Another couple of interview:
www.thisisgrimsby.co.uk/villain-s-bad-Rufus/story-18628373-detail/story.html#axzz2PqabMDMYR ufus Sewell once said he didn't want to play villains any more. Or so it was reported.
"I did say that, but I also said that I reserve the right to change my mind at any given moment," says the actor.
"When people round off what you say to the nearest available cliché, it's frustrating."
At the time, it was an understandable statement since Sewell, once typecast as the ruggedly handsome love interest, had just done a string of films in which he played the villain – A Knight's Tale and The Legend Of Zorro, to name just a couple.
"The idea of just playing bad guys is really boring, but if I'm a good guy in the interim then I might change my mind," adds Sewell, 45.
Which is why, after a break from baddies, he has returned to the dark side for his latest film, All Things To All Men, the latest release from Kidulthood and Adulthood duo George Isaac and Pierre Mascolo.
This time, though, Sewell is playing a bad boy with a difference. While his character, Parker, might be a murderer with sociopathic tendencies, he is also a cop whose main rival is renowned, feared and surprisingly emotional crime lord Joseph Corso (played by Gabriel Byrne).
Sewell found this part-good, part-evil character easier to play than your average villain because, he says, people who are all bad don't actually exist.
"They're just fantasy. Everyone has mixes of things."
The film is, essentially, a love letter to London. Almost every scene features another classic London landmark – from the London Eye to Shepherds Bush Market, the Dorchester Hotel to the derelict Battersea Power Station.
You might think that now he lives in LA with his girlfriend, this would make Sewell a bit homesick. But as it turns out he's not in LA all that much.
"I'm here half the time, my agent is here, so I never get the chance to miss London," he says.
Sewell has struggled to break into the world of independent films, settling instead for American movies, but the former is where his heart lies.
"If I could have a career doing small British indie films and nothing else, I'd do it," he says.
As it turns out, the best way to get the British to take notice of you is to move to LA.
"The reason I left was because I was annoyed that I couldn't get work here, but I've done more work in England in the past five years since moving to America than I had in the ten years before that. If that's what it takes, then fine," he says, clearly not frustrated by this paradoxical turn of events.
Comedy is another area Sewell would like to try his hand at.
"That's actually where I'm comfortable," he says. "I love The Office, Seinfeld and Larry Sanders. Garth Marenghi's Darkplace, too. I love the subversive British stuff."
Sewell is fussy when it comes to scripts, but he's also realistic. "If you don't get sent any scripts for months at a time, or when you do the scripts are all bad guys or men on horses in medieval times, it's hard to apply that fussiness," he says.
"Sometimes, I've been so fussy and I've gone so long waiting that I've ended up being desperate enough to accept a role that's worse than the ones I turned down," he says.
One area in which you'd imagine he isn't lacking offers is stage work, having won an Olivier Award and been nominated for a Tony Award for his role in Tom Stoppard's Rock'n'Roll, as well as many other theatrical successes. He's currently appearing in a Harold Pinter play, Old Times, with Kristen Scott Thomas in London's West End.
And next? He's off to do fight scenes with The Rock for his new film Hercules, of course.
"I don't feel like I've got anywhere near the kind of stuff I want to be doing, he says. "That's not a complaint. But as I get older, things are slowly ending up the way I've always wanted them to be.
"I'm playing the long game."
BORN: Rufus Sewell was born on October 29, 1967, in Twickenham. His parents divorced when he was five and his father, an Australian animator, died when Rufus was ten.
BREAKTHROUGH: His acting breakthrough was in TV series Middlemarch and on stage in Tom Stoppard's Arcadia. He then went on to play Seth Starkadder in Cold Comfort Farm.
APPEARANCES: He has since appeared in many TV, film and stage productions, including The Holiday, A Knight's Tale, The Legend Of Zorro and The Tourist.
FAMILY: Sewell has divorced twice and has a son, Billy, with his second wife, scriptwriter and producer Amy Gardner.
www.bbcamerica.com/anglophenia/2013/04/rufus-sewell-gets-more-uk-gigs-since-moving-to-u-s/This one gives a link to a bigger interview that doesn't seem to work
Rufus Sewell plays a bad guy so good. (Cipher Films)
Rufus Sewell (Parade’s End, Paris, je t’aime) bit the bullet and made the official move to the U.S. committing to LA and soon after he started getting more interest from the UK, reports The Mirror.
Sewell is on the set of his new film All Things to All Men co-starring Gabriel Byrne. The film revolves around a detective (Sewell) staging a bank robbery with a little help from safecracker (Toby Stephens) and London crime lord (Byrne).
At the time of the interview, Sewell was bundled up trying to keep warm outside the Battersea Power Station, located on the south bank of the River Thames, in Battersea, an inner-city district of South West London. … it is quite a striking difference in backdrop from the life in la la land in LA.
Sewell recognizes the irony saying, “’Since the moment I decided I’ll stay in LA, the interest in England has sparked up. I’ve actually done more work for the BBC in those four or five years than I had done in the 15 years previously.”
Isn’t that always the case, people want what they can’t have? … or even worse, what someone else has?
Well, there’s enough of Sewell to go around. He tries to balance his choice of roles saying, “As far as I’m concerned, the idea of just playing bad guys is boring. But, if I played a good guy in the interim (he laughs to himself), then I’d change my mind. A few years ago I said I didn’t want to do period dramas or play romantic leads but I’d love to do that now. I just change my mind. But, certainly, just a career of playing one-note villains is not an interesting career for me.”
He goes on to describe the current rogue cop character he’s playing, saying, “This guy felt equally different to anything I’ve ever done because he was from London and it was in a modern British film, with a London accent. Which for me, it was different than anything I had ever done.”