 |
เป็นค่ะ ต้องแวะเข้ามาที่นี่ถึงจะนอนหลับฝันดี
คุณกิฟแหมพูดยังกะว่าที่นี้เป็นฐานทัพลับของ SHIELD อิๆๆ ^^
คุณมินนี่เราไปอ่าน fic คุณแล้วมัน กร้ากกแตกยิ่งกว่าเดิม แล้วมาพลิกอารมณ์ 360 องศาตอนใกล้จบ Thor มีปัญญาคิดลึกซึ้งขนาดนั้นด้วย
แต่ก็ขำจริงๆ เรากับคุณหวานมองหน้ากัน งงว่าที่เบาะหน้าก็มี ทำไม Loki นั่งหลังกระบะ หรือเกิดมาไม่เคยนั่งรถยนต์ เลยนึกว่าท้ายกระบะเป็นแบบที่นั่งเทียมรถม้าศึก ประมาณ Ben Hur ไรงี้
เดี๋ยวมาอ่านต่อนะค่ะ
เอาสัมภาษณ์พี่เบนมาให้ค่ะ จาก http://cumberqueen.tumblr.com/post/22578562275/benedict-cumberbatch-the-uncensored-sherlock
กริ๊ดดพี่เบน ไม่แคร์เรื่อง Elementry แล้วอยากจิบน้ำชากับ RDJ!!!
Benedict Cumberbatch: The uncensored Sherlock interview
PBS held a contest for the fans of Sherlock the modern update on Sir Arthur Conan Doyles eccentric detective to attend a screening and Q&A with star Benedict Cumberbatch and creator Steven Moffat in honor of the series second season, premiering tonight. A whopping 10,000 people entered to win tickets to the event at the 400-seat Florence Gould Hall Theater in Midtown. By all accounts, it sounded like every single one of the hopefuls were in attendance when Cumberbatch entered the room to exuberant screams and applause.
But the smart, self-deprecating actor I met before fans were seated belies the rock star reception he received on stage. The 35-year-old Brit with a wry sense of humor was candid about how hes managing to stay grounded as his profile rises. He was careful and thoughtful as we discussed his commanding performance as the worlds most famous detective. Most of all, he was gracious counting his blessings for the opportunities he has been given and thanking, many times over, those fans so enthusiastic to make him a star.
- Have you seen the fans outside? Ive heard some have come as far as South Korea and that some have been standing in line for 10 hours for tonights event.
No, I havent. I want to go and see them at some point. And if I can, I will, because its all about them and bringing a wide audience to something if they are outside, they probably already watched [Season 1] and really enjoyed it, and I want to be here to promote the series and make them feel included in something bigger, because it was such an event in the U.K. this year. Eleven million [viewers] for most I think for all the episodes. It became a national obsession for a month. The week after [the finale aired in the U.K.] people were still trying to figure out what the hell happened at the end of Episode 3 and how it happened. So, its just great. Its nice to be in a watercooler moment, and Id love for America to experience a bit of that as well.
- Youre definitely having a moment yourself, having starred in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and War Horse last year and now filming The Hobbit and the next Star Trek movie though Ive heard you cant say much about the last two.
I cant say s about them, other than theyre both amazing fun to do. Im just finishing Star Trek Ive got one more day on in San Francisco in two days time. Its been amazing. Its just been amazing. Just had the best time. [It has been confirmed that he will play villain Khan in the second Star Trek movie.]
And The Hobbit was wonderful and might be ongoing, but Ive just done my first bit on it. Its brilliant. Its really fun. But I cant unfortunately say [anything more].
I think thats enough to get people excited. Of course, people are very excited about Sherlock Holmes right now from your series to the films starring Robert Downey Jr. to the new TV series coming to CBS called Elementary, starring your one-time co-star, Jonny Lee Miller. Theres room for all of us. Its like Hamlet there can be more than one going on in the world at any one time. Its a classic role. I think all of us on that list are fortunate enough to have a varied enough career so that were not all just being defined by that one role. So bring it. Bring it. [Laughs.] Just bring it.
It will be fun to see what Jonny does with it, and I love what Downey Jr. does with it. I think hes reinvented it for a younger generation in the cinema and created a fantastic sort of action-thriller franchise out of the original stories in a way very true to the original, even as theyre updating it. There are kind of polarities but I genuinely really enjoyed I havent seen the second one, actually, I was very busy when it came out, but Im dying to. Im friends with Jared Harris, weve worked together, and he played Moriarty [in the Sherlock films], so theres a lot of cross-fertilization going on Jude [Law, who also starred in the Sherlock films] is best friends with Johnny, and all that crap. So were all fine.
I want it as an excuse to just knock on Downey Jr.s door because Im staying quite near his office in Venice [California, while Cumberbatch is filming Star Trek] and I just want to knock on the door and go, I think we should have a cup of tea. We should maybe have a cup of tea and talk about this. Its quite an odd moment in pop culture. Actually, its an excuse to talk to you, really, on my part, because Im a huge fan. Hello! [Laughs.] Just do that.
- Any thoughts on why Sherlock is capturing imaginations at this particular time?
Not really, no. I mean, maybe its got something to do with the estate or something, I genuinely dont know. They do sort of come in threes, dont they? It is the way. But there are eras in theater where it just becomes about Hamlet, then it will become about Richard III, you know, or Richard II. Its just one of those cultural zeitgeist.
I hate to blow our own trumpet, but we did actually start it. We did the pilot waaay before they wanted to do the film. And in fact, its rumored that the Weinsteins and other people that had to do with Warner had already heard about the property, the idea that we were doing a modern adaptation of it, and thought, Ah, we havent had Sherlock Holmes in a long time as a movie franchise, and it popped up. You know, we were a bit sour about it at the beginning, we were kind of, Oh. Really. REALLY? Were just getting off the ground with this idea. And then we saw it and went Aw, its great. We can both exist at the same time.
And, obviously, millions of viewers every episode has proven that. Yeah, were doing all right. Theres nothing to complain about.
- So are you prepared to be a breakout star here? Um. Uhhh
yeah. [Laughs.]
Its weird. I really have enjoyed, over the last few days, the anonymity Ive got in this city. I think a lot of people do. Theres this famous story about Marilyn Monroe just walking with a friend down Fifth [Avenue] and no ones stopping and her friend going, Why isnt anyone recognizing you? And [Marilyn says], Oh, Im just not turning it on. And then she just threw her head back a bit, popped her chest out [makes the same motion], threw her bum back a bit and just did the walk.
And everyone just [makes a crash sound] traffic stops. Marilyn! You know, the whole thing came to a halt. Not saying that I can do that. [Laughs.] I cant stop traffic on Fifth Avenue, not unless I walk in front of an oncoming cab.
No, I think Im definitely ready for it. Ive been doing this for 10 years. Im just very excited about the opportunities that that level, a bigger audience, gives you.Thats all it is, really. Its another source of work and another level of work. Its not people look at being in big films as sort of the zenith of it, and its not, its really not. For me, every single job is a new beginning, a new starting point where you can learn again and begin again. Its never, Ive made it. I mean, Ive had the most extraordinary year, dont get me wrong. I count my blessings every day its been wonderful. But I try to treat each job as a job, no matter what scale it is. And I think otherwise, it can get quite overwhelming if you start really believing in your own press, good or bad, and you could go a little bit insane. As long as youve got those around you who are traveling with you spiritually or physically, whether its your other half or your friends and family, youve just got that base thats making sure youre checking in with who you are and that they know youre all right. Then yeah its just a great adventure.
- As your profile rises, which is more fearsome: The British tabloids, the American press or Definitely. British.
Or
Definitely. No, come on, it was so bad. No, Im sorry, what were you going to say?
- I was going to give you a third option: The Tolkien and Star Trek fans.
I dont know its interesting. The New York Times thing I did, James McAvoy had a quote in it, and he said, Oh, Benedict doesnt need to fear the media or his fans or his new profile, he just needs to fear actors who will be looking at him with envy and want to cut his legs off. Maybe thats the case, but most of my friends who are actors are just really, really thrilled with what Ive got. Its kind of humbling, actually, just to be that supported by people. People say, Its really nice its happened to somebody weve watched be good over the years. And at least, you know, Ive started at the same level with everybody. And its nice because Im not as good-looking as James and theres an awful lot I cant do that they can do. And its great that just by craft you can get where Ive gone. Thats really thrilling. Im very grateful for the opportunities that Ive been given.
And I think, going back to what I fear most, I kind of watched [other actors] go through [a rise in fame] and its
there are just ways to engage with it and not engage with it. I think thats the trick; I think choosing your fights or your battles, as is always the case whether its your day at work or parenting or being in the public, I think you just have to be very careful.
Its come at a time as well when Im very fortunate: Im working at a time of mass unemployment and economic contraction, I want to say depression, not depression.
- Recession?
Yes, recession, thank you. Not quite that bad yet, I hope, God, it wont get that bad. Very grateful for that. Yeah, so Im grateful for a time where theres very sparse work that Im employed. And there always is in our profession as well, which I guess is James point 90 odd percent of us if not more are unemployed. [The acting pool is] a massive, massive population, and eight percent of us are working at any given time.
What was the other thing I was really happy about? [Laughs.] You were talking about the fears, werent you? And I was talking about
Oh, yes, so yes, so to be in the public glare. To be the focus of media and also the sty, schlocky media in Britain at a time when that is really coming under the microscope, when the inquiry has thrown a good media focus on the bad media focus and bad practices. I just think its great that someone is morally, finally, making a judgment on everything thats happened with Murdoch and the Sun and all. But its not going to stop that from happening again in some other form, Im sure of it. Journalisms always been intrusive. And I think people have always wanted more of people in the public eye when theyre performers than they get with their characters, and you can understand why the obsession, the appetite builds.
I read profile pieces or I used to, before now. [Pretending to read a tabloid.] Oh, I learned something about that actor, oh he sounds a bit pompous, he sounds a bit petty, he sounds funny, he sounds lovely, she sounds great, shes gorgeous, shes not so pretty, shes not who I thought she was. Awful, judgmental s which, now that Im going through it, I wish I could eat it all back.
But you know, my dear ex-girlfriend Olivia, were both very good friends still, but I used to berate her for reading Hello and Heat and all those rags, Grazie. I mean, I know why girls read them, of course they fing do. Shes a smart one, and she knew to look at it and go, This is nonsense. But it was entertaining, you know, hairdressing reading. I quite get why in the handbags of smart, as well as kind of pop culturally hungry girls, theyre great entertainment. But they can be really damaging because people do take them too seriously.
And it also then starts to affect peoples behavior so that this thing of image even with men now. The pressure is always more on for girls in every sense. You have a really rough ride of it in every single sense you have a rough ride of it. Seriously, like, actors cant complain compared to actresses its horrific. I mean, in Hollywood as well, the sanest, smartest people I know are beholden to the body image, to the fing aging shit. Of course were visual vessels to portray characters and tell stories, so of course people are going to want to see their better reflection or someone whos dazzling or stunning or attractive. But its great when people like Charlize Theron can have an ugly moment. Then when people say, it was just unbeautifying her thats why she got the Oscar, I just want to get up and punch them. Not only was it an incredible performance in Monster and a really unattractive character in Young Adult, where she was extraordinary, but shes proven that actresses can have more than a shelf life, that they can have careers dependent on where they are and who they are at any given time in their life, not trying to maintain the idealized youth thing.
Not that I came in here expecting a huge ego, but youre super grounded at a time in your career when a lot of people would take advantage of such a heightening profile. Good, thank you. [Laughs.] Good. Good. Well, if you see me again in a years time, let me know if thats changed, cause thats good to know.
- Well in a years time, Season 3 of Sherlock should be off the ground. In the meantime, we have these three episodes of Season 2 that each play like their own 90-minute movie.
Well, thats what we say when people say, Oh God, we want more. And thats obviously a great thing, thats a sign that theres an appetite for something that they really like. But theres also the complaint of not having more volume or capacity. HBO wanted [to air Sherlock], but was like, Three [episodes]? Come on we do series. Although now theyre kicking themselves [for not picking up the show], but there you go. But the thing is, we do one-and-a- half hour films, and if you really want to be pedantic, thats nine half-hour episodes, so its not far off from a 12-episode series. But anyway. I think its much better [to air three movie episodes] because as a viewer, I can, you know, the ones I obsess over, like Mad Men and then all the box sets and things, I catch up with and watch on demand. I could never I dont know anyone who can program their life around TV shows.
- I dont know if many people do anymore. I mean once upon a time
Yeah, well, maybe a TV date with the family on a Sunday night. Thats why Ive always enjoyed doing anything shown on Sunday, because thats when I would always sit down with my mum and dad and watch something that was a little bit risky or something that would have a continuing thing every weekend. But that was when you were a kid. Its always slightly different being an adult, much more thrown up in the vagaries of social lives and work. And I think whats great about this is it always creates a watercooler moment so people can have that. I mean, what I was saying about the fans, bringing them into something thats slightly a bigger picture than the cult theyve created by word of mouth, God bless them here. The amazing but very focused group of people that are involved in enjoying Sherlock here, it should expand, because thats what happened in England and it just created this extraordinary three or four weeks [when Sherlock aired in the U.K. in January] really, really extraordinary. It was the new year and there were taxes to be paid and terrible weather to deal with and sort of the comedown from Christmas, so its always a good time for anything good on telly then. But I mean people really went fing berzerk for this here, which is just fantastic.
Fantastic.
- I was in a press conference for Sherlock when you were promoting the show back in January, and I remember
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
God, I think I was wearing the same jacket, I just realized that.
Was I wearing the same jacket?
Its a very nice jacket. Yeah, stuff it. Its a nice jacket.
- But during that Q&A, which happened around the same time the first episode of Season 2 aired in England, there was so much talk about one particular risque scene. And I was pleasantly surprised that even beyond that, the show had just sparked so much conversation over there. Do you think the same thing will happen here?
Yeah, Im sure it will. Well, that will probably happen. [Laughs.] Im sure there will be conversation over the controversy. But the thing is, if it is getting that much focus, it would be wonderful. I mean Im so aware of the fact that were going out on the same night as Game of Thrones and Mad Men, The Killing I mean the hugest, best that America has to offer. And very nice, very brilliant people have said, Well, what you do with Sherlock, we just, we dont do that here. We dont have TV like that here. Yes, you fng do. You really do, and you have it in large volumes. Its nice to be on the TV at the same time as all those programs, but you just hope people will seek it out amongst all of that.
Of course, those channels and cable networks, they can afford posters on every freeway in L.A. Its such a presence. Its been fascinating living there for the past three months seeing the presence that a product has in the market before its actually out, you know. In a way its a bad thing because Ive come across posters and go, Oh thats going to be outrageous! because its been there for two months before the air date. And then you kind of get blase about it like, [muttering] Oh, Game of Thrones again. Oh f, Ive missed the first episode!
So it works both ways, I suppose. You can get blase with too much exposure, but its just Im so aware of the quality and sort of incredible, whats the word
I guess saturation of the market. So I hope we float up and people [find Sherlock], because those who did last year have become obsessed with it in a really healthy unhealthy way. [Laughs.] And its sweet and its great.
And this [guerrilla marketing] thing thats happened all across Europe where [Sherlock Season 2 has already been] shown, its like, We believe in Sherlock. We believe in the real Sherlock. And these silhouettes of him on stickers that people have put across the walls and then on the metro if you look, theyre apparently here, too. Somebody the other day from CBS, I think, was wearing a pendant with it on, and I was like, What the? Whats this? I believe in Sherlock. I mean, its crazy.
And thats why I cant quite get scared as far as fans believing you are as potent or capable as your hero. I think theyve heard enough of me now in interviews and stuff to realize Im ever so slightly different in good ways, some ways, but a lot of ways just nowhere near as capable [as Sherlock]. Its just, its wonderful.
I had this moment in Venice when we all got up at the end of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy I say we, it was almost all of the cast it was a wonderful group. And we all got up and were bowing and it felt a little bit like bowing in character because the films such a complete arc for all of us, do you know what I mean?
It was very, whats the word. It was just well proportioned as a film. You got a flavor of everyones kind of angst or journey in their character arc in that story. It wasnt just like, Oh, theyre applauding us, theyre applauding the film, obviously. But all of us standing in line like that felt like taking a bow at the end of the theater and shaking off, watching myself in my character and sort of going back a little bit to what I felt when I was doing it.
Oh its just wonderful. It was wonderful. I feel a little bit like that with Sherlock, without associating myself with him too strongly. Because of how fond I am of playing him and what weve done with him, what Ive done with him, and how the audience responds, its such an affirmation of that. You feel great. Its good.
จากคุณ |
:
kwanie
|
เขียนเมื่อ |
:
8 พ.ค. 55 00:51:15
|
|
|
|
 |