V For Vendetta
Set against the futuristic landscape
of totalitarian Britain, V For Vendetta tells
the story of a young working-class woman named
Evey who is rescued from a life-and-death situation
by a masked man known only as “V.”
Profoundly complex, V is at once
literary, flamboyant, tender and intellectual,
a man dedicated to freeing his fellow citizens
from those who have terrorized them into compliance.
He is also bitter, revenge-seeking, lonely and
violent, driven by a personal vendetta.
In his quest to free the people
of England from the corruption and cruelty that
have poisoned their government, V condemns the
tyrannical nature of their appointed leaders and
invites his fellow citizens to join him in the
shadows of Parliament on November the 5th – Guy
Fawkes Day.
On that day in 1605, Guy Fawkes
was discovered in a tunnel beneath Parliament
with 36 barrels of gunpowder. He and his co-conspirators
had engineered the treasonous “Gunpowder Plot”
in response to the tyranny of their government
under James I. Fawkes and his fellow saboteurs
were hanged, drawn and quartered, and their plan
to take down their government never came to pass.
In the spirit of that rebellion,
in remembrance of that day, V vows to carry out
the plot that Fawkes was executed for attempting
on November 5th in 1605: he will blow up Parliament.
As Evey uncovers the truth about
V’s mysterious past, she also discovers the truth
about herself – and emerges as his unlikely ally
in the culmination of his plan to ignite a revolution,
bringing freedom and justice back to a society
fraught with cruelty and corruption.
Director: James McTeigue
Producers: Joel Silver, Andy Wachowski, Larry
Wachowski, Grant Hill
Cast: Natalie Portman, Hugo Weaving, Stephen
Rea and John Hurt
Action Thriller.
Official Website: http://vforvendetta.warnerbros.com/
Remember, remember
The Fifth of November
The gunpowder treason and plot
I know of no reason why the gunpowder treason
Should ever be forgot
Warner Bros. Pictures presents, in association
with Virtual Studios, a Silver Pictures production
in association with Anarchos Productions Inc.,
NATALIE PORTMAN in V For Vendetta, starring HUGO
WEAVING, STEPHEN REA and JOHN HURT. Directed by
JAMES McTEIGUE, the film is produced by JOEL SILVER,
GRANT HILL, ANDY WACHOWSKI and LARRY WACHOWSKI
from a screenplay by THE WACHOWSKI BROTHERS, based
on the graphic novel illustrated by DAVID LLOYD
and published by VERTIGO/DC COMICS. The executive
producer is BENJAMIN WAISBREN. The director of
photography is ADRIAN BIDDLE, B.S.C.; the production
designer is OWEN PATERSON; the editor is MARTIN
WALSH, A.C.E.; and the music is composed by DARIO
MARIANELLI. V For Vendetta is a United Kingdom-Germany
co-production.
This film has been rated “R” by
the MPAA for “strong violence and some language.”
V For Vendetta is distributed by Warner Bros.
Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company.
ABOUT THE STORY
Director James McTeigue describes V for Vendetta
as a political thriller first and foremost with
a very dark and multifaceted character at its
center. “On one hand, V is altruistic, believing
he can bring about great social change, but on
the other hand he has a murderous vendetta towards
anyone who’s done him wrong.”
While
preparing for V for Vendetta, McTeigue was influenced
by a host of films, principal among them 1965’s
The Battle of Algiers, a highly realistic account
of the Algerian revolution against the French,
fought from 1954 to 1962. Like Stanley Kubrick’s
A Clockwork Orange, George Orwell’s 1984, Ray
Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 or Lindsay Anderson’s
If...., V For Vendetta cautions against the dangers
of corruption, control, manipulation and repression,
while exploring the perils of extremism – whether
it be a government abusing its power or an individual
taking the law into his own hands.
“V For Vendetta is a multi-layered
film,” says producer Joel Silver, whose long and
impressive film career includes the groundbreaking
Matrix trilogy and seminal action films such as
the Lethal Weapon series, Die Hard and Predator.
“It can be enjoyed as a dynamic action picture,
or audiences can go deeper into the complex issues
and ideas it explores, about the individual’s
responsibility for the power they entrust to their
government, and what means are necessary or acceptable
to bringing an end to tyranny. It raises a lot
of fascinating questions, but doesn’t provide
any easy answers.”
The
film is based on the graphic novel of the same
name – V for Vendetta first appeared in Warrior,
an independent monthly comic magazine published
in 1981, quickly capturing a cult following. Co-created
by Alan Moore and David Lloyd, it ran in 26 issues
before the magazine folded, leaving fans hanging
mid-plot. After a five-year hiatus, Moore and
Lloyd completed V for Vendetta in 1989 under the
DC banner when it was released in its entirety
as a graphic novel.
V For Vendetta is set slightly
in the future, where modern day London is still
very recognizable. Creators Moore and Lloyd were
influenced by the times in which they lived. “Our
attitude towards Margaret Thatcher’s ultra-conservative
government was one of the driving forces behind
the fascist British police state we created in
Vendetta,” Lloyd explains. “The destruction of
this system was V’s primary reason for existence.”
Thematically, Moore and Lloyd’s
series explores many political and ethical notions
of continuing relevance in today’s world. “The
principal message of the original is that every
individual has the right to be an individual,
and the right – and duty – to resist being forced
into conformism,” comments Lloyd. “V resists by
directly attacking government installations and
murdering the regime’s supporters. So it’s not
just a story about a battle against an evil tyranny,
but a story about terrorism and whether terrorism
can ever be justified – and that’s something we
have to try to understand if we’re ever to solve
the problem of it in the real world.”
Acclaimed
writer/directors Andy and Larry Wachowski, the
inspired minds behind the revolutionary Matrix
trilogy, were fans of Moore and Lloyd’s original
work, and first wrote a screen adaptation of the
graphic novel in the mid-1990s, before embarking
on the Herculean task of filming the Matrix trilogy.
During post-production on the second and third
installments of The Matrix, the Wachowskis revisited
the Vendetta script and brought it to the attention
of their first assistant director, James McTeigue,
with whom they had worked on all three Matrix
films. McTeigue had been directing commercials
at the time and was looking to transition to feature
films.
“We were in post-production on
Revolutions when Andy and Larry first gave me
a copy of V for Vendetta,” remembers McTeigue.
Intrigued and excited about the themes of the
graphic novel, he shared the Wachowskis’ view
of its relevance in the current political landscape.
“We felt the novel was very prescient to how the
political climate is at the moment. It really
showed what can happen when society is ruled by
government, rather than the government being run
as a voice of the people. I don’t think it’s such
a big leap to say that things like that can happen
when leaders stop listening to the people.”
At
the time, the Wachowskis had just reached the
end of a 10-year odyssey with the Matrix films
and were not prepared to immediately jump back
into directing. As McTeigue explains, “Ten years
is a long time to spend on anything, and making
films takes a lot out of you. I think Andy and
Larry wanted the film to be made now, but wanted
to take a back seat for awhile.”
So the Wachowskis and producer Joel
Silver offered their longtime colleague the opportunity
to direct V For Vendetta, surrounded by many of
the Wachowskis’ other key collaborators, such
as producer Grant Hill, production designer Owen
Paterson, visual effects supervisor Dan Glass
and stunt coordinator Chad Stahelski, with the
brothers collaborating as producers and writers.
In returning to the script, the Wachowskis went
back to their original draft and set about making
revisions. As McTeigue recalls, “Their original
version was a really good adaptation, but it was
almost a blow-for-blow retelling of the graphic
novel. We thought it would be good to move the
story forward in time, setting the flashback portion
in the 1990s and projecting the present-day timeline
into the future around 2020.”
Other
key revisions included streamlining Moore and
Lloyd’s storyline, altering Evey’s background
and making her older than in the original material.
“The graphic novel is quite sprawling and has
a lot of characters,” McTeigue points out. “Some
of those characters had to be amalgamated or taken
out, but all the while we made sure we were adhering
to the themes and integrity of the graphic novel.”
The adaptation process was made
easier by the cinematic way in which Lloyd and
Moore constructed the original novel, with traditional
‘thought balloons’ replaced with captions, and
rectangular panels substituted for splashy layouts.
Lloyd feels the Wachowski screenplay adaptation
was a good representation of the original. “I
never had a purist concept of Vendetta as just
a comic,” he remembers. “It always felt like an
idea that could be transposed to other forms of
media. In any of my work, the only expectation
and desire is that the spirit and key elements
are retained and the same essential message is
captured.”
The filmmakers were adamant that
V’s enduring mystery remain intact, and in reverence
to Moore and Lloyd’s novel and richly drawn character,
in the film V’s horribly burned and disfigured
face remains hidden behind a mask that carries
the visage of Guy Fawkes, another legendary saboteur
who came to a violent end over four hundred years
ago…
On
November 5th, 1605, Fawkes was captured beneath
the House of Lords with 36 barrels of gunpowder
hidden beneath pieces of iron and firewood. While
tortured, Fawkes revealed an audacious conspiracy
to blow up the English Parliament and King James
I on a day when the King was due to open the parliamentary
session.
Fawkes was one of 13 disaffected
Catholics who hoped to end James’ persecution
of English Catholics. The intent was to create
chaos and disorder in the country from which,
it was hoped, a new monarch and political regime
sympathetic to the Catholic cause would emerge.
A veteran soldier, Fawkes was highly proficient
with gunpowder and so became an integral part
of the group’s scheme.
A cellar underneath the House of
Lords was acquired by the conspirators where they
stored explosives and awaited the opening of Parliament.
However, as more accomplices were drawn into the
plot, secrecy was endangered and an anonymous
letter to Lord Monteagle, a Catholic, warning
him to stay away from the opening of Parliament,
brought about the plan’s demise. On the night
of November 4th, Fawkes was caught in the cellar,
arrested and brought before the King. Succumbing
to grueling torture, his silence was broken and
the ambitious plan disclosed. Fawkes and the other
members of the group were publicly hanged, drawn
and quartered, as was customary for traitors at
that time.
Every
year across England on November 5th, bonfires
blaze and fireworks light the sky in celebration
of the foiling of Fawkes’ plot to overturn King
and government. Fawkes masks are sold throughout
the country and effigies of the conspirator, or
“Guys,” are burned.
When Alan Moore and David Lloyd
were originally conceiving the character of V
for their graphic novel V for Vendetta, Guy Fawkes
provided inspiration for the comic’s political
context. Like Fawkes, V hopes to create chaos
from which the country’s insidious regime will
fall. “Guy Fawkes was a kind of early anarchist,”
says Lloyd. “He seemed to be the perfect inspiration
for V.”
There is a dramatically disturbing
aspect to V’s use of the Guy Fawkes mask as well.
“Guy Fawkes masks have a kind of eerie look because
of their smile,” Lloyd notes. “It makes the character
look bizarre and threatening at the same time
– the last thing you expect from someone coming
to kill you is a smile on their face.”
In V For Vendetta, the man behind
that eerily grinning mask is multifaceted actor
Hugo Weaving, whose impressive and varied career
includes starring roles as the deadly Agent Smith
in the Matrix trilogy and as Elrond in all three
installments of the Lord of the Rings trilogy,
as well as memorable turns in the indie sensations
The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert
and Proof.
“V wants to continue what Guy Fawkes and the plotters
of November 5th weren’t able to do,” says Weaving.
“He wants to blow up the Houses of Parliament
because he believes, as they believed, that they
have become a symbol of tyranny.”
V
sees himself as fated to disrupt a system that
he views as cruel and unjust. “His deep desire
to serve the greater good is inextricably tied
to his obsessive quest for personal vengeance,”
says Silver.
In the midst of his quest to free
the people of England from their fascist leaders,
V is on a very personal mission to wreak vengeance
on those who imprisoned and tortured him, and
in doing so, created a monster. One by one he
is systematically eliminating these enemies, leaving
a single Violet Carson rose as his calling card
at the scene of each murder.
Possessing deeply-held convictions,
heightened by this bitter personal vendetta, V
fights passionately for dignity and freedom in
a dystopian and fascist Britain. This takes cunning
and guile, a certain fearlessness, bravado, a
capacity for extremism and a touch of madness.
“He’s a very complex and ambiguous
man,” says Weaving. “He’s been imprisoned and
tortured, mentally and physically abused. And
that has created this vengeful angel, if you like.
He’s an assassin, but also a very cultured and
educated man who believes strongly in individual
freedom.”
With his entire performance taking place behind
the immobile mask, leaving him without the facial
expressions or eye contact that are fundamental
tools for an actor, Weaving had to find other
ways in which to humanize and animate V. “I loved
doing mask work at drama school a long time ago,”
remarks Weaving, “and making V’s mask work onscreen
was a great acting challenge. You need to convey
a lot through voice, but there are also small,
fluid movements you can use that help give the
mask a life it might not otherwise have had. It
was also a question of trying to work out what
the mask says in different light and with various
shadings.”
“From
the moment Hugo put the mask on, we knew it would
work,” says McTeigue. “He has a theatre background,
which is important to the character. He also has
a great physicality and a fantastic voice. He
was able to make peace with the mask’s claustrophobic
restraints and convey emotion through his voice
and movement.”
V’s use of the Guy Fawkes mask
and persona functions as both practical and symbolic
elements of the story. He wears the mask to hide
his physical scars, and in obscuring his identity,
V becomes more than just a man with a revolutionary
idea – he becomes the idea itself. This underscores
V’s belief that a man can be defeated, but ideas
can endure and retain their power forever. V’s
mask also provides contrast to the metaphorical
“masks” worn by his fellow citizens, who have
surrendered their individual identities and beliefs
in order to assimilate and avoid persecution by
the government.
“In the film, V is described as
an idea rather than a person,” says Natalie Portman,
who stars alongside Weaving as Evey Hammond, the
young woman in whom V awakens a latent activism.
“One of the reasons he is so invincible is because
you can kill a man, but an idea can’t be killed.
So V represents truth, resistance and individualism.
But his vengeance taints his political idealism.”
Playing opposite an actor wearing a mask throughout
the entirety of the film was challenging, but
director McTeigue had no concerns with Portman’s
ability to engage emotionally with the character
despite his fixed disguise. “I knew she would
be able to play off the mask and help make it
come alive.”
A
highly accomplished young actress, Portman’s career
already boasts roles in Star Wars: Episode I,
II and III, as well as acclaimed performances
in such films as Closer, Garden State and Everyone
Says I Love You. Having previously worked with
Portman as first assistant director on Star Wars:
Episode II – Attack of the Clones, McTeigue had
witnessed firsthand her incredible talent and
focus. “She’s completely professional, and looks
luminous,” compliments the director. “But more
than anything, her fearlessness and intelligence
were perfect for the role.”
“Evey represents the people V is
trying to help,” says Silver. “But while she joins
V in his campaign to free the people of England,
she doesn’t condone his pursuit of personal vengeance.
Natalie is such a subtly expressive actress, we
knew she possessed the rare ability to portray
this kind of inner conflict.”
Evey
is orphaned at a young age after her parents are
killed for daring to speak out against the repressive
regime gaining a stranglehold on their country.
Thrust into activism after the politically-motivated
death of their son, in a sense Evey’s parents
chose their political ideals over their daughter.
“She’s had a very personal experience with political
activism – one that resulted in her parents’ death
and left her alone – so she’s just trying to live
her life under the radar and stay safe,” says
Portman. “She lives through her fear.”
Until the night that fate hurls
V into Evey’s life. Patrolling the streets after
the universal 11pm curfew, undercover Fingermen,
the state’s secret police, catch Evey alone in
a cobblestone alley, stealthily making her way
to a friend’s house. With only pepper spray to
defend herself, she falls victim to the ruthlessness
of their warped use of judicial discretion. But
before the encounter disintegrates into brutality,
a mysteriously cloaked man appears, saving Evey’s
dignity and her life. Unknowingly, this chance
meeting sparks Evey’s political awakening.
In
the face of torture and solitary confinement,
Evey’s political consciousness becomes fully realized.
“Through her imprisonment she learns to face her
fear, and overcoming that fear is important for
her own integrity,” asserts Portman, who was required
to shave her head on camera for a pivotal sequence
in the film in which Evey’s identity is violently
stripped down by her captors.
Portman was intrigued by the ideas in the story
and by Evey’s transformation from an anonymous
office worker to a brave and politicized heroine.
“The script has really strong political and ideological
overtones,” she says. “And it looks at the kind
of choices that must be made in order to be a
political person, and how those choices affect
an individual’s private life.”
In preparing for her role, the
actress watched The Weather Underground, a documentary
about a group of young American radicals in the
late 1960s and 1970s who bombed the Capitol building
and broke Timothy Leary out of prison. She also
read famed Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin’s
autobiography, which describes his early Soviet
imprisonment and subsequent leadership of Irgun,
a militant Zionist group in Palestine responsible
for terrorist activities intent on expelling the
British from Palestine.
Portman
also found Antonia Fraser’s Faith and Treason
about the Gunpowder Plot of 1605 informative.
“I learned about the British royal oppression
of Catholics and their uprising and the inspiration
for Macbeth coming from all the plots on King
James I’s life.”
Chief Inspector Finch is the detective
on the hunt for V, racing to stop his string of
murders and find him before he fulfills his promise
to destroy Parliament on the 5th of November.
Leading the state’s investigation into the mysterious
and eerily similar murders of several prominent
figures, Finch is determined at the outset to
simply catch the elusive terrorist and his seeming
accomplice, Evey.
However, as Finch unearths details of V’s history,
he discovers shocking state secrets concealed
by the government he serves and his sympathies
begin to shift. He starts to question that which
he has accepted for far too long. The investigation
thrusts reality and truth in his path, waking
him from his acceptance of the state’s oppressive
stranglehold on the rights and freedoms of its
people. Played by actor Stephen Rea, Finch guides
the audience through the film’s detective story
as he slowly begins to uncover evidence that suggests
that the British government may have something
unspeakably criminal to hide. “There’s an intriguing
element of the hunter becoming very interested
in his prey,” says Rea of his character.
Rea
feels the ideas in the story are timeless. “It’s
about what happens when government pushes people
too far. It’s a warning, a pretty ancient warning,
about the function of government and its responsibility
toward its citizens.
“Andy and Larry are doing interesting
and dangerous work,” Rea continues. “It’s a highly
ambitious attempt to move something from one medium
to another. Graphic novels are obviously static,
single frames, and you’re transposing that to
a moving picture. It’s tricky and not entirely
realistic, but I found that interesting. It was
good to be working with something that has a certain
heightened quality to it.”
Rupert Graves is Dominic, Finch’s
lieutenant and junior partner in the investigation.
“He undergoes a bit of an epiphany during the
film,” Graves points out. “He’s not a man of great
imagination. He’s always put his head down and
believed in the state, but he and Finch begin
to realize that their government isn’t as good
as they had thought.”
The
villainous head of England’s totalitarian regime
is Chancellor Sutler, played by the venerable
John Hurt, two-time Oscar nominee for his lauded
performances in Midnight Express and The Elephant
Man. Sutler’s government rules by fear, ensuring
submission of its citizens through intimidating
means – secret police, constant surveillance and
the threat of imminent and apocalyptic dangers.
Censorship, propaganda, and subverting freedom
of speech are the order of the day, and eliminating
minorities is but a necessary casualty. “Sutler
represents a society that believes that a fascist
government is the best way to run a country,”
says Hurt. “Don’t ask questions, let the Party
get on with it and above all, don’t criticize
our authority.”
Hurt starred as Winston Smith in
Michael Radford’s film 1984, based on George Orwell’s
chilling tale of a totalitarian society ruled
by an omnipresent fascist leader. In V For Vendetta,
with the exception of a few key moments, Sutler
is predominantly seen on an oppressively immense
monitor from which he delivers incendiary speeches
to the country and erupts in vitriolic confrontations
with his cabinet via digital conferencing.
In one comic scene, however, Hurt
steps away from the screen to play opposite Stephen
Fry in a mock variety show skit in which Fry’s
character, television host Gordon Deitrich, daringly
– and dangerously – pokes fun at the ruling Chancellor.
Deitrich,
a suave television personality hired by the government
to produce a daily variety show, is Evey’s trusted
friend and confidante. But he has secrets of his
own that must remain hidden from the state. “Deitrich
must be dragged out of his moral torpor and make
a stand,” says Fry of the evolution of his character’s
political consciousness. “He rips up the censor-approved
script of his nightly show and writes one which
makes vicious fun of the Chancellor.”
Most of Fry’s scenes in the film
are opposite Portman. “I’m immensely impressed
by Natalie,” he says. “I mean, what is she, 12
and a half years old or something? She’s a barely
divided embryo and yet she speaks multiple languages,
is immensely accomplished and a natural film actress.
She’s very bright and good natured. She’s quite
something. She’s going to be around at the top
of her profession for a long time.”
Rounding out the impressive ensemble
cast is Tim Pigott-Smith, who plays Creedy, the
head of Britain’s secret police, and V’s final
and most dangerous nemesis. While Sutler appears
to have the country tightly shackled, the real
power rests within Creedy’s grip. Ben Miles is
Dascomb, Sutler’s head of propaganda who cleverly
spins V’s explosion of Old Bailey on BTN, the
government-controlled network, as an “emergency
demolition” project.
Two-time
Laurence Olivier Theatre Award-winning actor Roger
Allam plays Prothero, the arrogant, vitriolic
host of a news program called “The Voice of London.”
The wildly popular television show attracts millions
of viewers who tune in to hear his latest rants,
finding solace in the slogan that ends each of
his broadcasts: England prevails. “He rants his
particular beliefs, serving as a mouthpiece for
the government’s propaganda,” says Allam. “His
evangelism is a kind of nationalistic fascism.”
John Standing, one of England’s most respected
stage, film and television actors, is Bishop Lilliman.
This man of the cloth’s religious convictions
takes a backseat to his perverse sexual cravings,
which ultimately prove to be his undoing. “I thoroughly
enjoyed playing Lilliman,” Standing remarks, “because
he’s slightly comic and utterly atrocious. Lovely
to do.”
The course of V’s life, and subsequently
Evey’s as well, has been unalterably impacted
by a woman named Valerie Page – a woman who neither
of them ever met. Her story is one of the thousands
of those who were tortured and killed by the government’s
callous cruelty and persecution of those it deemed
unfit – and also a story of the small shred of
hope that can ignite a revolution. The role of
Valerie is played by Natasha Wightman, whose previous
work includes Robert Altman’s Gosford Park.
Acclaimed Irish actress Sinead
Cusack plays Delia Surridge, a coroner haunted
by her horrific past – a past she shares with
V. “I never imagined that I’d be playing a vile
human being,” says the Tony-nominated actress.
“I always thought I was rather soft and sweet
and Irish! Instead I’m this vicious killer and
for that reason it was a departure for me. This
film is really a very interesting psychological
study, set in a world that we hope we’ll never
have to inhabit.”
ABOUT THE PRODUCTION
V For Vendetta is set in London in the near future.
Though still anchored by venerable landmarks such
as Parliament, Old Bailey and Big Ben, the city,
like the rest of the country, has fallen into
a state of post-war isolation and depression.
Chancellor Adam Sutler wrested incalculable power
over this tightly-controlled society by championing
his extremist Norsefire party as England’s only
safeguard against war, disease and famine. Yet
Sutler’s oppressive policies have stripped the
culture of its spirit, vitality and hope. Food
is rationed but fear is in great supply. Personal
freedoms are an antiquated notion of the past,
and no one dare raise a voice in dissent, lest
they be “black bagged” by Fingermen – Minister
Creedy’s secret police force – and never heard
from again.
Led by director James McTeigue,
the V For Vendetta filmmakers strived to capture
the essence of present-day London in their rendering
of the film’s grim socio-political landscape.
“England has become quite soulless,” says production
designer Owen Paterson, who previously collaborated
with McTeigue and the Wachowski Brothers on the
Matrix trilogy. “We tried to create a London that
is very recognizable, yet frozen by having become
this totalitarian state.”
Paterson and costume designer Sammy
Sheldon used a palette of gray tones to evoke
the bleak, regimented pall that envelops the city
and its citizens. “In this environment, choice
is limited,” set decorator Peter Walpole notes.
“You might be able to buy a car or a can of baked
beans, but there’s only one brand available. This
was reflected in the television studio set, for
example. All of the monitors are the same brand,
and all of the desks and chairs are exactly the
same.”
The film was largely shot on soundstages
and interior settings to underscore the story’s
tone of anxiety and alienation. “We wanted to
create a sense of claustrophobia, so the film
is very purposefully interior,” McTeigue explains.
Filming began in March 2005 at Babelsberg
Studios in Potsdam, Germany. With nearby Berlin
doubling for a handful of practical locations,
the production spent ten weeks on the Babelsberg
soundstages before moving to London for a few
weeks to shoot principal exterior sequences.
Paterson oversaw the design and
construction of a staggering 89 sets for the Babelsberg
segment of production alone, including the Jordan
television tower, home to the government-controlled
British Television Network; Victoria Station,
a former stop on the ruins of the Underground,
which the government shut down years ago; as well
as another critical section of the Underground
that V has commandeered for use in his plot to
blow up Parliament.
On historic Stage 2, where Fritz
Lang’s classic futuristic thriller Metropolis
was filmed in 1927, the cast and crew of 500 inhabited
the grandest and most elaborate of Paterson’s
sets: the labyrinthine Shadow Gallery.
Like V himself, his subterranean
lair is elegant, mysterious and enthralling –
a stylish cross between a crypt and a church,
carved from the passageways beneath the city.
“I envisioned the Shadow Gallery as an expanded
ace of clubs, with a central space and chambers
spiralling outwards from the middle,” McTeigue
says of the sprawling set, which includes a library,
V’s dressing room, a kitchen and a screening room/lounge.
“It feels like it’s located beneath some great
cultural institution that has long been closed
down by the government.”
“The Shadow Gallery is the sort
of place that could exist below St. Paul’s Cathedral
or Westminster Abbey,” Paterson elaborates. “It’s
an arched, Tudor kind of space where you can imagine
someone bricked up a door years ago and forgot
it was ever there.”
V’s vaulted hideaway also serves
as a museum of sorts, a home to his extensive
collection of music, film, literature, philosophy
and art – all of which has been banned by the
government’s Ministry of Objectionable Material.
“V has become a caretaker of everything that the
government won’t allow,” says McTeigue.
“He’s a guardian of a culture that
is in danger of being lost forever,” adds Hugo
Weaving. “I suspect there are a number of people
in this world who are like him, who have their
own hoards, their own treasure troves like the
Shadow Gallery.”
One of the biggest challenges for
set decorator Peter Walpole and the art department
was securing the rights to reproduce the Gallery’s
myriad iconic works – and then replicating them
and dressing the numerous Gallery chambers. “We
had to get an enormous variety of objects – everything
from Picassos to Turners, modern art to comic
books,” Walpole says.
Walpole’s team also had to collect
and arrange hundreds of books to dress V’s makeshift
library. It is here that Evey first awakens in
the Shadow Gallery and finds herself surrounded
by stacks and stacks of treasonous volumes.
“As you enter the room, the books
are piled low, as though they’ve been blown in
like a bunch of leaves,” Walpole describes. “But
as you move toward the far end, the piles grow
until they reach the ceiling and line the walls,
almost like a snowdrift.”
To give McTeigue and the crew maximum
flexibility while filming in the library, many
of the books were fastened together like building
blocks, so the stacks could be moved quickly and
reconnected like Lego components, rather than
moved piecemeal.
During production of this scene,
Natalie Portman recalls, “James brought in a clipping
from a newspaper with a photo of a library that
was discvovered in Iraq. The government had shut
it down and there were piles and piles of books
everywhere. It was sort of incredible, having
this real life parallel as we were filming.”
In addition to designing the sets,
Paterson also collaborated with McTeigue and art
director Stephan Gessler on the creation of V’s
eerie mask. More than a mere disguise, an affect
of his theatrical personality or a veil for his
hideously disfigured face, V’s mask becomes a
powerful symbol of the ideas of freedom and expression
he represents.
Paterson’s design was modeled on
V’s iconic visage from the graphic novel, which
illustrator David Lloyd based on the eponymous
masks worn in tribute to traitor-turned-folk hero
Guy Fawkes. But as drawn by Lloyd, V’s mask takes
on different moods and expressions from frame
to frame.
McTeigue opted to create a “fixed”
façade, rather than using CGI or a flexible
mask that could be manipulated to form expressions.
“I wanted the face, even though it’s very distinct,
to have a ‘universality’ to it,” he says. “I knew
that if we achieved the right look for the mask,
we would be able to tonally and atmospherically
change the way it appears on camera through the
lighting design and Hugo’s performance.”
The result, which the director describes
as “a cross between a traditional Guy Fawkes mask
and a Harlequin mask,” was sculpted from clay
– a considerably more imperfect and painstaking
process than the modern mold-making method of
computer cyber-scanning – then cast in fiberglass
and painted with an airbrush to create a porcelain
doll-like quality.
“We had a very fine sculptor named
Berndt Wenzel who patiently went through seven
generations of carving the mask from clay to get
the right personality,” Paterson says. “We needed
to capture the perfect generic look so that when
we lit the mask in different ways, it would take
on different expressions.”
Bringing the mask to life was “definitely
a collaborative effort,” Weaving reports. Though
aided by lighting and cinematography, the actor
needed to convey a great deal of emotion solely
through his voice and body language, as no part
of his eyes, mouth or face are visible behind
V’s façade. “James often gave me notes
about my dialogue or my performance as I would
do it if I weren’t wearing a mask. That was great,
because central to making the mask work was making
the character behind the mask work.”
Finding V’s voice was crucial to
the process. “I knew I didn’t have to worry about
my voice being muffled by the mask when we were
filming, because we would re-record my dialogue
in post-production,” says the actor. “But it’s
still important to find the character within the
voice and give the right performance on the day.”
In addition to the challenges of
emoting through the mask was the considerable
challenge of learning to work with the mask. “It
has a very narrow field of vision,” McTeigue explains.
“Hugo’s actual eye-line when he’s looking at the
character he’s playing opposite is at their stomach.”
Weaving also had to integrate acting
in the mask with the character’s wig, hat and
a heavy cloaked costume featuring a high neckline
that restricted his head movement. “The amount
of sweat that pours off you when you’re wearing
a wig, a hat, a very hot costume and a mask is
phenomenal,” Weaving says good-naturedly.
Created by costume designer Sammy
Sheldon (Black Hawk Down, The Hitchhiker’s Guide
to the Galaxy), Weaving’s wardrobe was styled
after McTeigue’s vision of V as “a cross between
the actual Guy Fawkes character and a gunslinger.”
“V’s costume is rooted in the 16th
century, but we chiseled it down to look more
simple, sleek and modern – futuristic in an historical
way,” says Sheldon, who crafted the ensemble from
cashmere, wool, leather and an original 16th century
silk basket weave. “V’s hat was modified, for
example. We shortened it and made it cleaner,
instead of fancy and feathered as it would have
been in Fawkes’ time.”
As with V’s wardrobe, his weapons
of choice – six handmade throwing knives – reflect
a combination of period and modern design. “When
V opens his cloak, I wanted it to look as though
he has metal teeth attached,” McTeigue explains.
“Our armorer, Simon Atherton, did an amazing job
of crafting V’s knives and creating the metal
sheaths they slide into.”
V’s chillingly exquisite calling
cards, Scarlet Carson roses, were portrayed in
the film by red Grand Prix roses. The prop department
purchased dozens of Grand Prixes daily to ensure
there were always a few on hand at the studio
in the perfect state of bloom for filming.
While Weaving contended with his
character’s multi-faceted costume, Natalie Portman
had a much more minimalist wardrobe challenge
in portraying V’s unlikely accomplice, Evey Hammond:
she was required to have her head shaved on camera
for a pivotal sequence in which Evey is imprisoned
and tortured to reveal V’s identity.
Knowing he had only one take to
capture Evey’s anguish as Portman’s auburn locks
were stripped, McTeigue used multiple cameras
to cover the action and asked the film’s hair
stylist, Jeremy Woodhead, to handle the shears.
Portman found the experience liberating.
“It’s been really nice to step away from vanity
a little bit,” she says. “The time you spend on
your appearance as a woman – if you put all that
together you’d have an extra ten years of your
life. It’s been great to get away from that. But
at the same time, it takes a really long time
to grow back, so the sooner, the better!”
Another powerful shot that McTeigue
and company needed to achieve in one take is a
stunning sequence in which V touches off thousands
of dominoes meticulously arranged in an intricate
“V” pattern on the Shadow Gallery floor.
Four professional domino assemblers
from Weijers Domino Productions spent 200 hours
of building time placing 22,000 dominoes in position
for the breathtaking visual feat. During the setup,
the stage had to be closed to everyone but the
assemblers, as a slight disruption flattened the
dominoes at one point early on.
Tension was palpable on the set
the day the scene was filmed, lest anyone’s footsteps
or voice tumble the dominos again. Loud gasps
were heard when an assistant hairstylist dropped
her comb while grooming V’s locks as he sat cross-legged
at the head of the domino chain. Fortunately,
the comb narrowly missed the first piece. The
dominoes were then officially “touched off” –
and fell into place perfectly.
In addition to months of soundstage
work at Babelsberg, a few weeks of location filming
were completed in Berlin. A flashback of Chancellor
Sutler’s Norsefire rally was staged in Gendarmen
Market; scenes in Bishop Lilliman’s bedroom chamber
were filmed in a rambling castle in Potsdam; and
a former chicken farm was transformed into the
sinister Larkhill detention facility.
It was at the Larkhill location
that stunt coordinator Chad Stahelski, a four-year
veteran of the Matrix trilogy as martial arts
stunt coordinator and Keanu Reeves’ stunt double,
walked through searing flames to achieve a haunting
shot emblematic of V’s harrowing past and his
indomitable quest for vengeance.
While principal photography rolled
on at Babelsberg, an advance team prepared for
the final few weeks of filming in London. Owen
Paterson’s art department transformed exterior
locations to convey the dull pallor of the strictly-controlled
society – removing advertising signage, all signs
of public transportation and any splashes of color
or brightness.
“We wanted everything to be gray,”
says set decorator Peter Walpole. “Then we added
surveillance cameras and telegraph poles with
speakers mounted on them to emphasize the ‘Big
Brother’ atmosphere.”
For flashbacks to the 1990s that
depict life in England prior to the election of
ultra-conservative Chancellor Adam Sutler, the
sets are “a little more cluttered, a little more
lived in, a little freer,” Walpole describes.
“In the scenes set in the present day in the film,
there’s not quite as much set dressing. Everything’s
a bit more regimented. There’s a subtle contrast.”
The film’s climactic sequence,
set in the shadows of Parliament, took place on
Whitehall, the iconic thoroughfare running from
Nelson’s Column at Trafalgar Square to the Parliament
Buildings and Big Ben.
Home to such high-profile Westminster
addresses as 10 Downing Street and the Ministry
of Defense, the security-sensitive thoroughfare
had never before been closed to traffic to accommodate
filming. After nine months of negotiating with
14 government departments and agencies, including
the Ministry of Defense, location supervisor Nick
Daubeney secured unprecedented permission to close
the street for filming between the hours of midnight
and 5am for three consecutive nights. This gave
the production only four hours of shooting time
per night, given the setup and removal of equipment,
personnel and the production’s vehicles, including
two army tanks.
As with the multiple permissions
secured to film on Whitehall, the production also
had to obtain authorization for the use of the
two tanks and simulated weaponry during rehearsals
and filming at the location.
The decommissioned ex-military tanks
were acquired from a prop warehouse in the UK.
Prior to transporting the vehicles to Whitehall
for filming each night, the tanks were inspected
off-site by government security personnel to ensure
their weaponry was not functional nor had been
altered in any way. They were then taken via trucks
to the location – with no stops or changes to
the tanks allowed during transport – and were
accompanied by security officials at all times.
(On screen and on set, the tanks moved under their
own power.)
Background checks were conducted
on every actor and technician who carried simulated
weapons during production of the Whitehall sequence.
Barcodes on the weaponry were scanned to track
each piece and the individuals authorized to handle
them.
Meanwhile, government security
personnel surrounded the production at all times
– some of whom were identifiable to the cast and
crew, and others who maintained anonymity within
the crowd to ensure the security of everyone involved.
This ambitious sequence also required
costume designer Sammy Sheldon and her team to
outfit 500 extras in replica V cloaks and hats,
as well as fabricate uniforms, helmets and flak
jackets for 400 extras portraying militia.
Following the completion of principal
photography, visual effects supervisor Dan Glass
and the V for Vendetta miniatures unit, led by
Model Unit Supervisor José Granell, spent
ten days detonating large-scale models of the
Houses of Parliament, Big Ben and Old Bailey for
key scenes in the film.
While some computer-generated effects
were later fused with footage of the models being
exploded, it was important to the filmmakers that
the explosions, which carry great symbolic value,
be as realistic as possible, so they opted for
the practical effect of detonating physical replicas
of the buildings over CGI.
“The models provide a real, tangible
environment,” Granell explains, “and when you’re
dealing with physical elements such as water and
fire, and especially pyrotechnics, you get a better
look when you have real, physical events taking
place. With CGI, unless you actually deliberately
create them, you don’t get any accidents – so
you don’t get that essential feeling of nature
doing its own thing.”
The filmmakers chose to utilize large-scale models
in order to create a realistic relationship between
the size of the buildings and the pyrotechnic
events being filmed. Built in eleven weeks at
Shepperton Studios by the London firm Cinesite,
the plaster models were constructed at one seventh
scale, which yielded an impressive 20-foot replica
of Old Bailey, with the Houses of Parliament and
Big Ben towering at approximately 30 feet high
and the length of Parliament stretching 42 feet
long.
During the course of their research, Granell and
his team studied documentary footage of actual
stone buildings being exploded to get a feeling
for how stone reacts to detonation. From there
they began their experiments with materials. Since
plaster breaks up well and behaves most like stone
when detonated, the models were predominantly
constructed with cast plaster. The team experimented
with a variety of plaster recipes for different
areas of the model – some components had to be
more rigid, while some of the finer detail necessitated
a weaker version of the plaster.
Prior to the final filming, an effects element
shoot was held during which the team performed
individual pyrotechnic explosions that they would
later be able to use in post-production. They
tested a variety of combinations of types of charges
and different varieties of plaster, to see how
each pairing performed on film. “For instance,
one of the problems we found is that the weakened
plaster we used tended to create too much dust,”
says Granell. “And the one thing I didn’t want
to do was hide any of the color of the actual
combustible elements – the pyrotechnic charges,
the flames, all of those details. So we adjusted
the plaster recipe to remedy the problem.”
The team had to study the architecture
of the Old Bailey and Parliament buildings inside
and out, in order to accurately surmise how the
structures would react to the detonations. For
instance, how fast the explosions would travel
through the building, how the structures would
break apart – which areas would give first, which
would be able to withstand the blast, what the
size of the fragments would be and how fast and
far they would travel.
In addition to this structural
accuracy, the designers studied the outer detail
of the legendary buildings to achieve exactly
the right look. “You’ve got to be a real stickler
for detail,” says Granell, “and pay close attention
to how the real building looks – such as design
elements or the aging of the stone – so that you
can match it. You have to keep in mind that you’re
dealing with structures that are potentially very
familiar to a lot of people, who will be in a
position to judge whether they look right or not.”
All of the research, time and work
put into creating the incredible structures resulted
in extremely convincing detailed models and detonations
that look authentic onscreen and performed perfectly
during filming. “The buildings looked just fantastic,”
says Granell. “I apologized in advance to the
chaps who were working for us because they put
a lot of hours into this and the miniatures looked
beautiful – until we blew them up. So the only
thing I could do was make sure we did a good job
of blowing it up, and make it all worthwhile!”
SEE IT IN IMAX
V For Vendetta will be released in IMAX® theatres
worldwide, in addition to conventional theatres,
beginning March 17, 2006. The film has been digitally
re-mastered into the unparalleled image and sound
quality of The IMAX Experience® with proprietary
IMAX DMR® (Digital Re-mastering) technology.
V For Vendetta represents the fifth IMAX DMR
film commitment from Warner Bros. Pictures in
2006, and the 13th DMR collaboration between IMAX
and Warner Bros. since 2002.
IMAX Theatres deliver images of unsurpassed clarity
and impact, and will enable audiences to experience
the thrill and intensity of V For Vendetta on
the world’s largest screens, surrounded by state-of-the-art
digital sound. (IMAX screens can be three times
larger than the average 35mm screen, 4,500 times
larger than the average TV screen, and as wide
as an NFL football field.)
“We’re excited to give fans the opportunity to
experience V For Vendetta in IMAX’s spectacular
format,” said Joel Silver, producer of V For Vendetta.
“The clarity and immersive quality of The IMAX
Experience adds a dynamic dimension to the film’s
powerful visuals, breathtaking action and multi-layered
storytelling.”
The sheer size of a 15/70 film frame, combined
with the unique IMAX projection technology, is
key to the extraordinary sharpness and clarity
of the images projected in IMAX theatres. The
15/70 film frame is ten times larger than a conventional
35mm frame and three times bigger than a standard
70mm frame. IMAX projectors are the most advanced,
powerful and highest-precision projectors in the
world, and the key to their superior performance
is the proprietary “Rolling Loop” film movement.
The Rolling Loop advances the film horizontally
in a smooth, wave-like motion. During projection,
each frame is positioned on fixed registration
pins, and the film is held firmly against the
rear element of the lens by a vacuum. As a result,
the picture and focus steadiness are far above
normal projection standards and provide outstanding
image clarity.
To fully envelop IMAX theatre-goers, the IMAX
sound system is a specially designed multi-channel
stereo system that delivers superb clarity and
quality for maximum impact. The IMAX Proportional
Point Source loudspeaker system was specifically
designed for IMAX Theatres and delivers superb
sound quality to every member of the audience,
regardless of where they may be seated.
The IMAX® brand is world famous and stands
for the highest-quality, most immersive filmed
entertainment. Visitors to IMAX theatres now number
in the hundreds of millions since the technology
premiered in 1970. As the number of theatres grows,
so does the visibility of the IMAX brand – a name
that is unique in the entertainment business.
The IMAX theatre network currently consists of
more than 260 IMAX theatres in 38 countries with
a backlog of over 60 theatre systems scheduled
to open during the next few years. IMAX theatres
are found in some of the most prestigious educational
institutions and destination entertainment centers
in the world and in a steadily growing number
of commercial multiplex theatres in both domestic
and international markets.
There are more than 200 educational and entertaining
films in the Large Format film library, which
have been enjoyed by more than 800 million people
around the world.
ABOUT THE CAST
An
actress who brings a timeless beauty and grace
with a disarming approach to each of her roles,
NATALIE PORTMAN (Evey) has established herself
as one of Hollywood’s most talented and sought
after young actresses.
In addition to V For Vendetta, Portman will
appear in the Israeli feature film Free Zone,
directed by Amos Gitai. Shot in Israel and Jordan,
Free Zone is about the unlikely relationship between
two women thrown together by circumstance after
one woman (played by Portman) jumps into a cab
driven by the other. The two women embark on a
journey that involves thugs and political intrigue.
The film debuted in competition at the 2005 Cannes
Film Festival.
Portman recently wrapped production on Milos
Forman’s Goya’s Ghosts with Javier Bardem. Produced
by Saul Zaentz, the film is set in 1792 when Francisco
Goya was Spain’s most famous painter. A scandal
arises when his teenage muse is framed for heresy
by a manipulative monk who is one of the driving
forces behind the Spanish Inquisition. Bardem
will play the monk and Portman will play the muse
as well as her teen daughter, Alicia, who might
be the result of an illicit affair with the monk.
She will then go immediately into production
early in 2006 on Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium.
Written by and featuring the directorial debut
of Zach Helm (Stranger Than Fiction), the fantasy
comedy features Portman as the manager of a toy
store that seems to come alive when infused by
the spirit of its eccentric owner, played by Dustin
Hoffman. When his health begins to fail, he wants
to turn the store over to her, but her depression
has turned the once vibrant store to a gray pallor.
Producers on the film are Richard Gladstein and
Jim Garavante.
Portman recently starred in the final installment
of George Lucas’ second Star Wars trilogy, Star
Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith, with
Hayden Christensen and Ewan McGregor. In 2002,
Portman starred as Senator Amidala in Star Wars:
Episode II - Attack of the Clones, following the
huge success of Lucas’ blockbuster hit, Star Wars:
Episode 1 - The Phantom Menace, in which her character
was introduced. Both films, prequels to Lucas’
wildly popular Star Wars trilogy of the 70s and
80s, rank among the top-grossing films ever produced
worldwide.
Portman won a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting
Actress, as well as an Academy Award nomination
in the same category for her role in Mike Nichols’
big-screen adaptation of Patrick Marber’s Broadway
hit Closer. Starring opposite Jude Law, Julia
Roberts and Clive Owen, and set in London, the
film is an intriguing story of passion, drama,
love and abandonment involving two couples, which
only gets more complicated when the man from the
first couple gets acquainted with the woman from
the second coupling. Portman plays an enigmatic
young American girl from New York, who like the
other characters in the film, explores her dark
side, sexually and emotionally. Other nods for
her work in the film include a nomination for
Best Actress from the London Film Critics and
nominations for Best Supporting Actress from the
Online Film Critics and the Critics’ Choice Awards.
She was also named Best Supporting Actress by
the San Diego Film Critics.
Portman also earned critical acclaim for her
work in Zach Braff’s Garden State. Written, directed,
and co-starring Braff, the film follows the travails
of a young man who returns home for his mother’s
funeral after being estranged from his family
for a decade. Portman plays Sam, a girl who is
everything he isn’t. A blast of color, hope and
quirks, Sam becomes a sidekick who refuses to
ride in his sidecar. Her warmth and fearlessness
give Braff’s character the courage to open his
heart to the joy and pain of the infinite abyss
that is life. The film also stars Peter Sarsgaard.
Portman received international acclaim for her
feature film debut in Luc Besson’s The Professional.
Starring opposite Jean Reno and Gary Oldman, Portman
played Mathilde, a young girl who seeks refuge
from a hitman after her parents are killed by
a corrupt DEA officer. She received further recognition
for her movie-stealing performance in the film
Beautiful Girls. Directed by Ted Demme, the bittersweet
comedy also starred Timothy Hutton, Uma Thurman,
Rosie O’Donnell and Matt Dillon.
Other feature credits include Anthony Minghella’s
critically acclaimed and Academy Award nominated
adaptation of the best-selling novel Cold Mountain,
starring opposite Jude Law, Nicole Kidman and
Renée Zellweger; Matt Williams’ Where the
Heart Is, co-starring Ashley Judd; Wayne Wang’s
Anywhere But Here, opposite Susan Sarandon (which
earned her a Golden Globe Award nomination for
Best Supporting Actress); the Woody Allen musical
Everyone Says I Love You, co-starring Julia Roberts,
Goldie Hawn, Alan Alda and Drew Barrymore; Tom
Tykwer’s short film True, as part of the compilation
feature film Paris je t’aime; Tim Burton’s black
comedy Mars Attacks! with Jack Nicholson and Glenn
Close; and Michael Mann’s Heat with Al Pacino,
Robert De Niro and Val Kilmer.
Portman first worked with Mike Nichols playing
the role of Nina in his Shakespeare in the Park
production of The Seagull, opposite Meryl Streep,
Kevin Kline and Philip Seymour Hoffman for the
New York Shakespeare Festival. Tom Stoppard’s
adaptation of Anton Chekhov’s classic tale resonates
with the contemporary questions of sex, love,
family and fame. In the 1997-1998 Broadway season,
Portman starred in the title role of The Diary
of Anne Frank, praised by USA Today as “a landmark
performance.” Directed by James Lapine, the production
took a fresh look at the play, incorporating new
material from the 1995 Definitive Edition of Anne
Frank’s diaries.
Australian actor HUGO WEAVING (“V”) has starred
in two of the biggest trilogies in film history
– playing elf leader Elrond in the Lord of the
Rings films and Agent Smith in the Matrix films.
Weaving is the recipient of three AFI (Australian
Film Institute) Best Actor Awards, receiving the
first in 1991 for his portrayal of a blind photographer
in Jocelyn Moorhouse’s breakthrough feature Proof.
He received a nomination in the same category
in 1994 for his drag queen Mitzi Del Bra in Stephan
Elliott’s The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of
the Desert. Weaving won the award for the second
time in 1998 for his role in The Interview, written
and directed by Craig Monahan, for which he also
received the 1998 Best Actor Award at the World
Film Festival in Montreal. His most recent credit
is the critically acclaimed Little Fish, opposite
Cate Blanchett and Sam Neill, for which he won
his third AFI Award for Best Actor (2005) and
the IF (Inside Film) Award (2005) for Best Actor.
Weaving’s other film credits include the Australian
features Peaches, Russian Doll, The Magic Pudding,
Strange Planet, Babe: Pig in the City, True Love
and Chaos, Babe and Exile. His foreign credits
include Rolf de Heer’s The Old Man Who Read Love
Stories and the British romp Bedrooms and Hallways.
Weaving also has a wealth of experience on stage.
In 2006 he will appear on stage with Cate Blanchett
in the Sydney Theatre Company’s production of
Hedda Gabler at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.
STEPHEN REA (Chief Inspector Finch) achieved
international recognition when he was nominated
for an Academy Award and a Golden Globe for his
performance in Neil Jordan’s The Crying Game.
Previously, Rea had worked with Jordon on Angel
(aka Danny Boy), his feature film debut, and Company
of Wolves, and they have since collaborated on
Interview with a Vampire, Michael Collins, The
Butcher Boy, In Dreams, End of the Affair and
Breakfast on Pluto.
Among his other film credits are Mike Leigh’s
Life is Sweet, Robert Altman’s Prêt à
Porter, Still Crazy, Guinevere, Bruce Beresford’s
Evelyn, Ulysses and, most recently, Tara Road.
Rea trained in Ireland’s Abbey Theatre School
and divided his time in the 1970s and 1980s between
fringe theatre, major stage productions, TV and
films. He also starred in or directed all of the
productions of the Field Day Theatre, a group
he and playwright Brian Friel formed in 1980.
Rea was nominated for Broadway’s 1993 Tony Award
as Best Actor for Frank McGuiness’ Someone Who’ll
Watch Over Me. He has starred in numerous theatre
productions in Dublin and London’s West End, as
well as appearing in several television productions
for the BBC, Channel 4 and HBO.
JOHN HURT (Chancellor Sutler), the son of an
Anglican vicar and an amateur actress, was born
in 1940 and attended schools in Kent and Lincoln.
He was a stage hand with the Lincoln Repertory
and studied art at St. Martin’s School in London
before winning a scholarship to the prestigious
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA).
Hurt is one of Britain’s best known, critically
acclaimed and most versatile actors. He made his
West End debut in 1962 and went on to take the
1963 Critics’ Award for Most Promising Actor in
Harold Pinter’s The Dwarfs. For the stage, Hurt
has also appeared in Pinter’s The Caretaker, O’Casey’s
Shadow of a Gunman, Stoppard’s Travesties for
the RSC, Turgenev’s A Month in the Country and
Samuel Beckett’s Krapp’s Last Tape in London’s
West End.
Hurt’s impressive body of television work commenced
in 1961 and has included such notable roles as
Caligula in I, Claudius, Raskolnikov in Crime
and Punishment and, most memorably, as Quentin
Crisp in the autobiographical The Naked Civil
Servant (for which he received a Best Actor Emmy
and a BAFTA Best Television Actor Award).
It was Hurt’s defining film roles as Max in
Midnight Express and as John Merrick in The Elephant
Man that thrust him into the international spotlight
with Oscar nominations for Best Supporting Actor
and Best Actor, respectively. His other film work
includes a trio of roles in 1984 which rewarded
him with the Evening Standard Award for Best Actor
for that year for: 1984, The Hit and Champions.
His many other films include A Man for All Seasons,
The Field, Scandal, Rob Roy and John Boorman’s
Two Nudes Bathing, the later for which he received
a CableAce Award in 1995, as well as an acclaimed
performance in Richard Kwietniowski’s Love and
Death on Long Island. Hurt was seen as Dr. Iannis
in Captain Corelli’s Mandolini, directed by John
Madden.
In 1999 Hurt filmed Beckett’s Krapp’s Last Tape,
directed by Atom Egoyan and Tabloid TV directed
by David Blair in 2000. The following year was
spent filming Miranda, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s
Stone and Owning Mahowny.
In 2002 Hurt won the Variety Club Award for
Outstanding Performance in a Stage Play alongside
Penelope Wilton for their performance in Brian
Friel’s Afterplay. This was followed by the film
Hellboy and The Alan Clark Diaries for the BBC.
In recent years, Hurt filmed The Skeleton Key,
directed by Iain Softley; Shooting Dogs, directed
by Michael Caton-Jones; and The Proposition, directed
by John Hillcoat. Most recently he was seen on
the London Stage at Wyndham’s Theater in Heroes,
directed by Thea Sharrock.
ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS
V for Vendetta marks JAMES McTEIGUE’s (Director)
debut as a feature film director.
This follows an impressive body of work as a commercials
director.
His career as an assistant director includes
some of the highest grossing films of all time.
These films include The Matrix Trilogy and Star
Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones. Other
career highlights as first assistant director
are Moulin Rouge, Looking for Alibrandi and The
Monkey’s Mask. These films were a natural progression
from his career as second assistant director on
Dark City, Paradise Road, To Have and to Hold,
A Country Life and The Well.
This diverse body of work makes V for Vendetta
an important and exciting directorial entrée.
One of the most prolific and successful producers
in the history of motion pictures, JOEL SILVER
(Producer) has produced well over 40 films, including
the groundbreaking Matrix trilogy, the blockbuster
four-part Lethal Weapon series and the seminal
action films Die Hard and Predator.
To date, Silver’s catalog of films have earned
nearly $10 billion in worldwide revenue from all
sources.
In addition to V For Vendetta, Silver is currently
producing The Visiting, a sci-fi thriller starring
Nicole Kidman and directed by Oliver Hirschbiegel,
and the supernatural thriller The Reaping, starring
Hilary Swank, the next release from his Dark Castle
Entertainment division.
Formed by Silver and Robert Zemeckis in the spirit
of the late horror impresario William Castle,
Dark Castle has produced a string of hit films
beginning with the record-breaking release of
House on Haunted Hill, which opened at number
one on Halloween of 1999, followed by Thir13en
Ghosts in 2001, Ghost Ship in 2002, Gothika in
2003 and House of Wax in 2005.
Silver’s 1999 production The Matrix grossed
over $456 million globally, earning more than
any other Warner Bros. Pictures film in the Studio’s
history at the time of its release. To date, the
Matrix franchise has grossed $3 billion from all
sources worldwide.
Universally acclaimed for its innovative storytelling
and visuals, The Matrix won four Academy Awards,
including the award for Best Visual Effects. The
first DVD release to sell one million units, The
Matrix DVD was instrumental in powering the initial
sale of consumer DVD machines.
The second installment of the epic Matrix trilogy,
The Matrix Reloaded, earned over $739 million
in worldwide box office, making it the highest-grossing
R-rated film of all time. The opening weekend
box office receipts for The Matrix Revolutions,
the final explosive chapter in the trilogy, totaled
a staggering $203 million worldwide, scoring the
biggest consecutive five-day opening in motion
picture history.
While overseeing production on The Matrix Reloaded
and The Matrix Revolutions, Silver produced the
integral video game Enter the Matrix, which features
one hour of additional film footage written and
directed by the Wachowski Brothers and starring
Jada Pinkett Smith and Anthony Wong, who reprise
their roles from the films. He also executive
produced The Animatrix, a groundbreaking collection
of nine short films inspired by the visionary
action and innovative storytelling that power
The Matrix.
Most recently, Silver produced the action/comedy/thriller
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, written and directed by Lethal
Weapon screenwriter Shane Black and starring Robert
Downey Jr., Val Kilmer and Michelle Monaghan.
He also produced the hit films Romeo Must Die,
starring Jet Li and Aaliyah; Exit Wounds, starring
Steven Seagal and DMX; and Swordfish, starring
John Travolta, Hugh Jackman and Halle Berry.
While at Lawrence Gordon Productions, where he
began his career and ultimately ascended to president
of motion pictures, Silver associate produced
The Warriors and, with Gordon, produced 48 HRS.,
Streets of Fire and Brewster’s Millions.
In 1985, Silver launched his Silver Pictures
production banner with the breakout hit Commando,
followed by Jumpin’ Jack Flash and Predator. In
addition to the Lethal Weapon series, Die Hard
and Die Hard 2: Die Harder, Silver went on to
produce The Last Boy Scout, Demolition Man, Richie
Rich and Conspiracy Theory.
A successful television producer as well, Silver
executive produces the hit UPN television series
Veronica Mars. Currently in its second season,
the critically acclaimed crime drama stars Kristen
Bell. Silver also executive produced, with Richard
Donner, David Giler, Walter Hill and Robert Zemeckis,
eight seasons of the award-winning HBO series
Tales From the Crypt, as well as two Tales From
the Crypt films.
As a student at Columbia High School in Maplewood,
New Jersey in 1967, Silver and a group of his
friends developed a game called Ultimate Frisbee.
The fast-moving team sport has since become a
global phenomenon supported by tournaments in
50 countries. In 2006, thousands of players representing
over 40 countries will compete in the World Ultimate
Club Championships in Perth, Australia.
GRANT HILL (Producer) recently served as executive
producer and unit production manager on The Matrix
Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions. Previously,
he produced Terrence Malick’s The Thin Red Line
and was co-producer on James Cameron’s Titanic.
THE WACHOWSKI BROTHERS (Producers / Screenplay)
were born and raised in Chicago and have been
working together for more than 30 years. Prior
to writing and producing V For Vendetta, Andy
and Larry Wachowski wrote, directed and executive
produced the Matrix trilogy. In 1996, they wrote
and directed their first feature film, Bound,
a thriller starring Gina Gershon, Jennifer Tilly
and Joe Pantoliano.
DAVID LLOYD (Graphic Novel Illustrator) was
born in Enfield, North London, in 1950. He trained
as a commercial artist in an advertising art studio
before realizing his childhood dream of becoming
a strip cartoonist in 1977. His big break was
a commission to illustrate a book of stories and
strips from the Logan’s Run television show. He
later worked with Marvel Comics UK, where he drew
the pulp adventure series Night Raven, and a range
of stories featuring the many villains of Dr.
Who.
In 1980 he began collaborating with Alan Moore
on the series V For Vendetta which became the
mainstay of the British monthly, Warrior. The
series was reprinted and completed by DC Comics
in 1988, and then published as a graphic novel
in 1990. Highly successful and critically acclaimed,
V For Vendetta has been published in many countries
across the globe.
Lloyd has also worked on ESPers, Hellblazer,
Slaine, War Stories, Global Frequency, Aliens,
Marlowe: The Graphic Novel, Night Raven: House
of Cards, and many short stories of various kinds.
Among other pursuits, Lloyd is currently involved
in setting up Cartoon Classroom – a website which
aims to provide access to cartoonists and comic
creators who teach, and to centralize all information
available to those interested in studying cartoon
art in the UK.
He presently resides in Brighton and has just
completed a 92-page detective story, Kickback,
for French publisher Editions Carabas. This will
be published in English by Dark Horse in the summer
of 2006.
BENJAMIN WAISBREN (Executive Producer) is the
founder and Managing Director of Virtual Studios,
a business that invests in the production and
distribution of major motion pictures. He is also
on the Board of Directors of Wild Bunch, SA.,
a motion picture distributor and sales company
based in Paris. He is executive producer on the
upcoming films Poseidon, The Good German, The
Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert
Ford, Blood Diamond, 300, First Born and Gardener
of Eden. He is also a Managing Director at Stark
Investments, a multi-strategy hedge fund with
over $7 billion of equity capital under management,
where he co-manages the structured finance strategies
at the firm.
He is a former Managing Director of Salomon Brothers
Inc., where he headed the restructuring group
in the Investment Banking Department. He was also
a bankruptcy litigator, and ran the bankruptcy
practice at Chicago’s Lord, Bissell & Brook.
ADRIAN BIDDLE, BSC (Director of Photography)
had a successful career, which started at the
age of fourteen, when he began camera assisting
for the legendary underwater photographer Gil
Woxholt. Following When Eight Bells Toll, Murphy’s
War and On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, Biddle
joined Ridley Scott’s company R.S.A in 1970 as
clapper loader, and worked with Ridley and Tony
Scott, Hugh Hudson, Roger Woodburn and Howard
Guard on numerous commercials, winning various
prestigious awards. He joined Ridley Scott on
his first feature film The Duellists, and then
as a focus puller on Alien.
Biddle’s first break as a feature film director
of photography was on James Cameron’s 1985 Aliens.
Biddle then went on to light such successful movies
as The Princess Bride and Willow before working
with director Ridley Scott again on his acclaimed
Thelma and Louise, for which he received an Oscar
nomination, a BAFTA nomination and a British Society
of Cinematographers nomination. He received a
further British Society of Cinematographers nomination
for Scott’s next film 1492: Conquest of Paradise.
Biddle’s successful career continued to flourish,
and in 1998, he received the European Cinematographer
of the Year Award for Neil Jordan’s The Butcher
Boy.
Biddle’s credits also include The Dawning, The
Tall Guy, City Slickers II, Judge Dredd, Fierce
Creatures, 101 Dalmatians, Event Horizon, Holy
Man, The Mummy, The World is Not Enough, The Weight
of Water, 102 Dalmatians, The Mummy Returns, Reign
of Fire, Shanghai Knights, Laws of Attraction,
Bridget Jones: Edge of Reason and An American
Haunting.
Sadly, Biddle passed away on the December 7,
2005.
OWEN PATERSON (Production Designer) worked as
production designer on The Matrix trilogy.
Paterson won an Australian Film Institute Award
for Best Production Design for Stephan Elliot’s
The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert.
Among his other credits are Red Planet, Stephan
Elliot’s Welcome to Woop Woop, Race the Sun, Minnamurra,
The Place at the Coast and Travelling North. Paterson
also worked as art director on the Australian
feature Bliss and The Coolangatta Gold.
Paterson’s television credits include Noriega:
God’s Favorite, The Beast, the telefilm Heartbreak
High for ABC TV and The Riddle of the Stinson.
MARTIN WALSH, A.C.E. (Editor) won the Oscar
in 2003 and the ACE Award for his work on Rob
Marshall’s Chicago. He was also nominated for
a BAFTA Award that same year.
Most recently, Walsh edited Separate Lies for
Julian Fellowes and Thunderbirds. Among his earlier
credits as editor are Iris, Bridget Jones’s Diary,
Mansfield Park, Hilary and Jackie, Welcome to
Woop Woop!, Feeling Minnesota, Hackers, Backbeat
and The Krays. Walsh collaborated on numerous
occasions with director Peter Chelsom on such
films as The Mighty, Funny Bones and Hear My Song.
DARIO MARIANELLI (Composer) was born in Pisa,
Italy, and studied piano and composition in Florence
and London.
After a year as postgraduate composer at the
Guildhall School of Music and Drama, where he
was also the chairman of the Contemporary Music
Society, he received a scholarship from the Gulbenkian
Foundation for a course held by Judith Weir and
Lloyd Newson at Bretton University College, on
the subject of composition and choreography. Other
scholarships allowed him to go to Germany for
a series of workshops on European film music,
and to spend three years at the National Film
and Television School, from which he graduated
in 1997.
Over the last few years Marianelli has written
music for several feature films and television
dramas, including The Brothers Grimm, Pride &
Prejudice, Opal Dreams, Shooting Dogs, Burnt Out,
Cheeky, September, This Little Life, In This World,
I Capture the Castle, Happy Now? and The Warrior,
among many others. He has also composed music
for numerous documentaries, animations, the theatre,
contemporary dance and concerts.
Marianelli has written orchestral pieces for
the BBC Symphony Orchestra and for the Britten-Pears
Orchestra, vocal music for the BBC Singers, as
well as incidental music for the Royal Shakespeare
Company.
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