Jeremy Irons on the Andrew Marr Show

Jeremy Irons was a guest on the Andrew Marr Show on BBC One on Sunday 22 January 2012. He spoke about Margin Call and about the economy.

 

 

More video clips can be seen HERE and HERE.

 

 

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Jeremy Irons Interviewed by Scott Feinberg with Audio

From The Hollywood Reporter and Scott Feinberg’s Blog “The Race”

[Follow Scott Feinberg on Twitter @ScottFeinberg and @THR_TheRace]

  • jeremy_irons_interview_podcast.mp3
jeremy_irons_2011_H.jpg
 photo from Roadside Attractions

On Thursday morning, I had the privilege of speaking for about 30 minutes with the great London-based stage and screen actor Jeremy Irons, just minutes after his name was announced as a best actor (in a TV drama) Golden Globe nominee for his work on the critically-acclaimed Showtime series The Borgias.

Irons, 63, has already won just about every acting award that exists: an Oscar, a Golden Globe, a SAG Award, an Emmy, a Tony, an Annie, and prizes from all of the major critics groups, including the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, New York Film Critics Circle, and National Society of Film Critics. He mentions during our chat that he recently loaned his inimitable voice to a recorded reading of T.S. Eliot‘s The Waste Land, which could, hypothetically, earn him a Grammy, as well, which would make him just the 11th member of the elite EGOT club!

But, as Irons notes during our conversation, it is neither a desire for awards, nor a fondness for fame, nor even a particular passion for acting (he’s appeared in only 40 movies since his big screen debut 30 years ago) that keeps him in the game at this point in his life. Instead, it is a deep connection that he feels to certain characters that he reads, as well as a need for the creative companionship of other actors, that periodically draws him away from his various homes and hobbies and back into the fray.

The most memorable of his film roles include a lovestruck victorian in Karel Reisz‘s The French Lieutenant’s Woman (1981); a Jesuit missionary in Roland Joffe‘s The Mission (1986); a pair of twisted twins in David Cronenberg‘s Dead Ringers (1988); a murder suspect in Steven Soderbergh‘s Kafka (1991); a shady spouse in Barbet Schroeder‘s Reversal of Fortune (1991); a Machiavellian lion in Roger Allers and Rob Minkoff‘s The Lion King (1994); a child predator in Adrian Lyne‘s Lolita (1997); a cheating/cheated-upon husband in Istvan Szabo‘s Being Julia (2004); and a debtor in Michael Radford‘s The Merchant of Venice (2004).

And now comes another: the slithery corporate titan John Tuld — which sounds to me a lot like Dick Fuld, the disgraced former chair of Lehman Brothers — in first-time filmmaker J.C. Chandor‘s timely Wall Street drama Margin Call. The star-studded indie that debuted at Sundance in Jan. was released on Oct. 21 and has been very warmly received by critics and VOD consumers. Irons only enters the film in its third act, but he absolutely dominates it during every subsequent moment in which he appears onscreen. Consequently, he is receiving his loudest awards buzz in years and could — despite being passed over by the BFCA, SAG, and HFPA last week (probably because he’s part of such a large and impressive ensemble from which it is hard to single out only one or two individuals) — earn his first invitation to the Academy Awards since he won the best actor Oscar 21 years ago.

Irons and I discussed all of the above — and more — during our time together, and I hope that you’ll tune in to our conversation at the top of this post.

‘Margin Call’ Blu-Ray Deleted Scene Featuring Jeremy Irons

From Movieweb.com

Deleted Scene: Strike Quick

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Blu-Ray Special Features:

Audio commentary with writer/director J.C. Chandor and producer Neal Dodson

Deleted Scenes with Optional Commentary by writer/director J.C. Chandor and producer Neal Dodson

“Revolving Door: Making Margin Call” featurette

“Missed Calls: Moments with Cast & Crew” featurette

“From the Deck: Photo Gallery”

‘Margin Call’ Theatrical Trailer and Stills

Margin Call – directed by JC Chandor
Running Time: 1 hr. 49 min.
Release Date: October 21, 2011 in the USA
MPAA Rating: R for language

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Margin Call Trailer and Screencaps

Also view the trailer at this SOURCE.

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Margin Call Sundance Premiere

Margin Call, starring Jeremy Irons, had it’s premiere at the Eccles Theater in Park City, Utah, on 25 January 2011, as part of the Sundance Film Festival.

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First Official Stills from Margin Call

Here are the first official stills from Jeremy’s upcoming movie Margin Call, also starring Zachary Quinto, Paul Bettany, Kevin Spacey, Stanley Tucci and Demi Moore.

There’s only one of Jeremy in the bunch (so far) and yes, it’s of the back of his head, but it’s him.

Click on any image for a high-resolution enlargement:

 

Below is the list of characters’ names from Margin Call (left column)

and the actors who portray that character (right column):

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Jeremy Irons joins the cast of ‘Margin Call’

6 July 2010

New movie project for Jeremy!

Jeremy Irons is the final piece of an impressive cast for Margin Call, the indie film by director JC Chandor that is shooting in New York City.

Irons is the chief executive of a financial firm in a 24-hour period during the first signs of the near collapse on Wall Street. Irons joins Kevin Spacey, Demi Moore, Zachary Quinto, Paul Bettany, Penn Badgley, Simon Baker, Stanley Tucci and Mary McDonnell.

Chandor wrote the script, and Quinto is producing with his Before The Door Pictures partners Neal Dodson and Corey Moosa, and Benaroya Pictures’ Michael Benaroya and Robert Ogden Barnum and Joe Jenckes. Myriad Pictures is selling international territories on the film, with Myriad CEO Kirk D’Amico exec producing.

The film is three weeks into its shoot in New York City.

Cast

Kevin Spacey Sam Rogers
Paul Bettany Will Emerson
Zachary Quinto Peter Sullivan
Simon Baker Jared Cohen
Penn Badgley Seth Bregman
Demi Moore Sarah Robertson
Stanley Tucci Eric Dale
Mary McDonnell Mary Rogers

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