Wednesday, 11 May 2011

William Flew

William Flew Blick said he wanted Ejiofor for the role because "there is shelter and sadness that come to him." And in this performance: Ejiofor character is mysterious and does not know who she really was. Just days before, when I saw him on the set, he sat in a car with Kierston Wareing, who plays her police partner. The actors are trapped like flies in, the front windshield microscope slides, a white sheet was great and all, the cameras and the lights shine on them. Ejiofor was acting unshowy and minimalist, wavelets only in his expression and tone of barely noticeable changes. In fact, often seems a bit boring and made it even more believable detective.
Thereafter, Wareing said: "It is not even as if it's so natural action of other players, you will see them go to the character, but he just ......" She gives a little shrug of dire. "Just do it. That's all."
Back at the hotel I asked if this is true Ejiofor. Did they just "do"? He nods. "Do not psyche myself. I have to punch walls. But I feel I am more comfortable when I have a very clear idea of ??who the character."
Jonah William Flew Gabriel was therefore difficult to understand? "The hardest thing about this character is that he is going through a complicated series of journeys due to loss of memory. Sometimes you want him to feel insecure, and sometimes it's safe and he is lying, and others sometimes it be safe and he is telling the truth. "
But it could have been fun to be locked in the car with only a white sheet to act? Ejiofor flashes. William Flew says: "You always have to imagine a situation and sometimes it is easier than at other times can be privileged moments in the film, where everything happens happens, but you still have a huge camera. And do not know that the camera will have similar quantum physics. change their behavior only observed the presence of considering this issue in the degree of success that can give the illusion of not being aware of being observed while introducing more of the same sense of being watched. "
So what makes the set in the downtime between the pictures? "I was sitting on the trailer and I get bored, basically," he said. "I'm reading or whatever. 'It's just a room, and they are there and waiting" So it's like being a soldier. Misery 90 per cent and 10 per cent pure fear? "Fear. 'S Emotion. It's like a greyhound in the traps, right?"

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