2012年4月27日 星期五

Long time no see, Mr. Cumberbatch !

好久不見的Benedict先生,終於出現在報導上啦!
親愛的Benny,如果你不打算出席某些公開的場合,能不能直接告訴大家,
省得一堆人盯在螢幕前看直播,只為了找根本不曾出現的你的芳蹤?Q_Q

抱怨歸抱怨,看到BC的新聞還是小鹿亂撞了一下^^
大概是因為5月Benny要出席NYC的Sherlock第二季首映會,所以報導陸續出現了。

不曉得Benny是不是太久沒人可以耍寶了,這篇真的是...極盡耍寶的能事阿!XD
'Star Trek 2': 'Sherlock' star Benedict Cumberbatch dyes hair, loves J.J. Abrams
原文點這裡


討厭,沒有新照片可看Q_Q

"I'm getting my hair dyed at the moment, at work," British actor Benedict Cumberbatch tells Zap2it, calling in from the set of "Star Trek 2," the second installment in director J.J. Abrams' big-screen reboot of the science-fiction franchise.

Cumberbatch, who returns to PBS' "Masterpiece Mystery!" on Sunday, May 6, in the second season of "Sherlock," playing the title role in the BBC's 21st century reboot of that venerable franchise, plays the mysterious villain in "Trek," the plot of which has been shrouded in secrecy.

"The movie goes very well," Cumberbatch says. "It's very, very long hours, but it's an incredible job. It's phenomenal. J.J. brings it. It's a very exciting set to be on. He's very imaginative. He's involved in the details, the acting and all the wonderful ideas he has for capturing stories in a fresh and imaginative way.

"Just the range of stuff I get to do in one day, it's great. Also, what he's asking me, it's just wonderful. I can't say much nicer than that. I'm basically raving about it, and I don't have a gun pointed to my head.

"He's a genuinely good human being, as well as being absurdly talented and popular. He's just fantastically talented, just in payoffs and thrills and chills along the way."

Cumberbatch shot "Sherlock" in Wales, but for "Star Trek," he's in Los Angeles, sometimes on a proper movie lot, with all the amenities that go with it -- such as catered lunches.

Asked if he's enjoying it all, Cumberbatch says, "Yeah, you betcha. It's great. I've gone up two suit sizes. The character I'm playing, he's strong, I can say that much. I've changed my physique a bit, so that requires eating like a foie gras goose, well beyond your appetite, And, providing I don't feel too ill, I then work out two hours a day with a phenomenal trainer. It's the L.A. way."

Cumberbatch has also gotten a chance to film in the Budweiser Brewery in the San Fernando Valley, which was used in Abrams' first "Star Trek" movie as the engine room of the Starship Enterprise.

"It's noisy," he says. "it's very, very, very mind-numbingly noisy. It's slightly like what you'd imagine they'd be playing in your earphones if you were being tortured by some foreign operative. It's not particularly pleasant.

"And yet, it's stunning, and it films beautifully. It's incredible. It's a working, functioning factory, and production doesn't shut down for us being there. It's fantastic, really beautiful."

But, he didn't get to bring home a case of cold Bud.

"No, I didn't," says Cumberbatch. "I'd like to. No, I didn't. There was a nice little tap on one of the big, old vats, and I thought, 'I wonder if I should take a taste.'"

孩子你的頭髮一年到底要被折騰幾次?又染...
還有,角色都給你了,不用一直誇JJ吧?XD
不過我相信,Benny真的是用一顆真心在與片場的所有人互動,也因此,只要訪問問到他對導演、對其他演員的看法,他總是迫不及待的要與人分享他所認識到的這個非常特別的人,他也不吝表現他的敬意與崇拜知情。也因此,大家都疼他吧^^(尤其長輩們?)

不過,看到這篇報導的Sherlock劇組會不會開始頭疼起來。胖兩個尺碼了耶!那小夏的在第二季基本上已經要爆扣子的襯衫現在該怎麼辦?XD請劇組快去找贊助商啦!一定很多西裝品牌願意贊助小夏的!:D


這篇實在有夠好笑的:
How an iPhone Audition Got Benedict Cumberbatch Into the ‘Star Trek’ Sequel
來源點這裡


Robert Yager for The New York Times
我喜歡Benny穿這件衣服,感覺這顏色好襯他^^

Benedict Cumberbatch, the British actor and star of “Sherlock,” has been filming the “Star Trek” sequel in the United States.
No, Benedict Cumberbatch is not going to tell us anything juicy about the top-secret role he’s been filming in the coming sequel to “Star Trek,” the next adventure of the starship Enterprise crew from the director J. J. Abrams.

To make up for this lack of candor, Mr. Cumberbatch, the British actor and “Sherlock” star who is the subject of a profile in this weekend’s Arts & Leisure section, will instead share the story of how he landed the mystery role via an audition he recorded for Mr. Abrams on an iPhone.

We’ll let Mr. Cumberbatch, who spoke from his temporary home in Venice, Calif., take it from here:

      I got a call before Christmas Eve saying that they’re very interested in you playing the not-so-good   
      guy in the next “Star Trek” film. Can you get yourself on tape? So I rang some friends of mine – 
      and when I say friends, I mean the top casting directors in England who were all on holiday 
      because we observe this little Judeo-Christian cult holiday called Christmas. Whereas, you know, 
      some kids in this part of town, [circles his hands to indicate Los Angeles] with their Crackberrys, 
      don’t. And the demands were coming in so fast, I was like, This is terrifying. And by the 27th, 
      people were knocking on the door, literally, and saying I’ve got to put myself on tape.

      I was down in Gloucestershire with some friends, who turned out to be useless. I won’t mention 
      their names, they’re quite well known friends, a director and a very brilliant actress. Bless them, 
      they were busy with his kid. I then went down to London and begged my best friend there, Adam 
      Ackland. He’s always been there to put out the fire. And he said, “Let’s do it.” My Flip wasn’t 
      working, I couldn’t get any kind of recording device. I said, I’m going to do it on my iPhone. It’s 
      high quality, it’s HD. It will be fine.

      And so I ended up squatting in their kitchen, at about 11 o’clock at night. I was pretty strung out, so 
      that went into the performance. And his wife, Alice, bless her, with two children asleep – they’ve 
      got enough on their plate without this actor in a crisis in their kitchen — and she’s balancing two 
      chairs to get the right angle on me and desk lamps bouncing light off bits of paper, just trying 
      desperately to make it look half-decent. Because it’s going to go into J.J. Abrams’s iPad. So we did 
      it, and then it took a day and a half to compress it. I sent it to him, and then I got told, “J.J.’s on 
      holiday.”

      I was furious. And then I heard on the day after New Year’s Day – we had an amazing first 
      showing for [the British season premiere of] “Sherlock,” and then he just sent me an e-mail, going, 
      “You want to come and play?” I said, What does this mean? Are you in town, you want to go for a 
      drink? I’m English, you’ve got to be really straight with me on this. Have I got the part?

Indeed, he did.

話說回來,美國人都不過聖誕節的嗎?讓我想起龍紋身的女孩當中,那位在聖誕節被大富翁千里迢迢叫去談工作時,他那心不甘情不願的身影。恐怕Benny接到電話的當下,也會覺得這是群瘋子吧?XD
但好在,最後Benny的Iphone發揮功用了。蘋果應該找Benny來代言的,哈哈!
JJ(怎麼辦?我一直想到犯罪心理裡面的JJ)那句話也好可愛: “You want to come and play?”Benny的反應更可愛了:I’m English, you’ve got to be really straight with me on this. 
親愛的Benny,別忘記這世界上只有兩種人呦!一種是認識了你並會喜歡上你,另一種是還不認識你呦!XD

另一篇:Role to Role, From Sherlock to ‘Star Trek’
原文點這裡

Robert Yager for The New York Times

HOW skilled a secret keeper is Benedict Cumberbatch if he readily confesses the easiest method for extracting secrets from him?

Asked somewhat frivolously for information about one of the many coming projects he cannot talk about, Mr. Cumberbatch, the 35-year-old British actor, offered an equally facetious response.

“You could stick a knife in my thigh, and I wouldn’t tell you,” he said a few weeks ago, relaxing on the deck of the Venice, Calif., home where he was staying. But he added: “Pull the hair on my head the wrong way, and I would be on my knees begging for mercy. I have very sensitive follicles.”

Deeper still within his head were numerous vital details that Mr. Cumberbatch’s work required him to keep locked away. There was not much he could say about his dual roles as a necromancer and a talking dragon in Peter Jackson’s film adaptation of “The Hobbit,” and even less about the part he was shooting in J. J. Abrams’s sequel to “Star Trek.” (“I’ve got to be a complete and utter tease,” he said, more gleeful than apologetic.)

What Mr. Cumberbatch can confirm is that these high-profile opportunities were made possible by the success of “Sherlock,” the television series that casts him as a cool and contemporary — if brutally rational — upgrade of Sherlock Holmes. It returns on May 6 for a second season on PBS’s “Masterpiece Mystery!”

In Britain, where “Sherlock” is shown on BBC One, the series has left millions of fans frantic to know the resolution of a season-ending cliffhanger, which American viewers have not yet seen, and transformed Mr. Cumberbatch (who already knows the outcome) from a well-regarded journeyman actor into a superstar.

And he makes no secret of his desire to see “Sherlock” enjoy similar acclaim in the land of “Mad Men” and “Modern Family.”

“I’m desperate for America to really take to this,” he said. “It has taken it into its heart as a cult thing, but I’d love it to hit the mainstream this time. Because I just think it’s of that quality, and it belongs there.”

In person the thin and muscular Mr. Cumberbatch shares the piercing gaze and sonorous, sinister voice of his Holmes but is warmer and more irreverent. He is a self-confessed motormouth and a relentless mimic who, over the course of an hour, adopted the shrieking voice of an admiring Valley girl; the Scottish burr of his friend and colleague James McAvoy; the synthesized speech of Stephen Hawking, whom he portrayed in a British TV movie; and the rapid, adenoidal clip of both Mr. Abrams and Steven Spielberg, who directed him in “War Horse.”

In similarly haphazard fashion Mr. Cumberbatch has spent the past 18 months ricocheting from role to role, in British stage productions like “After the Dance” and “Frankenstein” (for which he shared the Olivier Award this month with his co-star Jonny Lee Miller); a coming television version of “Parade’s End,” adapted by Tom Stoppard from the Ford Madox Ford novels; and films like “The Hobbit,” “War Horse” and “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy.”

Last December, on vacation in Gloucestershire, England, he got the call that Mr. Abrams wanted him to submit a videotaped audition for “the not-so-good guy” (in Mr. Cumberbatch’s words) in the “Star Trek” sequel — and could not find anyone to film it for him.

“We observe this little Judeo-Christian cult holiday called Christmas,” Mr. Cumberbatch said sarcastically. “Whereas, you know, some kids in this part of town” — he circled his hands in the Los Angeles air — “with their Crackberrys, don’t.”

In a friend’s kitchen late at night, an agitated and weary Mr. Cumberbatch recorded his audition on an iPhone — “I was pretty strung out,” he said, “so that went into the performance” — and sent it to Mr. Abrams, only to be told the director was also on vacation.

Mr. Abrams, who saw the recording a few days later and hired Mr. Cumberbatch, wrote in an e-mail that it was “one of the most compelling audition readings I’d ever seen.”

But Mr. Abrams already knew this from Mr. Cumberbatch’s work on “Sherlock,” whose second season drew around 10 million viewers in Britain for each of three 90-minute episodes shown in January, according to the Broadcasters’ Audience Research Board. (By contrast, in the United States, the first season averaged 4.6 million viewers per episode, PBS said.) On Tuesday, Mr. Cumberbatch’s work on the show earned him a Bafta award nomination for best actor.

Steven Moffat, the television producer who created “Sherlock” with Mark Gatiss, recognized similar qualities in Mr. Cumberbatch after seeing him play a quietly frightening character in “Atonement.”

“His look is quirky,” said Mr. Moffat, who also produces the BBC’s hit revival of “Doctor Who.” “His appeal is quite intellectual. He’s not conventionally handsome — handsome by any normal human standard. But the screen is very demanding.” Mr. Cumberbatch, he added, is “not ever going to play an ordinary man.”

Mr. Moffat — who met with no other actors for the role — said he saw in Mr. Cumberbatch an actor ideally suited to play Holmes, but also one who was ready for an assignment that would significantly raise his profile.

“Little boys like to be heroes,” Mr. Moffat said. “You get to wear the coat and swagger about, and girls think he’s sexy. There’s a lot of things that playing Stephen Hawking can do, but that’s probably not one of them.”

Mr. Cumberbatch realized too that “Sherlock” would shine a spotlight on him in a way he hadn’t previously experienced. “I knew it would accelerate wherever I was at,” he said. “And I thought, I’m ready for this.”

But the increased scrutiny that arrived as abruptly as his fame made him think otherwise. The address of his London home became public knowledge when he applied to expand his apartment into the one beneath it, and his breakup with a girlfriend he’d known since college was much discussed in the tabloids.

Since coming to California to work on “Star Trek,” Mr. Cumberbatch said, there had been “a huge blogging response to me selling out to Hollywood and dating a model and become a walking cliché. That was nice.” He also discovered a Web site that juxtaposes his facial expressions from “Sherlock” with images of otters in similar poses. He said it was “brilliant” and “fantastic.”

Mr. McAvoy, who appeared with Mr. Cumberbatch in “Atonement” and “Starter for 10,” said the toughest challenge he faced was not the glaring eye of fans or the news media but a self-imposed demand to live up to the expectations of his fellow actors.

“Your peers look at you and go, ‘All right, you’ve got this opportunity and this ability — step up and be good every time,’ ” Mr. McAvoy said.

Even so, he said that for as long as he had known Mr. Cumberbatch he has worked steadily in many enviable roles and “has occupied a position within the industry that people would chop his legs off to get, so I imagine he’s used to dealing with that sort of pressure.”

Season 2 of “Sherlock,” which presents 21st-century takes on the classic Holmes adventures “A Scandal in Bohemia,” “The Hound of the Baskervilles” and “The Final Problem,” offers Mr. Cumberbatch further opportunity to build on his portrait of the consulting detective as a cocky but not fully formed young man.

Paired once again with Dr. John Watson (Martin Freeman), Holmes is drawn further into his rivalry with the archfiend Jim Moriarty (Andrew Scott) and meets the mysterious Irene Adler (Lara Pulver), who stirs some decidedly warm feelings beneath the character’s coldblooded facade.

“The most prominent attraction is of the mind,” Ms. Pulver said. “Otherwise it would have literally been an episode of two people wanting to rip each other’s clothes off, and we’ve all seen that.”

Though his Holmes is meant to be lacking in social graces, Mr. Cumberbatch rejected a popular interpretation that the character has Asperger syndrome.

“He’s a high-functioning sociopath,” he said. “He has a general disregard for standard codes of conduct, pleasantries, niceties. He wants to cut to the chase. He wants everything to be faster and better and purer.”

Mr. Cumberbatch could at least relate to this aspect of the character. He recalled an encounter he’d had in January at the Golden Globe Awards, where the PBS “Masterpiece” executive producer Rebecca Eaton taunted him affectionately with a trophy that had just been won by “Downton Abbey.”

He said: “I just looked at it and went: ‘Begone, woman. Bring it back when it says “Sherlock Holmes” or Steven Moffat or myself — someone else who’s more deserving than the second series of “Downton Abbey.” ’ ”

Exhibiting a diplomacy that his Holmes is not known for, Mr. Cumberbatch stopped himself from saying anything more about the rival television series.

“I know too many people who are in it,” he said. “I thought the first series was good. That’s what I’ll say.”

話說回來,我也不是很喜歡第二季的唐頓,太拖戲了。比起第一季,第二季我有好幾次耐不著性子快轉,實在被編劇這種編劇情的方式搞的很頭疼。要不是我真的很希望Mary跟Matthew能有好結果,還真的很難持續追下去。(尤其在伯爵外遇後>"<)只是,唐頓在美國的勢力似乎很龐大阿?製片來跑來挑釁Benny是怎樣   >"<

補上另一張照片,真的感覺的出來Benny有變壯耶!:D













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