With each of the characters they seem to be kind of getting cornered more and more like rats. Are we going to see a little bit of an ease up on their situation, they're going to get a little bit more lucky breaks or is it going to get worse as the season goes along?
E. Izzard: Well, I'd say since they haven't written the rest of the season I would assume that it's just going to keep ramping up, and then there will be some turn at some point. It's really difficult to fathom this, because it's just conjecture, but logically it's just going to keep piling it on and then around episode 8, 9, 10, 11, it's going to turn and go somewhere else, and then we'll have a cliffhanger. But it's difficult for us to say more than that, because no one knows. It is weird that we get to this place.
M. Driver: I don't think it's going to get any easier.
E. Izzard: Yes.
M. Driver: If there are easy moments, it'll sort of be like being in the eye of the storm. There will be pockets, but they won't be really what's going on.
E. Izzard: I can tell you what's going to happen for the next seven seasons, which is that this is just going to keep ramping up and up and up and we're just going to keep stealing more of the American dream, and the stakes will just get higher and higher.
M. Driver: Yes.
E. Izzard: It's got to go there. That's our place to go. How that will actually turn out, we don't know, but it's going to be that crazy ride.
A theme early on this season seems to me that everyone has their price, and in the ... they end up returning to Edenfall for their $13 million dollars in Hugh's deal. Is that their price, and what do you think that says about the characters?
E. Izzard: I think it's Wayne's price. At $13 million, you could actually say a bazillion million, it's just more than he's ever fathomed.
M. Driver: We had a lot of discussions about this, didn't we... I mean, we all come back, but there is clearly Cal doesn't want to come back. I don't really want to go back at all. Wayne wants to go back, and this is our first fatal flaw, in a way. It's like this is the first time that we've shown ourselves to be, I don't know... like it's the first chink in the armor to me, not the killing of the people in the first ...
E. Izzard: We never really meant to kill any of these people. But I do think …
M. Driver: You see him, you see that Wayne, something is different in Wayne, like you see this slight …
E. Izzard: The end justifies the means. I think he really feels that if we get just this, there's only one chance of getting this and this is it. And maybe in the future it will turn out, though it isn't the only chance, but at this point I think this is the only chance and he's willing to burn the family to get it.
M. Driver: Yes, to get it.
E. Izzard: With an idea that after he's got it …
M. Driver: He'll put it back together.
E. Izzard: He'll put the family back together.
M. Driver: But it's a really Machiavellian idea, it's the first time you've seen again Wayne operating outside of the unit. He's doing something for the good of the family, but it's not a familial decision. It's something that he's decided. I think that is a huge turning point. I think it says a lot that we go along with it. It says a lot about Wayne, but it's really to me the first moment. It's setting up the season, because you're basically going to see that spiritual and moral compunction unit come under even more fire, or you're going to see kind of the true expression of who these people are I think this season, and I think it begins with that $13 million.
<< Previous 1
|
2
|
3
|
4
| 5 |
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
11
|
12
Next >>
There are no comments posted. Be the first!