, but don’t mind

John Erick Dowdle and Drew Dowdle on the set of 'No Escape' (photo: The Weinstein Co.)

By Tim Lammers

Considering they all hail from Minnesota, there’s no escaping the comparisons of filmmaking brothers John Erick Dowdle and Drew Dowdle to Joel Coen and Ethan Coen.

The distinct similarities hardly bother the Twin Cities born-and-bred siblings, though. In fact, they fully embrace it. After all, it’s hard not to think of the Coens when you consider that the brothers both write their scripts, while John Dowdle, 41, directs and Drew Dowdle, two years younger, produces. And like their Minnesota filmmaking inspirations, the Dowdles’ combined vision works wonders with their latest film, the compelling, pulse-pounding action thriller “No Escape.”

“The (Coen brothers-like) set-up was definitely by design,” John Dowdle told me, laughing, in an interview Tuesday, alongside his brother. “When I was in college, I read an article about the Coen brothers, which talked about how Joel went to NYU and studied film, and Ethan went to Princeton and studied literature and business, and then the two joined up to make films that Joel directs and Ethan produces. It helped them keep control of what they were doing and keep their voice more singular. Once we saw that article, we went, ‘OK, here’s the blueprint. Here’s how we’re going to do this.”

“The article talked so much about the autonomy that they were able to create for themselves by way of doing everything,” Drew Dowdle added. “That really appealed to us and we definitely took a page out their playbook. We always wanted to work for ourselves and have our own business, but Hollywood seemed to be the kind of place where that would be a hard thing to create.”

Despite the odds against them, the Dowdle brothers, like the Coens before them, are bucking the Hollywood system. To date, their combined independent voices have churned out such hit horror thrillers as “Devil,” “Quarantine” and “As Above, So Below,” and top-level talent is definitely taking notice. In fact, their new film, the independently-produced action thriller “No Escape,” attracted the likes of Owen Wilson, Pierce Brosnan and Lake Bell in the principle roles.

Opening in theaters nationwide on Wednesday, “No Escape” captures the real-life terror that envelops businessman Jack Dwyer (Wilson), his wife (Bell) and his two young daughters (Claire Geare and Sterling Jerins) after they relocate from the U.S. to a Southeast Asian country for Jack’s work. Not long after they settle into their hotel, the family becomes a target in a violent, bloody coup, where insurgents fearful of a U.S. corporation’s plans to privatize the country’s water supply ruthlessly execute Americans and other foreigners at will.

With only a mysterious British citizen (Brosnan) and his friend (Sahajak Boonthanakit) to aid them, the family faces a harrowing day and night of terror as they seek a way to survive the uprising and find possible path to freedom.

While “No Escape” takes a corrupt, American company to task, the Dowdles want viewers to know that “No Escape” is definitely not anti-American. True, bad American and British corporations create the problem, and bad foreigners respond with brute force. In the middle, though, is a good American family trying to survive through it.

“We wanted to make sure this wasn’t a ‘rah-rah’ jingoistic movie where all the Americans were good and the foreign characters were all bad — there’s a much more gray area here,” Drew Dowdle said. “But we do believe a lot of things happen in foreign countries where there’s a lot of blowback due to foreign policies via the private sector when it comes to massive infrastructure investments that are set up to fail in a way. They’re set up to default. That’s something that’s very real and we liked that element. We wanted some of the causality to be pointed back toward the Western world. That detail was very important to us.”

No identity

The interesting thing about “No Escape” is that it takes place in a country that isn’t identified. The brothers filmed “No Escape” in Thailand, which allowed for a Southeast Asian setting that is reminiscent of Cambodia.

“Initially we had written the city where the film took place as Cambodia, where there was the Khmer Rouge Uprising (from 1975-79),” John Dowdle said. “But after reading the script, people kept asking us, ‘Could this happen in Cambodia again? Is Khmer Rouge still around?’ Yes, Khmer Rouge is still around. The location of the story became so much a part of the conversation that we stepped back and said, ‘How do we focus the story more on family? How do we make it more allegorical?'”

By making the story more allegorical, the brothers were able to infuse ideas that harkened such horrifying historical events as the Fall of Saigon, the scene of American soldiers’ bodies being desecrated on the streets of Mogadishu (“That was actually me — the bloodied body being pulled behind the Jeep,” Drew Dowdle revealed) and the terrorist attack on the American Embassy in Benghazi.

The eerie coincidence is, the idea that chronicles the Benghazi-like slaughter was conceived long before the actual incident happened.

“When we first wrote this seven years ago, people said, could this really happen? Now nobody questions that,” John Dowdle said. “This is absolutely possible. This happens all over the place and it could take place in any number of countries.”

Film fans will notice a distinct difference in Wilson’s and Brosnan’s characterizations, in that Wilson, normally the funnyman, is playing a serious role, and Brosnan, the action-turned-drama star, gets the most laughs amid the chaos. The Dowdles like the approach, however, that real life has its share of funny and serious moments, and it shouldn’t matter who when representing real life in their films is delivering the lines.

“We like to joke that we cast Owen in Pierce’s role and Pierce in Owen’s role, but we like to make things feel more real by casting people in interesting and different ways,” John Dowdle said.

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Interview: ‘Shaun the Sheep’ filmmakers talk character’s movie debut

'Shaun the Sheep' (photo - Lionsgate)

By Tim Lammers

Thanks to the likes of the clay-animated “Wallace and Gromit” short films, the hit feature “Chicken Run” and the feature-length Oscar winner “Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit,” London-based  Aardman Animations has no doubt molded a stellar reputation over the years in the world of stop-motion.

And that reputation is sure to grow this Friday when the animation studio releases “Shaun the Sheep Movie,” a whimsical tale about a the shenanigans of a sheep named Shaun and his fellow flock members, a farmer named Farmer, and his sheep dog Bitzer. In the 85-minute adventure, Shaun and his cohorts spring into action when one of their “free days” in the country goes awry and Farmer inadvertently ends up in the big city, suffering from a bout of amnesia.

While the character is making his big screen debut, “Shaun the Sheep Movie” is hardly a grassroots effort by the film’s co-writers and co-directors, Richard Starzak and Mark Burton. A spin-off character from the 1995 “Wallace and Gromit” short film “A Close Shave,” “Shaun the Sheep” was cultivated as a TV series on the BBC in the U.K. in 2007. The duo knew it was only a matter of time before Shaun made the leap to the feature films, mainly because of the bond that developed between the characters as the series progressed.

“As we went on, the characters, including Farmer, who thinks he’s the boss but isn’t; Bitzer, who’s the middle man between the sheep and Farmer; and of course, Shaun, began to feel like a family. Farmer felt like the father; Bitzer, the older sibling; and Shaun the younger sibling,” Starzak said in a recent call from Los Angeles. “It felt like there a good emotional story there with those three, and we felt like we could make a good film.”

While American audiences might not be as familiar with “Shaun the Sheep” as viewers across the pond, Starzak said there are elements in the film that don’t need translation. Chief among the attributes of the characters that have attracted viewers across the board are the character’s eyes — the windows to the soul — which immediately engage viewers.

“Among the things we study at Aardman is acting, but also neurolinguistic programming,” Starzak said. “It tells us how our eyes to access parts of our brains, all move in the same way, so if you can get that worked out with the characters, the audience will know what they are thinking, even on a subconscious level.”

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Communicating through the eyes is a must, considering that the “Shaun the Sheep” movie (and TV show before it) has no dialogue. That’s not to say “Shaun the Sheep Movie” is silent: You’ll hear animal noises and some indiscernible mumbling by the human characters, and an occasional song will help forward the narrative.

“When we started to make the series, we decided to go with no dialogue — and that was for practical reasons,” Starzak said. “Adding dialogue to the animation just slows the process down a great deal.”

The eyes of characters like Shaun and the homeless dog, slip, are particularly effective in “Shaun the Sheep Movie” because not only do they reflect comedic moments in the movie, but act as mirrors that reflect the film’s more emotional moments. Ultimately, the range of emotions projected in “Shaun the Sheep Movie” gives the film much more depth than your average animated film.

“That’s what we want to do — make ’em laugh, make ’em cry — and with the story in this film, that plan worked out really well,” Starzak said. “In order to cry and laugh, you have to care about the characters, so that’s a good sign when you see that happening with audiences.”

The great thing is, Burton and Starzak have found that the film is resonating with audience members of all ages — and that’s a good thing considering the movie was not only made for young kids, but the kid in all of us.

“When we start out, it’s to make a film that makes us laugh. We don’t think of it as dumbing down to kids. Or maybe it is that we have a stupid sense of humor,” Burton said with a laugh. “Whatever it is, it seems like the audience are picking up on it.”

Amazingly, while Burton and Starzak have been with “Shaun the Sheep Movie’s” characters for three years, one frame at a time, they haven’t grown tired of their company. In fact, they still feel very much attached to likes of Shaun, Farmer, Blitzer and company.

“It gets to stage where you know what these characters are thinking in any situation. Part of them becomes quite real in your head. So if anybody is cruel to them, they’ve got me to answer to,” Starzak said with a laugh.

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Interview: Rebecca Ferguson talks ‘Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation’

Guess you could say after making a “Mission: Impossible” movie with Tom Cruise, it’s becomes second nature to spring into action in a moment’s notice, no matter how harrowing the scene is.

That’s at least the feeling I immediately sensed while chatting with Cruise’s fellow lead Rebecca Ferguson. During a recent call from Ferguson in Chicago to talk about “Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation,” the stunning Swedish actress was glancing out of her hotel window and gasped when she nearly witnessed a bad accident.

“Oh, my God. A man ran across the road and a car nearly hit him. I could have jumped down and saved his ass,” Ferguson quipped.

A veteran of European television and film, Ferguson’s U.S. film debut came in 2014’s “Hercules” opposite Dwayne Johnson, a fantasy adventure where the action star did most of the heavily lifting.

With “Rogue Nation,” she said, that all changes.

“When I did ‘Hercules’ I wasn’t a woman in action. For me, it was mostly about horses, sandals and a camel named ‘Bobby,’ which was lovely. But after the movie, I thought, ‘God, I’d love to kick some ass now,'” Ferguson said with a laugh. “When they started casting ‘Mission: Impossible,’ I thought, ‘That’ll never happen. It’s not an independent movie.’ But I guess my audition went well.”

In “Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation,” Ferguson plays Ilsa Faust, a mysterious woman with ties to a terrorist organization known as “The Syndicate” – a group that the CIA claims is a product of IMF agent Ethan Hunt’s (Cruise) imagination.

Photo: Paramount Pictures

After a deadly encounter with The Syndicate’s head (Sean Harris), Ethan confirms the group is indeed for real; but with the IMF division abolished thanks to a vindictive CIA honcho (Alec Baldwin), the rogue agent only has a small group of fellow IMF colleagues to count on to help expose the group. More importantly, though, Ethan is forced leap of faith and trust Ilsa, who for reasons unexplained helped him escape torture and certain death at the hands of her employer.

Opening in theaters and on IMAX screens Friday, “Rogue Nation” is directed by Christopher McQuarrie, and features the return Simon Pegg, Jeremy Renner and Ving Rhames as Ethan’s only IMF allies.

By now, it’s quite likely that movie fans have seen behind-the-scenes featurettes for “Rogue Nation” that illustrate how Cruise’s death-defying stunts in the film are definitely real. Ferguson, a 31-year-old native of Stockholm, Sweden, said knowing Cruise was doing his own stunt work helped motivate her to keep her stunt double seated on the sidelines.

“I think it’s really intoxicating seeing him do it and know that it’s possible,” Ferguson said. “But I’ll admit I was really scared knowing that on the first day of filming I would be shooting off the rooftop of the Vienna Opera House. Doing something like that was a big fear of mine, and I knew I could always say, ‘No,’ because I had this wonderful stunt double named Lucy who could jump in.”

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Having a month-and-a-half to prepare for the scene with Cruise, Ferguson eventually opted to do the scene for real because she realized if you’re doing an action-filled adventure film, you have to actually experience the adventure — especially when that adventure is with Cruise.

“I wanted to be going through it with him. I wanted to be on this adventure. That’s why you do a ‘Mission: Impossible’ film. Also I knew that I’d have my legs wrapped around Tom Cruise and going, ‘Woo-hoo!” Ferguson said, laughing.

While Ferguson has her legs wrapped around Cruise and is holding on for dear life in one scene, she proves in many other scenes in the film that she can more than handle herself against the bad guys as she puts on a spectacular array of crippling martial arts moves.

Amazingly, Ferguson said, she didn’t know a thing about physical combat before she started work on the film.

“When I got the part, we flew over to London and a car picked me up, and we went straight to the gym,” Ferguson said. “They showed me the schedule, which was basically six hours of training a day, six days a week. We did Pilates, stunt training, choreography and sprinting, because Tom Cruise likes to run. I had no idea of the amount of training that goes into what people eventually see on screen. But now, I miss it. After shooting the scenes, I’d say, ‘Let’s do it again!’ It’s such a high that kicks in when you’re doing it. It’s like an incredible dance routine, and you get better and better the more you do it.”

While “Rogue Nation” was stocked with more than enough action and adventure scenes to give Ferguson her an adrenaline high, she said the experience of working on the film wouldn’t have been complete without the smart story that action and adventure is rooted in.

“That’s the reason I’ve loved all of the ‘Mission: Impossible’ films from the start,” Ferguson enthused. “I love the highly intelligent stories. I love the twists, turns, stories and the characters. I love it when the filmmakers get together and make this incredible puzzle. They make the impossible possible.”

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Interview: David Dastmalchian talks ‘Ant-Man,’ Marvel, DC

David Dastmalchian is one of those rare performers in the film business who can stake claim to something not many of his acting counterparts can: Not only has he been a part of both the Marvel and DC movie universes, he’s effectively been preparing all his life to help bring their stories to life as a lifelong comic book fan.

“As an actor, you try to absorb and feel the tone of the material as best you can, and I’ve always found that always comes from the director and the material itself,” Dastmalchian told me in a call this week from Los Angeles. “So I think knowledge of comic book mythology and the history of it has been helpful to me as an actor. Also, the directors of these films that I’ve worked on have had very strong visions, and have been very good about communicating and setting up the tone.”

Dastmalchian’s first big-screen gig, of course, came in a small but haunting role as Joker thug Thomas Schiff in Christopher Nolan’s 2008 DC blockbuster “The Dark Knight Rises.” On Friday, though, he’s on the side of the good guys helping Paul Rudd save the world in Peyton Reed’s “Ant-Man,” the latest installment in the expansive Marvel Universe that’s led to the assemblage of the Avengers.

Dastmalchian stars in “Ant-Man” as Kurt, a Russian computer hacker sporting an Elvis Presley-inspired pompadour who, along with Luis (Michael Pena) and Dave (T.I. Harris), joins forces with Scott Lang (Paul Rudd). Scott is an ex-con who has to resort to what he thinks will be a big score when his past as a burglar limits his options outside prison walls.

As it turns out, the score was actually set up by the mark, legendary scientist Hank Pym (Michael Douglas), as a test to see if Scott would steal a specially designed suit that decreases his size down to that of ant, yet greatly increases his strength and makes him as resilient as a bullet. Dubbed “Ant-Man,” Scott and The Crew need to devise a heist — along with Hank and his estranged daughter, Hope van Dyne (Evangeline Lilly) — to break into the corporation he’s no longer in control of to steal a similar suit dubbed “Yellow Jacket.” Ant-Man must break into an ultra-secure facility and steal the suit, designed by Hank’s protégé, Darren Cross (Corey Stoll), before the technology falls into the hands of the wrong people and puts the world in peril.

The irony for Dastmalchian in “Ant-Man” is that unlike his role in “The Dark Knight,” Kurt is not dark and twisted. It’s probably a good thing, since Dastmalchian has long been split on which comic book company has traditionally provided the best heroes and villains; and in the case of “Ant-Man,” he happens to be on the right side.

“My favorite villains were always the DC ones — I’ve said that to everybody, including Stan Lee,” Dastmalchian said. “But interestingly, my favorite superheroes were always on the Marvel side. The DC villains embody darkness — including the film that I got to be a part of — perfectly. On the other side, here in the Marvel world, Peyton has brought to life is a vibrancy and brightness in a very high-stakes adventure, which happens just the right amount of humor and irreverence. I feel like I’ve gotten the best of both worlds. In the Marvel movie I worked on, I got to be somebody playing for the hero, and in the DC one, I got to be on the side of the villain. It’s a dream.”

Dastmalchian’s involvement in “Ant-Man” has been interesting, since there was a period of time when he didn’t know if he’d be in the film despite being cast in January of 2014. The actor, who’s made indelible impressions in recent years with frightening roles on both film and television, said he was originally cast in “Ant-Man” by writer-director Edgar Wright, yet didn’t know where he stood when the filmmaker left the project and was replaced by Reed.

David Dastmalchian, Paul Rudd and TI in 'Ant-Man' (photo: Disney/Marvel)

“My concern was that they were going to let go of me,” Dastmalchian said. “Of course, Paul was on-board, as well as Michael Douglas, and Evangline Lilly, because they’re movie stars. But when you’re an actor like me, there’s very few assurances when a situation like that comes up. When I tested during auditions, I want to say in the original script the crew had eight or nine guys, and they cast all of us.”

The uncertainty came on the heels of what Dastmalchian called a “crazy, awesome time” time for he and his wife, Eve. The couple’s son, Arlo, was born, and the actor/screenwriter’s deeply personal addiction drama, “Animals,” won a Special Jury Award at SXSW. Suddenly, Ant-Man’s Crew began undergoing some changes and Dastmalchian became a bit nervous.

“Originally, I was just going to sit around a month before ‘Ant-Man’ got started, but then I started to see that actors were leaving or being let go from the film — and they were all the guys from ‘The Crew,'” Dastmalchian recalled. “The script was being changed and I knew the crew dynamic was changing, as well as the number of people in it. But ultimately, I was very, very lucky that they kept me and Pena, and then T.I. came on board later, so we ended up with three of us.”

Once Reed started on the project, not only was Dastmalchian thrilled to discover that his new director had the same tastes as when it came to the Marvel Universe, but the sorts of filmmaking sensibilities to properly execute it.

“Peyton was made to make this movie. He’s as big if not bigger a comic book geek than I am, he loves the obscure characters like ‘Ant-Man.’ It’s a character he’s read and been devoted to for a very long time,” said Dastmalchian. “Plus, he has this real flair for bringing a good story to life, while utilizing action and comedic elements. So, as difficult as the starts and stops of the film process was, it ultimately all happened the way it was meant to be.”

One particular thing that Dastmalchian said he loved about working in the Marvel Universe was the involvement of talent on many different levels.

“Marvel is proof positive that the formula that massive kinds of collaboration can lead to effective filmmaking and really great story-telling because this is an all-hands-on-deck kind of process that the company has,” Dastmalchian observed. “The producers who have developed this sprawling cinematic universe have input on the film because they’re connecting the threads to the comic books that Stan Lee oversaw. He oversaw all of the different comic characters, even the ones he wasn’t writing or producing month to month.”

Once Dastmalchian settled into the role and was on-set, he got to experience things only a comic book-lover could dream of: hanging out with Lee, the Marvel icon and “Ant-Man’s” co-creator.

“Me, Rudd and one of our producers, Brad Winderbaum, would hang out in Stan’s trailer and just talk,” Dastmalchian marveled. “It was about 1987 when ‘Avengers’ No. 240 became the first comic book I ever bought. It was a from a spinning rack at a 7 Eleven in Kansas City, Kansas, and ultimately I’ve kept every comic book I’ve ever collected, including that one. It’s all tattered now, but I brought it to work and Stan signed it, ‘To my good friend Arlo,’ who is my son. I almost cried.”

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Another legend Dastmalchian got to encounter, of course, was Douglas, who shares some screen time with The Crew. And while Dastmalchian is a professional who’s shared the screen with some pretty impressive talent, there was something about being on-set with Douglas that made his stomach gurgle.

“We only have a couple scenes together, which are very funny, but I am the least comfortable doing comedy,” Dastmalchian said. “I’m more comfortable with doing dramatic stuff, especially with the likes of Michael Douglas or Paul Rudd, for goodness sakes. It was very nerve-wracking, but Michael and I immediately hit it off. He’s a wonderful guy and the nerves went away pretty quickly. We talked a lot about Karl Malden (Douglas’ co-star on the classic TV drama ‘Streets of San Francisco’), who was a huge mentor to him, and to me, one of my all-time favorite actors. He’s right up there with the kind of actors I aspire to become. He had a reputation for propelling scenes and his scene partners.  It was amazing to talk about Karl’s legacy and Michael’s amazing history.”

The bonus for Dastmalchian in “Ant-Man,” though, is that amid all the laughter, cool special effects and engaging action, tucked within is a poignant storyline about family. In two completely different circumstances, Hank and Scott are trying to reconnect with their daughters: Hope, fully-grown and angry at Hank over her childhood; and young Cassie (Abby Ryder Fortson), holding out hope for Scott in the hope that he can go the straight and narrow so he can be a good dad to her.

“The thing I love about ‘Ant-Man’ is there’s a theme that runs throughout the whole movie, that even families that have been frayed, or have been through the ringer or have really been tested — ultimately love can win out,” Dastmalchian said. “That’s something that’s really special about ‘Ant-Man’ that I don’t think I’ve seen in other big superhero movies really be as intimate.”

While the fun of his experience of “Ant-Man” will soon end, you get the feeling that the warmth he got from the family angle of the film will always remain with him. After all, he’s living it every single day of his life.

“I don’t know how to properly put it. When you go home at night after being in a film like ‘Ant-Man,’ you can say, ‘It was incredibly satisfying,’ but then you’re just another guy walking down the sidewalk,” Dastmalchian said. “But then you see your wife holding your kid at the end of the block and get to go and be with the people you love. If you have someone that you can love and share the experience with, it’s all that matters, man. It really is.”

Dastmalchian will have many more film experiences to share — and very soon. He just finished filming the James Gunn-penned horror-thriller “The Belko Experiment,” and is prepping “All Creatures Here Below,” another film drama he wrote and will star in. Also coming out soon is the drama “Chronic,” in which Dastmalchian stars opposite Tim Roth.

Dastmalchian’s SXSW award-winning “Animals,” meanwhile, is streaming now and coming out on DVD Aug. 25.