US – Saturday, July 4
The week's releases
Metro staff reviews the latest CDs, DVDs and books for your reading pleasure.
 
The gangster of Hollywood
FEATURE. Johnny Depp doesn’t know what time it is. Though he technically calls an adorable village in France home and owns an island in the Caribbean, the mercurial actor spends so much time working that his internal clock is all out of whack.
 
 
Directorial debut is a shot at the ‘Moon’
INTERVIEW. When directors are limited to a $5 million budget and a 33-day shooting schedule, they usually won’t do anything too arduous — especially for their first films. But director Duncan Jones, 37, tells us that he “wanted to do something with ambition” for his debut flick. So instead, Jones, who is the son of David Bowie, decided to make the sci-fi adventure “Moon,” which opens Friday. The affable Brit explains how.
 
The Beckhams’ island getaway
GOSSIP. According to the Sun, David Beckham is planning a trip to Necker Island, Richard Branson’s private island hideaway, to celebrate his 10th wedding anniversary with Victoria Beckham. And the best part? It only costs $51,000 a night to have the whole island to themselves.
 
Bale does light-lifting
 MOVIES. Christian Bale is more relaxed than usual, and with good reason. The heavy lifting in promoting his latest film, “Public Enemies,” falls to Johnny Depp. For once, the success or failure of the movie doesn’t rest on Bale’s shoulders. There’s no talk of on-set outbursts or franchise potential. And for that, he’s grateful — and cheerful.
 
Published 18:24, October the 7th, 2008
 
Who sucked out the feeling? Skarsgård looks tired at Fashion Week in NYC. Or shall we just call him "vampire weakened"?Who sucked out the feeling? Skarsgård looks tired at Fashion Week in NYC. Or shall we just call him "vampire weakened"?
 

From soldier to bloodsucker

HBO star Skarsgård isn’t likely to be pigeon-holed in Hollywood

PROFILE. Brad Pitt, twice named sexiest man alive, can’t make a Starbucks run without setting off a paparazzi frenzy. So what’s a five-time winner to do? Get his own damn coffee and the chance to enjoy it, actually.

“The celebrity culture is very different in America,” says actor Alexander Skarsgård, named the most superfine Swede in his homeland five times over.

“There are no paparazzi in Sweden, so I’m not harassed,” he says. “It’s a socialist country, so you shouldn’t think you’re special. It’s not like L.A., where people drive around in their pimped-out Bentleys. In Sweden you’re supposed to drive your Volvo and shop at Ikea.”

Skarsgård may have mega-celebrity (or some approximation thereof) back home, but in the States he’s becoming known for his serious acting skill. Critics hailed his quiet, intense portrayal of real-life U.S. Marine Sgt. Brad Colbert in HBO’s honest and fascinating “Generation Kill.” The must-see miniseries is based on the book by Evan Wright, a Rolling Stone correspondent embedded with an elite unit leading the invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Skarsgård, who lives mostly in Los Angeles but keeps a place in Stockholm, admits he was “terrified” to step into the role. But it wasn’t the controversial material that made the former Swedish Marine apprehensive.

“It’s a big part with tons of dialogue,” says the 32-year-old, who studied intently with a dialect coach to become “Americanized.” “I’ve seen lots of European guys coming over here, and with accents, you tend to play the evil Nazi or the Russian bad guy making the bomb. That’s fun for a while, but I wanted to be able to show I was able to play other parts.”

Skarsgård’s convincing embodiment of a red-blooded Yankee is unwaveringly stoic in “Generation Kill.” So it’s a bit surprising to watch the actor morph into the suave, 1,000-year-old Viking vampire Eric Northman in HBO’s “True Blood,” airing Sundays at 9 p.m.
“It’s not like he’s been asleep for 1,000 years and just now woke up and he’s still wearing his Viking helmet,” Skarsgård says, laughing (He does throw a line of Swedish into the dialogue in homage to Eric’s heritage, though). “True Blood” imagines vampires coexisting with humans since the invention of a synthetic blood substitute. Eric is owner of a vampire bar and sheriff of the Louisiana-area undead.

“I played with the idea of being around for a millennium,” Skarsgård says. “Eric has a tremendous amount of confidence. He knows what he wants and he knows how to get it.”
Kind of like being able to score fame and your own Frappuccino.


‘True Blood’ airs Sundays at 9 p.m. on HBO

‘Generation Kill’ re-airs on HBO in November and hits DVD on Dec. 16

 
 
MMMpod
The June edition of MMMpod features an interview with Perry Farrell on getting Jane's Addiction back together, as well as a talk with actor Ed Helms about his love/hate relationship with a capella music. We also have new music from Phoenix, Magic Magic, Lady Sovereign, and a classic from Booker T. & the MGs. As always, there's a chance to win a whole lot of free music.
 
 
Metro Life Panel