|
| |
| I N T E R V I E W S |
| HOME
| INTERVIEWS
HOME
| |
|
| Posted 11 September 2006 |
|
| ROBSON
GREEN ON WIRE IN THE BLOOD |
|
1TV1 Network |
Wire in the Blood begins on Wednesday 20 September 2006 @ 9.00pm
Robson Green believes the new
episodes of Wire In The Blood are the best, and scariest, yet.
“I feel that this series is our strongest so far, and we are always
pushing the budget so each episode has a filmic quality. I am very proud
of it, and I hope our viewers will be terrified and intrigued by it.
“One of the episodes is full of religious imagery – hanging,
beheading and drowning with a millstone around the neck. The killer is
someone who’s besotted with the artist Caravaggio. Like the slaying of
John the Baptist whose head was served on a plate, which is how one of
the victims ends up. It’s full of symbolism and it’s like a feature
film in the way it’s shot and lit. However, having a conversation in
between takes with a head on a plate covered in blood was slightly
surreal to say the least.”
He adds: “The feedback we’ve had from around the world is that
people enjoy being scared by the films and want us to push the
boundaries a little bit further, without being gratuitous, of course.
Our aim, through the writing, performances, design and effects, is to
create a chilling atmosphere.”
Robson thinks it is good that Wire In The Blood doesn’t shirk from the
truth about serial killers.
“Destructive behaviour is not something that drives itself from an
outside force known as ‘evil’, but from a choice made by a human
being. The consequences are visually unpleasant. Our programme is not
real but what we have to say is important.
“As long as it’s not a gore fest, we don’t shy away from the
reality of what we’re talking about. I don’t go around celebrating
the violence but I enjoy experiencing the reasons why people behave as
they do. It’s an interesting learning curve for me – the most
educational piece I’ve ever been part of.”
Robson’s character, eccentric clinical psychologist Dr Tony Hill, has
to learn to work with a new police chief in the series, thanks to the
arrival of DI Alex Fielding, played by Simone Lahbib.
“She really doesn’t want him on board but in the end thanks him for
being there. Tony and Alex have to learn to trust each other and work
together to solve the murders and their new relationship brings a new
energy and warmth to the series.”
Adds Robson: “Tony’s far more outside the university now and more
involved in the police work, as a volunteer. But he’s on the
periphery. When the crime is solved he disappears. He’s never
applauded for what he does and he doesn’t stand out in a crowd. Just
like a surgeon who performs something profound in hospital or someone
who has carried out an amazing engineering feat. You wouldn’t look at
them twice.”
Returning to the character of Tony Hill means learning long speeches –
a challenge for any actor.
“Not many actors have the bottle or courage to stand in front of the
microphone for eight minutes and deliver dialogue. It’s very
complicated stuff – bizarre but interesting to say. Luckily good
writing is easy to learn, especially once you understand the imagery, so
I talk to the writers and Val McDermid a lot.”
|
Despite his close involvement with
the series, Robson insists he never takes the dark subject matter home.
“This is fun and it’s a job I really enjoy but I know it’s unreal.
I’m not a psychologist, I don’t take it home and if you do, don’t
do the job. It’s the real stuff that lingers for me, like happy
slapping kids.”
The success of Wire In The Blood, with sales to well over 30 countries,
is particularly rewarding for Robson as it is made by his company
Coastal Productions.
“I can understand why it is a
very successful programme because its themes are universal and what Tony
has to say is very interesting. It’s unusual though, because he’s a
clumsy character, not your clichéd lead. He travels to work on a
bicycle and has his life in a blue polythene bag.
“It’s taken us 10 years to get prime time drama that’s shown
around the world. Once the infrastructure’s created then people are
attracted to it. The aspiration is to make movies from here.”
Despite his profile internationally, Robson is in no rush to try his
luck in America.
“I’m offered stuff but it’s a whole new ball game. You have to up
sticks and go out there and I have a son in education here. But
obviously, if they offer me something with De Niro for three months
that’d be different!”
Robson lives in Surrey with his wife Vanya, six-year-old son Taylor and
stepdaughter Lara. His many credits include Soldier Soldier, Casualty,
Unconditional Love, Trust, Touching Evil, Close and True, Reckless,
Grafters and Rocket Man. He recently completed the new ITV drama Little
Devil and is about to start filming a new series of Northern Lights.
His hobbies include tending to his organic garden: “I’ve got a
greenhouse with melons, aubergines, marrows, peppers and chilli. I see
it as nurturing life which I guess is good for the soul.”
|
| |
|