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‘Pride and Prejudice and Zombies’ – Lily James and Sam Riley Interview

Lily James and Sam Riley Pride and Prejudice and Zombies Interview
Lily James and Sam Riley at the 2015 San Diego Comic-Con (Photo by Eric Charbonneau / Invision for Screen Gems / AP Images)

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies is a reimagining of Jane Austen’s classic tale with, obviously, zombies, and on February 5, 2016 the Screen Gems/Sony Pictures Entertainment horror film will be hitting theaters. The book, credited to Austen and Seth Grahame-Smith, was adapted for the screen by Burr Steers who also directed the zombie period piece.

Lily James (Cinderella) and Sam Riley (Maleficent) lead the cast as Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy, respectively, and together at the 2015 San Diego Comic-Con they provided details on their characters and on how they attempted not to actually kill any ‘zombies’ while making the film.

This is such an unconventional movie. What attracted you to it?

Lily James: “Zombies.”

Sam Riley: “There it is. We had the same agent and when he rang to tell me, first of all he said Pride and Prejudice and then I was like, ‘Ugh.’ Then he said And Zombies and I had never heard of the book or anything. I thought he’d lost his mind. Then I read it from start to finish in one sitting which is very rare. Then I rang up and said I really desperately want to be in this.”

What kind of Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth Bennett are you?

Sam Riley: “The best.”

Lily James: “The best kind. I have to say, when I knew that Sam was going to go, I was like, ‘Yeah.’ I think the cool thing is that the central characters are really truthful to the book, but heightened because everything’s life and death. My Liz Bennett’s pretty angry.”

Sam Riley: “I don’t really know. I watched the BBC one because my mother’s a huge fan and I asked her who is Mr. Darcy and she says Colin. She was very quick. Colin, Colin, Colin. So I watched that, having never seen it, just so that I could have an understanding of what the perception of this great character is in most people’s minds so that I could then take that and add samurai swords.”

Lily, had you ever wanted to play the straight version of Elizabeth Bennett?

Sam Riley: “We kind of did, though at the same time, which sounds bizarre.”

Lily James: “I definitely feel like I’ve done that now, yeah. And our proposal scene, which is one of my favorite scenes in it, worked just as well without the fighting. And then suddenly you add in me cracking books at his head. All the inner rage inside Liz Bennett in that she’s sort of rebelling against society, about the way things are, about what women’s fate is within that world, all that inner conflict that exists in her growing up is channeled into killing zombies which is what I mean by that sort of rage is let out through the means of killing the undead.”

Did you enjoy wearing the wardrobe? An imperial A-frame as opposed to corsets?

Lily James: “We did wear corsets, but there’s different kinds of corsets. Corsets that pull you in the waist or push you up at the top. We had those. The upper deck is up and out.”

Lily James and Bella Heathcote Photo
Lily James and Bella Heathcote in Screen Gems’ PRIDE AND PREJUDICE AND ZOMBIES (Photo © 2015 CTMG, Inc)

How does the period piece put a twist on the popular zombie trope?

Sam Riley: “Well, I think the key to it was what Burr described as we’re playing Pride and Prejudice. I’m playing Mr. Darcy as Mr. Darcy, but at the same time instead of it being the black plague, there’s this plague of the undead and everybody’s trying to keep up appearances. This class system still exists. The snobbery is still rife, but then there’s this sub class of the undead. It always sounds ridiculous talking about it.”

What was the hardest challenge you faced?

Lily James: “I guess just for me it was trying to balance what I know and loved about the original Pride and Prejudice and keeping that still really alive in this new version. And so that sometimes felt really simple and sometimes it was quite a big conflict. Also the fighting was hard and you never have much time to learn it. The Bennett sisters trained together for months before and we got to become this sort of lethal version of the Spice Girls. Or the Powerpuff girls. I don’t really even know why. I just love them. So I’d be kicking one zombie as Bella was slicing its leg off. We worked in tandem and that was cool but that was hard.”

Sam Riley: “She’s lethal. I was black and blue after one of our scenes together.”

Lily James: “I sort of forget that you’re not supposed to actually hit people. He was like a samurai though. One time I threw this book at his head and he literally went, whoom. Like The Matrix.”

Why do love and war, even if it’s zombie war, go so nicely hand in hand.

Sam Riley: “Well, because we’re still animals, aren’t we really? And they’re basic desires, anger and love I suppose. It’s a very deep question.”

Lily James: “I always think with this, because so much is life and death, that sort of enhances love, makes you just go for it because why not?”

Have you discovered your inner fighter?

Sam Riley: “I woke him up again, but he’s asleep again now. Fighting, especially a real fight is always so messy and horrible if you ever see one outside of a bar or someplace. It’s not for me. Not the face!”

What was the craziest zombie herd scene?

Lily James: “I mean, I had a scene where I was riding on a horse up a hill in the middle of the night in some place in the country, and over the top of the hill, hundreds of zombies were running at me. Earlier on in the day, I had an incident where I’d stood on an extra’s head so I was really cautious. It was really bad so I was really cautious. As the horse is going, I was like, ‘Can you make sure that the zombies move out of the way?’ because they get really into character. I’m not joking, I was like, ‘Please, they have to give way to us.’ And they just didn’t. I was riding and I was screaming, ‘Jesus Christ, get out of the way!’ These extras were in a second of their life, were about to get trampled on by this horse.”

Sam Riley: “It’s so funny, if you tell them to walk in a straight direction, they will do it. And if cars are coming, they just keep walking in a straight line.”

Lily James: “It was one of the most frightening moments I’ve ever had on a set. I was horrible.”

What is it like being part of a film that’s this unique? What does it mean for the future of genre films?

Sam Riley: “Well, we’re really thrilled that we’ve been able to do this and I think zombie films already, like Shaun of the Dead, I think as long as people are interested in zombies they’ll find ways of sticking them in anything.”

Lily James: “And it’s also wonderful to have the women being so powerful and so strong. Girl power is very much present in this movie.”

More on Pride & Prejudice & Zombies: Bella Heathcote and Douglas Booth Interview




Ronald D. Moore Interview: ‘Outlander’ Season 2 and the Challenges of Adapting ‘Dragonfly in Amber’

Ronald D Moore Interview: Outlander Season 2
‘Outlander’ writer/executive producer Ronald D. Moore (Photo © 2014 Sony Pictures Television Inc. All Rights Reserved.)

The Outlander of season two will be dramatically different from the world introduced in season one. Adapted from Diana Gabaldon’s Dragonfly in Amber, the second season of the Starz series finds Jamie (Sam Heughan) and Claire (Caitriona Balfe) far from their Scottish family and friends. They’ve landed in France on a mission to infiltrate the Jacobite rebellion and stop the Battle of Culloden from ever taking place.

During roundtable interviews at the 2015 San Diego Comic Con, writer/executive producer Ronald D. Moore discussed the changes in store for this second season and the challenges of creating a second season that will satisfy both readers of Gabaldon’s bestselling book series as well as viewers who were introduced to the time-traveling romantic drama via the television series. Moore also talked about the new characters who will be introduced to the story in this upcoming season.

Ronald D. Moore Outlander Interview

With the timeline changes in book two, how difficult was it for you to adapt that and make sure that it played well to both fans of the books and those who only know Outlander via the TV series?

Ronald D. Moore: “It was a challenge. The second book is much more complex. It’s a more difficult book to adapt. It changes the point of view; it plays with time. It’s more political. It deals with the Jacobite rebellion that most people in this country never even heard of, so it’s a challenge. We’re always trying to play this to two audiences. There’s the book fans and then there’s the general audience that has no idea, and you have to play fair with both. The book fans are looking forward to certain things and you want to satisfy that. We also want to surprise them. You want to catch them off guard and sometimes you want to scare them. Like, ‘Oh my god, Frank’s going up that hill?! If he goes through time I’m out of this show!’ That’s great. I’m sitting at home with my wife going, ‘Across America people are losing their minds.’ That’s fantastic and I enjoy that.”

The fans of the books should also have discovery. They should also be surprised. You want to engage their emotions as well. But then there’s the other half of the audience that has no idea what the books are about and you want to tell them the story clearly. They have to be able to follow along. I always make the comparison with Game of Thrones in that I’ve never read those books and that show has to stand on its own. It has to work for me. I doesn’t matter whether that scene’s in the book or not. If I don’t get it, I’m not engaged in it. I have the job of trying to keep both elements of the audience involved.”

Who are some of the new characters we’ll be meeting this season and what are some of the new locations?

Ronald D. Moore: “There’s several actual historical figures that are in the books. For the first time we meet Louis XV. The Comte St. Germain is a real historical character who is one of the villains in the show. There is gentleman named Master Raymond who runs an apothecary shop in Paris and helps Claire. He’s got some interesting things going on in his world. There’s Mother Hildegarde, a nun who runs a hospital in Paris. She’s a key player in the show. She has a dog, Bouton, that the fans are happy is in the show. There’s a boy named Fergus who becomes very important, especially as the book series goes forward, and he’s introduced this year. Bonny Prince Charlie is in it this year – a real historical figure. Those are the key players, I think, in terms of new characters.”

We’re plunging them into a new world. There were no costumes, sets or props that we could use. We had to create a new series for the second season. For the audience, it’s just like, ‘Wow, this is Outlander?’ We don’t have any of those elements in it, other than the three characters who came over. Everyone else is left behind. It’s a whole new world and a whole new story, but then eventually it does get back to Scotland so we’ll regain a lot of that stuff from the first season.

That’s a big deal. The rhythm of the scenes is different; the way it’s shot is different. The fabrics are different and the color palettes are different. Even the most basic things like candles are different. There’s a lot of gilt and a lot of fine china and silver. It’s just a completely different world.”


Can you talk about Jamie and Claire’s mission in season two?

Ronald D. Moore: “They’re trying to change history and that’s a very big deal. The future is helping to inform them on how to find a way to stop the Jacobite rebellions and stop the disaster at Culloden. There’s not a lot of time traveler in the show like in season one, but it’s still such a key idea that it propels a lot of the action in terms of what they’re doing.”

Was it a conscious decision to downplay Jamie’s faith versus Claire’s Catholicism?

Ronald D. Moore: “No, it wasn’t a conscious decision. I think it was just a question of emphasis. We didn’t try to play it down. I guess it just didn’t quite play into the story as much as we could have. It wasn’t a strategic choice; it just evolved that way.”

It’s such a large book. Was it a challenge to make the key events fit into one season in three fewer episodes?

Ronald D. Moore: “Definitely. Another three [episodes] would have helped but it’s still more episodes than Starz typically shows so I’m fine with it. I knew going in there was going to be 13. Fortunately, it’s the thinnest of the books. [Laughing] It’s not like the next one. That book is a whole different animal.”

Was there talk of breaking the third book into two seasons?

Ronald D. Moore: “We talked about it but no decision’s been made. I haven’t focused on it yet. We haven’t gotten a third season pickup so I don’t have that problem yet. Eventually we’ll have to have that discussion. I don’t know what the answer is. Maybe, maybe not. We’ve always talked about generally doing a book a season, but there are books that are just big and complicated. But once you do that, ‘ Okay, are we ever going to get to book eight or nine?’ When you start thinking about how many years we’re talking about…I don’t know. I really don’t know the answer to that.”

Will the look of Scotland change when we finally return to it in season two?

Ronald D. Moore: “Well, it will be a war-torn Scotland so it will be a heavier, darker, more threatening vibe when the story gets back to Scotland. The Parisian part is much richer and much more romantic. It’s a different world and we play that so visually it’s shot differently. It has a different kind of move and feel to it.”

If Outlander receives any Emmy nominations, what will that mean to you and the show?

Ronald D. Moore: “What it means to me is I like being able to go back to Scotland and say, ‘You know what? Your work matters. Those people back at the TV academy recognized you.’ Those people in all the different departments and the cast, those people work really, really hard. They all work harder than I do – trust me. They’re out lugging cameras around in the dead of night in the goddamn snow. That’s tough, and so to be able to go back and say, ‘Here’s this recognition,’ I think it matters for the morale of the show. It matters for people to be acknowledged. If they don’t get it, okay, it’s fine. Battlestar was ignored year after year. We were still very proud of it and we’re still like, ‘Screw the world! We know we’re doing a great show.’ We felt that way and it was always really annoying to me that Edward James Olmos never got a nomination. He’s one of the greatest actors and I think he did fantastic work. I could not believe it year after year that he was ignored. So, those things are kind of frustrating.

I don’t think Terry [Dresbach] cares a lot one way or another, but I want them to recognize her work. She’s done a fabulous job. Same goes for the cast, the cinematographers, and on and on and on. I think all of these people do really good stuff and I think it would be nice to have it recognized.”

More on Outlander Season 2: Sam Heughan Interview / Caitriona Balfe Interview

Melissa Benoist Interview on ‘Supergirl,’ the Costume, and Action Scenes

Melissa Benoist Supergirl Interview
Melissa Benoist and Mehcad Brooks in ‘Supergirl’ (Photo © WBEI)

Melissa Benoist stars as Kara Zor-El/Supergirl in CBS’s upcoming superhero TV show Supergirl debuting this fall, and she’s well aware of the popularity of the character and didn’t take the task of embodying the character in the new series lightly. At the 2015 San Diego Comic-Con, Benoist even admitted it was a bit daunting to step into these particular shoes. During roundtable interviews at the Con, Benoist said she wanted to stay true to the source material while shouldering the responsibility of playing Supergirl.

“What I want to bring is I love her humanity, even though she is an alien. I love that she really has a lot of discovering to do – and growth – and she makes mistakes. I just wanted to stay true to that,” explained Benoist. She also immediately stepped up her workouts after landing the role in order to bring the right physicality to the part. “I definitely had to learn technique, like how to actually punch someone and not hurt yourself more than you’re hurting the person you’re punching. So, boxing was part of it and core work.”

In training for the role, Benoist found her mindset shifting into that of a superhero. “I can’t sit down and be like, ‘I’m done. I want some popcorn.’ I have to stay on top of the game.’”

Part of staying on top of the game was preparing to handle extensive wirework. “The wirework is really difficult but so fun when you get it right. Like, watching the results is exhilarating. It’s a really, really cool feeling to know what it felt like, the energy I had to exert to create those flying scenes, and then the way they look is really cool.”

And speaking of looking cool, Benoist was asked what it felt like to see herself in the actual costume. “There’s this internal feeling, something changes. It’s this transformation almost to the point where I don’t really recognize myself in it, you know? I feel like a different person,” explained Benoist. “I grew up as a dancer and it feels like the skirt and tights that I wore when I was a ballerina.”

Watch the full interview for more on Melissa Benoist and Supergirl:





Colin O’Donoghue, Jennifer Morrison Interview: ‘Once Upon a Time’ Season 5

Jennifer Morrison and Colin O'Donoghue Once Upon a Time Season 5 Interview
Jennifer Morrison and Colin O’Donoghue at the 2015 San Diego Comic Con (Photos by Richard Chavez / Showbiz Junkies)

Once Upon a Time‘s favorite onscreen couple Colin O’Donoghue (“Hook”) and Jennifer Morrison (“Emma Swan”) made the press room rounds at the San Diego Comic Con as a team, however O’Donoghue was a little late sitting down at our table because he was going to flip things up by interviewing Emilie de Ravin instead of being the interviewee. Fortunately, that gig didn’t last long as we had many questions to ask both Morrison and O’Donoghue about Once Upon a Time‘s fifth season.

As you’ll remember, the final episode of season four found Emma turning dark. Although fans (myself included) might have wanted a little happiness for Emma, season five doesn’t appeat to be set up that way. However, we can still hold out a little hope. “Who knows? Maybe the darkness will bring out some happiness,” joked Morrison.

When asked for some hints as to how their relationship will play out in season five, O’Donoghue said he found some info out during Comic Con which he was willing to whisper in his co-star’s ear.

“I mean, Hook was a villain for a long time. I think he might like her dark side,” said Morrison, not sharing whatever was whispered. “I think he wants to keep her heart good, but it’s not like it’s going to turn him off. She’s still her. I mean, Emma’s still in her; she’s just tethered to the darkness. So what’s talked about at the beginning of the season, just in terms of me structuring the character, is that there’s this constant tugging. [Tugging at her hands] That’s what it feels like. She feels violent because of being tethered to the darkness, and yet she’s trying constantly to overcome it. There’s this underlying push of this dark, angry, angsty energy that doesn’t go with what she’s saying and doing, so the energy doesn’t always match her actions.”


“Much the same way with Rumple when he was the Dark One,” added O’Donoghue.

Morrison agreed, adding, “You know, she loves Hook so truly and so intensely…”

“Yeah,” confirmed O’Donoghue, with a sexy smile.

“So passionately,” added Morrison with an equally irresistible smile.

“Yeah!,” interjected O’Donoghue.

“That when she is herself and her good version of herself, she can make good decisions amidst that passion and that intensity,” continued Morrison. “But now that she’s tethered to darkness, we’ll see her making different choices because she’s not necessarily going to be as selfless once she’s tethered to darkness.”

How will this new darkness affect Emma’s relationship with Henry? “I don’t know,” replied Morrison. “I don’t have a lot of details about what it means for her and Henry. I know that everything in her being is going to fight against anything that can hurt Henry. Even if she is tethered to the darkness, she’s still going to be determined to protect him and to make sure that he’s safe, even if that means keeping her away from him. But I don’t have details on how that plays out.”

As the seasons progress, the story has gotten even less black and white, with more shades of grey coloring each of the characters. “I think what Eddie [Kitnis] and Adam [Horowitz] are exploring is that no one is entirely good and no one is entirely bad. And that there are all sorts of things that happen in life that push us in a direction. There are tragedies, there are losses, and there’s pain in life that can push people to do terrible things,” said Morrison. “And then there are places in life where you can find hope and strength that you can overcome some of that stuff, so nothing is ever clear cut. There’s a lot of messiness in life and I think that that makes these characters and storytelling relatable, because that’s how life is. You know, no one wakes up in the morning and says, ‘I’m going to be a terrible person today,’ but something might happen that causes them to do something they regret or maybe isn’t the nicest thing, and then they try to redeem it. We all make mistakes and we all have things to overcome, and there’s reasons for that. There’s baggage in all of our lives. I think that they’re trying to show that through these characters who’ve been in Storybrooke for a very long time and trying to use them as a way to say we’re all the same. We all have things that we fail at and we all have things that we succeed at.”

Turning to O’Donoghue, Morrison asked if he had anything to add to that. Laughing, O’Donoghue replied, “That was pretty comprehensive. Yeah, bad people are bad and good people are good. And sometimes good people are bad and sometimes bad people are good on the show, and that’s kind of the way it is. No, it’s interesting because as a character who came in as a villain, then you realize that he was a good guy at one point and then he became a villain and became a bad guy, and then another good guy and then a bad guy again… It’s what Eddie and Adam do really, really well because it’s so complicated – and all the writers do it well – because it’s so complicated and so crazy to try to get your head around. But they manage to always make it work. It’s a very difficult thing, especially in the relationship that they have because Hook has been bad so he’s desperately trying to keep her heart from going into that darkness because he knows what is like. Now that she’s in that darkness, he’s going to try and bring it out of her but he still has a little bit of it. I mean, we saw it last season – he still has a little bit of darkness in him. So, does he give into it? Does he try and take her away from it?”

Once Upon a Time fans will have to wait until this fall to find out the answer.

Watch the Colin O’Donoghue and Jennifer Morrison interview:

‘Scream Queens’ – Lea Michele and Emma Roberts Interview

Lea Michele and Emma Roberts 'Scream Queens' Interview
Emma Roberts and Lea Michele star in ‘Scream Queens’ (Photos © 2015 Fox Broadcasting Co)

Lea Michele (Glee) and Emma Roberts (American Horror Story) say their Scream Queens co-star Jamie Lee Curtis is like the group’s den mother. Curtis brought them books and juices, and couldn’t have been more giving with her co-stars. “But more than that, just feeling like there’s such a supportive…she’s the main structure that keeps everything together,” said Michele. “She’s like our protector, and I really love that. I feel like being a part of a show that has someone who does that for us is unbelievable.”

Michele and Roberts were teamed up for the Fox Scream Queens press room at the 2015 San Diego Comic-Con where they discussed being a part of Ryan Murphy’s new horror series.

“I think we all just went into and I don’t think that we knew that people were going to solidly die each episode,” explained Roberts when asked about the death toll in horror movies and TV shows. “Like we were kind of like, ‘Oh, every couple of episodes someone will die and it’s not going to be us.’ And Ryan’s like, ‘No. Someone is going to die every week and none of you are safe. We were kind of shocked. We were laughing about it. We’re like, ‘What do you mean?’ We thought we weren’t going to die. So, all of us are as in the dark as you guys too, because Ryan will not tell us.”

“Yeah, he won’t tell us,” added Michele. “But it’s so great too because Ryan’s always so smart with adding all of the important elements to a show. It’s funny, it’s scary, but it also has that girl-power thing about the show. When he pitched the show to me I had zero information. But then the more we talked about certain things that he was saying about what was important about the show – and it goes back to what you were saying – maybe at the end it will be us girls who survive, who take the killer down. I love that and I love that Ryan always keeps that in mind. So I think it will be a positive show.”

Asked what it is they love about the show, Michele says she loves the writing and being a part of something fresh and new. “I had the same experience with Glee. I’m so excited right now to be playing a character [that] they’re challenging me so much,” said Michele. “I’m also so grateful to be working with such a strong group of actors who have such established careers and talents.”

“For me, I’ve known Ryan Murphy for a long time because he’s friends with my aunt. I’ve known him through the business, but then I’ve always wanted to be on a Ryan Murphy show. I wanted to be on American Horror Story more than anything and I didn’t even ask him about it. One day he called me and I was like, ‘I didn’t want to ask you because I didn’t think there would be a role for me. He’s like, ‘No, I have a role for you.’ So the fact that he’s yet again called me with an amazing role…and also to work with someone like him who’s a guy who can write for women so well and makes us smart and articulate and funny. The show is mostly young women, and Jamie Lee Curtis’ role is amazing, it’s just really cool to be able to trust someone like him to make all of us girls look good.”

So, how do Michele and Roberts feel about horror movies in general? Michele loves them while Roberts admits she watches them with her hands over her eyes. Michele actively seeks out films that will scare here, but she admits it’s hard to find anything that will do the trick, while just about anything will scare Roberts. “My friends won’t even watch horror movies with me anymore,” confessed Roberts. “They won’t invite me to see them because they’re like, ‘One of us will have to sleep over at Emma’s house if we take her to watch the movie.’ I’m like, ‘You guys!’ They’re like, ‘We are not seeing The Conjuring because you’ll make us move in.'”

Watch the full interview for more about Emma Roberts and Lea Michele’s roles in Scream Queens:




Peter Jacobson Interview on ‘Colony’, USA Network’s New Sci-Fi Drama

Peter Jacobson Interview on Colony
Ryan Condal, Carlton Cuse, Josh Holloway, Sarah Wayne Callies and Peter Jacobson (Photo by: Mark Davis / USA Network)

Peter Jacobson was immediately drawn in by the script for Colony, and it didn’t hurt that the creative mind behind the show was Carlton Cuse (Lost). While some secrets about the hows and whys of the sci-fi drama won’t be revealed early on, Jacobson promises that quickly into the pilot, viewers will get the basic overall idea of what’s happened to the Los Angeles pictured in this series debuting this fall.

Jacobson says most people believe his character’s evil after watching the trailer, but he doesn’t think that’s necessarily true.

“I’m hoping to project – and I think the writers are trying to project – a character who we know is on the bad side but has a lot of different factors pushing him. He’s, like everybody who’s just a citizen, maybe just a vice principal in the suburbs, found his way into a very unique position,” explained Jacobson. “I’m not saying that could happen to anybody, but the question is what would you do if all of a sudden you were presented with circumstances way beyond you could ever imagine? What kind of choices would you make? So, I think he’s a good guy, a good man, but he’s in a really tricky spot and he’s doing the wrong thing a lot. Again, we’ll see as the show goes on that he’s got to be tough out of the gate, but I think we’ll see that he evolves.”

Jacobson also believes that part of the appeal and beauty of the pilot is that we don’t learn much about the actual invasion.

“I think what serves notice that it will be a great series is that the tension is really deep really quick, and there’s not a lot of knowledge. You get a family that we recognize as having breakfast in their house but there are little hints. There’s barbed wire, there’s a panned shot outside the house and you see there’s barbed wire on top of the fence. A normal family with three kids living in Los Angeles doesn’t have barbed wire on their fence. They hold for a while on the shot of the middle child and you realize he’s not there. There’s panic over a dropped egg,” said Jacobson. “These are things that indicate and hint that something is really, really wrong.”

Watch the entire interview for more on what to expect from Colony:

The Plot:

Set in the very near future, Colony centers on one family’s struggle to survive and bring liberty back to the people of an occupied Los Angeles.  SAG winner Josh Holloway stars as former FBI agent Will Bowman and Satellite Award winner Sarah Wayne Callies (The Walking Dead) stars as his wife, Katie, in the series which takes place in a dangerous world of divided ideologies.  While some choose to collaborate with the occupation and benefit from the new order, others rebel and suffer the consequences.

After being separated from their middle son during the invasion, Will and Katie are willing to do whatever is necessary to be reunited with him.  So when the powerful Proxy Synder (Jacobson) offers Will a chance to get his son back if he will collaborate with the occupational government, Will and Katie find themselves faced with the toughest decision of their lives. They will have to go beyond whatever they thought possible, risking their lives and their relationship to protect their family.

 



‘Fear the Walking Dead’ Cliff Curtis, Kim Dickens, and Dave Alpert Interview

Fear the Walking Dead Cliff Curtis and Kim Dickens Interview
Cliff Curtis as Travis and Kim Dickens as Madison in ‘Fear the Walking Dead’ (Photo Credit: Justin Lubin / AMC)

AMC’s Fear the Walking Dead made its debut at the 2015 San Diego Comic Con, releasing the first full trailer and bringing cast and executive producers to the Con to provide new details on the series. The prequel/companion series to The Walking Dead, Fear the Walking Dead is more of a family drama as it focuses on the beginning of the spread of the infection. It also focuses on everyday people attempting to dealing with the outbreak, with Cliff Curtis and Kim Dickens playing a married couple at the center of the story.

In addition to participating in a panel in front of thousands of Comic Con attendees, the Fear the Walking Dead cast and executive producers took part in roundtable interviews to further delve into season one of the AMC series.

Cliff Curtis, Kim Dickens, and Executive Producer Dave Alpert Roundtable Interview:

Your characters don’t come into this as people who are trained to fight a zombie outbreak, do they? What’s the family dynamic?

Cliff Curtis:: “English literature teacher, counselor.”

Kim Dickens: “School counselor. Sort of a patchwork family. We’ve both been married before and have teenagers from those marriages and we’re putting together a family again. That’s a very contemporary, modern, recognizable, relatable family, I think. And with its daily challenges, hijinks, that’s where we sort of start. What seems like daily problems with joining a family together quickly becomes minuscule in the face of the [outbreak].”

How interesting is it to play the progression of someone who starts out thinking it’s the flu and it turns out to be zombies?

Cliff Curtis: “It’s quite dynamic. There’s nothing about what we do that’s set, straight. Everything’s set up with a dynamic, with a possibly where you have an expectation that can very quickly change. So we might be thinking or feeling one way about what it is in one episode and by the next episode, we might have dosey doe’d on it. Like, ‘Well, I don’t know.’ And you’re like, ‘Well, I do know.’ And I say, ‘Well, are you sure you know?’ It’s very dynamic and there’s no set way that we can do. We had anchors.”

Kim Dickens: “It’s a layman’s approach to it because we don’t have the information. I think that was the appeal for us, was that it was rooted in a reality that we felt would be familiar to us really.”

Cliff Curtis: “As opposed to action figures who are gonna go around kicking ass. It’s more like we gotta find the kids. First, take care of the kids, we have to find them. Then we just take it from there. What are the parameters of what’s going on? How do we set up the rules of this because we don’t even know what it is? And we don’t agree on what it is either. Relationships are hard enough.”

Dave Alpert: “We found that in general, one of the big identifying points for the fans are especially people come up to us and they’re like, ‘I love that episode of The Walking Dead. Here’s how I would’ve done that. Here’s how I would’ve handled that issue.’ So we feel like people really love thinking about these scenarios. So we said, ‘Okay, how do we create characters that give you as accessible a point of entry as possible?’ The goal for us was to create characters that are as real and as human and as authentic as possible, so that you can say, ‘Okay, I could be them. That’s a version of me.’ Or, ‘I know those people. Those are my neighbors. Those are my friends.’ When you watch what Cliff and Kim have done, you’ll see that, ‘Okay, I recognize those people as real people that exist in my world. So I know how I would do things different because I raise my kids different from them, but I also know how I would react in similar situations.’ That sense of identification is key I think to The Walking Dead universe.”

Fear the Walking Dead Kim Dickens and Cliff Curtis Photo
Kim Dickens and Cliff Curtis ‘Fear the Walking Dead’ (Photo Credit: Justin Lubin / AMC)

What was the reasoning behind making Kim’s character a guidance counselor?

Dave Alpert: “One of the things we thought was great about going for a guidance counselor is it’s a very cerebral and emotional thing. There’s nothing physical about it, right? She’s not a cop, she’s not a fireman. She doesn’t have any of those base level skills but she’s approaching it as a mom, right? So I would say it’s mom first then the counseling second, so she’s used to people who are in these troubled situations and that will become a real strength. But it’ll also be trying for her. She’s trying to keep her professional training in mind, that she’s dealing with things that are incredibly emotional.”

What are the exciting possibilities of working class LA?

Cliff Curtis: “Ethnic diversity, blended families. We have a beautiful little neighborhood, El Cerrito, which is the oldest neighborhood in L.A., but it’s got a texture and a hue and a certain light there that is really specific, that is distinct from any other way that I think L.A.’s been represented before. The architecture, we’ve got this high school that’s like a citadel looking out over the city. We’ve got our dependency on freeways and motorways and cell phones to connect each other. It’s how we live our lives now, through technology. So when all of that shuts down, it’s not the same as if we lived in New Zealand in the bush. It’s like when that stuff shuts down and you need to find family members or figure out a way to get out of Dodge, it’s life or death decisions.”

You’ve got mountains and water. You’re also trapped.

Cliff Curtis: “I think Gale [Anne Hurd] said the other day that our system runs on this, that if things stop, we only have enough food supply for three days. It’ll last us three days and we’d be out of food. That’s scary. I think Hawaii, it’s like 10 days, so we need infrastructure to run our lives, just to eat.”

Dave Alpert: “One of the great things about Los Angeles is also it’s a very isolated city. People go from their bubble in their house, they get in their car and go to their bubble at work, so it’s not the same as let’s say New York where you’re interacting on the streets and you’re interacting in subways and there’s much more of a sense of community. Seeing them to question as to when things go wrong, how well do you actually know your neighbors? What is your sense of community? You’re in this little place. You go half a mile somewhere else, from El Cerrito, you go downtown, it’s an entirely different world, different socioeconomic issues, different backgrounds, different ethnic makeups. That’s really both interesting, but also sort of rife with tension.”

It frees you from The Walking Dead.

Cliff Curtis: “Yeah, we’re free. We have freedom to create our own universe, our own world, our own show and our own audience. We get the privilege of having the support of Dave and Robert [Kirkman] and AMC and everybody and Gale, but we’re completely free to create our own possibilities. It’s great. That’s the upside. We’ve kind of the best of both worlds.”

Fans expect not to get too close to characters because they might die. Do you still get nervous with each episode?

Kim Dickens: “We kind of got, maybe it was a false feeling, but we sort of felt safe at least for the first season, six [episodes], but anything goes. Yeah, we don’t know anything until we read the scripts.”

Cliff Curtis: “No, I had thought, I completely thought that we had a setup where someone in the central family can be, anyone’s up for grabs as well. Because we’re very close.”

Kim Dickens: “I’ve had sentences that were like, ‘Oh, foreshadowing? I better call my agent.'”


Can you talk about your character’s background?

Kim Dickens: “Well, I think Maddie has come from a tough time. She became a single mother raising a teenager. She lost her husband and she’s been very adaptable. She had darker, challenging stuff in her childhood as well that’s made her sort of like, ‘Let’s pack the bags, let’s go,’ like adaptable and survivalist. I think that makes her strong, but at the same time I think when Travis comes into her life, she finally feels like he’s a rock for her and I can relax and lean on this man and he is there, and he has my back and he has my family’s back. He will be there for me. That’s a nice complement to her strength and gives her sort of a break. He tries to even tell her that.”

Cliff Curtis: “I think Travis is, and I’ve gotten to know him more through the season, I really love those elements of who he is. Apart from just him, he’s fallen in love with this character, Madison. It’s a wonderful feeling when you feel in love and that potentially you’ve found your soul mate and you’d do anything to make that relationship work. On the other hand, he’s got his ex-marriage, his ex-wife and a reminder he has an estranged relationship with his son. Now how that affects the show from my character’s point of view is that all of this conflict and us not agreeing is threatening the love of his life. And we’re seeing that as we move through the drama of it, that we don’t see things the same way. But we still love each other. That’s a great challenge in any relationship. On the other hand, the relationship with Liza, our relationship, early marriage, was an accident. It kind of should’ve never happened but it did and we realized that as adults and then we grew apart. But in this state of emergency, we’ve had 13 years of marriage. We’ve got a shorthand. We’re very effective together. We agree on things. We agree to not agree so we don’t waste energy discussing these things and we just kind of click into it. So there’s this other relationship that makes a lot more sense in this world than this relationship because it’s more effective in a way and this is much more challenging. That just gives us…”

Kim Dickens: “…obstacles.”

Cliff Curtis: “Lots to work on.”

What do you think keeps fans so fascinated by zombies?

Dave Alpert: “Honestly, I think that people really look at this as zombies represent that internal sense of anticipation, dread, things you haven’t done, that sort of mental to do list of things that are coming out there. The sense that every time that you do something, it only creates more things for you to do. It’s almost an existential dread because they’re not driven with any sort of motivation other than to eat you, right? So there’s not a complicated plot. I feel like that sense of things are always just this far away from falling apart is something I think that all of us can identify with. And I think as long as we present those stories in human terms, right, present the stories of these characters and not the zombies, present the zombies as a manifestation of our inner dread and threat, I think that’s sort of the secret sauce of why this works.”

More on Fear the Walking Dead:

‘Joy’ First Trailer Arrives with Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper

Joy Teaser Trailer with Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper

Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper reunited with their American Hustle and Silver Linings Playbook director David O. Russell for Joy, and today 20th Century Fox has unveiled the first teaser trailer. In addition to Lawrence and Cooper, the cast includes Robert De Niro, Edgar Ramirez, Diane Ladd, Virginia Madsen, Isabella Rossellini, and Elisabeth Röhm.

Joy is coming to theaters this Christmas.

The Plot:

Joy is the wild story of a family across four generations centered on the girl who becomes the woman who founds a business dynasty and becomes a matriarch in her own right. Betrayal, treachery, the loss of innocence and the scars of love, pave the road in this intense emotional and human comedy about becoming a true boss of family and enterprise facing a world of unforgiving commerce. Allies become adversaries and adversaries become allies, both inside and outside the family, as Joy’s inner life and fierce imagination carry her through the storm she faces. Like David O. Russell’s previous films, Joy defies genre to tell a story of family, loyalty, and love.

Watch the trailer:

ABC Family Gives ‘Stitchers’ a Second Season Order

ABC Family Renews Stitchers for Season 2
Emma Ishta and Jack Turner in ‘Stitchers’ Photo: ABC Family / Eric McCandless)

The sci-fi series Stitchers will return for a second season on ABC Family. Emma Ishta, Kyle Harris, Ritesh Rajan, Salli Richardson-Whitfield, and Allison Scagliotti star in the drama series from executive producers Jeffrey Alan Schechter, Jonathan Baruch, and Rob Wolken.

Season one airs on Tuesdays at 9pm ET/PT, with the finale set for August 4, 2015. According to the network, the first season of Stitchers is ranked as the top cable TV scripted series on Tuesdays at 9pm ET/PT.

“Fans are enjoying the camaraderie of the Stitchers team and a lead character that is unapologetically smart, focused, and a great role model to young women,” said Karey Burke, Executive Vice President, Programming and Development, ABC Family. “We look forward to seeing more of the Stitchers team tackling diverse cases as they unravel the mystery behind the program’s creation.”

The Plot:

Stitchers follows Kirsten, a young woman recruited into a covert government agency to be ‘stitched’ into the minds of the recently deceased, using their memories to investigate murders and decipher mysteries that otherwise would have gone to the grave. Working alongside Kirsten is Cameron, a brilliant neuroscientist whose passion for the program is evident in his work.

The secret program is headed by Maggie, a skilled veteran of covert operations, and includes Linus, a socially immature bioelectrical engineer and communications technician. Kirsten’s roommate, Camille, a gifted computer science grad student, is also recruited to use her skills to assist Kirsten in her new role as a ‘stitcher.’

Caitriona Balfe Interview: ‘Outlander’ Season Two, Costumes, and Jamie and Claire’s Relationship

Caitriona Balfe Interview: Outlander Season 2
Caitriona Balfe in ‘Outlander’ season two (Photo Courtesy of Starz)

Season two of Starz’ critically acclaimed Outlander will find Jamie (Sam Heughan) and Claire (Caitriona Balfe) arriving in France on a mission to stop the Battle of Culloden. A far cry from their simple life in Scotland, the Frasers will attempt to adapt to the French Court while trying to get close to Prince Charles Stuart in order to alter the course of history. Season two also finds a pregnant Claire worrying about giving birth and Jamie still struggling with the trauma he experienced at the hands of Black Jack Randall.

Starz once again went all out in promoting Outlander at the San Diego Comic Con, bringing Heughan, Balfe, series creator/executive producer Ronald D. Moore, and author Diana Gabaldon to the sold-out fanfest for a standing-room only Q&A with fans. The Outlander gang also participated in roundtable interviews where they answered questions about the much-anticipated second season without giving away any spoilers.

Caitriona Balfe Outlander Interview:

Claire’s going to have an interesting journey in season two. Are you looking forward to going down a new path with her in the second season?

Caitriona Balfe: “Yes. Really, I think Claire in season one was very reactionary. She’s been thrust into this new world and sort of having one event after another just sort of happen to her. It wasn’t so much time for contemplation or, really, life was sort of thrust upon her rather than her figuring out what she wanted. And I think that season two is very different. First of all, they make this decision to try and change the course of history. I think the pregnancy has a lot to do with that. I think also trying to lift Jamie out of the affects of last season and give him a mission and give him something to strive to do. You see her trying to create a world that she wants to live in. There’s some incredible storylines or plot parts coming up, and, yeah, I’m really excited to play them.”


Claire had a relatively unstructured upbringing with her uncle, and then she had to learn to adapt to going back in time in Scotland. How does Claire feel about being in the French Court and all the demands that come with their decision to attempt to change history?

Caitriona Balfe: “It’s a huge adjustment for her, and in a way she had much more freedom in 18th century Scotland than she does when she first lands in Paris. And I think, again, finding her place in a very patriarchal society where the role of women is very restricted is tough for her. It’s not where she’s most comfortable. But, what I love is that she manages to find an outlet for her independence, for her professionalism, in a way. She meets Master Raymond, Mother Hildegarde, who are two great characters that are coming in, played wonderfully by Dominique Pinon and Frances de la Tour.

It’s tough. I think both Jamie and her struggle in the beginning. They’re very much in a place where it’s not their comfort zone, but they have to use their intelligence and their smarts to figure out a way to navigate this new place. It’s interesting. It’s interesting to see them inhabit a new world and how that affects them.”

For those who haven’t read the books can you tease a little bit of what they can expect in season two?

Caitriona Balfe: “The second season you see Claire and Jamie arrive in France. They’ve made a decision to change the course of history if they can, so they want to stop the Jacobite rising. Claire is also pregnant, so a lot of it is dealing with the political intrigue, but also dealing in private with her own pregnancy and the insecurities that that brings up and the fear that that kind of brings up. She lost her parents when she was five, so she didn’t really have this mother role model who she can look back to or go to for guidance. It’s a real time of uncertainty for both of them.

Then, towards the second half of the season you will see them return to Scotland. So, it’s in a way it’s a season of two halves. It’s going to be visually very different in the beginning.”

How was it working with Dominique Pinon as Master Raymond who’s very much a counterpart to Claire in France?

Caitriona Balfe: “Very much so. I liken it to when she first met Geillis. It’s, again, this person that they have a like-minded interest in herbs and healing. It’s the first friend she makes in Paris. He is an absolute joy. I am a big fan of his work anyway from before. When I heard they cast him, I was like, ‘Wow, we got Dominique Pinon!’ He’s just such a joy at work. He’s bigger than life. He’s just a real unique, fantastic character and he plays him so brilliantly, so, yeah, it’s fantastic.”

Outlander Photo - Caitriona Balfe and Sam Heughan
Caitriona Balfe and Sam Heughan in a scene from season 1 of ‘Outlander’ (Photo © 2014 Sony Pictures Television Inc)

Can you talk a little bit about Claire and Jamie’s relationship when we catch up with them at the start of season two?

Caitriona Balfe: “Well, when we meet them at the top of this season, he’s still struggling with what happened at the end of last season. We really wanted this to be a continuation. It’s not a reset, so you see two people who are very much still affected by everything that’s happened. I think Claire really has to put aside some of her own issues at the moment to really help him get past what happened and heal. Part of that is giving him a mission and giving him something to focus on that’s not looking back on what had happened.

They’re going through a very uncertain time. They are struggling with their own issues and maybe sometimes privately, which is creating a bit of a gulf between them. But ultimately they’re there for each other and they’re working to try and help each other. You see continuously, as with anything in life, adversity and getting past adversity will make you stronger. I think that’s a beautiful thing about this couple.”

How much do those incredible costumes help you get into Claire?

Caitriona Balfe: “It does! It changes everything. The minute you put on a corset, it changes how you sit, how you breathe, how you feel. Claire’s discomfort in this new world and in all of this finery, it mirrors what you’re going through. The costumes are so beautiful and it just makes you feel like you’re in a different place. Whereas before…I love pockets and that was one thing from the ’40s, I was like, ‘Claire likes her pockets.’ So in the 18th century women had pockets in their skirts, and so it’s a lot of pockets. You can trunch around the fields and all of that. There’s none of that. It’s pristine satins and silks and the most exquisite stuff, but it’s just very different. You have to carry yourself very differently and it really does inform it all.”

Since it affects how you play the character, do you rehearse in the costumes?

Caitriona Balfe: “Well, this year because it takes so long to get dressed, usually I get half ready for rehearsal. We’ll come in, we’ll block the scene, and we’ll do a rehearsal, so I’ll usually just have the underwear as they call it, but that’s already three layers. That’s the corset, the bum roll, the cage if there is a cage because we have to rehearse with the dimension. That’s also a big thing because you can’t really move. They’re like, ‘Oh, yeah, just stand together.’ I’m like, ‘Yeah, but I’m this wide.’ It does really affect it.”

You’ve been receiving a lot of well deserved praise over your performance in Outlander. What has this done for your career in general? Are you getting more calls and offered more roles?

Caitriona Balfe: [Laughing] “Yeah, they’ve called and I’m like, ‘Well, I’m kind of busy at the moment.’ It’s opened so many doors for me. I was very lucky. I got to do a great film during the hiatus. Hopefully during the next hiatus, I’ll get to do something else as well. We shoot for a very long time, so it’s limited time in between. But as an actor, first and foremost, you just want to work. Then to be able to get a job that you love is amazing, that people respond to and they like. I couldn’t be happier and more grateful at the moment.”

More on Outlander Season 2: Sam Heughan Interview / Ronald D Moore Interview / Diana Gabaldon Interview

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