¿Quien me puede traducir esto de una forma entendible?
10 estrellas al que lo haga:
Hey all at JSOnline!
Just want to apologise for not getting this interview to you all sooner. The first time it was sent to me it got lost in my hotmail so my apologies for that.
I also want to sincerely thank you for all the hard work that you do. The website looks awesome and I’ve been told that you won the best website in a competition recently which is amazing to hear! Nice one!
I hope everyone is well.
Much love,
jimx
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JSOnline: Your next film, Heartless, premiered at FrightFest and we understand it will be released later this year or early next year. Can you tell us anything about the film or your character? What were your biggest challenges for this role?
JS: Heartless is quite a unique piece of work. It’s a bit of a hard one to pin down really! I feel it’s really a modern fairytale, an imaginative look at all the random mindless acts of violence that plague the modern world. It’s as much of a love story as it is a horror story and is as tender and beautiful as it is scary and horrific. It’s even pretty funny places!
In England there is a huge amount of youth stabbings. Kids all walking around with knives, stabbing and killing each other over pointless gang related causes, mobile phone robberies etc etc Whilst we were making the film a young lad was stabbed to death at the end of my street after leaving a nightclub and no one has any idea why. It was seemingly unprovoked and the lad had no connection with the other boys that killed him! When you live in cities such as London, Manchester etc you are very aware of the threat of violence.
I play a young guy called Jamie Morgan. He is a very affected and sensitive soul, struggling to make sense of it all. For anyone who has picked up a newspaper and looked at all the madness that goes on in the world day in and out, the religious wars, kidnappings, shootings, stabbings, racial hatred etc etc and thought ‘I can’t take it anymore’…’what is wrong with the world’…………..well that is Jamie!
JSOnline: In your recent thank you letter to JSOnline, referring to The Way Back, you said, “It was the most exhausting but exhilarating thing I have ever done.” The elements that you contended with while filming this movie must have been pretty extreme. What was that like for you? Can you tell us any particular story where you recall being pushed to your limits for this film?
JS: There really didn’t seem to be a day where we weren’t pushed to our limits!!! We spent long hours in the freezing snow, barely able to feel our toes and fingers. I don’t think anyone will ever truly appreciate just how cold some days were as it’s hard to ’see’ the cold on a cinema screen…but trust me it was freezing!!! We would spend our days dreaming of getting to Morocco where it would be warm and sunny, but when we finally got out of the Bulgarian mountains and into the desert it was just sooo unbearably hot that it was even worse! We also had to carry all our winter clothes with us through the desert so we were wrapped up in all this clothing or having to carry it on our backs. We would think about the people, who might have actually gone through this, everyday! It was an extraordinary feeling of just keeping going, and every day I knew that there was nowhere else in the world that I would rather be. I feel I saw some of the most beautiful sites and sunsets that the world has to offer, so as much as it was hard it was extremely exhilarating.
JSOnline: What do you do to relieve the stress of filming on location and how do you prepare for a difficult scene?
JS: I don’t know really…i’m probably at my most happiest when i’m on location stressing over filming a difficult scene!
JSOnline: Still talking about The Way Back, this movie was shot in some amazing locations — Bulgaria, Morocco, and India. In which location(s) did you enjoy filming most? Most of these places were pretty remote. Did you have much access to the outside world (newspapers, internet, phone, etc.) in these exotic locales?
JS: It was amazing to spend time in all these places. Bulgaria was a very tough city to live in. The oppression of communist rule still lingers and there is alot of poverty there. I didn’t really like it there to start off with. The people seemed very closed and cold at first but I soon realised that once they opened up there were some fantastic people there. I remember my driver barely said two words to me for about 2 weeks, but then as time went on and we spent more and more time together, talking, listening to music etc we became really good friends. We spent so much time together it was quite an emotional goodbye! He was this tough ex Bulgarian wrestler nearly in tears as we said goodbye at the airport!!
Morocco and India were just mindblowing. To be immersed in such diverse culture was just amaz
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