Thank you to http://community.livejournal.com/chardwickefans/39360.html for these fantastic scans!
Max Irons is featured in the February/March 2011 issue of Wonderland magazine, interviewed about Red Riding Hood:

Thank you to http://community.livejournal.com/chardwickefans/39360.html for these fantastic scans!
Max Irons is featured in the February/March 2011 issue of Wonderland magazine, interviewed about Red Riding Hood:
Max Irons is featured in the April 2011 issue of Teen Vogue magazine, as part of a two-page spread (pages 166-167) entitled “Wild Things” about Max and Shiloh Fernandez, stars of Red Riding Hood.
Click on the photo for a larger version:
Max wears a Calvin Klein Collection suit. Inis Meain shirt. Jill Sander tie.
Max Irons is featured in the London Evening Standard in an article from 11 March 2011, by Richard Godwin. Photographs by Hamish Brown.
Max Irons walks into a West London café dressed in a slim black overcoat, smelling slightly of tobacco. You can tell he’s a bit of a rebel as he is brazenly drinking from a carton of Ribena. For some reason – his regally handsome looks? family connections? – the waitresses don’t seem to mind.
I had been warned that Irons – 25-year-old model, actor and son of Jeremy Irons and Sinead Cusack – would be rather shy, but, on the contrary, he’s wholly self-assured. He talks about his dyslexia, which was so bad he couldn’t write his name at eight; his expulsion from boarding school for getting caught in flagrante with his girlfriend just before his A levels; what it was like watching his dad have sex with a minor on screen in Lolita (‘weird’, but it’s one of Max’s favourite films); and the family’s controversial holiday castle in Kilcoe, Ireland, the colour of which has become an obsession of the tabloid press. ‘Listen: pink was the undercoat, it’s now a nice rusty orange,’he says.
And if his CV is still looking a little sparse given the hype that surrounds him, Max ought to put that right with his latest projects. After training at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama and appearing in a couple of plays on the London fringe, he is about to appear as a drug-addicted pornographer in the Sky mini-series The Runaway and, before that, in a big-budget reimagining of Red Riding Hood by Twilight director Catherine Hardwicke. ‘You’ve got to forget about what you know about Little Red Riding Hood and inject a bit of sexuality,’he explains. I thought Little Red Riding Hood was all about sexuality? ‘Well, yes, it’s about rape. But it’s very subconscious…’
At any rate, this version has a sexuality that’s precision-tooled to set young female audiences’hormones raging, with Amanda Seyfried as the hooded heroine and Irons as her rich suitor. Clearly, there’s an invitation to follow the Robert Pattinson route to teen idol (Hardwicke describes Max by saying, ‘He’s 6ft 3in, drop-dead gorgeous, and has this crazy magnetism’), but Max is wary of being typecast as a heart-throb. He recently ‘found’ himself talking to Disney about Snow and the Seven, a similarly racy reboot of the Snow White tale. ‘I was thinking, if I get this, they would probably pay a bit, there would be a lot of exposure – but I could pretty much bank on not having the kind of career I want.’He talks admiringly of Andrew Garfield and Tom Hardy, two young British actors who have made interesting career choices, and speaks of his love for Pinter and Stoppard: ‘I want to have a career that lasts 60 years, not six.’
He has a wariness of Hollywood and laughs at the ridiculous diets and the punishing vanity. ‘At the end of a really, really, really horrible workout, the only thing I want to do is… have a smoke,’he laughs. (He started smoking at 13, liquorice roll-ups, same as his father.) He remains a Londoner, commuting back and forth to LA, where he met his girlfriend, the Australian actress Emily Browning, 22, who has just starred in a sexy Australian take on the Sleeping Beauty story and is shortly to hit our screens in the big-budget teen flick Sucker Punch (no relation to the recent Royal Court play). For the moment Max continues to live with his parents in a cottage on a cobbled mews in West London, to which we retire halfway through the interview, when the din at the café becomes overwhelming. The Irons residence is cosy and bohemian, with an overflowing ashtray, a warm red colour scheme and battered leather sofas. A note pinned to the front door, on Sinead Cusack-headed notepaper, addresses itself to the family cyclists with the word ‘HELMET!’.
Max is touching when talking about his parents, whose marriage is the subject of endless tabloid speculation, though it has lasted more than three decades. The gossip doesn’t bother him, he says. ‘I remember there was a story – I must have been about ten – and it was about him reportedly kissing a co-star. And they said to me, ”Look, there’s going to be a story in the papers tomorrow. It’s not true.” And that was fine. You learn very quickly not to Google yourself.’
He grew up between the family’s Oxfordshire estate, where the novelist Ian McEwan was a neighbour, and London. He was sent to a state boarding school, where, funny to think now, he was mercilessly bullied for his pudding-bowl haircut and the ‘fucking medieval’ inverted yellow glasses he wore to correct his reading. Otherwise, he describes his childhood as happy and stable. One parent, usually Cusack, would try to stay at home while the other was away filming.
He lights up when I mention how much I loved the 1989 film of Roald Dahl’s Danny, the Champion of the World, which starred Jeremy Irons as an unconventional widower trying to raise his son (played by Max’s older brother Samuel, now a photographer). ‘I was two when the film came out, but I watched it so much as a kid, and it made me cry terribly.’Is there a parallel with his own father-son relationship? ‘I would like to say yes,’he says mysteriously, before deciding, ‘Actually I would say there is. My dad’s not lawless but he’s got his own set of morals and ethics which don’t always agree with other people’s – like in the movie. It’s not unjust what they do, or unfair, but it’s unconventional. I kind of respect that, especially these days.’
That unconventional streak emerged in Max when he was sent to Bryanston, a mixed boarding school in Dorset. He was always getting suspended. ‘Nothing serious, only girls, booze, cigarettes. My parents always said,”You’re really bad at getting caught.” I replied,”No, I was just doing it a lot.” That way, statistically, you’re more likely to get caught.’His parents once sent him to observe a school in Zimbabwe, just after Robert Mugabe had come to power, to remind him of his privilege – with mixed results. He was kicked out of Bryanston prior to his A levels, after a teacher caught him having sex.
His parents also exercised caution when he announced that he, too, wanted a career in acting, pointing out that they were in the ‘zero point one’per cent who were successful. They are not overly involved now, though ‘every now and then, there’s a bit of fatherly advice but it’s mainly to do with what to expect from Los Angeles, not how to actually do the acting’.
In fact, he tells me, the dyslexia was the bigger factor in his career choice. ‘The teacher would come along and say, ”Are you finding it all right?” and I would say, ”Yeah, it’s brilliant, I’m loving it, easy,” and that was a bit of acting in itself. You have to rely on charm a lot.’
At first, scripts terrified him, as he was unable to read them, but now he studies his lines beforehand. ‘When I applied to drama school, they had this sheet you had to fill in saying whether you had any disabilities and I called up and asked,”Does dyslexia count?” and they said,”It’s practically a qualification.” ’
I ask him if he’s scared of not being taken seriously. ‘No. I know I have to combat the fact that my parents are actors at least for the next ten years. It’s tied up with dyslexia. You want to give the impression you’re successful. That you’re well, often when you’re not.’He pauses. ‘When you’ve got parents who’ve done what you want to do, as much as they’re proud of you, they can’t be as amazed by it, because they’ve done it themselves. The only person I can amaze is me. I’ve got to do it for me. So… fuck the world, to an extent.’It’s an attitude that has served other members of his family rather well.
Red Riding Hood will be out in cinemas in the US from 11 March and in the UK from 15 April.
Click on the thumbnails for larger images:
Red Riding Hood director, Catherine Hardwicke, traveled to England to audition actors for Henry.
Hardwicke says, “Max Irons walks into this casting session, and he’s a very impressive guy. He stands 6 foot 3 and he’s simultaneously charismatic, down-to-earth and soulful. And then I asked about his family and learn that he’s Jeremy Irons’ son…
“Sold.”
Read more at KansasCity.com
Red Riding Hood Round Table Interview
Photos of Max from the Red Riding Hood press conference at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel in Beverly Hills, California and one of Catherine Hardwicke and Max Irons in the BBC 5 Live Studio in London:
Check this site’s Vodpod feed for even more video of Max promoting Red Riding Hood.
Vodpod videos no longer available. Vodpod videos no longer available. Vodpod videos no longer available. Vodpod videos no longer available. Vodpod videos no longer available. Vodpod videos no longer available. Vodpod videos no longer available. Vodpod videos no longer available.Actor Max Irons arrives at premiere of Warner Bros. Pictures’ Red Riding Hood at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre on March 7, 2011 in Hollywood, California.
Vodpod videos no longer available.Click on the thumbnails for larger images:
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Irons: R-Patz ‘gifted and cursed’
Tuesday 8th March 2011
Max Irons steps out with the cast of Red Riding Hood
Max Irons may be being compared to Robert Pattinson but the Red Riding Hood star reckons R-Patz has been “gifted and cursed” with fame.
The son of acting couple Jeremy Irons and Sinead Cusack hit the red carpet in Hollywood to premiere the new thriller in which he plays Amanda Seyfried’s love interest.
Having been cast and directed in the movie by Twilight’s Catherine Hardwicke, Max confessed he takes any Pattinson comparisons as a compliment.
“Well Robert’s a lovely actor, [but] this is a different beast to the film that shall not be named!” he joked, before adding: “You know, I think he’s been gifted and cursed.”
The 25-year-old explained: “All you want to be able to do as an actor is work and to be able to focus on the work. For lack of a better term, the celebrity is consequential and all you should be doing is focusing on the quality of your work and kind of, I think, ignoring the rest of it.
“If I can do that and have a long, long career and not a short, short career that’s all I want.
“Robert by the way is going to have a long, long career,” Max added. “I have a feeling about that… because he’s English!”
The young actor described working under the direction of Catherine Hardwicke as “nuts”.
“We had a director that encouraged us to be silly and to just have fun.”
Max Irons in Red Riding Hood B-Roll Footage from Movieweb:
Vodpod videos no longer available. Vodpod videos no longer available. Vodpod videos no longer available.And two clips from the finished film:
Vodpod videos no longer available. Vodpod videos no longer available.Collider.com has a video montage of seven clips from the movie Red Riding Hood, starring Max Irons.
Vodpod videos no longer available.From: http://www.latimesmagazine.com/2011/03/the-next-factor.html
Max Irons is featured in an article in the LA Times Magazine, by Leslie Gornstein. Photo by Hedi Slimane.
Max Irons
All right, folks, might as well get it out of the way: Yes, Irons is the 25-year-old son of Jeremy, one of the greatest British actors still breathing. You’d think such an august surname would translate into quite the fall-at-your-feet acting life, especially for a chap who qualifies as irrefutably gorgeous. Alas, that’s not always the case. This month, Irons breaks big as Henry, Amanda Seyfried’s suitor in Catherine Hardwicke’s Red Riding Hood. But getting the role was no stroll through the woods. “I had four auditions and two screen tests,” says Irons, stage-trained like his dad. “I’d be lying if I said there aren’t casting agents more inclined to see you. But if you go into an audition and do a mediocre job, they’ll never forget.”
Max Irons did a Twitterview (Twitter Interview) on Thursday 3 March 2011 with @wbpictures and answered a few questions from fans. Scroll down to read the full transcript…

Photo via @wbpictures
Here is the transcript:
Q: What was your favorite part about being able to work with Catherine Hardwicke as your director?
Max: She’s got a child-like imagination and an infectious energy, which is what you need when you’re doing a movie about a wolf.
Q: Did you ever read Little Red Riding Hood when you were little?
Max: I never read it. I would have been told it, but the thing about fairy tales is that you never remember the first time you heard it.
Q: What are the differences and similarities between the Little Red Riding Hood story and the film?
Max: Forget what you know about Little Red Riding Hood and leave it at the door. Ours is much edgier and darker and far more exciting.
Q: What was it like working with the legendary Gary Oldman?
Max: It was amazing watching a seasoned professional like him. You learn so much.
Q: How did you guys make the characters you played in Red Riding Hood your own? Were they easy to connect with?
Max: Aside from the wolf, which requires the imagination, a love triangle in one form or another is something I’m sure we’ve all experienced.
Q: What do you look for in a girl? Does she need to wear a red hood? LOL
Max: Yes, she has to wear a red hood. It’s incredibly important.
Q: Given the choice, would you rather be a werewolf or a vampire? Why?
Max: I’d rather be a robot. Way cooler.
Q: What was the most embarrassing moment while filming Red Riding Hood?
Max: Amanda Seyfried, at any opportunity, tries to embarrass you. So many. Mainly about me being English.
Q: If you could have played any character in film history or worked with any actor/director, who would it be?
Max: I would have liked to work with Stanley Kubrick. I’ll get back to you re: character.
Q: You have chosen this career despite your parents’ “optimistic remarks”. Have you ever experienced what they warned you about?
Max: Good question. Yes. You know, acting is an unstable business. You have to have thick skin and remember why you’re doing what you do.
Q: What was your favorite set/scene of the movie? Or your favorite prop you were able to use? Why?
Max: Riding through a forest on a massive white stallion. Not really a prop, but hey, good fun.
Q: When will you be on the London stage again? You are so brilliant.
Max: As soon as possible. When I have acting dreams, it always involves stage.
Q: Do you have a Twitter of your own???
Max: I don’t. Wouldn’t know what to do with it.
Q: Any fun memories from set?
Max: Listening to Gary Oldman endlessly, I mean ENDLESSLY, singing Beatles covers.
Q: If you could only take one item with you on an island, what would it be?
Max: A special girl.
Q: Finally, why should everyone go see Red Riding Hood on March 11th?
Max: Because it’s going to be a dark re-imagining of something that means so much to people. Plus we’ve got an amazing cast.
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