I'm still waiting by my letter box for the postie to deliver my shiny Prince of Persia DVD and Blu-ray. Despite the cramped conditions (not to mention the draft coming under the door), I'm able to do this evening's post. Even more distracting is the Jake Gyllenhaal Learning How to Swordfight video posted by OK! It's not often you get such great footage of such spectacular swords. You can see the video here. These images give you a taster.
Love how Jake has his hair pulled back in the picture below.
To mark the release of the DVD, some more Q&A interviews have been released. Again, these date from earlier in the summer but are only now getting a release. These include a Q&A with Jake. It's included here in full and, although much of it does sound very familiar, it makes good reading and goes with the video above.
'Q: You and Gemma Arterton have great chemistry on screen in Prince Of Persia: The Sands Of Time. That must have helped in the scenes where your characters banter together? JG: Oh definitely! Those scenes I think were the best written and the most fun to play. They came so naturally and we shot them so fast. It was unfortunate that the ended so quickly. We might spend a month on an action scene and half a day on that scene (with Gemma). We would nail it and move on. She and I had a sort of tit for tat thing. The first time we met she looked at me as though she was unimpressed and I looked at her like…’You should be! Why aren’t you?’…(joked). So that was it from the beginning, there was no acting required.
Q: The weather in Morocco during filming was supposed to be so hot and sandy that it was almost like having sand in your mouth all the time? JG: It was not that bad. It was ok. It was hot but it was fun. The desert is really cleansing…the sand exfoliates your skin….and there is a nice warm dry sun and you are sweating.
Q: You must have been conditioned by Jarhead? JG: I was. I make a lot of movies about turning back time and a lot of movies in the desert. It’s a very strange thing.
Q: You have been Spider Man and Batman. Now in Prince Of Persia: The Sands Of Time you have become a sort of super hero? JG: No! I am a video game adaptation. (jokes)
Q: So how does it feel to finally have your own action figure? JG: That is like fulfilling the dreams that I had when I was eight years old. When he is playing with an action figure what young boy doesn’t think that maybe one day…You personify anyway as the action figure character that you are playing with, so to be one is incredible. If you were to go back to the eight year old me and say that one day you will be playing in a movie that looks a little like Indiana Jones, or The Goonies and a couple of other things and it is the video game that you are actually playing called the Prince Of Persia…I think that my head would have exploded.
Q: What was your inspiration for the movie? JG: My primary resource was the video game. There were also books and different paintings of that time that were real inspirations. After I read the script I had a meeting with Jerry Bruckheimer and asked him what the movie was going to look like. Was it going to look like a video game or how I might imagine a typical Disney film? For instance, I wondered if I was to be wearing the red outfit for the whole movie. Jerry handed me this book (The Orientalist) and said that was how he wanted it to look. But apart from that there was not a lot of research. There was some research into weaponry and things like that. But I looked on it more like it was based on a fantasy world that was based on reality.
Q: What is it like to make a big expensive special effects film like Prince Of Persia: The Sands Of Time? JG: The thing about a movie like this that is interesting is that people tend to only associate it with commerce. For me it was always that it was so much fun. It is differentiating the actor with the businessman and the actor who says that he wants to be a kid again and have a good time. It was so exciting! Every day I would drive to work and it was like going to a sporting event when you are the captain of the team. There were thousands of cars lined up along the road for five miles and there was an army of film crew and then the sets were 100 feet high – all built with perfect detail. I don’t think you see that any more on a film set. So often it is green screen effects that are done later. But we could shoot anywhere because the details were extraordinary and there were thousands of extras. And some more were added in later – to make it even bigger! I would get in there and every day I did feel like a kid.
Q: After working with you in this film, Sir Ben Kingsley says you have the ability to seemingly be doing very little in front of the camera and yet it’s just right? JG: With this movie I always looked at it like I was reading a children’s book to a child. It was that kind of style of acting. Because of his years of theatrical work and his history of Shakespeare, Sir Ben has an attitude that there is a sense of telling a story clearly and even theatrically. At on point I told him I felt as though I was speaking to a child and he said….exactly! I always feel that if a movie is good then an actor should have to do very little.
Q: What would you say was the greatest challenge, the physicality of it or speaking in a British accent? JG: No doubt speaking in a British accent, that was the hardest part for me. It’s daunting trying to do any service as an American to such a beautiful fluid speech pattern that you all have. For me, it did help being surrounded by a primarily British cast and somewhat British crew. So I would speak every day, I would get out of the car and I’d have the accent on all day. And I would sort of journey from region to region around England with each different person I would talk to, I would mimic them and sometimes I would sound like them in takes and Mike [Newell] would say [adopts posh British accent and shouts]… ‘Dear boy! You don’t sound right! Do it again! Smashing!’. That’s my favorite line. ‘CUT!’. That’s when you know he was excited about a take. So yeah, I would say the accent was much more daunting, particularly in front of the British press.
Q: How dangerous is it working with ostriches? JG: The ostrich scene was where I was the most terrified in the entire shoot. They are terrifying animals. Even in their innocence, they can tear out your eyeballs and rip out your heart. They seem like they have eyes similar to mine but they really don’t. They can really do dangerous stuff to you.
Q: How much of the stunt work did you do and were you in the best shape of your life for this movie? JG: It depends what you mean by ‘best shape’. I cycle and I run long distances…10 or 12 miles. But I am not able to do that when I am the shape I was for the movie. I remember seeing lance Armstrong on the cover of a magazine and he was saying ‘I’m ripped!’ He was skinny and really gaunt but that was him ready for the tour. So that is being in shape in another way. But I was fit for doing almost any sport. I could avoid serious injury because I was strong and flexible enough. I am pretty athletic so I always feel pretty good and healthy.
Q: What sort of injuries did you get? JG: My shoulders got pretty big so I couldn’t always grab on to something and sometimes there was a little pulling and tearing of tendons. There were some little muscle things and bruises and cuts…but no big deal. I accepted that aches and pains are part of the job. I want to go after the things that I want to do or I am inspired by.
Q: Did you feel you were chosen for Prince Of Persia: The Sands Of Time, not just for how you look but because you can handle deeper stuff? JG: I hope so. I hope that is why people choose actors. Obviously I know they don’t always do that. But I believe that you earn your stripes. I don’t believe that there is necessarily an order and that doing a bigger movie means you have to do a smaller movie. But I do feel that when you are cast in a movie you should have earned that thing – whether it is from an audition or other work you’ve done, or whether you have behaved well in a certain way or that you also do good work. Those things are important. Jerry [Bruckheimer] said he thought I was a good actor and [director] Mike Newell too. Mike had worked with my sister and had seen and respected my work. He didn’t just pick me out of the blue. I worked to gain their confidence and I feel that is how it should be.
Q: As a child was it always the case that you would become an actor? JG: There is a very early entry in my diary, from when I was six years old. It says…Soccer is my life! I played AYSO soccer – school soccer. It became my obsession. Which position did I play? I played all sorts of positions. When you are playing soccer at five years old there isn’t really a position. You run after the ball, basically.
Q: There are several Prince Of Persia stories. So how prepared are you to do another film as Dastan? JG: With a movie of this size that is something that becomes contractual even before you start it. There have been many movies in which I have been involved when there has been the potential for something else and it hasn’t happened. Or it has happened actually. But the thing is, I am totally game. I love the character and his world. I think it is super fun.
Q: You must be pleased with your English accent in Prince Of Persia: The Sands Of Time because it is spot on. JG: Thank you very much. I worked really hard on it. It was planned from the very beginning to use an English accent. Jerry Bruckheimer said that he thought an English accent seemed to legitimize any time period. Particularly if it is in the past but even if it is in the future. It’s sort of strange but there is something about the accent. I don’t know what it is. There is an ancient quality and the Shakespearean theatrical thing that people can unconsciously relate to. Also since Mike Newell was shooting it in Britain, he wanted primarily to cast British. So the actor who was to play the part of Dastan would have to fit in.
Q: How have you coped with fame? Have you become more comfortable as you have got older? JG:Up until now I have had an interesting perspective because I haven’t been so clear about all the things that I want to do or who I was. Now I think I feel much more comfortable with it because I am more comfortable with what I want to do and who I am and what I care about. A lot of this stuff is great fun, I have a good sense of humor and I enjoy laughing. I want to make movies that are like that and spend time with good people. This is our day so you should have a good time doing it. That is my perspective on it now. Source.
There is a similar Q&A with the PoP Creator Jordan Mechner. You can read that here, but I did like this response of Jordan's to the question of what he thought of the film: 'Firstly the original Prince Of Persia was a character 40 pixels high on the Apple II screen, running and jumping. The technology at the time was quite primitive, I think in my mind I imagined a much grander spectacle, and to see Jake [Gyllenhaal] in the best shape of his life running around the rooftops of Morocco and doing parkour and all this stuff was more than I could imagine.'
Jordan was also asked what he thought of the cast: 'Mike Newell put together a fantastic cast. Jake Gyllenhaal makes a terrific prince. He is a very good actor but he also has the right spirit – besides being a warrior and in the best shape of his life, he has got a humanity that is really important.'
You can also read a similar Q&A with Jerry Bruckheimer here.
The Prince of Persia Blu-ray
We've had some discussion about what exactly will be included on the Blu-ray, in terms of the interactive features. There is a full account of them in this review, which tells us that they total up to about 42 snippets, each two minutes long, all of which can accessed through an index and not just through disrupting the movie. I am also wondering how much or little there will be of Jake and Dastan in the deleted 'Head' scene. The review includes some interesting comments on the quality of the audio and the video and some great screenshots, one of which is below.
And so, more anxious than ever, back to my letterbox vigil...
Includes pictrues from links, Getty, USA Today and IHJ.
14 comments:
The headache that had tormented me all day was suddenly gone after watching that swordfighting vid. Wonder how that happened... ;-)
42 snippets!! Darn it. *gives playing the lottery a second thought*
Reading the Q&A I could tick off every question-that-everyone-has-asked-in-May. *big grin* We should start a game, really. Let's come up with the questions we know/think that Jake is gonna get asked about LAOD and see how many we get right in the end. "So Jake, tell us a bit more about that infamous merkin..."
Hi there Lady Ekster! Glad this helped your headache - feel better soon. I sympathise, my lungs are having a lot of trouble at the moment.
That is so true about the questions!! Every time Jake does a Q&A he gets asked the same questions and so it's always so hard to tell what's new and what's cobbled together. There are Q&As released today from Jake, Jordan and Jerry (in the same format), and Mike yesterday so I'm givving them the benefit of the doubt. But yes! It'll happen with LAOD just as it does with every film. Zodiac was a corker - if I had to hear talk of cellphones and fax machines one more time... Yep, it'll be merkins!
Duncan Jones just tweeted at me! Happy sigh :)
Thanks. I hope you feel better soon, too! Must be the countdown to autumn, so many people here sick already...
Yay for Duncan! He seems to be such a great guy. :-) Did anybody notice by the way that Source Code's rumoured US release date is up against RPattz' new movie? Once again: what a strategic move...
Thanks, Lady Ekster :) I think it is the time of year - and there's so much floating around in that air! I saw that about the RPattz movie but, to be honest, his films don't even register with me - why would anyone see one of his non-Twilighty movies when Duncan Jones and Jake Gyllenhaal are in the house?!!
Hello WDW and everyone
Well that Jake sword-fighting shirtless clip on OK Magazine's site was a tonic for a Friday morning. Looks like the marketing people are pulling out all stops to get the POP DVD sold, by emphasising Jake's charms. The comments by OK magazine are a little OTT, the staff there obviously appreciated Jake.
I liked the interview, it had some new material. I hope there is much more publicity to come out, to generate interest in the DVD/Blu-ray release.
42 extras in the Blu-ray, great.
Cheers
Tui
I just caught up on many days of posts here...thanks WDW! Busy days for me so hardly any on line fun lately so it was great to spend some time here and I am looking so forward to Tuesday when I get my PoP Blu-ray. Sounds like you will have it any day now WDW...I'm sure you'll report your thoughts here!!
Until next time... :-)
I need some time to read all this information. thanks.
The cover is with Michelle Williams and Ryan Gosling, but Jake and Anne are also in the magazine:
Boy Meets Girl
I did not realize until I read their names. This after a long time, because Michelle and Ryan are so beautiful on this cover.
Just a quick catch up on all the posts I've been missing this week. I'm looking forward to the PoP Blu Ray landing through my letterbox.
Won't be here much over the few weeks but will try to stop by occasionally.
BTW thanks for the email WDW:)
Good morning everyone! Friday - hallelujah :D (pplease, please, please postman deliver my PoP today, please, please, please)
Morning Tui! Yep they're bringing out all the guns :D As if anyone could not want PoP in their homes - Dastan 24/7, is this not essential?? And jake and Gemma - perfect combo. No doubt Mr WDW is completely looking forward to a weeknd of PoPping ;)
So good to see you BBMISwear :-) I know you're so busy doing exciting things. See you later!
Hi Monica - thanks for the link :D I find those pictures of Michelle and Ryan really strange. Beautiful yes but not in a natural way. I actually find them a bit creepy! I think Michelle looks more beautiful when she's less posed and less airbrushed. But what do I know...
Carol! Great to see you!! I've been thinking of you as your big day approaches. Keeping an anxious eye on the weather. I'm glad you got the email :D Have a fantastic time and I hope you can pop in now and again during this busy time. Good luck!!! xx
My word is sting - ouch.
Oh yes, Duncan tweeted the MB post again! I'v had emails now from quite a few people in the theatre - really nice :)
They seem like they have eyes similar to mine but they really don’t.
i don't get this sentence.is that an idiom/saying in English(eyes similar to mine)?
lol i love the title at the video source:"Jake Gyllenhaal flaunts abs in behind the scenes video on Prince of Persia set"
i hope Jake is always shirtless in behind the scenes stuff. :D
Quite frankly I think Mike Newell just watched 'The Thief of Baghdad' and decided to base most of his shots on that. Only the flying horse is missing...oh but Gemma made up for that loss in Clash of The Titans didn't she?
8)
TD
PS Me and mine survived the week! Yay! Hopefully PoP to celebrate.
PPS I haven't watched the sword vid yet tho
td
Hi there Gretchen! He's said this a couple of times. I've wondered if he's comparing the size of the ostrich eyes to his own - they do indeed both have beautiful big eyes. An interesting thing to say. Shirtless is good :)
Hi TD! I'm so glad to hear all is well! I do think Mike had a certain vision from his past and he wanted to match it. He certainly knew the potential of Jake as a classic heartthrob in robes and floaty tents!
Hello! I have my POP DVD! And I watched all the extras. But I don't want to spoil anything.
Unfortunately the copy is not perfect. I didn't watch the movie yet, so I don't know it's quality, but during extras the image was damaged in some places:(
About Source Code and Water for Elephants with Robert Pattinson. I read the book - WfE - I liked it, and I'm looking forward to see the movie. I'm Twilight saga fan and I like Robert, though I'm Team Jacob.:) I hope you know what I mean. In WfE Rob plays together with Reese Witherspoon and it is possible that they make the same releasing date for SC and WfE because of her and Jake. It is upsetting but it is not actors fault. Nor Reese or Robert. Let's hope both movies will be fine. I suppose Jake wishes Reese well and doesn't want to compete with her.
This swordfighting vid is great. Jake in all his beauty. At least we can see his perfect body. He didn't show it too much in the movie.
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