Charlaine Interviewed By The Orlando Sentinel

This is a MUST-READ interview with Charlaine Harris!

Charlaine was interviewed by the Orlando Sentinel, in a pre-interview before her appearance at SleuthFest. The annual conference, sponsored by the Florida chapter of Mystery Writers of America, shifts to Central Florida this year. The conference runs Thursday-March 4 at the Royal Plaza Orlando at Walt Disney World Resort in Lake Buena Vista.

Charlaine Harris speaks at the March 3 luncheon, which starts at noon. A book signing follows. If you want to attend only the lunch and book signing, register at sleuthfest.com. The group allows walk-up registrations but encourages advance registrations.

Also March 3, Harris will speak at a 3:40 p.m. panel and discuss the Sookie Stackhouse series at 5 p.m. poolside. A Saturday full-day registration is required to attend these events. Send any questions to email@mwaflorida.org.

In their telephone interview, Charlaine talks about the next book in the series, “Deadlocked”. You have been warned…this post may contain spoilers from “Deadlocked”!

If you don’t want to know – don’t read below!

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Alexander Skarsgard Interview Reveals “Battleship” Is An Art House Movie

The Huffington Post shared this interview with Alexander Skarsgard and Peter Berg, where they reveal that their new movie, Battleship – which hits theaters this spring – is “an art house movie”.

Read the interview below:

According to director Peter Berg, “Battleship,” an epic, sci-fi war movie with a $200 million budget, is an art house movie. At least that’s what Berg and “Battleship” star Alexander Skarsgard either (A) want you to believe or (B) told me as a practical joke that they are still laughing about.

I had the chance to talk with Berg and Skarsgard at the American International Toy Fair about their upcoming summer hopeful-blockbuster (opening May 18) and why the duo was interested in making a movie based on a popular board game. Oh, and there’s the matter of that quite gigantic budget…

This is different: a stand-up interview.
Berg: I’ve been sitting all day, take this.

Oh, I don’t need your chair.
Berg: Take it.

So, why are you doing a “Battleship” movie? I mean, you’re Peter Berg…
Berg: Well, it was my idea.

OK, that’s a good reason.
Berg: That’s the really fucked up part: I thought of it. I was like, “Hey, who wants to do a movie about “Battleship’? And they’re like, “Uh, that’s a crazy idea.” I grew up the son of a Naval historian. My dad schlepped me to every Navy museum in America. I love the Navy and I’ve always wanted to do a Navy film. I wanted to do John Paul Jones, who founded the American Navy, but I couldn’t get that together because “Master and Commander” came out. I wanted to do “In the Heart of the Sea,” which was the story of “Essex,” the whaling ship sunk by a whale — but the problem with that is it ended in cannibalism, they all eat each other.

I assume “Battleship” does not end that way.
Berg: It would be tough to get that one made. Then I wanted to do the “Indianapolis,” the ship that carried the nuclear bombs that we dropped on Japan in the Philippines, then it sunk and all of the men were eaten by sharks. That was too depressing. So I wanted to do a Navy film and I’m thinking, right now, in our business, there are these huge movies that are getting made — I wanted to make one of these big “super movies.” I thought, What if I create an adventure story around something as simple as “Battleship”? Ponder this when you write about the film: there’s a real interesting element. This game’s been around for 85 years. When you and I are gone, I guarantee it will still be around.

I’ve played it many times.
Berg: Simple, boring game. Right? I say “B5′ [points at Skarsgard] he says “hit.” When he says “hit,” something happens. I have figured out where he is and I try to kill him as violently and quickly and brutally as I can. He’s going to get desperate and try to find where I am and kill me. So the core of the game “Battleship,” is this very violent component, which is a great engine for a movie.

OK, Alexander, I know “Battleship” wasn’t your idea. What did you think when you first heard of the “Battleship” movie?
Skarsgard: Well, I was excited to work with Pete. And I think it was also an opportunity — it was right after “Melancholia,” so I had that experience of working with Lars von Trier…

A very different movie.
Skarsgard: Yeah, an art house movie.

Berg: We’re sort of an art house movie.

Skarsgard: Well, the thing is, in a way, yes.

Berg: See.

OK, explain that.
Skarsgard: Well, with Pete being an actor himself, I knew that he’s a guy that could definitely do something that’s big, epic — but! — with real characters and real relationships. We actually care about these guys. You root for them; you want them to make it. I wouldn’t want to be in something big and epic just because it’s big and epic. If I don’t care about the characters, it’s not fun for me as an actor. And when we first met, Pete talked 30 percent about the scope of it and 70 percent about Stone Hopper, the guy I was going to play. And I’m not going to compare the movie to “Melancholia”…

But, yet, you are.
Skarsgard: You know, it was so fun and organic in front of the camera on “Battleship.” We were so free. And this is my first big studio movie and I didn’t know. I was like, “How is it with Universal? Do they micromanage you? If you want to change one word, do you have to get approval from 25 executives?” And Pete was like, “No. Creatively, they trust me and they’ll let me do this. If you have ideas, tell me and we’ll have fun with it.”

You have a very large budget for this film. Is that something you think about in a, “Well, I better come through,” kind of way?
Berg: I’ve been making movies since I was a little kid in high school. The first movie I ever made was about a board game called “Stratego.” I made that film with some friends and, since then, every job I’ve had on a film set… I love making movies. I actually fucking love making movies, and I feel very fortunate to get to do it. And, for me, there’s not much difference. I know how much we’re spending in the back of my mind, but it’s really me working with him. It’s no different. It’s a camera and an actor trying to find a moment that is compelling. It’s not like they give you a bill at the end of the day.

Now, that would be horrifying.
Berg: That might be a little off-putting. But, you know, it’s like, you can’t go around thinking, Oh my God. You have to basically, like anything, just do what you know how to do and try to tell a good story. And try and help these guys do what they know how to do. And be real and compelling. Because the money goes in special effects. At the end of the day, it’s all of our belief that you’ll see some of the movie and you’ll know that we didn’t want to rely on the scope of the film. We wanted it to be human. We wanted emotion — and emotion “don’t cost nothin’.” Emotion is cheap. Who do you write for?

Moviefone.
Berg: Hey [grabs a battleship off of the prototype Battleship game board] have a Battleship.

Oh, speaking of, will we hear the line, “You sunk my battleship”?
Berg: You might! You might.

Mike Ryan is the senior writer for Moviefone. He has written for Wired Magazine, VanityFair.com, GQ.com, New York Magazine and Movieline. He likes Star Wars a lot. You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter

Here are the dates in which Battleship will be released:

  • Belgium 11 April 2012
  • France 11 April 2012
  • UK 11 April 2012
  • Germany 12 April 2012
  • Finland 13 April 2012
  • Italy 13 April 2012
  • Spain 13 April 2012
  • Sweden 13 April 2012
  • Australia 18 April 2012
  • New Zealand 18 April 2012
  • Denmark 19 April 2012
  • Hungary 19 April 2012
  • Netherlands 19 April 2012
  • Portugal 19 April 2012
  • Russia 19 April 2012
  • Singapore 19 April 2012
  • Thailand 19 April 2012
  • Estonia 20 April 2012
  • Lithuania 20 April 2012
  • Norway 20 April 2012
  • Romania 20 April 2012
  • Turkey 20 April 2012
  • Hong Kong 1 May 2012
  • Argentina 10 May 2012
  • Brazil 11 May 2012
  • Canada 18 May 2012
  • USA 18 May 2012

Source

Sounds like Alex and Peter really get along with each other, don’t they?

Disappointed in the fact, both the US and Canada will be the very last to be able to watch Battleship though…

What are your thoughts? Share them below!

Alexander Skarsgard Tells MTV Chris Meloni Is Hot

MTV News recently caught up with Battleship director Peter Berg and the film’s leading man Alexander Skarsgård! In the interview, Alex revealed how hot he thinks Chris Meloni is – plus Peter Berg shares the reasons why he cast Alex in “Battleship”!

Watch the video below!

Please note: Unfortunately, this video is only playable in the US, so not everyone will be able to watch it. But don’t worry, we’ve quoted MTV on what was said!

Get More: Movie Trailers, Movies Blog

This is what they said over at MTV…

“I was a fan of ‘True Blood’ [and] all the girls in the office stormed my office and demanded that we cast him,” Peter said of offering the role to the Swede. Of course, with the topic of “True Blood” on the table, I had to ask Alex for any and all hints about the upcoming season, set to debut this summer.

According to the hunk, the cast is currently filming episode four of the fifth season, and if you’ve been following casting announcements, you know a brand-new big-bad will storm Bon Temps this season: “Law & Order: SVU” star Christopher Meloni.

“He’s really, really good,” Alex enthused of new co-star Chris. “And a great guy.” As to whether we’ll be seeing the newbie predominately shirtless, Alex would only say, “Maybe, maybe not,” cheekily adding, “He’s so hot.”

Peter Berg also revealed he cast Alex in Battleship because of the car he drives;

Peter: “…when I met him my son was there. He got out of his Audi R8. That’s my son’s dream car and my son just stood there with his jaw open staring first at him and then at his car.  And he said, ‘Dad, it’s non-negotiable. Alex is in the movie.’”

As usual, Alex is being coy about anything to do with the new season.

Love how the girls in Peter Berg’s office and his son pressured him into casting Alex! Hahaha…

What are your thoughts? Share ‘em below!

Alexander Skarsgård Interviewed In The Boom Boom Room

Credit: Just Jared

Alexander Skarsgård was interviewed in a most interesting place during his appearance at the Boom Boom Room, when he was there to listen to The Kills.

The New York Observer had this to say…

Hold the phone, everyone just lost their shit. It’s Alexander Skarsgard. Let’s see if we can peel him away from the lunch line of twiggy models, shall we?

Here’s what went down:

“So Alex, we’d like to ask you one question, would that be alright?”

“Of course my friend, anything!” he beams.

“How did Alexander Skarsgaard get here?”

“Oh man, I really like this question! It would be so easy for me to say “The elevator””

We agreed.

“But look, I see that this is one of those really open ended questions, and I like that! So many things brought me here, but first it began with my mother and my father. I owe them everything. Oh, also I really like The Kills!”

We continued our chat on The Kills briefly till the nicest vampire we’ve ever met announced he had to pee, so we took the talk to the famed urinals of The Standard.

“So tell me this my friend from The Observer, how did you get here?” as we both unzip our jeans.

For the next few minutes Mr. Skarsgaard did the interviewing, and concluded (completely mistakenly) that we too would be able to be as lucky with the ladies as he is. We informed him, that while we were flattered, the two of us were definitely a few standard deviations apart…

It crossed our minds as we zipped our flies and washed our hands that if there was ever a guy you’d want as a life coach, this is that guy.

Wait a minute…hold the phones! Did they say they interviewed him in the washroom – while going pee?

*must stop images of Alex’s gracious plenty from entering my head*

I’m assuming that this interviewer is a male, because you know that if she was a female…she would be too busy drooling to pay attention to what he said, much less able to write it down afterwards. Or, maybe there would be something else going on besides interviewing…if you know what I mean?

*please stop these mental images I’m having*

You gotta laugh at how honest and funny Alex is…”the elevator”? LMAO

What are your thoughts? Share ‘em below!

 

True Blood Claudine would like to return

Anyone who has been lucky enough to see the most recent series of “Sherlock” will know what a terrific actress Lara Pulver is, and it seems she would welcome a return to Bon Temps, where she played unfortunate fairy  Claudine. In an interview with  assignmentx yesterday she spoke about the possibility.

“It wouldn’t surprise me if she appears as some crazy Eric Northman sex dream at some point in season five,” she laughs. “I wouldn’t put that past Alan Ball at all. I can deal with. If Alex Skarsgard has to eat my neck for another season I can deal with it. We’ll see what happens. I have no idea; obviously they don’t stay rigid to the books.”

It looks to me like Lara is a fully paid up member of Team Eric – I mean who wouldn’t want to appear in an Eric Northman sex dream or have Alex bite their neck. Perhaps it is just wishful thinking on her part or perhaps we might yet get to see her twin sister Claudette? Let us know what you think.

Interview source – assignmentx

True Blood in UK SciFi Now Magazine

More True Blood features in the UK this week with a piece about season 4 in the new issue of Sci Fi Now Magazine. Not sure if there is anything new or if it’s a mishmash of previous interviews. There’s a few snippets from Anna, including how she suggested the threesome dream as a joke, and a side interview with Alex. Most of what Alex says sounds very familiar,except I’m not sure I’ve heard him warn that season 4 will be quite different to the book before? Maybe he is weary after Team Eric’s general reaction to the end of season 4 or maybe I just missed his warning the first time round!

Click on the scans below to read:

Kristin Bauer Talks About Superstar Alexander Skarsgard & True Blood With E! Online

E! Online recently talked to Kristin Bauer van Straten about what’s going to happen to Pam during True Blood Season 5 – plus, shares her thoughts on Superstar Alexander Skarsgard! (Hehe, I love calling him that!)

WARNING: This may contain mild spoilers! Read at your own risk!

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Alexander Skarsgård Leads The Swedish Invasion

E! Online aired a segment featuring actors and actresses from Sweden – aptly called, The Swedish Invasion! This wouldn’t be complete without Alexander Skarsgård, (his father) Stellan Skarsgård, Noomi Rapace, Michael Nykvist, Joel Kinnaman, and Malin Ackerman!

They begin this segment with an Eric and Sookie scene from True Blood, then move on to Alex on the red carpet! Alex tells E! Online about filming Melancholia in Sweden, where the cast and crew all lived together!

Watch it below!

What do you think? Share your thoughts below!

Anne Rice: Her Thoughts On TB and the SSN

Anne Rice, the renowned author behind the Vampire Chronicles series of novels—Interview With the Vampire, The Vampire Lestat, and The Queen of the Damned, was interviewed recently by The Daily Beast.

In an interview with The Daily Beast, the “queen” of vampire fiction, Anne Rice, opens up about her Twilight “beef,” her feelings about HBO’s True Blood, why she thinks teens these days are obsessed with vampires, and her upcoming foray into the world of werewolf novels, The Wolf Gift, which will be released Feb. 12.

We won’t share the whole interview – just bits and pieces related to True Blood and Charlaine Harris. Here are the highlights…

So what’s your take on the Twilight series? It really does seem to go against the grain in its depiction of vampires.

I think the concept is so rich in itself. It’s like the concept of the cowboy or the detective. Vampires have become almost like a genre, like the Western. What I see happening, with writers like Charlaine Harris and Stephenie Meyer, is the domestication of the vampire. I was more interested in a powerful, Old World figure that had a lot of knowledge, experience, and was surrounded by a lot of glamour and mystery. I wanted to keep the romance. I loved the idea of these people gaining wisdom as they aged, and how that might cause them to be ever more tormented by the fact that they don’t really belong in the world and they prey on human beings, who they’ve really come to appreciate. Charlaine Harris is doing something different by imagining what it’s like if vampires are legal and you have them living in your Southern town, and I think she gets a tremendous amount of energy out of that. She’s very witty—there’s a lot of satire there—and on the HBO show True Blood, there’s even a romance with Vampire Bill.

Back to True Blood, how do you feel about the show’s depiction of vampires as these uninhibited, primal, sexual beings?

I’m a fan of the show. I see it as a logical part of it all. [Harris] has expanded the sexuality that’s inherent in that idea. I didn’t think of that, but as my books went on, I involved my vampires in more sexuality. But I couldn’t go as far as Charlaine Harris did, because I had said that my vampires can’t have sex; that the act of drinking blood is orgasmic for them. She’s doing it a different way. She’s saying that this blood drinker must also be dynamite in bed. Makes sense!

I think True Blood does werewolves justice with Alcide.

Oh, yeah, I like Alcide. I like that actor [Joe Manganiello] a lot, and I think the character’s hot.

UGH! Not only does she mention Sookie having a romance with Bill…but she says how hot she finds Alcide too! ARGH!

If you would like to read her entire interview – click here!

What are your thoughts on this interview? Share ‘em below!

Dark Media Interviews Charlaine Harris

DarkMedia sat down with Charlaine Harris to discuss the end of Sookie’s story, how the publication of Anne Rice’s “Interview With the Vampire” was a groundbreaking moment in the history of vampire fiction, and what it was like to see her characters on screen for the very first time.

There isn’t a whole lot that is new to us, but there was one answer we thought you might find interesting.

Warning: it may contain spoilers for the end of the series – please don’t read, if you don’t want to know!

In a previous interview, you’ve mentioned how much you like ”unexpected endings”, such as the finale to the HBO series Six Feet Under. If you don’t mind the question, would you say the ending of The Southern Vampire Mysteries will be something your readers aren’t expecting? Do you hope to surprise them with the way it all turns out?

That’s a tricky question, because after so many books in the series my readers have developed widely divergent opinions about what will constitute a surprise. I’m writing the ending I’d always planned, and I’m sure some of them will not expect it.

Hmmm…a surprise? I wonder what she means by that?

You can read the entire interview here!

What do you think? Share your thoughts below!

FEAR.net Talks To Charlaine About Deadlocked

Charlaine Harris was interviewed by FEAR.net, where she discusses her approach to writing, her influences, the creation of Sookie Stackhouse, the character’s upcoming final adventures, and what she might do next.

WARNING: she mentions some spoilers about the next novel, Deadlocked – please read at your own risk!

Here are a few excerpts from the interview:

How far into the thirteenth Stackhouse novel are you?

Zero! [Laughs.] That’s my next project. When I get home I have to go over the copy-edited pages of Sookie 12, which will be out in May. That will freshen up my memory about what I need to do in Sookie 13, to tie everything together. A seemingly impossible task.

I’m sure you’ve been asked this before, but could you talk about what the twelfth novel will involve?

It’s called Deadlocked. It’s another extension of her adventures, moving a step forward to resolve many of the issues that are brought up in previous books. She gets kidnapped – you know, the usual mayhem. She gets kidnapped, she has to get out of it. The Fey entry into her life is pretty much wrapped up. She learns a lot more about everything really. She learns a lot in this book, the truth. So it was a challenging book to write, and I tried to keep it on track more as a mystery. But there are just so many loose ends to tie up, it’s just incredible. [Laughs.]

Wow, the Fey are OVER? I wonder how that comes about? And what truth is she speaking of?

Even though Sookie is a mature woman, do you view the entire series, on one level, as a coming-of-age story?

The growth of her character is definitely a major part of the novels, but I wouldn’t call it coming-of-age. She’s a twenty-six year-old woman. But she certainly becomes worldlier, more aware of the other worlds around her. She’s always known what human nature was like, because she’s telepathic. Which is kind of a bitter pill to swallow. But she learns how to live with a lot of things, and what she can’t live with.

Hmmm…not sure of that last sentence. What do you think?

The Stackhouse books are, as billed, mysteries. But you blend other genres into them. Without sounding too clinical, is there an unofficial recipe for much of each genre you add to the mix?

Not really, because it varies from book to book.

So it’s what the story calls for?

Some books are quite romantic. Some books are all about the mystery. Some books are just adventure, because Sookie’s moving forward with her life and it’s really complicated. Things happen in the werewolf world, the vampire world, the Fey world that impact her directly. So it’s just an adventure getting through her day. [Laughs.]

Do you never really know what the genre will be until you begin the book?

That’s true. I just see where the story takes me and go with that.

Do you not use an outline when you write?

Well, that might be stretching it a bit. But as long as I’ve got my basic characters, I just set them in motion and we just see what happens.

Wait a minute…did she say what I thought she said? It sounds like her stories just ‘come to her’ as she writes. It kind of answers her ‘continuity issues’, doesn’t it?

You can read some more of her thoughts about True Blood, her graphic novel Cemetery Girl and more here!

What are your thoughts on Charlaine’s interview? Share ‘em below!

Alexander Interviewed by The Globe & Mail

Alexander Skarsgard was interviewed by The Globe & Mail while he was at the Toronto International Film Festival in September! You may remember, he was there because his film, Melancholia was one of the films featured during the festival.

He said some interesting things about his character, Eric Northman. We thought we’d share it with you!

Image courtesy of Jennifer Roberts of The Globe and Mail

Here is the interview below…

Alexander Skarsgard must have a dark side. He’s drawn to characters who emanate a silky menace: not only his most famous role, the 1,000-year-old vampire Eric Northman on the HBO series True Blood; but also a violent hayseed in this year’s remake of Straw Dogs; and a steely U.S. Marine sergeant in the 2008 miniseries Generation Kill. His gorgeous new film, Melancholia, written and directed by Lars von Trier, digs deep into two of the toughest subjects around, severe depression and the end of the world. (It opened in select cities yesterday.)

But during an interview in September, no demons were displayed, not even a hint of a shadow. Alexander Johan Hjalmar Skarsgard (he goes by Alex) was born and raised in Stockholm, but unless he’s pronouncing Scandinavian words, his accent is husky American, and his conversation is a steady burble of positivity, all about luck and gratitude and the “great energy” he’s feeling around him. He’s a striking fellow, as tall (6 foot 4), slender and golden as a shaft of wheat in the sun. In repose, his face is a study of angularity, cheek and jawbones jutting away, highlighting his sensual lips and the textbook movie-star cleft in his chin. But when he grins – and he grins almost non-stop – he immediately loses 15 of his 35 years, plus any hint of danger. It’s like flipping on the lights to reveal that the monster in the corner is actually your favourite teddy bear.

Viewers of True Blood last season saw a version of this phenomenon, when a witch cast a spell on Eric that made him forget he was an evil bastard, and had him wooing Sookie Stackhouse (Anna Pacquin) like a shy seventh-grader. Until they got their clothes off in a woodland glade, that is, and he suddenly seemed pretty confident again. (Whoops – best not to think about that while doing an interview. Blushing at the memory of certain images is becoming an on-the-job hazard for me, as more and more actors get more and more naked in franker and franker films and TV shows. Though I don’t expect any sympathy for it.)

What’s funny is, fan chatter indicated a clear preference for the diabolical Eric. The ladies, especially, seem to like their fangs sharp. “The naïve innocent was sweet for a while,” Skarsgard says. “But people started to miss the old guy. The alpha male.” He grinned. “His power.”

What’s funny is, fan chatter indicated a clear preference for the diabolical Eric.

Michael, the bridegroom Skarsgard plays in Melancholia, is another detour from Alpha Maleville. Much of the film takes place during his wedding reception, as he struggles to soothe his troubled new wife (Kirsten Dunst). “He knows she’s depressed,” he says. “He knows it’s escalating. But he’s so sweet and sensitive and vulnerable, he thinks, ‘It’s worth it, I can take care of her.’ This is supposed to be the best day of his life, and it’s so not. But he’s trying so hard to stay positive: ‘I can make her happy, I can save her. Just give me a chance.’ It’s heartbreaking.”

Making the film, however, was pure joy. Skarsgard has been a lifelong fan of von Trier’s – his father, the actor Stellan Skarsgard (Good Will Hunting), appears regularly in von Trier’s work, and has a small role in Melancholia, too. And Alex remembers watching von Trier’s 1994 television series The Kingdom and thinking, “Come on! This is amazing!” So when von Trier’s producer phoned him to say that the director wanted to work with him, “I immediately called my agent and manager and said, ‘Take these three months off. I don’t care what it is, if Lars von Trier is asking me to come make his coffee in the mornings, I’ll do it,’ ” Skarsgard remembers. “It’s the only time I’ve said yes to something without reading the script.”

The cast, which also includes Kiefer Sutherland, John Hurt, and two gorgeous, mysterious Charlottes, Gainsbourg and Rampling, lived together in a yellow wooden house in the countryside in southern Sweden for two months. “It was like a summer camp,” Skarsgard says. “It was amazing. To work with my old man, and that cast – I was pinching myself. I kept waiting for them to say, ‘Dude, you can go home now. We were kidding.’ ”

He, Dunst and Von Trier “hung out, had dinners, talked about the characters and the relationships,” Skarsgard said. “It was a wonderful time.” Von Trier struggles with depression, and has admitted that some of the story is autobiographical; he also conducted a disastrous press conference during the Cannes Film Festival, where he compared himself to a Nazi. But Skarsgard declines to dish. “What happens in Trollhattan stays in Trollhattan,” he says. Grinning.

Skarsgard didn’t set out to join the family business (three of his six siblings, all younger, are also actors). At 7, he did a small role in a film Stellan was directing, and that led to other projects. “It was fun, I enjoyed it, but I never thought of it as, ‘This is what I’m doing the rest of my life,’ ” he says. Then, when he was 13, he starred in a hit television show. “Suddenly, people recognized me, and I didn’t like that,” he says. “It’s a weird age anyway, and it made me feel paranoid and insecure. My dad was very supportive. He just said, ‘If you’re not feeling it, go do something else.’ ”

Skarsgard listened – he served 18 months in the Swedish military and studied English at Leeds University in England. But at 21, he thought, “Maybe I should try acting again before I dismiss it for good.” He took a theatre course in New York, realized, “Oh yeah, I’ve missed this,” and began racking up air miles, working in Sweden and auditioning in Los Angeles. A small part in Zoolander got the ball rolling, and now he spends his five-month hiatuses from True Blood on film sets. His upcoming movies include What Maisie Knew, based on a Henry James novel, starring Julianne Moore and Steve Coogan; and Battleship, based on the plastic game, opposite Liam Neeson and Taylor Kitsch.

Now when Skarsgard is recognized, “I try to see it as a compliment,” he says. “Actors are so invested in our characters, when people actually care about them it means a lot.”

He even found a positive spin for the end of the world. Melancholia is arguably von Trier’s most mature work, and his vision of the apocalypse is stunning – humane, heartrending and terrifying all at once. But it didn’t spook Skarsgard. “Without giving away the story, something happens at the very end between two characters that made me feel it was almost a happy ending,” he says. “They connected. It’s beautiful.”

Thanks to True Blood Italy for the heads up!

What are your thoughts? Share them below!

Alexander Skarsgard Talks to Moviefone

Alexander Skarsgard was interviewed by Moviefone.com while promoting his movie, Melancholia, in which he co-stars with his father.

He had a lot to say and we thought (for some strange reason ;) ) you might be interested in reading what he had to say…imagine that?! Don’t know how we would ever know this?! LOL Just kidding…

Here is the interview below.

Warning: It may contain some foul language.

This is a fucked up movie.
Yeah, it is. It is pretty fucked up.

When you read the script, is that what you were thinking?
I mean, it’s a Lars von Trier movie, so it’s a little romantic comedy about the end of the world.

You play, by far, the nicest person in this movie.
It was fun because Eric on ‘True Blood’ is an alpha male. And we shot this right after we wrapped season three, so I had spent seven months being Eric and it was so fun doing something that was very different.

Is that what drew you to this?
No. I mean, Lars von Trier drew me to it. I mean, it’s a no-brainer. Whatever he wanted me to do, I would have done.

I do think that this shows a halfway realistic look at what would happen if another planet was going to smash into Earth. I mean, Bruce Willis doesn’t take off in a spaceship to save the day.
[Laughs] No.

Or maybe he is, but we’re not seeing that.
And just the confusion of it all. Like, “What the fuck is this? What’s going on?”

This is a hard movie to ask questions about.
It’s a hard movie to talk about.

Why?
I don’t know, it’s just so… [pauses] It was just such an amazing experience shooting it, and it’s difficult to describe, in a way. It was just so different. And [von Trier] is just so unconventional the way he makes a movie.

What’s unconventional about him, in your opinion?
The way, like, you’re so free. It’s so liberating, in a way. There are no tape marks that you have to hit or 45 minutes of lighting because it has to look beautiful. It’s all real. And you shoot a lot — there’s not a lot of waiting around. And you can have fun with it, he doesn’t care about continuity.

What scene stands out in that respect?
Well, the first day was the limo scene. And Lars was like, “You guys, you’re stuck, you talk about that for a while, and then Alex will get out of the limo to help the driver.” And I was like, “Sure, which side do you want me to get out?” And Lars just looked at me and was like, “I don’t know. You do whatever you want.” And that’s what was so liberating.

As an actor, can you take that too far?
Well, I felt like you’re free to do whatever you want. And he’ll reign it in if it’s not working. But you want to feel that freedom as an actor. You want to feel that confidence that I can do whatever I want.

You play an extremely popular character on ‘True Blood.’ A lot of people have played popular characters on television and sometimes it winds up haunting them. Between a Lars von Trier movie and ‘Battleship,’ is there a plan in place so you’re not known as Eric Northman the rest of your life? Or maybe you want to be known as that?
Well [pauses], it’s not so much like a career move or a strategy that I have. It’s more… I need that. Like, creatively. Of course, after ‘True Blood,’ I get a lot of scripts that are similar to ‘True Blood’ or very similar to Eric Northman — because people want to pigeonhole you. So it’s the same character, but in a movie set or whatever. First of all, of course it’s not a good career move to do that, because then you become that. You’ll get typecast doing that forever. That’s creative suicide. But it’s also, for me — I’m not going to do a good job if I do something I’ve done 25 times before. Because I won’t be inspired; I won’t be encouraged. There’s nothing in that script or in that role that I’ll discover. I mean, it’s already there, I know what I’m doing. I’ll just go there and I’ll show up and I’ll be whatever I’ve been for the past ‘X’ amount of years. So that’s why I actively look for guys like Michael in this movie, who is so different than Eric Northman.

Have you been offered other vampire roles?
Not other vampire roles, but definitely a lot of roles that are very similar to Eric Northman, even though they are not vampires — but kind of the same type. Basically Eric Northman, but without the fangs. Pretty much the same guy.

I’m curious how much input you have in this: During the first season of ‘True Blood,’ I found Eric a bit frightening, but I feel like there’s something more appealing about him in recent seasons — even when he does something frightening, I still want to be his friend. Maybe it’s the hair.
Well, that’s what I loved about it. When people watch something, they’re lazy. So they want to label the characters. Oh, “the hero.” “The girl.” “The villain.” And they sit back and it’s very convenient, you know? And what I loved about Eric — I always love when it’s because life is more complicated than that. In movies, I always love when there’s darkness in the protagonist. You know? And there’s goodness in the antagonist. When there’s more of a grey zone than just black and white. What I love about Eric is that when you meet him, he’s introduced as “the villain.” And the audience is like, “All right, very well, here’s the evil sheriff.” But then, after a while, you’re like, “Oh, wait a minute, that was kind of nice, why did he do that?” And I love that, that people had to revisit, “Oh, shit, well, actually, maybe he’s not just the villain.”

But, of course, when people see a vulnerability that he can be weak and sensitive and kind and loyal… it is tough, because you still want him to be dangerous; he’s still a predator — so you can’t emasculate him too much.

I know love scenes on set are nothing but professional. But is it at all different when the other two members of the scene are married in real life?
Not really. We’re good friends and professional actors. All three of us. So we know what we’re doing. And it’s like, I love Anna [Paquin] to death, but Steve [Moyer] obviously knows that our friendship is very platonic. So, sometimes it’s more awkward if you don’t know them. Steve knows that I’m not a threat.

Well, I’d be more like, “Oh, I hope I’m not imposing.”
Nah. And Steve was very sweet before we got in to all of that stuff. He said to me, “Dude, I just want you to know that I want you to feel comfortable with this and it’s not awkward at all. I love you and I know there’s no one I’d rather have doing these scenes with Anna and me because we’re friends. It’s not awkward at all and I don’t want you to hold back because then that’s going to be weird. Like, do what you have to do.” It was very great of him to say that.

What are your memories of doing ‘Zoolander’? That was your first American movie, I believe.
It was my first job. I was here on vacation and I lived in Sweden. I was here on vacation visiting my dad and his manager was like, “Do you want to go and try an audition and see what it’s like?” I was like, “Oh, that’s fun. I’m in Hollywood and I’m going on an audition.” And it happened to be ‘Zoolander.’ I was lucky enough to get it. It was surreal. I was this kid from south Stockholm on vacation in Hollywood. Two weeks later I was shooting a movie in Tribeca with Ben Stiller, you know?

And then you went back to Sweden and acted there?
Yeah. Because I was there on vacation. And I did that and got an agent and a manager because of ‘Zoolander,’ but I was working on stage in Sweden, so I went back to Sweden and I was there for another three or four years. And when you’re on stage, you really don’t really have time — you work six days a week. So there’s really no time to go to L.A. and take meetings and read scripts and stuff. But since I had an agent and a manager, they basically said, “Whenever you’re done with your plays, come on over and hang out for a couple of weeks and take some meetings. So that’s how, in 2004 and 2005, I started going out to L.A. because I was like, “I have an agent and a manger, but they can’t do shit for me right now because I’m in Sweden doing plays. But whenever I have a little break, I’m going to go out and check it out.

All because of ‘Zoolander’…
Yeah, it’s weird. It’s really crazy that happened. Yeah, it’s extremely fortunate… in my very first audition.

I love what he says about Eric Northman!

What are your thoughts? Share ‘em below!

Coming Soon…Alexander Skarsgard in Melancholia

Here’s a video interview with Alexander Skarsgard who answers these burning questions!

  • How he learned about Melancholia
  • If he’d ever visited his father on a Lars von Trier set
  • How his father urged him to work with von Trier
  • How tightly-scripted the movie was
  • How von Trier works out and films the scenes
  • What filming the star-studded wedding reception was like
  • Whether he got any background on his character
  • How much he knew about the second half of the movie
  • How busy he’s been keeping during the off-season of “True Blood”
  • He talks a little about his upcoming movies The East, What Maisie Knew and Disconnect.
  • That crazy Battleship trailer!

And More!

Read more: CS Video: Alexander Skarsgard on Lars von Trier’s Melancholia – ComingSoon.net http://www.comingsoon.net/news/movienews.php?id=83787#ixzz1dA1PX4NJ

Alexander Skarsgard Featured In Elle UK Magazine

Alexander Skarsgård is featured in an article in the December 2011 issue of Elle UK magazine!

Here are a few quotes taken from the article…

“I’m not stressing about it, but I want to get married and have children. I come from a family with six younger siblings, I love kids. That day will come, I have plenty of time.”

“To rest, he goes – sometimes alone – to a house on a Swedish island his mother owns.”

“He is startlingly good looking. Short brown-blond floppy hair, grey eyes and pearly, perfect teeth, his 6 ft 4in frame is clad in a pec and bicep hugging t-short with tight black pyjama bottoms: very Nordic, indubitably hot.”

“We had a basement apartment, no heating and a bathroom we shared with crazy people. We slept in sleeping bags on the same bed. I loved it.”

“Skarsgard claims to be a reluctant heart-throb. He scrunches up his face at the label. ‘Eugggh. Of course it’s flattering, but I prefer compliments on my acting. There’s too much vanity in Hollywood. Vanity is suicide for an actor. Your creativity will die if you focus on looking good. It’s one of the main reasons I don’t look at gossip about me online.’”

“He admits enjoying ‘a lot of attention’ from women, but he insists it’s a distraction, not a main event. ‘it’s important not to focus on that. I have lunch with a friend and the next day I read we’re engaged.’”

Check out the scans below!

Special thanks to suzitothefuture.tumblr.com for the quotes and the scans!

What are your thoughts? Share ‘em below!

Alex Appears At HIFF

Image Source: LisaTamburini @ twitter

Alexander Skarsgård appeared at the Hamptons International Film Festival (HIFF) earlier today! Movieline.com did an interview with Alex at the festival!

You can read it below!

This is crazy, right?
Yeah! Especially considering I just got off a plane from Sweden. It’s like, wild.

Yowza. I heard you’re a Hamptons regular?
I’ve actually been coming out a lot this summer, because I’ve been shooting in New York the past two and a half months. My best friend, who’s out here tonight with her husband, they have a house out in Amagansett. So on weekends, when I’m done shooting, that’s where I go off to. I’ve been out there a lot this year.

I think you’re the third Skarsgård we’ve interviewed in the last year after your father, Stellan, and your younger brother Bill. What’s the professional dynamic like in the family? Is it competitive? Do you guys ever want the same roles?
Well, I’m 14 years older than Bill, and my brother Gus, we’re quite different. We usually don’t go after the same parts. So I wouldn’t say its competitive. But we do talk a lot about work, and we do encourage each and try to keep each other motivated.

And you and father co-star in Melancholia, which is a masterpiece — but seems kind of overshadowed these days by the Lars von Trier circus.
Not really.

Really? Do you think he’s done a disservice to the film? Or is all publicity good publicity?
I mean, I don’t think he did. The movie’s so strong, and I think pretty quickly, people are focusing on the movie again after that comment.

Straw Dogs had a tough go of things recently, which is too bad. What was your take on the film and its reception?
I don’t know. I don’t read reviews, so… I don’t like knowing.

Did you see it?
Yeah! Yeah, I’ve seen it. I’m happy with it! I think it’s good, and I’m happy with my part.

But no reviews.
No. No, I just… don’t.

Not even the positive ones?
No.

Here are some pics from this event! (Sorry for the watermarks…AGAIN.) Please click image for larger view.


Sources: movieline.com and newscom.com

I always find it interesting that he refuses to read any reviews or articles about himself and/or his career. It’s refreshing because all the publicity won’t go to his head and he seems like a down-to-earth kind of guy.

What do you think? Share your thoughts or just drool below!

Alex In Out Magazine

Alexander Skarsgård is featured in the November issue of Out Magazine with some great new photos and an interview with another famous Swede, Jonas Åkerlund who directed Alex in Lady Gaga’s “Paparazzi” music video!

Here are some interesting quotes and sexy photos of Alex from the interview, which you can read in its’ entirety here!


Skarsgård: Also, I think part of the reason why there are so many musicians coming out of Sweden is you’re encouraged to play an instrument, or to sing and be creative, from a very early age, and it’s free. It’s a combination of a good school system and the long, dark winters. Because that means people sit in their garages and play music for five months because it’s too cold and dark to be outside.


Skarsgård: And that’s also why we’re so liberal and so cool with our sexuality — because we fuck a lot [laughter].

Skarsgård: Very tame, very tame, by Swedish standards.

Skarsgård: When you’re bored, just have sex.

Definitely some of the greatest quotes by Alex we’ve heard recently! We can’t help but think about sex when it comes to these photos too!

Thoughts? Share them below!

Video: Alex & Kiefer’s Melancholia Interview

Alexander Skarsgård and Kiefer Sutherland were interviewed at the Toronto International Film Festival about their movie, Melancholia – which was featured at the festival.

Together, they shed some light on Lars Von Trier’s unusual filming techniques and much more!

Watch it below!

Thoughts? Share ‘em below!

Charlaine Harris Interviewed at Bouchercon

Charlaine Harris was interviewed by McKenna Jordan of Murder By The Book at Bouchercon 2011 in St. Louis, earlier last week and we have the video footage from it taken by someone who attended the Q & A session!

She answers many questions about the Sookie Stackhouse novels and her thoughts on many different things!

It comes in 6 parts and you can watch them below!

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

Part 5

Part 6

It’s interesting that she thinks Chris Bauer (Andy) and Kristin Bauer (Pam) are the two actors who look most like the characters she imagined in her head when she writes. As for her thoughts on Anna playing Sookie? She admits, she’s not the Sookie she pictured in her head, but she thinks she does a great job.

She also shared the book scene she’s most proud of and that’s when Sookie watches Godfrey ‘meet the sun’!

Her story about meeting a fan who had Alexander Skarsgard tattooed on her shoulder and wanted her to make out the autograph to ‘Mrs. Alexander Skarsgard’ and her stunned reaction was very amusing! (I know many people who would do the same exact thing! ;) )

What do you think? Share your thoughts below!

Alexander Skarsgard: Two Video Interviews

Image courtesy of Straw Dogs

Alexander Skarsgård is busy promoting his new movie, Straw Dogs! He was recently interviewed by On The Red Carpet and ExtraTV! We thought you might enjoy watching and hearing what he had to say about his role!

You can watch both videos below!

This first one is from On The Red Carpet – where he shares how he tried to make Charlie Venner likeable!

“It was important to make this guy three-dimensional and real. I don’t know if ‘likeable’ is the right word but at least in the beginning of the movie, it was important that you understand him because that makes it real,” Skarsgard told OnTheRedCarpet.com and other press outlets in a satellite interview.

“To play a character who’s just evil … I wanted the audience to be able to connect with the guy and understand him and I thought it would be more interesting for the audience if they were kind of on the fence at the beginning at least – ‘Should Amy, his ex-girlfriend go back to him or should she stay with David, her new husband?’ It made it more interesting than good guy, good girl, bad guy,” Skarsgard continued. “Those movies don’t really work for me and I think we all didn’t want it to be one of those movies.

“Vanity is always dangerous for an actor,” Skarsgard said. “For Charlie, I wanted to gain weight because he’s an old football player and I wanted to be bigger than I was at the time. The day you’re motivated by, like, going to the gym because you’re in a tank top, then you’re in trouble as an actor, I think.”"

Watch Alex’s interview here: On The Red Carpet

Alex revealed to ExtraTV that he found it interesting that Straw Dogs filmed where True Blood is set – in Shreveport, LA. Plus, a whole lot more…including Stephen Moyer’s plans to put a camera down Alex’s “pants” (so to speak) while filming Eric and Sookie love scenes!

Watch this interview below!

Did you see Alex blushing while discussing his “Gracious Plenty”? LMAO!

What are your thoughts? Share them below!