Category Archives: Interviews

Interview: Christoph Waltz talks ‘Horrible Bosses 2’

Even though he’s been funny in films before — having drawn laughs while in absurd situations in the Quentin Tarantino gems “Inglorious Basterds” and “Django Unchained” — acclaimed Austrian actor Christopher Waltz has never really had the opportunity to be in an American comedy, so he was thrilled with the offer to act in “Horrible Bosses 2.”

Still, the two-time Oscar-winning actor humbly admitted to me in a recent interview, when it came to deciding whether he wanted to star opposite Jason Bateman, Jason Sudeikis and Charlie Day, he knew he wasn’t asked to do the sequel to the 2011 comedy blockbuster to make people laugh, necessarily, but to bring more of a serious presence to help set up some very funny situations.

Christoph Waltz in 'Horrible Bosses 2' (photo: Warner Bros.).
Christoph Waltz in ‘Horrible Bosses 2’ (photo: Warner Bros.).

“They wanted me for a reason, and that reason wasn’t to be the fourth funny guy, which I couldn’t have done,” Waltz said. “Had they asked me to be the fourth funny guy, I would have had to decline, regretfully, because I couldn’t do that. Maybe in a different situation I could contribute comedy in some sort of way, but my contribution in this case was to be the straight guy, because a straight guy is necessary.”

“Horrible Bosses 2” reunites  Bateman, Sudeikis and Day as Nick, Kurt and Dale, three former tormented office subordinates who emerged from the shadows of their horrible bosses in the first movie to become their own bosses and form their own company.

Coming up with an invention that they’re sure will be a hit on the market, the trio catches the attention of Rex Hanson (Chris Pine) — the irresponsible son of business magnate Bert Hanson (Waltz) — who convinces his multimillionaire dad to invest in the start-up and distribute the product. But just as the product is produced, Bert cancels the deal with the newbie businessmen, leaving them $500,000 in debt with no legal recourse.

Desperate to avoid financial ruin, Nick, Kurt and Dale decide that the fastest way they can get their money back is to kidnap Rex and demand that Bert pay the ransom — a plan that Rex, as the trio finds out, wants to be a part of.

Opening with special screenings Tuesday night before its official wide release Wednesday, “Horrible Bosses 2” also features the return of Jamie Foxx as crime consultant Mother (expletive) Jones; Jennifer Aniston as Dale’s former sex-addicted boss, Julia; and Kevin Spacey as Nick’s now-imprisoned evil former boss, Dave.

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Although Bateman, Sudeikis and Day had already well-established their chemistry with the first “Horrible Bosses” movie, Waltz said he didn’t feel like an outsider trying to break into an exclusive club with the sequel. He said there was no room for feeling intimidated because the success of any film, much like a sequel, is never guaranteed, and all the actors were on equal ground, no matter how many times they’ve worked with each other before.

“They’re comedians, but they’re also actors, so they know what it feels like to come into a new situation,” Waltz said. “They were welcoming of me, but even if they had not been, and cooperative and helpful as they actually were, I still would have served my purpose on the film because of the way the characters are set up. It’s part of the job to orient yourself as quickly as possible and participate in what you’re asked to be a part of.”

Due to the conniving nature of his character, Waltz, who will next star in the Tim Burton drama “Big Eyes,” said he was asked by director and co-writer Sean Anders to treat his role as if he were acting in something different than a comedy.

“What I really liked about Sean is that he treated this movie like a thriller, too,” Waltz observed. “He was not saying, nothing else matters and it has to be a funny movie — not one bit. Everything was really, really thought out like it was a thriller. This guy is not only talented, he’s knowledgeable and polite. He planned his stuff and led the whole shoot like a real director.”

Sharing in the suspense with Waltz was Pine, his big-screen son. Although their characters don’t see eye-to-eye,  the two got along famously, Waltz said.

“He’s fabulous and so good-looking on top of it. That’s not fair, is it?” Waltz asked, laughing. “He’s the loveliest guy you could imagine. All of his qualities converged on film and added up to one great guy.”

Interview: Christopher Nolan talks new dimensions of ‘Interstellar’

While filmmaking is at its heart an art form, acclaimed writer-director Christopher Nolan has also always been on the forefront of embracing the science that powers the industry, especially the technical aspects of shooting his movies — still on film, mind you — and presenting them in the IMAX format.

And in the case of his latest epic, the sci-fi opus “Interstellar,” Nolan doesn’t only want audiences to board the rocket with Matthew McConaughey and company, he wants them to feel it.

“In the IMAX format, we aggressively mixed the sound in what we call the low-end. We want you to feel the seat shaking like you’re in a rocket. We want you to feel exhausted by the end of the film, but in a good way exhausted,” Nolan told me, laughing, in a phone call from New York Tuesday. “However, as much the film has to say in terms of its themes and ideas about humanity, it’s first a roller coaster ride. I want them to feel like they’ve been through an experience with these characters. It’s paramount to what we do.”

Opening on IMAX screens across the country Wednesday and everywhere Friday, “Interstellar” stars McConaughey as Cooper, a farmer in an unspecified time in Earth’s future where conditions reminiscent of the Dust Bowl era of the 1930s has eliminated much of the world’s food supply. Blight has eradicated wheat and farmers can only grow corn, and as Cooper finds out from the now secretly-funded NASA, his children’s generation will be the last to survive on the dying planet.

A former pilot and engineer whose aspirations were waylaid because of the planet’s deteriorating condition and shift in the government’s fiscal priorities, Cooper finally gets his chance to live his dreams and command a space module on a potential life-saving voyage that will secure Earth’s future. However, the mission comes with great sacrifice as Cooper, a widower, will be forced to leave his 10-year-old daughter, Murph (Mackenzie Foy), and teenage son, Tom (Timothee Chalamet), behind — possibly forever.

A film that explores such concepts as wormholes, black holes and the notion of love transcending the dimensions of space and time, “Interstellar” also stars Nolan’s frequent collaborator, Michael Caine, as Professor Brand — a theoretical physicist who formulates Cooper’s trek to new galaxies; Anne Hathaway as Brand’s daughter, Amelia, a doctor venturing with Cooper whose emotional vulnerabilities cloud the mission; and Jessica Chastain as the adult version of Murph, who has come to resent her father over feelings of abandonment.

Always one to ground his films in real life and present the details as accurately as possible, Nolan went to great lengths to quantify the scientific aspects of “Interstellar.”

Nolan is ready to admit that the scientific formulas will likely be hard to grasp for the average audience member, but that’s OK since he’s not as much concerned about people learning about what it takes to  travel through a wormhole as he is having them travel through one as part of the cinematic experience.

“There is a lot of science in this film, but it’s there for the people who are interested in it and want to dig a little deeper. I liken it, otherwise, to watching a James Bond film where he’s trying to diffuse a nuclear bomb. You don’t need to know how that works, you just need to know that if he doesn’t do it, it’s going to blow up,” Nolan said, laughing. “I like to think that the film has emotional clarity — narrative clarity — but it has to be a fun ride first and foremost.”

Much like the uncertainty that clouds the dusty Earth in “Interstellar,” Nolan said he faced a fair amount of unknowns creating the film. Driven by the idea of presenting images never seen on film before, Nolan said he feasts in a way on fear. Otherwise, no risk means no reward.

“Every film you want to have things in there that really frighten you, and there were plenty of those experiences I wanted to find out for myself in ‘Interstellar’ in terms of what things would look like and feel like (in the depths of outer space),” Nolan said. “I had a great team, from visual effects supervisor Paul Franklin and (special effects coordinator) Scott Fisher, to the great theoretical physicist Kip Thorne. Kip was able to work with the visual effects guys and give them the actual equations for how a wormhole would look, how a black hole would bend light around it. He explained it and they were able to render it more accurately than it’s ever been done before.”

Nolan said one of the great things he found out working with the likes of Thorne was that at times, he found out “truth is indeed stranger than fiction.”

“We were coming up with stuff in real science that was far more mind-blowing than anything I could think of as a writer,” Nolan said. “That gave me a lot of confidence in addressing these cosmic issues, because you’re dealing with hard facts and hard science, and ultimately getting imagery that you’ve never seen before.”

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While “Interstellar” is grounded in reality, the last thing Nolan wanted to do was alienate his audience by layering in contemporary, hot-button issues like climate change or global warming to set up the dying planet narrative. Instead, to avoid any sort of “movie message” storyline that would come off as preachy, he and his co-screenwriter brother, Jonah, rooted “Interstellar” in a setting akin to the Dust Bowl of the 1930s.

Simply put, Nolan said his responsibility as a filmmaker is to entertain his audiences, not push an agenda on them.

“We go to the movies to escape, and that’s why the film isn’t about global warming or addresses climate change,” Nolan explained. “‘Interstellar’ deals with an agricultural crisis of the type that has happened before, and that was to give the idea of the film credibility. I want people to feel afraid for the end of the world at the beginning of the film. I want them to feel like these guys really have to do something to save it.”

Nolan noted that if he were indeed trying to push something onto his audiences, he woefully fell short.

“Very specifically, Michael Caine’s character says, ‘We’re not meant to save the world. We’re meant to leave it.’ That certainly isn’t a very great environmental message,” Nolan said, laughing. “I hadn’t have done a good job if I was supposed to be wagging my finger.”

If anything, Nolan says he hopes “Interstellar” will make people think about humankind’s relationship with the planet and our place in the universe, and ultimately, what else is out there.

“Right now the film is about fiction, but I believe one day one day we are going to strike out to the wider universe in real life,” Nolan said. “I hope we do that out of choice rather than necessity. In a movie, it’s got to be out of necessity. You’ve got to understand that these guys have to do this right now. They have to go.”

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Interview: Daniel Radcliffe talks ‘Horns,’ ‘royal rumble’ with reporters

There’s a laugh-out-loud funny scene in Daniel Radcliffe’s new movie, “Horns,” where his horn-headed, murder suspect character — who develops the strong power of persuasion over nearly everybody he comes into contact with — tells a group reporters trailing him to beat the living daylights out of each other.

The reason? The last one standing gets an exclusive interview in the “big get” everyone is vying for.

Thankfully, this reporter didn’t have to fulfill the same requirements to talk with Radcliffe the actor about the film.

“I felt kind of bad talking to journalists about that scene beating where they beat each other up. They’ve been asking me, ‘Is that how you really feel about us?’ And the answer is ‘No, not all of you,'” Radcliffe told me, laughing, Thursday. “There’s a select few, if I could arrange some sort of royal rumble, I would, but you are not amongst them, I assure you.”

Daniel Radcliffe in 'Horns' (photo -- RADiUS-TWC)
Daniel Radcliffe in ‘Horns’ (photo — RADiUS-TWC)

Opening in limited release Friday and already playing on Video On Demand, “Horns” follows the strange happenings of Ig Perrish (Radcliffe), a seemingly harmless Washington man who’s the target of a vindictive community and sensationalistic reporters after his longtime girlfriend, Merrin (Juno Temple) is found brutally murdered.

Feeling that everyone is staring at him like he’s a devil, Ig ironically begins to sprout horns, which instead of evoking fear, brings out strange behavior in virtually everyone he encounters.

As if they’re under the devil’s spell, the town’s residents begin to confess their true and often times perverse thoughts to Ig, leading him on a puzzling path to search for the person responsible for the murder – including himself, perhaps in an altered state of mind and subsequent blackout.

Much in the way he’s approached all of his post-“Harry Potter” roles, Radcliffe says the choice to do the edgier material came from his desire to play an interesting character, and in no way was an attempt to distance himself from the famed, boy wizard character that he played in eight films.

“I think people are in the habit of thinking that anything I do is a statement on what I used to do, and it’s really not,” Radcliffe said. “I’ve always tried to make it clear when I can, that me doing other things isn’t a way for me to distance myself from ‘Potter.’ I’m very proud to be associated with those films.”

Radcliffe, 25, said he was reminded of how important it is to be proud of your past when he met a man who used to be in a punk band before he switched over to acting.

“I was a big punk fan and the time and I asked him about his career, but he wouldn’t talk about it,” Radcliffe recalled. “I found that very odd and sort of a shame. How sad would that be to not be associated with the thing that made you or brought you to prominence? In my case, ‘Potter’ was incredibly formative to me and a wonderful experience. I don’t want to forget that.”

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“Horns” is no question another great entry in Radcliffe’s quest to spread his creative wings. Directed by Alexandre Aja (“The Hills Have Eyes,” “Piranha 3D”), the film blends several genres, including horror, black comedy, drama, mystery and heartbreaking romance.

“That’s why I was wanted to do this film. Apart from it being a very cool story told in a really inventive, original, exciting way,” Radcliffe explained. “Plus, there was Alex, and I don’t use this word lightly, but he’s a genius. I think he’s the best all-around director I’ve ever worked with in terms of how he is visually and how he is with the actors.

“Also, he harnesses the creativity of the crew better than I’ve ever seen any other director do it,” Radcliffe added. “It became apparent early on, that he listens to the crew, and if they have a good idea, it’ll be in the movie. Alex is secure enough in creativity that he doesn’t view any suggestion as a slight on his talent, which I feel some directors do. So as soon as the crew realized that, it made everyone want to work twice as hard, including the actors.”

One crew that it got its workout with “Horns” was the make-up effects crew, that, apart from sealing the prosthetic horns on Radcliffe’s head, were tasked with creating a ghastly look for the actor in the movie’s climactic, final act.

Radcliffe said it’s the biggest prosthetic work he’s had done on a film after the final chapter in the “Harry Potter” series, where he donned “hex” makeup to give the appearance that his face was swelled up like he’d been stung.

That make-up job took three hours at a time, Radcliffe says, and thanks to advances in the craft, getting the makeup done for “Horns” went much faster than “The Deathly Hallows, Part 2.”

“It’s been about four or five years since the last time I had prosthetics done, so it was a lot easier. Plus, I definitely knew what to expect this time,” Radcliffe said. “Everything was practically done that you see at the end, the face, the eyes, everything.”

Undoubtedly, though, it’s the horns that are the coolest looking practical make-up effect Radcliffe sports, which begs the question: Who would win if he and Angelina Jolie’s Maleficent locked horns?

“We were just talking about that other day because Juno’s in both films,” Radcliffe said, laughing. “So, we came to the conclusion that she only does movies with people who wear horns now. I haven’t seen ‘Maleficent’ but I have seen Angelina Jolie with her horns and I wouldn’t want to trifle with her.”

-Tim Lammers

Follow Tim on Twitter or Direct Conversations on Facebook.

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Interview: Ken Page recalls playing ‘Nightmare Before Christmas’ villain Oogie Boogie

Jack Skellington and Oogie Boogie in 'The Nightmare Before Christmas' (Walt Disney Studios

Tim Burton’s classic stop motion animated film “The Nightmare Before Christmas,” of course, evokes fond memories for countless viewers and people involved in it around Halloween time, and the love is definitely not lost on Ken Page.

Page — an acclaimed stage performer who brought the film’s chief villain Oogie Boogie to life with his distinct voice and singing style — says he vibrantly remembers the first time he saw “The Nightmare Before Christmas” in its completed form, and his excitement didn’t solely stem from the fact that he voiced an integral character. You have to remember, unlike a live-action film, voice actors on an animated film, specifically a stop motion animated one, most of time aren’t around during the actual shooting of the film.

“After seeing the sets and bits and production, I couldn’t imagine at all what the end product would be until it was all done,” Page recalled for me in a phone call from St. Louis this week. “What really made it amazing was that it was stop motion, which I hadn’t seen in a long time. I was in awe of the process, all the way from seeing some of storyboards and the armatures, to the completed film.”

Produced by and based on an original tale by Burton, and directed by Henry Selick, “The Nightmare Before Christmas,” turned 21 on Oct. 29. To help celebrate the film’s legacy, Walt Disney Pictures is re-releasing the film in more than 200 theaters across the country this Halloween weekend.

Page, who at age 39 was an established stage vocalist at the time of “Nightmare’s” release, says composer Danny Elfman played a large part in helping him get cast in the film. Elfman, of course, sang the vocals of the film’s hero, Jack Skellington, while Chris Sarandon voiced the speaking part. Fortunately for Page, he and Elfman both had the same lawyer, and somehow, that mutual friendship opened the door for the man who would fatefully come to embody Oogie Boogie.

“At first, the filmmakers were looking for someone to just sing ‘Oogie Boogie’s Song,’ and they wanted something like a Cab Calloway-esque, Fats Waller-esque kind of vocalist. Somebody who could characterize the vocal,” Page recalled. “So my lawyer said to Danny Elfman, ‘I know the person for you – there’s nobody else that fits that description other than Ken Page. He’s done these things and embodied many critters.'”

Ken Page,  Oogie Boogie in "TIm Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas" (photo: Rainbow High Entertainment/Walt Disney Pictures).
Ken Page, the voice of Oogie Boogie in “The Nightmare Before Christmas” (photo: Rainbow High Entertainment/Walt Disney Pictures).

Page said that he didn’t expect that he’d be asked to do the dialogue for Oogie Boogie, too, but that all changed when Elfman and Selick asked him what his take was on the character. The response, which drew references to the man who played the Cowardly Lion in “The Wizard of Oz” and the woman who voiced one of the scariest characters in movie history, took the composer and filmmaker aback.

“I said, ‘My take on him would be somewhere between Bert Lahr and the voice of the demon in ‘The Exorcist,’ Mercedes McCambridge,'” Page said, laughing. “Danny and Henry kind of looked at me and went, ‘Wow — that’s wild.’ So, that was the take I gave them, and said, ‘If I go too far in either direction, you can stop me.’ So, along with the Cab Calloway and Fats Waller stuff for the singing, that’s how we came up with Oogie Boogie.”

Page says he still gets — and gives — the chills when singing “Oogie Boogie’s Song” at various Disney events, and is thrilled to see the reaction on fans’ faces – especially the younger ones.

“Disney has been wonderful to me over the years. I’ve done a lot of events at the park in California and at the El Capitan Theater around Halloween time before,” Page said. “When I see little kids, because they don’t often connect the person and the voice of a character they see on film, I’ll bend down and go, ‘Well, well, well. What have we here?’ When you see their faces light up, it’s worth a million bucks.”

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More than two decades after the film, Page says he still holds a special place in his heart for Burton, after getting an opportunity to be a part of the “Nightmare.” To be a part of a Burton’s world is a privilege to be savored, Page said.

“It isn’t often that anybody gets to construct a world of their own creations, and when you put all of those worlds together, it gives you quite a universe that has sprung from his mind,” Page said. “From ‘Nightmare Before Christmas’ to ‘Ed Wood’ to ‘Sleepy Hollow’ and on and on, they all have a distinctive feel and visual impact. His mind and his take on the world is unique, fascinating and amazingly creative.”

Needless to say, Page said if the opportunity to do another Burton film presents itself, he’ll sprint toward the opportunity. He said perhaps what he appreciated most was the familial aspect that came with being a part of “Nightmare,” a tale very familiar to other actors who have worked with the beloved filmmaker throughout the years.

Interview: Danny Elfman talks Tim Burton film music concerts, ‘Nightmare’ re-release

“I love working with people that you can connect with, and are not only there for your talent, but your humanity,” Page said, humbly. “That’s the best working environment you could ever imagine being in.”

In the meantime, Page is loving his time performing live, and there are no signs of the 60-year-old performer stopping anytime soon. Next up are a pair of shows in Texas at the Austin Cabaret Theatre Nov. 13 and 14.

In the end, Page chalks up everything he’s done — from “Nightmare” and “Dreamgirls” on film, to an upcoming cabaret performance, “The Heart of a Man, set for May 11 at the Birdland jazz club in New York City — to passion.

“Passion is what makes you do what you do,” Page concluded. “We can all be motivated by money and fame, and that’s great when it’s happening. But when you’re in the trenches and doing it, it’s the passion that drives you. You should never get into it for money, because the chances are you’re not going to make a lot of money. It’s about doing something that you love, which most people don’t get a chance to do, especially for a lifetime.”

-Tim Lammers

Follow Tim on Twitter or Direct Conversations on Facebook.

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