Epic: first film still released

The first still from Epic has been shared on the Kinote.info website.

Epic: first film still released

Ripper Street: a chat with Matthew Macfadyen

A new interview with Matthew has been shared on the Bullz-Eye Blog

BE: I’ve asked some this people and been told, “I hate to say that I’ve made it even now, because I don’t want to jinx myself,” but was there a moment when you realized definitively, “Well, I’ve done it: I’m a full-time actor”?

MM: No, there was never any kind of “eureka!” moment. When I left drama school, I did three world tours with the theater, so I was just sort of…doing it. It’s lovely, and I love it. I don’t know what else I’d do. I mean, I really don’t know what else I’d do! [Laughs.] I don’t have any other strings for my bow! Thankfully, I’m doing okay…

BE: How was it for you to transition from theater into television, as far as the projects that weren’t literary adaptations?

MM: Oh, it was fine. Yeah, the first TV I did, I didn’t know what was going on, because we didn’t really have much TV training at drama school, really. So everybody…I mean, now it’s changed and they do, but you sort of learned on the job. My first job, actually, was a “Wuthering Heights” adaptation for BBC, and I sort of had to come through a gate. My first-ever scene, I had to come through this gate and sort of walk up, grunt at somebody, and…that was it. And they said, “Check the gate!” But, you know, what they meant was when they check the film in the camera. But for weeks and weeks I couldn’t pluck up the courage what on earth they meant, because I thought they meant the actual wooden gate! [Laughs.] So, yeah, that was terrible. But then you sort of get used to it. 

Ripper Street: episode 5 clip

The BBC have uploaded a clip from next Sunday's UK broadcast of Ripper Street - The Weight of One Man's Heart. No sign of Matthew unfortunately. 

Ripper Street: episode 5 clip

Ripper Street: Matthew Macfadyen sometimes has trouble keeping a straight face.

An interview with Matthew from the recent TCA panel in Pasadena has been shared on Philly.com.

You might not guess it to see him as Mr. Darcy to Keira Knightley's Elizabeth Bennet in "Pride & Prejudice" or the somber Victorian London police Inspector Edmund Reid in BBC America's new "Ripper Street," but Matthew Macfadyen sometimes has trouble keeping a straight face. In fact, Jerome Flynn ("Game of Thrones"), who plays Reid's sergeant in "Ripper Street," says Macfadyen and co-star Adam Rothenberg ("Alcatraz") are "the two biggest gigglers I've worked with." "Adam's terrible. He's terrible!" said Macfadyen in an interview earlier this month during the Television Critics Association's winter meetings. "We . . . got to a stage where we couldn't look at each other."

Another great article about Ripper Street has been posted on The Guardian.

But what nudges Ripper Street into superior territory is its cast. The keystone is Macfadyen, playing real-life detective Edmund Reid. Often careworn, and fascinated by the glittering prospects of the approaching 20th century, he's an effortlessly authoritative lead and a refreshingly modern presence in a period piece such as this.

Ripper Street: Matthew Macfadyen sometimes has trouble keeping a straight face.

Ripper Street: What Culture Episode 4 Review

WhatCulture! has reviewed Episode 4: The Good of This City and here are a few of the comments. Be sure to read the whole review at WhatCulture!

As usual, the acting is fantastic and the best was on show between Macfadyen’s Reid and Rothenberg’s Jackson.

This episode was superb, full of action and mystery throughout and even though it didn’t take a genius to decipher the identity of the villain, there was a fantastically ironic end to the story.

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