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Warm Bodies: Nicholas Hoult interview

Nicholas Hoult (Skins, X-Men: First Class) tells us what it’s like to play a hot zombie in unusual love story Warm Bodies, and how eating brains isn’t gory if it’s well shot…

NICHOLAS HOULT stars in WARM BODIES

How would you describe the character of R?
The most compelling thing about R is his need to connect. He wants to connect with the other zombies in the airport, even though they’ve got nothing to really say to him and can’t even say their names. He wants to connect with Julie and to feel alive. That’s one of the most human instincts ever – to want to feel a part of something and to connect with another human.”

What made this part stand out for you?
The idea of this zombie who I have to try to make an audience care about and root for, that was interesting to me. In the script, he was very funny and eloquent in his voiceover, so there was a charm about him and a humour as well.

Was it challenging to play a character who barely speaks?
A lot of the time I had to communicate just through movement, my eyes, the things I do, or the records R plays for Julie. The idea of not being able to say what you’re thinking was something that was exciting for me. It makes you think in a slightly different way than you normally would.

Director Jonathan Levine said the first on-screen conversations between R and Rob Corrdry’s M saw you both crack up, but by the fifth take you were both properly groaning…
There were moments where we’d both zone out in each other’s eyes. It was just very weird stuff.

Warm Bodies Nic Hoult Teresa Palmer zombie love story

You eat another person’s brains in the film. Is that going to gross out the audiences who come looking for a love story?
That’s a slightly violent moment in the film, where R is cracking Perry’s head open, but it’s shot very beautifully. The way Javier Aguirresarobe framed and lit everything, it just looks fantastic – even the more gruesome aspects, there’s still something very cinematic about them.

Did it gross you out?
Eating brains is fun! They made the brains out of kind of a cold, wet sponge. The idea Jonathan came up with is that because these brains are memories it’s like being alive again, it’s kind of like a drug to the zombies.

A lot of R’s thoughts are revealed via voiceover in the film. Did you have to keep that in mind while acting?
Sometimes the script supervisor read out the voiceover on set so I could hear what the character was meant to be thinking during the scene. It helps with the timing of the scene to make everything link together.

Warm Bodies, which stars Nicholas Hoult, Teresa Palmer, Rob Cordry, Dave Franco and Analeigh Tipton, opens in cinemas on 1 February in the US and 8 February in the UK.

MUST WATCH:
Warm Bodies: first four minutes with Nicholas Hoult’s zombie [VIDEO]

MUST READ:
Warm Bodies: Jonathan Levine interview


Warm Bodies Jonathan Levine director and scriptwriter

Warm Bodies: Jonathan Levine interview

Jonathan Levine (50/50, The Wackness), scriptwriter and director of zombie romantic comedy Warm Bodies, talks humanity, musical shorthand and breaking zombie conventions…

WARM BODIES

You were initially resistant to doing a movie based on a young‐adult novel. What changed your mind? I identified with the main character, and the book Isaac Marion wrote really allowed for these incredible directorial flourishes and aggressive style. I was excited about the opportunity to push the envelope visually. And it was a great character piece, as well. It’s an adventure, it’s a romance, it’s got comedic elements, and it’s got horror elements.

Were you worried it would be hard to create a believable relationship between a zombie and a living girl?
The arc of their relationship was the most important thing to me to get right directorially – the push and pull of guys and girls, the way relationships start and people are nervous at first, maybe even repulsed, and then come together.

Zombie films often speak to the audience about humanity. Is that true of Warm Bodies?
The salient theme at the heart of it is that people have forgotten what it means to be human and, through the interaction of these two characters, other people re‐learn what it means to be human. Not just the zombies, but the humans, too.

What made you cast Dave Franco (21 Jump Street, Superbad) as the boy who gets his brains eaten?
He has to make a very big impact in a very short time and he really does it. He’s so charming and likeable, and so talented, that he sticks with you throughout the movie.

The most zombie-like zombies, the Boneys, were created using CGI based on the movements of stunt performers in motion‐capture suits. How was your first time using that kind of technology?
The great thing about CG is, not only can you create these characters, but you can do things stylistically that I feel like some people aren’t taking advantage of remotely enough. When we go into R’s dreams, for example, we do surreal transitions. At the very beginning of the movie, about the first 10 minutes, there’s a lot of really interesting, stylish CG that is used to tell the story in a way that people haven’t seen before. I’ve never previously had it as a tool in my arsenal. It allows for the editorial process to be as creative as the production process.

Aside from R’s relationship with Julie, he also has a lot of screen time with his best friend, M…
M, in many ways, is the heart of the movie. R’s change sparks everything, but M’s change is representative of everyone else.

Was it a challenge to have the zombie characters communicate?
They’re able to have conversations based on short, one‐word things and to interpret each other’s groans. That led to a lot of on‐set laughs. We were shooting this scene at the very beginning of the movie and it’s basically just two guys groaning at each other. The guys kept cracking up. By the time we got to take five, they were literally groaning and having conversations with each other.

There’s an interesting use of music in the film, too…
R’s use of records to communicate with Julie was a clever feature of Marion’s novel that helped draw me to the project. Music really does help set tone. It’s another way to have a shorthand with the audience. Music is, in a big way, how I access the world in a movie and the characters. It’s really nice that it was already written into the story.

This film has less gore and physical disintegration than many other examples from the zombie genre. Was that intentional?
I don’t even look at it, really, as a zombie movie. I look at it as a monster movie that turns into a love story. We’re working within the zombie mythology, but we’re using that mythology as a means to an end, as shorthand for something else.

Apparently your inspiration came from Depression‐era photos and images of coal miners, instead of traditional zombie movie references…
We wanted to make a movie that appealed to all ages, so we couldn’t necessarily get involved in some of the fun stuff that other zombie movies do. The process of designing the looks of both the zombies and the Boneys was a lengthy one that started early in pre‐production. We had people doing sketches, artists taking a picture of Nick Hoult from Skins or X‐Men, and tweaking and playing with it. It would be back and forth internally, and then we would take it to the studio and do make-up tests.

Are you worried horror purists might disapprove of the way the film plays with zombie‐movie conventions?
I have a great knowledge and love of films like 28 Days Later, Shaun Of The Dead, Day Of The Dead and Return Of The Living Dead. But one of the great things about making movies is you can use genre and mythology to tell different kinds of stories.

Warm Bodies, which stars Nicholas Hoult, Teresa Palmer, Rob Cordry, Dave Franco and Analeigh Tipton, opens in cinemas on 1 February in the US and 8 February in the UK.

MUST WATCH:
Warm Bodies: first four minutes with Nicholas Hoult’s zombie [VIDEO]

MUST READ:
Warm Bodies: Nicholas Hoult interview

 

 


Warm Bodies Nic Hoult first four minutes zombie eyes 470

Warm Bodies: first four minutes with Nicholas Hoult’s zombie [VIDEO]

If you watch The Walking Dead and have lost your sympathy for the biters, prepare to have some of it restored by Nicholas Hoult‘s R.

A victim of the zombie apocalypse, he’s wandering the world in search of a connection. Having read Isaac Marion’s novel, we know he tries to find it in this zom-rom-com with love interest Julie (Teresa Palmer).

Warm Bodies Nic Hoult first four minutes zombie love story

The first four minutes of the film have appeared online and serve as a great introduction to this very unusual love story.

Warm Bodies, which stars Nicholas Hoult, Teresa Palmer, Rob Cordry, Dave Franco and Analeigh Tipton, opens in cinemas on 1 February in the US and 8 February in the UK. 

 

MUST READ:
Warm Bodies: Jonathan Levine interview
Warm Bodies: Nicholas Hoult interview 

Die Hard 25th Anniversary Collection Remastered Blu-ray box shot 470

The Terminator Is Back – As Are Die Hard, Hannah And Her Sisters and Sleeper on Remastered Blu-ray

Die Hard 25th Anniversary Collection, Hannah And Her Sisters, Sleeper and a remastered Terminator all coming to Blu-ray in the US…

20th Century Fox has announced new treats for US Blu-ray owners, with high-definition versions of four classic films arriving early in 2013.

Woody Allen’s Hannah And Her Sisters and Sleeper have both been given a polish, although as with DVD releases the director doesn’t believe in adding bonus features. Even so, cleaned up prints of both of these films should look amazing.

Two action heroes also get a scrub (or should that be a bed bath given their ages now?), as the Die Hard 25th Anniversary Collection comes to Blu-ray and James Cameron’s The Terminator is remastered for the HD format.

Die Hard celebrates 25 years of Bruce Willis playing John McClane with a five-disc collection featuring the first four Die Hard films and an all-new bonus disc, ‘Decoding Die Hard’.

Hannah And Her Sisters and Sleeper are both released on 15 January, 2013, Die Hard follows on 29 January, 2013, while The Terminator is released on 19 February, 2013. Pre-orders for the two Woody Allen films start tomorrow, with Die Hard available to be reserved from 19 December, 2012 and The Terminator on pre-order from 9 January, 2013.

The full details of each title are below…

Hannah And Her Sisters Blu-ray

The eldest daughter of show-biz parents, Hannah (Mia Farrow) is a devoted wife, loving mother and successful actress. A loyal supporter of her two aimless sisters Lee (Barbara Hershey) and Holly (Dianne Wiest), she’s also the emotional backbone of a family that seems to resent her stability almost as much as they depend on it. But when Hannah’s perfect world is quietly sabotaged by sibling rivalry, she finally begins to see that she’s as lost as everyone else, and in order to find herself, she’ll have to choose – between the independence her family can’t live with… and the family she can’t live without.

Screen Format: Widescreen 1.85:1

Audio: English DTS-HD-MA 1.0 / Spanish: Dolby Digital 1.0 / French: Dolby Digital 1.0

Subtitles: English SDH/Spanish

US Rating: PG-13

Total Run Time: 107 minutes

Closed Captioned: Yes

Sleeper Blu-ray

When cryogenically preserved Miles Monroe (Allen) is awakened 200 years after a hospital mishap, he discovers the future’s not so bright: all women are frigid, all men are impotent, and the world is ruled by an evil dictator…a disembodied nose! Pursued by the secret police and recruited by anti-government rebels with a plan to kidnap the dictator’s snout before it can be cloned, Miles falls for the beautiful – but untalented – poet Luna (Keaton). But when Miles is captured and reprogrammed by the government – to believe he’s Miss America! – it’s up to Luna to save Miles, lead the rebels, and cut off the nose…just to spite its face.

Screen Format: Widescreen 1.85:1

Audio: English DTS-HD-MA 1.0 / Spanish: Dolby Digital 1.0 / French: Dolby Digital 1.0

Subtitles: English SDH/Spanish

US Rating: PG

Total Run Time: 87 minutes

Closed Captioned: Yes

Die hard 25th Anniversary Collection Blu-ray

It’s the ultimate tribute to the tough-as-nails cop with a wry sense of humour and a knack for explosive action. Wrong place. Wrong time. Right man. Yippee ki yay!

Special Features:

  • Modern-Day Hero — Casting, evolution and legacy of John McClane
  • Along For The Ride — Engaging sidekicks who have teamed up with McClane
  • Bad To The Bone — McClane’s well-armed and formidable foes
  • Punishing Blows — Creating the intense action sequences, fistfights and stunts
  • Explosive Effects — Role of groundbreaking visual and special effects including some of the biggest explosions on screen
  • Reinventing The Action Genre — Development of the franchise from concept to character to story
  • The Right Hero For The Right Time — Appeal and influence of Die Hard films on pop culture

Screen Format: Widescreen

Audio: English 5.1 DTS-HD-MA / Spanish: 5.1 Dolby Digital / French: 5.1 Dolby Digital

Subtitles: English/Spanish/French

US Rating: Not Rated

Closed Captioned: Yes

The Terminator, Remastered Blu-ray

In this newly remastered film, Arnold Schwarzenegger stars as the most fierce and relentless killing machine ever to threaten the survival of mankind!

An indestructible cyborg — a Terminator (Schwarzenegger) — is sent back in time to kill Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton), the woman whose unborn son will become humanity’s only hope in a future war against machines. This legendary sci-fi thriller from pioneering writer/director James Cameron, written with Gale Anne Hurd, fires an arsenal of action and heart-stopping suspense that never lets up!

Special Features:

  • 7 Deleted Scenes
  • Creating The Terminator: Visual Effects & Music
  • Terminator: A Retrospective

Screen Format: Widescreen 1.85:1

Audio: English 5.1 DTS-HD-MA / Spanish: 5.1 Dolby Digital / French: DTS 5.1

Subtitles: English SDH/Spanish/French

US Rating: R

Total Run Time: 108 minutes

Closed Captioned: Yes