The Man to Call
Interview by Chad Colvin,
David Read and Darren Sumner.
Transcript by Kerenza Harris.
Date: June 2009
Source:
Gateworld
GateWorld: For
GateWorld.net, I am Chad Colvin. I'm joined by David
Read and Darren Sumner and we're here today visiting
with Mr. Ryan Robbins. Ryan, thank you for taking
the time to talk with us today.
Ryan Robbins: My
pleasure. [Ryan waves] [Laughter]
GW: In your favorite
coffee shop.
RR: In my favorite
coffee shop. I'm here all the time.
GW: Where is it? What
is it?
RR:It's called Grain
City. It's in North Vancouver on the corner of 2nd
and Lonsdale. I come here all the time. I love it.
It's yummy and people come in and out all the time.
You'll hear coffee noises, "Shhh" sounds. But it's
yummy. And I bet everybody right now is like,
if you haven't had your coffee yet you're like, "Oh
God, I really want a coffee right now."
GW: Do they have
chai?
RR: M-hmm! Yeah, they
have chai and they have really good tea here as
well. Someone left the door open. Horrible! It's the
only problem, the door is not on a spring here.
GW: Tell us a little
bit more about how you got started in the business.
Was acting the first thing that you wanted to do?
RR: Yeah, you know
it's an interesting question. I kind of like this
story. I'll make it as quick as I can. When I was
12, we were going to check out the junior high we
were going to go to the next year. These kids had
done this sketch, this sort of play, and this one
kid in particular just blew my mind, I thought he
was so good. "Man! I want to do that."
I had all these hopes and
dreams and all these things that I wanted to be when
I grow up; Firefighter, stuntman or whatever. And I
quickly realized that for an actor, I can do all
those things. I could be any number of those things.
So, that's when I really started focusing on it.
I went to a high school that
had a really progressive arts program, and I had a
teacher there named Drew Kimp. I would turn every
scene into a joke like you do when you're a
teenager. It was just really [an] intense acting
program that we were meant to take seriously and I
just didn't. I just kind of relied on whatever. "Ah,
I can perform, It'll be great."
He literally kicked my butt
in a scene. He was so angry with me for not being
truthful in this scene with my scene partner, that
he took over the scene from my scene partner and we
actually physically were tearing at each other and
...
GW: Sparring.
RR: ... yelling and
screaming but staying within the scene. And it was
so amazing, the feeling was so exhilarating and
cathartic. I wanted to do this. I wanted to feel
like this all the time. And that was sort of the
moment.
I scrambled around doing
lots of other things. I was a circus performer, I
was in a band and all those things. I didn't I know
how to really be an actor, particularly in film and
television. This wonderful filmmaker was a fan of my
band put me in a movie and I kind of just went from
there. But I truthfully started quite late. I didn't
get my first professional gig until I was about 26.
GW: That's considered
late?
RR: Well, I mean for
me it was. Considering I wanted to do it when
I was 12. Most people that I know even now started
at young ages. At least in their teens. And part of
me wishes that I had started younger, but part of me
is really glad that I didn't because I don't think I
could have handled it then. I was a bit crazy.
GW: What was the
first professional gig?
RR: My very first
paid gig was a TV series called Cold Squad.
It was a show shot here in Vancouver and I played a
character named Chimp. Yeah, Chimp. That was my
first paid gig.
Getting loud in here, it's
the lunch rush. "It's a good idea Ryan, let's do the
interview in a coffee shop." It was my idea to do an
interview in a coffee shop by the way.
GW: You've had quite
a few other credits in the Vancouver area. You've
had Twilight Zone and several others.
RR: Yeah, lots of
stuff. I've been lucky, lots of stuff shooting in
the area. Twilight Zone, that was a good one
-- Outer Limits, Jeremiah. There's a
list of really good ... It's funny. Vancouver seems
to be -- its like a hot bed of Sci-Fi here.
GW: Are you
personally more drawn to that genre? The stuff
itself? Or do you just go where ...
RR: I am bit of a
comic book geek, so that's how it started for me. I
loved comic books growing up and I still like comic
books. I guess the genre is an offshoot of that as
far as I'm concerned. I am definitely inspired by
... I've chosen films that have that comic book,
fantasy, edge.
I just love acting, man. I
like the work regardless. If it's interesting
scripts, interesting stories, I'm in. I'm sold. But
I do really enjoy this genre. I think I have a
bigger understanding of the genre. Maybe that's
helpful.
GW: We'll talk about
Atlantis and Ladon Radim a little bit.
Throughout the series we're never really sure where
his loyalties are. He double crossed the Atlantis
expedition with
Kolya [Robert Davi] and
Cowen [Colm Meaney]. Was he ever loyal? Was he
just loyal to himself? Or was he doing what he
thought was best for the Genii people?
RR: I think the thing
with Ladon is that he was loyal to his people. I
think that it wasn't about choosing sides.
Personally, I never played him like he was trying to
mess with anybody else. I always played him like his
priority was his people. That he would just always
do what was best for his people and whatever
happened as an offshoot of that or a consequence ...
He wasn't going to worry about that because he felt
his people deserved more.
GW: And his sister.
RR: And his sister.
GW: One of the last
time we see you on the screen was during the third
season, it was in "The Return." I think that's the
last time we saw you? It was
"The Return, Part 1."
RR: "The Return,"
yes.
GW: There was kind of
an alliance that he's kind of built up with the
Atlantis expedition at that point. Do you think
that's something he would have upheld? Or do you
think that if it suited his own purposes, he would
have ended up breaking that again down the road?
RR: I think – In
my world, in my opinion – I think that he
would have liked the idea of an alliance. I think he
understood the potential for an alliance. What he
could learn from them. I think that was one thing
about Ladon that I always thought was pretty cool.
Where Kolya had it all under control and he was
better than, I think that with Ladon's thing he
wasn't.
He was willing to learn. He
wanted to absorb everything he could that would
somehow benefit his people. And I think that he
appreciated those guys for what he could learn from
them.
You get guys like Ronon, we
never really saw the Genii have that kind of
presence and then Teyla, the kick ass female. I
think those guys had a lot to offer. But just an
alliance in general, I think he would have upheld it
until it didn't suit him anymore. Until he became
bored of it.
GW: What are your
feelings about basically the Genii storyline and
Ladon, particularly about the whole story kind of
being dropped after ...
RR: Oh, what are my
feelings about the story being dropped? It's
unfortunate. I thought there was a lot of potential
there. Personally I thought it was really
interesting.
GW: You didn't think
it ran its course?
RR: I didn't think it
ran its course at all. I mean Kolya came back from
the dead like three times. [Laughter] Obviously it
hadn't run its course. But maybe Ladon had. Maybe
Ladon wasn't enough of a threat.
I thought he was really
interesting. I just think that when it came down
towards the end. They had developed all these
potential enemies and I think they needed to sort of
focus on one. I think the most threatening was
probably the Wraith so that's the avenue they tried
to go with.
GW: I myself find
personally that the characters that you don't know
if you can trust or not are the most interesting.
RR: Me too. I mean I
find those interesting as well. Again, going back to
comic books, I like the anti hero. I like the
characters that maybe one day they're good, maybe
one day they're bad. They kind of have their own
agenda. I find that really, really fascinating.
They don't have an
allegiance to anyone. I tried to bring that to Ladon,
I tried to bring that to the Genii people so that
they could call on us if they needed us but then we
might pop up as an enemy. But hey, it's not
personal, it's just business. That's kind of what I
thought was interesting.
But again, they'd already
developed these other potential storylines and when
they knew they had to bring it to a close, I
understand, you've got to tighten it up and draw
your attention to one thing so that it doesn't feel
too scattered. Who knows what will happen? There's
talk of a movie and you never know. I still know
those guys. [Laughter]
GW: Do you feel the
episodes of Atlantis that you did gave Ladon
enough depth in character? Are there any shades of
personality that you wanted to personally put into
him that you weren't able to?
Like a haircut? [Laughter]
RR: Yeah, I'm growing
it back. I like characters to have secrets. That's
why I like Henry. I think everybody's got secrets. I
like to have something to hide when I'm playing
certain characters. I presented in my storytelling
of Ladon some secrets that I gave him.
It would have been nice to
sort of see those a little bit, hints of those a
little bit here and there. I think that Ladon was
looking for a queen, sort of speak. I think he was "wookin'
pur nub". You know what I mean? [Laughter]
That would have been sort of
fun to complicate things if maybe he'd fallen for
someone on Atlantis. That's sort of something
that I was trying to disguise. It helps you figure
out -- you not know if he's good or bad.
GW: When you're a
guest star on a show that you may come in for -- for
a year, once a year or something like that. How do
you negotiate your situation where you have an idea
for the character but you ... do you ever feel that
it's ... How do you negotiate the situation where
"It's not really my place to tell them where to go
with this character?" I mean, "Who am I? I'm just
the guy who comes in and does this, but I really
want to tell them my idea for this."
RR: It really
depends. You have to sort of feel it out a little
bit and see.
GW: How receptive the
producers are?
RR: You start with
the director. How receptive the director is. Then
producers and writers. On Atlantis, they're
quite present. I was fortunate that I worked a lot
with Martin Wood and he's quite receptive.
One of the things that
happened was Ladon becoming the leader. As most
people know, it was supposed to be Kolya. Robert
Davi wasn't available so they rewrote it for Ladon.
The intention was still written for Kolya. So when I
got to work, I was talking to Martin and I was like
"You know, we've only ever seen that guy as a
scientist, I'm not sure how it translates for him to
suddenly just be this ruthless leader. Is there a
way to find a middle ground?"
Of course they were very
receptive to that. That's how Ladon's version of a
leader came to be. And then in the following
scripts, that was more the tone. And then Ladon
became the sort of ambiguous "What is this guy up
to?" thing.
GW: It gave the
character depth!
RR: Yeah, you got to
think of it. He's a scientist. He's not a general or
a ruthless leader. He's not any of that. He's out of
his element, somewhat. And I liked to show that a
little bit. I liked that he was a little out of his
element and trying to behave as though he wasn't.
It depends. I've done shows
where I've had ideas that I thought were great and
the director is like "Yeah ... No, just stick to the
words," "OK it's cool." You just don't know. It also
depends on the tone of the show. You don't know the
tone on the show, but I did know the tone.
GW: Would you have
suggested something for you character on
Battlestar Galactica as opposed to Atlantis?
RR: Oh yeah.
GW: Are there certain
shows where you get the vibe from the staff that
they have this completely in hand and there is
nothing that I can do to suggest anything? That's
off limits.
RR: On Battlestar
Galactica we did talk about it. We did try
certain things. They loved the idea of my character
but no one ... Battlestar Galactica had so
many characters and so many story lines. And then,
here is this new character that they really like and
saw a lot of potential in. They want to keep him
around so that they have the option to use him
eventually. They're just not sure where and what
for.
They know they like the
character. We all get along. I know all those guys,
so "let's keep me around." Go from like resistance
fighter to bartender. OK, so how much resistance
fighter am I embodying in the bartender? So we made
choices. He's just grateful to have a room again.
He's grateful he's got a job. He's trying to get his
life back on track so he can be happy. At least he's
got a fresh start now.
And then there's the
reminder of Baltar, so we did have to discuss that.
For them, they have all these actors coming up to
them going, "What about my character 'this?'" All
the actors are very involved and everybody cares so
much about that show. All the actors want to put
their input in.
For me coming in [an]
episode here, episode there, I am equally as
passionate about the show. I come in they're just
like -- it's either "Yeah go ahead, give that a
shot" or "You know what let's just keep this." I
wanted to be on the show more, so I'm trying to
figure out ways to create something interesting.
When we did the first
episode of season four, that stuff with Baltar ...
James [Callis] is awesome to work with. If you
remember the scene when I'm telling him to go ahead
and scream.
GW: Yeah, in the
bathroom.
RR: He was supposed
to scream. And James didn't scream. He just didn't
feel like he would scream. So, we're doing it and he
wouldn't scream, wouldn't scream, wouldn't scream.
James and I work pretty similarly. We're pretty
intense, we kind of get into it. We were battered
and bruised at the end of that episode but he
wouldn't scream so I screamed for him. And literally
threw him to the ground
He's like "Throw me harder,
throw me harder, come on, you can do it!" I
literally screamed and I was so mad because he
wouldn't scream, I screamed at him, threw him to the
ground and it was "Cut!" And there was this moment
and pause. He kind of looks at me with this cheeky
smile and we started laughing and there was this
[clapping] "Oh that was awesome."
So there were those. And
then when the girl was beating me with the handle
and Michael Rymer is directing. "Not so hard, we
don't want to people to think he's dead. He's not
dead. You're not killing him." It was never intended
to seem like I was killed, but that scene was so
intense, everybody just got caught up in it.
Everyone was sure I was
dead. I was never meant to be dead. Because I was
like, "Please don't kill me, Michael. I don't want
to be dead, come on man."
GW: I thought he was
dead the first time I saw it.
RR: I was like, "Oh I
don't want to be dead, man! Please don't kill me."
They left it kind of open. And then it was like
episode 15, 14 episodes later. You get this call.
"You're back on the show." I'm like, "I knew I
wasn't dead!"
GW: Just been in a
coma for a few weeks.
RR: Yeah, and not a
scratch on me when I came back. Not a mark on me.
GW: What similarities
would you say Ladon Radim and your character Charlie
on Battlestar share?
RR: Boy, Ladon and
Charlie. I think that there was an unflinching level
of commitment. I think that they were both very
committed to whatever it was they were ... They made
a decision to do something and they were going to
see it through regardless. And I think that's
something that they definitely both share. I think
that there's definite commitment, no hesitation. "If
I'm going to do this, I'm going to do this."
GW: They both had
family with troubled lives. I mean Charlie obviously
his son was killed on New Caprica.
RR: Yeah, Charlie had
the death of his son to deal with and Ladon had his
sister almost dying. Plus you know, in my mind, if
he's got a sister that he loves dearly, I'm sure
he's got other family out there so I'm sure there
was a lot at stake for him.
GW: A lot of drive.
RR: Yeah. And you
know, we never talked about Charlie's wife. His son
died, so I had just always assumed that his wife
didn't make it.
GW: She died in the
attack?
RR: Yeah. He probably
had this really great relationship with his son. And
that wasn't hard for me because I have a daughter.
So when we started shooting the first scene when it
was revealed that he killed ... he was blaming
Jammer for the death of his son. That wasn't too
hard to imagine that. That was a heavy scene, man.
Shooting that was the heaviest, darkest, weighty day
I've ever worked. And everybody brought it. It was a
really weird day when we shot that scene.
GW: Killing Jammer?
RR: Yeah, it was a
weird day. And [Dominic] Zamprogna who played
Jammer, he just brought it. Everybody was so bumped
that they were killing Jammer. Because Dom's such a
cool cat and everybody was just so bumped they were
like, "Oh my God." Every time someone of any
relative consequence to the show is killed, it was
just, "Oh no."
GW: Dee [Anastasia
Dualla] was a shock. That was a total shock. And
what a sweetheart that actress is.
RR: Yeah, yeah. Even
Kat [Louanne Katraine].
GW: Kandyse [
McClure].
RR: Kandyse. But even
when Kat got killed – Luciana [Carro]. I wasn't
there but, every time you feel like you're not going
to be on the show, it's devastating. Every actor
that I know that got killed or written out, was just
so bummed.
There were tears shed. some
actors. It's a tough call. Everybody loves that show
so much, even working on it. It's just so weird that
it's over. Weird.
GW: Could you compare
the working environments at all between the two
series between Atlantis and Battlestar
Galactica? And Sanctuary also. Was there
one series that was easier to work on than another?
RR: Well, definitely
Sanctuary is by far the easiest to work on. I
think it's very much a family environment, we have
zero ego. I mean the people are amazing. It's one of
the rules on the show. No one's allowed to be a diva
on Sanctuary. It's very fun and really
encouraging. Everybody collaborates and participates
and it's a really great feeling.
It is like shooting an indie
film you're really passionate about. It feels like
that every day, I love going to work there. When I
have the 5 AM call. On most shows I'm like, "5 AM
... that's crazy." But on Sanctuary I'm up
and ready to go, "Let's go to work." And then also
because I've been on this show since the Web series,
I think that I've got a lot invested. But you know,
Atlantis was always fun. "Oh you're going to
go and have a good time." But it always felt
temporary, I just never knew.
With Battlestar Galactica,
I was such a huge fan of the show. It was so
exciting and the thing about Battlestar Galactica,
everyday was so different because there's such huge
cast and everybody is so into the show and really
interested in what's going on. We'd be shooting
scenes and there'd be other cast members come by
just to watch. And that rarely happens.
That'll happen on
Sanctuary from time to time. Last season when
there were scenes with Christopher Heyerdahl and
Peter Wingfield and Jonathon Young. Robin Dunne and
I would go and sit and watch. Because for me, those
guys are heavyweights. Those guys are
unbelievable actors. There was scene between ...
A Druitt [John] and [James] Watson scene -- Peter
Wingfield and Christopher Heyerdahl -- Robin and I
were just watching and we were saying "Man, these
guys are awesome, so good."
GW: When they're
outside of their test?
RR: The particular
scene was a scene in Magnus' office.
GW: Oh, OK.
RR: And they were
discussing: "I can't believe it was you, the whole
time it was you." "Sorry about that, old friend."
You know it was just ... and Jonathon Young -- who
is back in Season Two -- is just so awesome, he's
just so good as Tesla. I just love him.
GW: I'm glad they
didn't kill him.
RR: Yeah, he's great.
We just shot some stuff yesterday, he's awesome.
Ironically I don't know if people know this about
Jonathon. He actually toured and has a play where he
actually plays Nikola Tesla in this play that he's
been doing off and on for years.
He actually toured with it,
won festivals with it. He has a theater company that
was founded on the back of this production. This
theater company's called The Electric Company. He
actually toured as Nikola Tesla, so he's just a
fountain of Tesla knowledge. He always jokes with
his theater friends saying ,"Well, you think that
Tesla died, he didn't. He actually went underground
and became a vampire." [laughter]
GW: Since the Web
series -- the show is obviously moving to its second
season now. Does it still feel like an experiment in
progress? Or is it much more ... [the show] found
its footing?
RR: No, not this
year. This year it's definitely found its footing. I
think there were lots of moments last year. There
was lots of moments of discovery.
GW: Not that it
hadn't found its footing last year but, not being
afraid to try something.
RR: I know exactly
what you're saying. Last year it was a lot of, "Oh,
yeah. It's not that simple because we have to
do this and this." It was never fear-based or
anything, it was just never a concern but it was a
lot of moments of, "Oh yeah, right we've got to do
this." But this year ... You know what? That's what
it is. I've been trying to figure out what feels so
good this year. The scripts are amazing, everything
is good. There is a level of confidence this year
because the show ...
GW: It's done well.
RR: It did very well.
I think it definitely exceeded expectations and then
some. Internationally it's off the charts, it's
doing so well. In the U.S. it's doing, I think,
better than expected.
There's this level of
confidence and fun. "Yeah let's do it." I think
there's a willingness to take some risks. It's
action-packed this year, it's going to be great. I
love it, reading the scripts.
GW: The first season
of any show is usually ... there's some potential
missteps. There's a lot of feeling your way through
the new world that's been created, the new
characters that you're inhabiting.
We go back and watch old
episodes of Stargate SG1 and some of them
just feel a little foreign to what the show becomes.
What are your thoughts on the first season of
Sanctuary? From that perspective, looking back
on it now, with a year's worth of distance. What did
it accomplish creatively?
RR: I know what
you're saying. Hopefully we go a few more
seasons to look back on Season One and see it. I
know at the beginning of Season One it's definitely
finding your feet, finding your rhythm and making
discoveries. You're literally making discoveries
about your character and your scene partner.
You're making these new
discoveries on the go. It's right there. That's
what's kind of cool about the first season of a show
is that you can actually watch people make
discoveries in a scene. There's just something cool
about that. But it does feel a little bit uncertain
at times.
I think creatively we're a
lot more comfortable with the choices we make. I
think as an actor, say you get a new director,
historically I probably wouldn't do that. And you
can say that now, because you do have a history.
Before you would go, "I'm not sure my character
would do that."
"Well, has your character
ever been in this situation before? Hasn't been with
mine." Now you can make some really informed
decisions and we have some really great dialogues,
really great conversations.
And again, I keep talking
about Martin Wood, but he's directing the first two
episodes. He's a shinning example of that because,
you'll have moments when you kind of want to go
"Jeez." Something does feel right here but I don't
have a solution, so I don't want to go "Hey this
doesn't feel right," and they'll say "What do you
want to do?" "I don't know."
But with Martin, he's so
intuitive, he'd be like "Doesn't feel right does
it?" You're like "No, thank you, no. But I don't
know what to do with it." "Alright, so let's talk
about it," and then we'll come up with a solution
and it's usually something really simple.
He's incredibly bright. He
did this yesterday. I can't remember what the scene
was but he was like, "Something doesn't work. You
know what? Just do this." And it was such a simple
little tweak.
It's like "Man, I would've
never thought of that." I get way to heady about
things. It was just so simple to him. It was just
like "Just do this," and it changed the whole tone
of the scene. It was perfect, exactly what it
needed. And I couldn't think of what to do. He's
really great that way.
GW: How about the
scripts on the show this year?
RR: Scripts this year
are great. Scripts last year were great. But this
year there's something new, I think. Maybe it is
the confidence. We've got a staff of writers this
year. Last year it was Damian Kindler and Sam Egan
having to write all the scripts. A lot of pressure
on them. We've got some new writers this year. I
feel like the scripts are maybe more action-packed,
definitely a lot at stake. Stakes are very, very
high this year.
GW: In terms of story
or how things are done on set?
RR: In terms of
story, in terms of character. Mostly in terms of
story and character. I think we've seen the
potential that the show has. So I think we just want
to really exceed that potential and just really
knock it out of the park for Season Two. Maybe the
first season has to be played somewhat safe. But I
think this year we're just like "Man, we can see
what we can do. Let's do it. Let's try to knock this
out of the park and go crazy."
I think we've got a better
understanding of maybe what the fans want to see. I
think what the fans want to see and what we
want to portray are very much on the same page.
I'm super excited. I've only
read the first three scripts and I read the third
script in my trailer and I sent Robin Dunne a text.
And I was like, "Just read the third script. Oh my
God it's awesome." And he's texting me back, "It's
amazing, it's so great." Truthfully he was in the
next trailer. [Laughter] It was raining, so ...
GW: Last year with
Season One, you had the lead guest star on the
episodes. Are they upping you in Season Two to full
time?
RR: I guess you guys
get the exclusive. I understand this has been quite
a bone of contention with a lot of people. Me being
the guest star.
GW: You show up so
much, you know, why not.
RR: 12 out of 13
episodes. Not to bore you with the whole contractual
thing but it wasn't possible for them to make me a
series regular last year. This year -- to my
knowledge -- yes, I will be in the main title
credits. Yes I will. There you go. Exclusive, right
here. You heard it from me.
And if I'm wrong, "Boy oh
boy", I'll be pretty upset. More upset than you. No,
it's good. It's going to be good. This year they've
got me. I'm in, I'm on board. I'll be around.
GW: You just recently
started some charity work?
RR: Yes. A friend of
mine, an actor friend, Holly Dignard has a wonderful
charity called Caleb's Hope and I want to support
her in that. We're going to be doing a photo shoot
soon.
It's a wonderful charity
helping women and children in Africa. She goes to
Africa several times a year. It's a very important
charity to her. I'm happy to help out. I was doing
some stuff for the Red Cross last year. I'm trying
to get more involved with charities.
Charities are an interesting
thing when you're an actor, or in this business,
because you don't want to just jump in. A lot of
time you want to make sure that funds are going to
the right places and you're not being misused in any
way. Which is what's great about Caleb's Hope. I
know it's my friend. I know she started this thing.
I know how hard it is to start an organization like
that.
I'm really excited for her
and I'm really excited to support that. For me, my
focus has always been on underprivileged children.
Children that need support and need to be shown
options, ways out. My childhood was a tough one. So
I want to be able to show kids that they can ...
GW: Return the favor.
RR: Yeah. I had a
couple of people in my life who showed me options
and it was helpful. I wouldn't be here if it wasn't
for them. I wouldn't be able to do that so that's
going to be a bit of a focus for me.
I started on this crazy
environmental thing a couple of years ago renovating
my house. I just want to participate. I just want to
make sure that I'm doing my part, even if it's on a
small scale, if I'm able to. It's one thing if
you've got a voice and you're able to use it, you
might as well.
GW: But you want to
make sure that you're using it for something that
whoever you're working with is perfectly compatible
with. You don't want to "Well, I don't agree with
what you guys are doing there."
RR: And that's the
big thing. It's true, that's a very good point.
People don't talk about that with charities. When
you're getting involved with a particular charity,
for me personally I need to do a lot of research
first and make sure that I agree with everything.
Because if we disagree on something, if I can't get
behind you on a certain ...
There's some things that are
really important to me and if I make the decision to
do something, I give it everything I have. And so if
I hit a wall it's like "Woah, woah. That's not
cool." For me it's definitely a ... "with great
power come great responsibility." [Laughter] I don't
have great power yet. But I feel like I have great
responsibilities.
GW: Now that it's
quiet again, let's continue the interview.
[Laughter]
RR: By the way, that
was the lunch time rush that we did the interview
through. Listen, it's almost silent.
GW: Aside from
Sanctuary, anything else going on we should keep
an eye out for?
RR: Between seasons I
did a feature film. I went over to Toronto to shoot
a feature film called Leslie my name is Evil
which is going to be a crazy, crazy movie. It's sort
of an interpretation of the Manson murders. The best
way to describe the film is the film is more of a
statement than a biopic. Effectively, I play Charles
Manson in the movie for a month and a half. Shaved
my head. It grew back really curly. Go figure. I'm
just glad it grew back. I was like, "Oh my God."
GW: Superstitious
there?
RR: Well, shave your
head and you're kind of confronted with your
hairline you know. I was like "OK, not so bad. Not
so bad." It's going to do the festival circuit. I'm
pretty confident it'll premiere in Toronto. That's
what it sounds like. I haven't seen it yet. I‘m
pretty excited about it. Definitely we all worked
very hard on it. It was a tough place to go for a
month and a half. It's a tough place to be in that
guy's head for a month and a half. But yeah.
GW: You know what I
just hate about you guys here in Vancouver. There're
so many great actors and you do so many great
non-blockbuster projects. They're so darn difficult
to get a hold of without downloading illegally. It's
next to impossible to get them.
RR: Yeah, it's true.
That's just the times. People want to see big
Michael Bay blockbuster explosions with a
Bruckheimer-inspired musical score that guides you
emotionally through the piece.
I have this theory about a
Jerry Bruckheimer movie, not that I wouldn't do one.
But my theory is -- I am not even sure who he gets
to compose his films -- Bruckheimer movies have a
very particular music composition and I think they'd
be an entirely different film without the music. And
you've got this music that literally guides you
emotionally, how you're supposed to feel. People get
emotional and you're like, "I think that's has a lot
to do with that music," I think he realizes the
importance of the score in his films.
I love those movies. I'd
love to do a big action movie while I can. That
would be so much fun. Those movies look like fun to
make. But that's what people want to see. You're
working 40 to 60 hour weeks, you just want to go be
entertained. I get like that sometimes. I just want
to be entertained. It's cool to just watch something
that just makes me forget about everything else.
As an actor, I just like to
do movies that are a little more intense, I suppose,
a little more interesting, more intimate, I think. I
come from indie films. That's where I started. I
will always do indie films, I'll never stop doing
those films. I've been fortunate to be able to do
certain projects, certain films that pay well.
I've done my bits and pieces
in big Hollywood movies. That allows me to be able
to go work on an indie film for little to no money
which is often the case. And that's a problem. It's
really hard to get funding for an indie film, which
makes it really hard to market an indie film, which
makes it really hard to see. It's interesting now.
Indie in my opinion has become more of a
genre.
GW: It's cool. It's
the in thing.
RR: It's not a budget
anymore. It used to be it's an indie film because
there's no budget and now, you see these Indie genre
films. It got the big budget but...
GW: Every major
studio has their own indie film -- Fox Searchlight.
Look at "Donnie Darko." The
explosion of that movie.
RR: Right. And now
they're doing "S. Darko," they're doing a sequel
about his sister.
GW: They are?
RR: Yeah. I am not
entirely sure of the budget for films like "Dan in
Real Life." I'm pretty sure it's a decent budget. I
don't know. But, you've got some big stars.
But they have a look, right?
I know "Juno" is truly an
indie film. I know they shot that film for something
like seven million dollars which is insane. It's a
beautiful film. One of my friends was a producer on
it and he told me that their biggest hope was they
knew Helen Page would blow up and be a big star, but
they had no idea the kind of response they would
get.
You do get lucky from time
to time. You do get that attention from time to
time. And it's great. And now that indie is this
type of genre and "Juno" had so much to do with
that. How many movies come out now that just look
and feel like "Juno?" When "Juno" came out, the
movie was so unique. The only films that reminded me
of that kind of genre were from the 80's. "Say
Anything." the John Cusack movie. Those movies were
made popular again. For that, I think it's awesome.
GW: Is there any kind
of character that you won't play?
RR: Any kind of
character that I won't play ... I don't know, I
don't think so. I think it would really depend on
the script and the message. I would be really
hesitant to play certain types of characters. First
thing that comes to mind is a pedophile or
something. I don't think I'd like that.
But then I think of "Little
Children" and Jack Earle Haley who is unbelievable,
and I'm like, "I don't want to like this guy," but
he's so compelling. I think if the overall script
and the tone and the people involved are solid.
GW: How the
character's written.
RR: Yeah, how the
character is written. I wouldn't quickly say no. I
love that challenge and I am really fortunate to be
an actor who is given the luxury to play all sorts
of different characters.
I aspire to be a very
memorable character actor. My heroes are famous now,
but maybe weren't 10 years ago. They've been doing
this for 20 years. Chris Cooper I think is amazing.
Philip Seymore Hoffman is amazing. And then
character leads. I think Viggo Mortensen is such a
phenomenally gifted actor but he's so prepared. He
obviously works very, very hard and I love the work
ethic of guys like that. Sean Penns Johnny Depps,
these guys are just great.
GW: Intense.
RR: They're great.
They're stars but they could easily have, without
that exposure, I'm sure they would still be making
movies if they were doing these small indie movies,
if that's what they were offered.
I like that. I like that
kind of intensity. It's not the healthiest way to be
an actor. It's tough on the body, it's tough on the
emotions when you want to dedicate yourself and
commit yourself to a character that heavily. But
it's the only way I know how to work. It's
fulfilling.
I'm trying to find a way to
actually become a werewolf.
GW: Good luck with
that.
RR: Yeah, I just
can't find any real ones. You go online, Craig's
List. "werewolf." "These stats are just so boring."
I just need someone to scratch me. Just to know what
it's like.
GW: I keep waiting to
see you as a full fledge werewolf in the show but
it's so expensive to show you considering how
they've designed you. They don't want to design it
cheap. They want to make him look impressive.
RR: It's really
interesting because we had this conversation, and
when we did see the version of Henry as a werewolf
in the elevator in the "Edward" episode, that was
Edward's interpretation of Henry's beast. It's not
even what Henry looks like as a werewolf. When we do
see Henry as a werewolf, it will be different still.
GW: When we do
see it. It's a little nugget there.
RR: If we do
see him. [Laughter]
GW: Backtrack.
RR: We might see him.
GW: It would be such
a letdown to never see his true form.
RR: We know that
Henry has some control over his werewolfiness.
GW: Lycanthropy?
RR: Yeah, just like
Lycanthropy. "Laminopathy." We know Henry has some
control over it so I think there's going to be some
elements where it will play. We're not going to
overexpose it. We're not going to show it often.
Because I think it spoils it.
Also, for a character choice
I think it's very painful for Henry to do that. I
don't think he wants to do it. I think it's one of
those things, it's the last, last, last option.
GW: Back through the
wall. Break himself out of a cell.
RR: Yeah, out of a
meat locker. I was bruised after that scene. It
didn't look that tough or rough at all, but I was
bouncing off those walls for hours.
GW: The pain on your
face looked real. You put it on your Facebook.
RR: Oh, God. Yeah.
You got a picture, that's my Facebook picture.
GW: I was like "What
is that?" And then I saw the episode. "Oh, OK."
RR: That's my
Facebook picture. I like that picture. It's a good
picture. That was actually a fan who created that
picture. Shelley Templar created that picture. I was
like "I have to have it." So she sent it to me.
"Awesome." I put it on Facebook.
RELATED LINK:
"Caleb's Hope" Charity
|