Thursday 30 June 2011

ELIJAH WOOD - awesome new series WILFRED

I have been hearing tons on the radio about Elijah Wood's new series Wilfred.  This is an article taken from the Chicago tribune



Elijah Wood can add "comic actor" to his Renaissance man resume.

The "The Lord of the Rings" actor has dug up a hit with his first foray into series TV with "Wilfred," which attracted 3.8 million viewers for its debut June 23 on FX. In the show, which airs at 9 p.m. Thursdays, Wood plays Ryan, a depressed lawyer who sees his neighbor's dog, Wilfred (Jason Gann), as a trouble-making bloke in a dog suit.

Dog days for Jason Gann in 'Wilfred''Wilfred' teaches Elijah Wood new tricks 
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  • Review: FX's 'Wilfred' has a dog complex
It's a far cry from the drama of Middle Earth, which Wood worked on from ages 18 to 23. But the now 30-year-old, who I recently chatted with by phone from L.A., is always up for new challenges.

Among the big studio and indie movies he's made, he's lent his voice to video games and animated TV shows. Outside of acting, he turned his lifelong love of music into his own record label, called Simian Records (currently on the back burner, he says), and even deejays on weekends at L.A. clubs.

The former child star credits his family for his well-rounded life. They moved to L.A. when he was 7 years old from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, so that he could pursue acting. He never jumped into that L.A. scene that has gobbled up young actors and led to more than a few implosions.

"There were moments" when he showed signs of an inflated ego or feeling entitled, he said, but "I can't recall any of them because I never was allowed to go any further with it. ... If any of my behavior smacked of that my family was on it so fast so I kind of never explored it, thankfully."

Now, he's just grateful for his career and for all the opportunities he's had both professionally and personally.

"Not only could I not have had the career that I've had, but also I wouldn't be the person that I am, which is far more important," he said. "It's one thing to have the support of your family to help you in your sort of life decisions and I can reflect on that in regards to where I am with my career."

And that just happens to be working with a man wearing a dog suit. In this second part of our interview, Wood and I talk about "Wilfred," Wood's family, career, his love of music and "The Hobbit." (Read Part 1 of the interview here.)

First off, I love the show.
Oh, that's awesome; that's so nice to hear. I think working on something as unique as "Wilfred," we love it and we're extremely passionate about it. It's also something that we're definitely aware of how different it is and how strange it is, and that's all the things that I love about it. At the same time it's interesting, I don't think I've ever felt so curious to see what people's reaction will be of anything that I've worked on, so it's really exciting.

What did you think of Jason Gann when you first met him?
Jason's great. [He has] a wry sense of humor. I'm definitely familiar with the sort of Australian characteristics. I met him in the context of reading for the role, so we were professionally put together in the context of having to read opposite one another. And he was just wonderful. I think there was an immediate sense of comfortability between the two of us and how we were playing off one another that continued throughout the show. I think we got on extremely well right away and saw eye-to-eye as to what that relationship [between Ryan and Wilfred] was supposed to be. Working with him was extremely easy, which was a blessing because most of the show is the two of us every day and we really could rely on each other. There was that great secondhand between the two of us. It was really wonderful. He's great…

A lot of the comedy that he comes up with, even though it's heightened and he's a man in a dog shoot, it does come from a place of honesty and there's something real happening there too. It's great; it's a lot of fun to watch.

He told meet filming was a lot of fun and that off-camera, you crack him up a lot.
I guess so. I definitely have made him laugh. I don't quite know what I've done to make him laugh, but that's a lovely compliment.

We make each other laugh. You know what's interesting I think going into it, I think it was David actually who said wow, you know, this is ten weeks, ten straight weeks. It's going to be grueling, you know, your first time on television; the schedule is going to be really intense. And that's when I like I don't know, I've definitely endured intense schedules before. And I have to say, as intense as our schedule was and we were doing an average of eight to 10 pages a day, sometimes 35, 40 setups a day, it never really felt that intense. And I think some of that's due to the working relationships and to the fun that we were having. Every day it was such a pleasure to come to work and not only to work on the material but to work with everyone involved. It was a really great creative team.

Wilfred and Ryan smoke a lot of weed together.
Yes, they do.

Also loving the new Antenna mag shoot of Elijah Woods



New York day 2



So yesterday was my big day meeting with a big agent, who personally inspires me and his agency astonishes me.

He currently reps Miles Aldridge and Greg Kadel. So i am very happy that they have shown interest in my work and given me a positive response. They are keen to rep me but need more work to present to clients, so they have helped me arrange a shoot here in New York. The theme is  "Discovering the Big Apple" .



They want me to do more lifestyle, portrait and reportage style work.  First of all thats where the money is and a certain part of my portfolio  is portraits and lifestyle with emotion and thats what they wanna see ! They loved my Gangster portraits, my parisian boy shoot, my Cape Town car graveyard work and all my parisian rockstar portraits . So now i know what i need to shoot  so i better get stuck in.

They also invited me to a small exhibition that was happening that night, and by looking at my watch realized that it was in 2 hours time... crap. it was a 1 hour trip home to Brooklyn because the first taxi i got into was like getting into a Dubai taxi, it was a indian dude who didnt know where Brooklyn so he kicked me out, the second taxi dude stopped but didnt have a Taxi sign on the car, he quoted me 86 $ back to which i replied " No fucking way , the trip here only cost me 35 $ !! " , so i had to get out that taxi, then the 3rd taxi i jumped in and said Brooklyn and he said " No, sorry im going off duty in 5 min" so finally the 4th taxi i jumped into took me straight home and it only cost 30$ .

I had 5 minutes to get ready, because my itrip Iphone app said my train was leaving in 10 minutes from 36th street and 4th avenue so i ran to the station and made the train by 1 minute as it was fucking spot on time . Thank you Itrip app !

It was at the gallery 518, west 19th street. I met with Marek and his friends and met the crew from Spin Mag, which was awesome because i really want to shoot with them . Marek's friends Jordan and Sun own a leather fashion store called Lost Art  on 509, West 27th street
I will be shooting a portrait of them on Saturday . Then i'm shooting a few portraits of Sabrina's ( Marek's right hand lady ) boyfriend who is a awesome skateboarding . So we heading over to the skate park on Sunday or Monday to shoot a few shots. So 3 shoots in 2 days . Gonna be tough but so so awesome !

















I stayed at the exhibition for around an hour and then left to meet Cedric and Erik for a beer at Freddy's bar, I took the subway to Pacific / Atlantic station thinking that 17th street on 5th avenue was close. My mistake it happened to be 25 plus blocks away. I seriously tried to get a taxi on the way , but they were all full, so ended up walking the entire way. Freddy's has a outside back patio area where you can smoke , so i was happy . I had 2 drinks with the boys and headed home - 15 blocks















And after the 2 beers i was really starving cause i hadn't really eaten all day, so i went on a sandwich mission , ooo and look what i found ! Fucking A class fucking sandwich - 4$ worth of turkey ham inside that sandwich




First day in NYC !

 I was flying Delta airways from LA to New York . Because the flight was pretty cheap they made damn sure that they charged an extra 30 $ per suitcase i had. Which was fine as i had shopped so much in LA that i was overweight but luckily the check in dude's girlfriend was from South Africa so he let me slip by without charging me for extra luggage !

Then when i arrived at the bag scanning area they found my newest piece of jewellery... my stylish knuckle busters that is designed to be able to wear 24/7. They wanted to take it away from me but i managed to work my woman charm and they let me through with it . I later found out that its actually illegal for me to wear this in NY as its classified as a weapon. Which is is and thats why i bought it ... in case someone tries to steal my camera .. i can take em out !

As you all know i was in two minds about moving to LA or NYC. LA has the beautiful weather, beaches, cool cars to drive and yeah it was awesome driving through Beverly Hills in a convertible ! After my LA trip ad great meetings i was actually ready to move to LA, But i can honestly say within 5 minutes of being in a taxi from New York airport , i had already decided that NYC was the place that we are going to move to .

 What changed your mind? you ask . Well I am very big on people, light and locations. This is why i loved Paris so much... The people look cool and interesting and the locations are real with and have so much charactor and the light is amazing. So while driving through NYC i saw that NYC has awesome looking people, great locations, convinience and beautiful beautiful light. I was sold.

I also love that you can pay your cab fare with your debit card .. welcome to a first world country !

And the cab has a live google maps system that shows you exactly where you are at all times





 I asked the taxi driver about gangsters in New York and he said there are a few and told me the various locations to find them . Unlike most people i try to find gangsters because i wanna photograph them. He said there are a few in Brooklyn East. And he also said on 12th street between 2nd and 3rd avenue there are tons of biker gangs. i'll see if i have time to visit them