Showing posts with label sean bean. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sean bean. Show all posts

Wednesday, 11 May 2016

CIVILIZATION VI announced by Lord Boromir Stark

Firaxis Games have employed the mighty Sean Bean to formally announced that Civilization VI will be released on 21 October this year.



This will be (obviously) the sixth title in the series that began with Sid Meier's original, classic strategy game back in 1991. I must admit I thought this was a bit soon, but then I saw that Civilization IV (which I still think of as quite new) was released in 2005 and V (which I own but haven't played once yet) in 2010. I think I can safely say that it will be some considerable time before I get around to playing this.



Civilization VI will build on elements of V and will come with all of the features introduced in that game's DLC as standard. VI also promises to "unstack the cities" in the same way that V "unstacked the armies". VI will feature areas around each city where you can place additional buildings and facilities. The developers are also promising a stronger focus on AI and diplomacy than ever before.

If Sean Bean is a character in the game, I can confidently predicted he will be nuked to death by Gandhi before the endgame is reached.

Sunday, 16 October 2011

GAME OF THRONES triumphs at the Scream Awards

Last night, Game of Thrones triumphed at the Spike TV Scream Awards.

Ned Stark and Cersei Lannister meet the Eleventh Doctor. This is like the craziest - but also AWESOMEST - fanfic cross-show mash-up you can think of.

The show won three awards, with Peter Dinklage picking up Best Supporting Actor for his performance as Tyrion Lannister. Emilia Clarke then picked up Breakthrough Female Performance for her role as Daenerys Targaryen. Finally, Game of Thrones itself won in the Best Television Show category, beating The Walking Dead, True Blood and Doctor Who (though, as the above image attests, Matt Smith didn't hold any grudges).

Well done to the cast and crew of Game of Thrones for their victory!

Sunday, 6 March 2011

Black Death

It is 1348 and the Black Death is sweeping the English countryside, killing tens of thousands. A young monk, Osmund, has fallen in love with a young girl who has taken refuge in his monastery. His actions lead him to joining a band of the King's men, led by the knight Ulric, on a mission to find a marshland village reputed to be in the grip of witchcraft. Along the way, he hopes to break off and run away with his love. But in the woodlands he finds himself drawn onto a far darker and crueler path.


Black Death is a relatively low-budget movie financed and made in Germany, although the film is in English and has a mostly British cast. It stars Sean Bean as Ulric and Eddie Redmayne - the main character in the recent adaptation of Pillars of the Earth - as Osmund, with veteran actors David Warner (too many roles to list) and Tim McInnery (Blackadder) in support, along with rising star Carice van Houten (noted for recent roles in Black Book, Valkyrie and Repo Men). A bunch of solid supporting actors such as Emun Elliott (soon to be seen in Game of Thrones, along with Bean) and John Lynch (Merlin's father in the BBC series of the same name) line out the relatively small cast.

Given this is a small-budget movie with Sean Bean wearing armour and swinging a sword, the first impression is of a cheesy action flick. Nothing could be further from the truth. Black Death is a surprisingly bleak and dark movie about faith, power and fundamentalism. Sean Bean's Ulric is a far, far cry from his other heroic roles or his out-and-out villains. Instead he's a God-fearing knight who believes absolutely that the Black Death is God's punishment of humanity for its sins. He's a brave and capable warrior, but also utterly unrelenting and ruthless in his quest, capable of killing anyone who gets in his way. Redmayne's Osmund is idealistic and hopeful, shocked by the viciousness of the world and the perchance for violence demonstrated by his new associates.

The film unexpectedly moves into Wicker Man territory when our protagonists reach the supposedly witch-infested town and become engaged in a struggle of faith, reason and power. McInnery is cast against type as the the town headman, with Van Houten as the woman who has brought hope to it. Van Houten is a little too obviously villainous from the off, but her contempt of those who slavishly believe whatever they are told is well-played.

The director, Christopher Smith (best-known for Severance), seems to be aware of the potential for sniggering comparisons to Monty Python and the Holy Grail and with Blackadder, so tackles them head-on. McInnery's casting is possibly one allusion to this, whilst the scene with the monks flagellating themselves as they walk along seems to be a very overt reference to the Grail. Beyond these nods, there is little humour in the film, especially once it moves into its final, dark act.

The film's biggest weakness is that the supposedly wordly wise knights fall a little to easily into a certain and very obvious trap, and whilst the film's focus is commendable in an age of bloated 3D monsters, some side-elements and secondary characters could have done with a bit more fleshing out.

The film's ending is a startling, expectation-destroying sequence. Initially it appears to render the entire film pointless, but on further reflection it raises further questions over corruption and fundamentalism that are surprisingly effective.

Black Death (****) is a dark, bleak and occasionally powerful movie which poses hard questions of its audience. A sometimes uncomfortable watch, this is a far more intelligent and interesting movie than it looks like on first glance. It is available now in the UK (DVD, Blu-Ray) and, on Region 2 import only, USA (DVD, Blu-Ray).

Monday, 20 July 2009

More official casting news for A Game of Thrones

A lot of news about casting has broken over HBO's A Game of Thrones today, following from the earlier confirmation that Peter Dinklage will be playing Tyrion. So let's get down to it:

Sean Bean in the forthcoming Medieval movie Black Death

Sean Bean has been cast in the lead role of Eddard Stark, Lord of Winterfell and the North. Bean rose to notice playing supporting roles in the late 1980s, but hit the big time in 1992 by playing Sean Miller, the villain in the Harrison Ford movie Patriot Games. The following year he cultivated an image as a sex symbol by appearing as Mellors in a BBC adaptation of DH Lawrence's Lady Chatterley's Lover. His rise to stardom really began when he took over the role of Richard Sharpe from Paul McGann, who had broken his leg shortly after beginning the filming of Sharpe's Rifles. Based on the Bernard Cornwell Sharpe series of novels, Bean went on to play the role in a further thirteen two-hour TV movies between 1993 and 1997, taking Sharpe from the initial British intervention in the Peninsular War to Waterloo. He maintained his Hollywood villain credentials during this time by also appearing as the treacherous Agent 006 in the James Bond movie GoldenEye.

His identifiability as Sharpe led to casting offers drying up, and he didn't work for nearly a year after completing Sharpe's Waterloo, although he returned to the big screen in Ronin and didn't look back. His biggest genre role to date came when he played Boromir in Peter Jackson's adaptation of The Fellowship of the Ring in 2001. He also appeared in a specially-filmed flashback sequence for The Two Towers which was cut, but restored for the DVD special edition of the movie, along with another brief appearance as a hallucination in The Return of the King. He also played Errol in Equilibrium and had a very good role as Odysseus in Troy, an appearance notable for being one in which he didn't either 1) die, or 2) played a villain, or 3) both. More recently he played a villainous serial killer in a very bad remake of The Hitcher and resumed the role of Sharpe for two more TV movies.

Lord Eddard Stark in the godswood of Winterfell

Eddard 'Ned' Stark is arguably the lead character in the novel of A Game of Thrones. He is the Lord of Winterfell and the North, ruling over a vast but lightly-populated area. He is a close friend of King Robert Baratheon, whom he helped win his crown. As a second son, Ned did not expect to inherit the rule of the North, but when the Mad King, Aerys II, murdered his father and elder brother and approved the kidnap of his sister, Ned inherited the title and raised the banners of rebellion. Ned Stark also helped Robert crush the rebellion against his rule led by the Greyjoys, the ruling family of the Iron Islands. Stark is known for his honour, his trustworthiness, his steadfastness and reliability. He has little interest in politics, and is fiercely loyal to his family: his wife Catelyn, sons Robb, Bran and Rickon, and daughters Sansa and Arya. He also has a bastard son, Jon Snow, whose presence in Winterfell causes a constant strain on his marriage. The action of A Game of Thrones begins when Ned is summoned to King's Landing to serve as the King's Hand (a role analogous to a prime minister, overseeing the day-to-day rule of the kingdom) after the death of the previous incumbent.

Mark Addy (left) in A Knight's Tale

Mark Addy has been cast as King Robert Baratheon. Addy rose to fame as Dave in The Full Monty (1997) and had a number of roles, usually comedic, in films such as A Knight's Tale as well as sitcoms such as The Thin Blue Line and Still Standing. He has played more serious roles in Jack Frost, Band of Gold and, most recently, Red Riding. There is an interesting interview with him in Robert Baratheon lookalike mode, about his opera Fram, here.

Robert Baratheon was, in his youth, a mighty warrior who was never happier than when he was fighting, training or partying. He became Lord of Storm's End at a young age (when his parents died in a shipwreck) and was given the responsibility of bringing up his infant brother Renly (although he mostly deferred this to the castle staff). Robert was immensely charasmatic and was known for winning supporters to his cause just through talking to them. As a child, he fostered for a time at the Eyrie, the great mountain castle belonging to Lord Jon Arryn, and there met and befriended Ned Stark, who was also fostering there for a time (a tradition by which children from one noble house would stay with another for a time to strengthen relations between them). The great friendship between them grew when Robert fell in love with and was betrothed to Ned's sister, Lyanna. When Lyanna was kidnapped by Prince Rhaegar Targaryen, the son of the Mad King Aerys, Robert was furious. When Aerys murdered Eddard's father and brother (as well as Jon Arryn's nephew and heir), Robert raised the standard of rebellion alongside both the Arryns and Starks, and helped win the powerful Tully family to their cause as well. Through a blood relation (his grandmother was a Targaryen), Robert claimed the Iron Throne and led the rebellion, winning the great victory at the Battle of the Trident and killing Rhaegar. Unfortunately, Lyanna had died by this time and after winning his crown Robert chose to marry Cersei Lannister, after the Lannisters unexpectedly defected to his cause during the war and captured the capital city in his name.

King Robert and his wife, Cersei of House Lannister

By the time A Game of Thrones starts Robert has become fat and unhappy with the tedium of ruling the kingdom. His marriage is not a happy one and his three children (Joffrey, Myrcella and Tommen) are distant from him. He has few true friends at court, only people who want things from him. When his Hand, Jon Arryn, dies, he immediately chooses Ned Stark to replace him.

Harry Lloyd as Will Scarlett in Robin Hood

Harry Lloyd will be familiar to Doctor Who fans from his turn as Jeremy Baines in Family of Blood and Human Nature. He also played Will Scarlett in Robin Hood and was Prince Rupert in The Devil's Whore. Lloyd is playing Viserys Targaryen.

Viserys is the son and legal heir of King Aerys, whom Robert Baratheon supplanted as King of Westeros. Viserys and his young sister Daenerys fled to the continent of Essos and were given sanctuary by a powerful merchant lord. As the series opens Viserys has arranged to sell his teenage sister in marriage to Khal Drogo, the leader of an immense army of Dothraki blood-riders, in return for his help in invading Westeros and reclaiming his crown.

Viserys Targaryen, the Beggar King

Jack Gleeson is a young actor whose only major role to date has been in Batman Begins (as 'Young Boy'). He will be playing Joffrey Baratheon, Robert's eldest son and heir. To strengthen the alliance between the Starks and Baratheons, Eddard agrees that his daughter Sansa should marry Joffrey. Joffrey is vain, arrogant and entirely lacking in martial ability, but likes to boast of his elite swordfighting skills. He is usually accompanied by his bodyguard, the scarred and threatening Sandor Clegane (uncast as yet).

Prince Joffrey Baratheon


Kit Harington

Newcomer Kit Harington has done some theatre work but nothing on television yet. The producers were apparently blown away by his audition tape. Harrington will be playing the key role of Jon Snow, Eddard Stark's bastard son who finds his place at Winterfell increasingly uncomfortable due to the attitude of his step-mother and eventually decides to 'take the black' and join the sworn brotherhood of the Night's Watch. The Watch guards the Wall, a colossal fortification of ice stretching for 300 miles across Westeros' northern border built thousands of years ago to defend against an ancient threat. That threat has long since vanished (cough) but the Watch still has to guard against the wildlings or 'free folk' who live beyond and occasionally seek to cross the Wall and raid the lands beyond.

Jon Snow and his direwolf, Ghost

For my money, these are solid casting choices. Sean Bean is a good choice for the solid and reliable Ned. Mark Addy is a bit more unexpected as Robert, but his casting tape impressed quite a few people (including GRRM), as per Parris' comments in this thread. As for the others, Lloyd is a strong up-and-comer with some solid work behind him. Harrington and Gleeson are more or less total newcomers, although Benioff and Weiss were impressed by the former's audition, which apparently stood out from the rest by some distance.

The only concern I have at this time is that unless Gleeson is a lot older than he appears, Joffrey would seem to be quite a few years younger than Robb or Jon, who in the books are only a year or two older than him. If there are many years between them, this makes the key scene from Book 1 where Robb and Joffrey try to arrange a practice bout somewhat nonsensical. Hopefully that point will be clarified as more news emerges.

Further casting announcements to come, including Jaime and Cersei Lannister, Daenerys Targaryen, Theon Greyjoy, Khal Drogo, Littlefinger, Sansa, Arya, Robb and Catelyn Stark.