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Martin Landau On Frankenweenie’s Mr. Rzykruski And Teaching Jack Nicholson At The Actor’s Studio

Hollywood veteran Martin Landau earned an Oscar in his first collaboration with Tim Burton , 1994’s Ed Wood , and for Burton’s latest and most personal picture, Frankenweenie , the filmmaker cast his erstwhile Bela Lugosi as the eccentric but inspirational Mr. Rzykruski — the science teacher who nurtures young Victor Frankenstein’s budding talents and encourages him to forge his own path. It’s a fitting role for the 84-year-old Landau, who lit up as he discussed Frankenweenie and his longtime parallel career as an acting coach to the likes of Jack Nicholson, Anjelica Huston, and many more Hollywood greats under Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio. Tim Burton cast you as Mr. Rzykruski, Victor’s teacher and he’s quite the character: At first imposing and foreboding, he’s revealed to be one of Victor’s only kindred spirits. What did you make of him at first and how did you find his quirks? It’s a fun character, and the thing that amazed me is that I saw an arc and if I could play it on camera I’d play it exactly the same. I did [the voice recording] first and the animators animated after. It was just my voice, but Tim sent me pictures of the character and it looked like me years ago, or Vincent Price and me mixed up, a caricature of me with dark hair and such. I saw him as a loving man, but eccentric as hell and passionate! And also, European – but not specifically from a country. It said that; it said it’s a generic accent. It’s not German, it’s not Russian, it’s not Hungarian, but it’s European. [In Mr. Rzykruski’s voice] So I lowered the voice . The relationship between Victor and Mr. Rzykruski is the best child-adult relationship in the film, and probably the most important one. He’s the one who inspires the kid, with science and the frog! He’s somewhat outlandish and certainly not a diplomat. If you’re a teacher you don’t call your students’ parents stupid. It’s a great line, though. It’s a funny line, and I knew it. But again, the movie is funny, moving, and scary in equal parts and I love that. This is a movie Tim wanted to make three decades ago and couldn’t. He made a short live-action version of it, but the one blessing is that if he had done it then it wouldn’t be in 3-D. But it’s not stuck on 3-D, things coming at you to shock you. You also happen to be a teacher off-screen, having spent many years with the Actors Studio where so many talents passed through over the decades. It was a different time. A lot of my contemporaries have passed away, which is sad, but I still run the Actors Studio on the West Coast with Mark Rydell – [Al] Pacino, [Harvey] Keitel and Ellen Burstyn run the New York Actors Studio so we’re in touch with each other all the time. And I work with a lot of young actors and help them. Why did you first begin teaching? I started teaching when I was in my 20s because Lee Strasberg asked me to, and he didn’t do that with a lot of people. Why do you think he did? At the Actors Studio when I got in, he’d ask for comments and I’d raise my hand and critique the actors succinctly and helpfully, and I think he noticed that. One day he said “I want you to teach – I’ve got a waiting list and I’m going to send some of my people to you.” He sent me off, teaching. Jack Nicholson was my student for three years, and Harry Dean Stanton, Anjelica Huston; a lot of people have studied with me. It’s paying my dues, because as a young actor I benefited from getting in. The year I got into The Actors Studio, Steve McQueen and I were the only two accepted that whole year. Two people, Steve and me. It’s still tough to get in. Lifetime membership. Who was your favorite student? That’s hard – they’re all my kids. I’ve got two daughters and it’s impossible for me to say one of them is a favorite. Fair enough! Was there one actor who surprised you the most over the years? Nicholson did, but he had some problems. He would kind of surround a moment that he didn’t want to embrace. I found that those things were probably the richest part of his talent, which he was avoiding because it was very hurtful. But I wanted him to know that it wasn’t going to hurt him. You can’t perish because of your own feelings, you have to embrace those things as an actor because it’s part of your palette. How did you help him? I had him do a bunch of exercises that would connect his voice, his body, and emotions. A lot of actors lead with their voices and their bodies follow; they’re split, they’re not together. The instrument is not working as a unit. To get them to become good actors… all an audience wants to believe is that what’s going on up there is happening for the first time ever. You don’t want to see the rehearsals, you don’t want to see the work. You want to see two people in conflict or people connecting, but I don’t see a lot of that. There are some movie stars who are considered good actors who put me to sleep. I’m not going to mention their names! You could be talented but if you don’t use that talent well you’re depriving yourself. Craft is about talented people who shut down easily because they’re vulnerable, they’re hypersensitive, where your talent actually short-circuits you. People who are less vulnerable are usually not that interesting. [Laughs] So when your own talent acts as a deterrent, you’ve got to pay attention to that. How do you open that up? How do you create relaxation when you start getting tense because you’re sensitive to a situation? Tension will shut you down. Your sphincters will all close up. Talented actors have problems; it’s like a violin playing a violinist, where the instrument itself shuts the talent down. It’s a matter of managing that, then. Getting the actor to trust his talent and trust his instrument. No one tries to cry. Bad actors try to cry. Good actors try not to cry. How a character hides his feelings tells us who he is. No one shows their feelings except bad actors! No one tries to laugh! If I tell you a racial joke and you laugh, you’re telling me something about yourself – you’re revealing something. A drunk doesn’t try to be drunk; he wants another drink! One of the most studied things is a drunk picking up a full glass of booze [affects drunken mannerism, grabbing an invisible glass]… and bringing it to his mouth. It’s not sloppy. [Slurring] It’s ve-rrry … concentra-aated . Anyway, I never met two people who were alike so I’ve never approach a character as the same character. They’re physiologically different, environmentally different, emotionally different – they’re all different, and that’s what makes it exciting, still, for me. What’s your relationship with Tim like, after years of working together? Well, we kind of understand each other. He doesn’t have to say a whole lot to me. But I’m rarely directed by anybody. I really haven’t been directed by anybody in 30 years. A good director hires good actors and creates a playground, and you play. You come up with stuff that no one could quite envision. I saw this character not only vocally but physically, behaviorally, and to my pleasure what they came up with was exactly as I would have done it if I’d been acting and it wasn’t animation. That thrilled me, because it was like, wow – they caught it from the voice and it’s exactly as I saw it! Because I saw the arc. There was an arc; he gets fired and gives the kid advice, but it’s sad in a certain sense. He doesn’t restrain himself, this guy. Rzykruski seems to understand why his progressive thinking doesn’t fly in the suburbs. He is who he is, and I love that about him. He’s a zealot. He loves science, and the fact that people don’t understand it in the way that they need to upsets him. He sees this kid and he immediately thinks, “This kid’s okay.” He doesn’t know what the kid’s doing, because from the frog’s reaction the kid channels lightning… but Tim loved Frankenstein. He loved Dracula as a kid. This has been festering in him all these years. He never lost this movie, and you think about that – it’s three decades later and this is probably the most Tim Burton film. Edward Scissorhands was as well but he wanted to do that as an animated film and couldn’t, but that was fortuitous in that it introduced him to Johnny Depp, and that became very important to him and to Johnny – and to me too, in a way, because I loved working with Johnny and Tim in Ed Wood . Ed Wood is fantastic. The relationship between you three on that project really jumps off the screen. It’s a fun movie. We had a good time. A great time, actually. Johnny and I hit it off, Tim and I hit it off. You also started out as a cartoonist early in your career. Do you think that had something to do with you and Tim getting on so well? You kind of see things visually, and maybe that’s a little bit of it. Tim and I draw differently; I have a bit of an Art Deco style. Do you still draw? Oh, all the time! I’ve got thousands of what I call doodles, although they’re not doodles. Tim’s seen them. But yes – the visualization is there for me too, in a way. I see the character, and then I work on all of those things into a subjective form. They’re objective, and I make them part of me. We’re all capable of it. Where do you go from here? The next thing I know I’m doing is I’m going to London to do more work for Frankenweenie . I’d like this picture to do well. And the BFI is giving me a lifetime achievement award. How does that feel, to receive an honor like that? Well I’ve got a lot of those now. I keep saying, “I’m not done!” Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Martin Landau On Frankenweenie’s Mr. Rzykruski And Teaching Jack Nicholson At The Actor’s Studio

WATCH: Daniel Craig’s SNL Monologue, Dedicated To The Bad Guys He’s Killed

So maybe Daniel Craig lost last night’s SNL spotlight to Big Bird . He still held his own and promoted Skyfall with fun little riffs on his James Bond persona, starting with his opening monologue — an Oscars-style In Memoriam tribute to all the poor guys he’s killed over the years while dutifully serving as Hollywood’s iciest action hero. Watch above to see Craig uncharacteristically (but nevertheless quite charmingly, I must say) go a bit goofy on the SNL stage (unfortunately NBC hasn’t released the monologue excerpt on its own, but here’s the full episode). For another dose of 007’s big SNL promo push, hit the Bond-themed digital short below detailing 50 years of lesser-known Bond Girls… [via NBC ] Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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WATCH: Daniel Craig’s SNL Monologue, Dedicated To The Bad Guys He’s Killed

Britney And Kelly Clarkson Bond Over ‘X Factor’ Cover Of ‘Stronger’

Spears reached out to original ‘Idol’ winner after two ‘Factor’ contestants sang one of Kelly’s hits. By Gil Kaufman Britney Spears and Kelly Clarkson Photo: Getty Images

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Britney And Kelly Clarkson Bond Over ‘X Factor’ Cover Of ‘Stronger’

‘Skyfall’ Clip Captures Classic Bond Moment

The first clip from the new adventure finds Daniel Craig catching a train in true Bond fashion. By Kevin P. Sullivan Daniel Craig in the first clip from “Skyfall” Photo: MGM

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‘Skyfall’ Clip Captures Classic Bond Moment

Russell Crowe Channeled Wu Tang’s Ol’ Dirty Bastard For RZA’s Man With The Iron Fists

RZA ‘s kung fu actioner The Man With The Iron Fists is already a must-see thanks to its pedigree (RZA co-wrote, directs and stars, Eli Roth co-wrote and produces, Quentin Tarantino “presents”), cast (Lucy Liu, Gordon Liu, Pam Grier to name a few) and stylistic influences (Shaw brothers meets Wu Tang? Yes please! ). Speaking with Movieline, RZA dropped another worlds-colliding tidbit that might blow minds when Iron Fists hits theaters November 2: Russell Crowe ‘s mysterious, dagger-twirling character Jack Knife was influenced by none other than the late rapper Ol’ Dirty Bastard. That’s right — the spirit of Ol’ Dirty Bastard, AKA ODB, AKA Dirt McGirt, AKA Big Baby Jesus, lives on within Oscar-winner Russell Crowe. “When you see the film you will see a couple of ODB references and you’ll go, ‘Okay – that’s where he got that from,'” RZA promised when he rang Movieline (look for the full interview next month). “He does an ODB move exactly like ODB would do!” In the film’s press notes, RZA explains further: “My cousin’s not here anymore, but I wanted his spirit in the film. Russell and I talked about it, and he loved the idea.” The mysterious Jack Knife, an opium-addicted soldier enamored of China named for his weapon of choice, even has a signature jaw harp audio cue reminiscent of ODB’s “Shimmy Shimmy Ya.” But the ODB-Crowe connection extended further on set as RZA pointed to the spirit of his late cousin and collaborator when filming hit a snag. “When we talked about the character one day we had a little problem that we had to figure out on the set,” RZA told Movieline. “And it seemed like we were going to have a bad day so I had to go to his trailer and tell him what was going on. To get him to feel comfortable at the time, I told him a story about ODB.” He continued: “The story was, one day ODB walked into the studio late as hell. He was so late, he’s ruined a whole day and wasted all this money. The beat is playing, he walks in, and in one take he performs “Shame On A Nigga.” He does this song in one take and if you notice in the song there’s a part where he goes, ‘Shame on a nigga who tries to run game on a —’ He doesn’t really finish the hook.” “I was like, ‘Do it over.’ He said, ‘No — that’s it. I’m keeping it. That’s what I like!’ One take . And this one take idea, I explained to Russell, is sometimes just a moment we capture. It doesn’t have to be done over and over. ‘He’s a guy that would come in and do it in one take. So I know we’re out of time, but for today you might have to go one-take, ODB-style.’ Now of course Russell’s a master anyway and he’ll do it in one take. But I think telling him that story at that time helped because we were about eight hours late and it helped us capture a lot of things in that one day that it would have taken us two days to do.” Check back for more with RZA and his directorial debut, The Man With The Iron Fists , including our full discussion of his lifelong love of kung fu, working with idol Gordon Liu, learning from the Quentin Tarantino school of cinema, and more. The Man With The Iron Fists hits theaters November 2. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Russell Crowe Channeled Wu Tang’s Ol’ Dirty Bastard For RZA’s Man With The Iron Fists

Two New Skyfall Clips: Ladies, 007 Knows About All The Fear

I wonder how much pure willpower it takes for Daniel Craig to look as tirelessly cool and bad-ass as he does in every second so far of Skyfall , a Bond pic whose plot I have very little knowledge of despite all the ads, other than Javier Bardem is a blonde-wigged weirdo villain, 007 bags more exotic ladies in exotic locales, and he jumps onto exploding trains while nonchalantly adjusting his cufflinks. That cufflink move gets a lot of mileage. Watch two new exciting-but-not-terribly-expository spots from Skyfall and tell me I’m wrong. The first clip, “Precise Intelligence,” is all about how M (Judi Dench) always kinda-sorta but not really knows where her #1 agent is at all times because he’s probably on a yacht in the South China Sea macking on ladies on boats and in showers. I mean, obviously. Watch it on YouTube . The second offers a little more: Femme fatale Sévérine (Bérénice Marlohe) leans in and SUPER SERIOUSLY asks Bond, “How much do you know about FEAAAAH ?” What follows is the first semi-hilarious bit we’ve seen from Skyfall , just because Craig’s response is SO INTENSE. I mean, look at this face: BOND KNOWS ABOUT ALL THE FEAR, BABY. Watch it on YouTube . Then, BOOM! Cufflink move at the 0:17 mark. Come November we’re all going to live for that cufflink move, people. Skyfall skyfalls into U.S. theaters on November 9. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Two New Skyfall Clips: Ladies, 007 Knows About All The Fear

POLL: Celebrate 50 Years Of James Bond And Vote For Your Favorite 007 Movie

In an industry where success is often measured by a movie’s performance over a single (opening) weekend, the James Bond franchise is that rarest of things: a long-distance runner. At 23 movies — 22 if you don’t count the independently produced Never Say Never Again — and counting, Ian Fleming’s Agent 007 has managed to be mostly relevant at the box office for 50 years and, according to filmsite.org , while earning more than $1.5 billion. That’s third only to, respectively, the Harry Potter and Star Wars franchises.  Even more so than Bob Dylan records (especially the recent ones),   Bond movies are very much products of the times in which they are released.  The campy 1980s sex-fluff of the Roger Moore 007 movies would probably not fare so well were they released in today’s economically fraught kill-or-be-killed world. Daniel Craig is the right Bond for this era, and, if you ask me, in a dead heat with Sean Connery for the best Bond of all time.  But, actually, I more interested in your opinion. In commemoration of Tuesday’s release of Bond 50: The Complete 22 Film Collection, MGM’s Blu-Ray collection of the 22 Bond films  that it recognizes, Movieline will be presenting a series of posts all week long that focus on the iconic super spy.  To kick things off, we’re asking our readers to pick their favorite Bond movie.  Our list numbers 23 because Never Say Never Again deserves to be included.  Order up a martini (or, ahem, a Heineken ) and vote your choice. We’ll post the results mid-week and on Saturday. By the way, if you think that David Niven and Peter Sellers’ 1967 Casino Royale spoof should have been included, vote for it in the comments section. Take Our Poll

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POLL: Celebrate 50 Years Of James Bond And Vote For Your Favorite 007 Movie

WATCH: Daniel Craig Appears In SkyFall Heineken Ad − Martini Drinkers Shaken, Not Stirred

I’m going to need more than one martini — Ketel One, straight up, lots of olives — to swallow this ad. Daniel Craig appears with Bond Girl Berenice Marlowe in a new Heineken ad tied to the release of the upcoming 007 feature, Skyfall . Craig’s brief appearances book-end the commercial and martini lovers will find some consolation in the fact that he doesn’t actually drink from the bottle of Heineken that he orders in the clip. I do have to give Wieden + Kennedy Amsterdam props for the zany, international flavor of the recent Heineken TV ad spots. The scene in the clip below where the actor mistaken for Bond recreates a miniature replica of Moscow’s onion-domed St. Basil’s Cathedral by shooting playing cards from the palms of his hands is a smart touch. Although Heineken has had a 15-year relationship with the Bond franchise, this commercial represents part of a stepped-up marketing and product placement campaign that was announced this past spring. Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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WATCH: Daniel Craig Appears In SkyFall Heineken Ad − Martini Drinkers Shaken, Not Stirred

Adele to Sing New James Bond Theme Song

Another day, another honor for Adele. The Emmy-winning, chart-topping artist will sing the theme song for this November’s Skyfall , Movie Fanatic reports, taking her place in history as the latest musician to play a role in the James Bond franchise. Adele – who will also reportedly write the track – joins the ranks of other icons to lend their vocal to 007, including Shirley Bassey, Nancy Sinatra, Carly Simon, Paul McCartney and Duran Duran. Skyfall , meanwhile, will once again feature Daniel Craig in the lead role and come out on 11/9/12.

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Adele to Sing New James Bond Theme Song

Jeffrey Wright Is Catching Fire’s Beetee; Robert Pattinson’s The Rover Sells Overseas

Also in Friday’s Biz Break: indie horror maven Ti West goes “mainstream,” Daniel Craig signs for more Bonds, and Spike Lee ‘s Oldboy is snapped up by FilmDistrict for U.S. release. Jeffrey Wright Cast In The Hunger Games: Catching Fire Lionsgate continues to beef up its sequel cast with stellar veteran talent. The Tony- and Golden Globe-winning actor will play Beetee, a former victor from District 3 thrown into the Quarter Quell competition with Katniss Everdeen. [Press release] Robert Pattinson’s The Rover Makes International Sales The pic from David Michod ( Animal Kingdom ) sees RPattz teaming up with Guy Pearce for a gritty dystopian Outback thriller ; actor-filmmaker Joel Edgerton co-conceived the story, and filming begins this winter. Rights have been sold in “United Kingdom, Canada and Benelux to eOne, Scandinavia to Nordisk, Latin America to Sun Distribution, the Middle East to Italia Film and Eastern Europe excluding Russia to Revolutionary Releasing. Village Roadshow already picked up the film in Australia and New Zealand,” per THR . Ti West And Eli Roth Team Up For The Sacrament Indie horror auteur West ( House of the Devil , The Innkeepers , V/H/S ) begins filming this month on the under-wraps horror thriller, which will court buyers at the Toronto Film Festival. Roth will produce and West will direct from his own script in what Roth describes will be West’s “first mainstream movie,” via Variety . Daniel Craig Commits To Two More Bonds With his third turn as 007 in the can ( Skyfall hits theaters in November), Daniel Craig has signed up for at least two more Bond pics in the current EON Production series. According to MI6 , Sony/MGM execs are aiming for an aggressive two year gap between films. Spike Lee’s Oldboy Gets U.S. Distribution He hasn’t even begun filming yet (though he told Movieline he’ll definitely shoot on celluloid ), but Spike Lee continues to put his ducks in a row for his Oldboy remake. FilmDistrict will take U.S. rights as Lee heads into production this month, according to THR . Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Jeffrey Wright Is Catching Fire’s Beetee; Robert Pattinson’s The Rover Sells Overseas