INT: Mads Mikkelsen

Over
the past few months much has been made over the new James Bond film CASINO
ROYALE
coming out in November.
Many seem to question the casting of Daniel Craig as the next
Bond, I for one am looking forward to a really strong actor to take
on the role. But one casting
decision that nobody will question is Mads Mikkelsen as Le Chiffre,
Bond’s nemesis. Originating
from

Denmark


, he has made an impressive career with films like PUSHER and its
sequels, WILBUR WANTS TO KILL HIMSELF and THE GREEN BUTCHERS.

I
had a chance to talk one-on-one with Mr. Mikkelsen and found him to
be not only a really nice guy but also very intelligent.
He had much to say about his early work and what it was like
being a Bond villain and how we both were freaked out by Jaws in MOONRAKER.
I look forward to seeing him put up one helluva fight for Mr.
Bond, and if anyone can stir up trouble, it will be him.

Mads
Mikkelsen

How
is it different doing something like Casino Royale as opposed to
what you’ve done with Pusher and all that?

The
scale, the [amount] of people on set is a tremendous difference.
Five hundred people on a Bond film and then maybe thirty on a
Danish film. So being
bad at names, which I am, it was kind of nightmare.
But besides that, it’s the same focus, you focus, you try
to be disciplined, you focus on the work and… for an actor it’s
not that different.

Did
you have a good time with the other cast members on [Casino Royale]?

Well,
I mean definitely, when we started out we were doing the big poker
game and that took for like, three or four weeks to shoot that.
And there was like ten poker players at this table and every
time there was a break we were playing poker seriously, and we went
back to the table and played poker again.
We would hang out in the night as well and Michael Wilson was
there playing with us. We
had a great time.

With
a film like Pusher and its sequel, what do you enjoy more, doing a
character like that or something a little bigger like Casino Royale
or King Arthur?

The
good thing about that is I don’t have to choose, I don’t have to
compare them because they’re incomparable; they’re two different
kinds of films. There
will be like one-hundred kinds of different films you could make.
I don’t have to compare them, I like them both – I would
love to do both, I’d like to do a black comedy, I’d love to do a
commercial, I’d like to do a musical.
So I don’t compare things and I like it when I work and
that’s it.

You’re
doing all this press for [Casino Royale], is the press as big of a
deal when doing a Danish film?

Back
home… I would be one of the five people back home that is supposed
to carry a film so the press would be pretty heavy as well but
nothing this size of course. I
am not carrying this film, Daniel [Craig] is… imagine how much
press he’s doing.

Yeah.

But
no, of course it’s bigger, the budget is bigger, the amount of
people that is going to watch this film is hopefully [Laughing] very
much bigger. So this is
what comes with it and I find it kind of easy, I like it.

Have
you seen the completed film yet?

No,
not yet. I haven’t
even seen the trailer and that’s my own fault because I can’t
– I’m not good with the internet thing, you know.
I will see it one of these days.

Well,
I’ve got to say, I watched the trailer last night when I found out
I was going to talk to you and, dude, you look pretty cool in this
movie.

Oh
good. [Laughter]

Is
it fun to play the “bad guy”?

Yeah,
of course it’s fun. Its
fun, I mean it’s been a tradition of bad guys… everyone wants to
play the bad guy and I’m not an exception.
There’s something great about the bad guy, we tend to be
drawn to the bad guys. And
this is hopefully not an exception.

Are
you a fan of the James Bond movies?

Oh,
definitely. Like
everybody else, I mean, I’m not a freak, I’m not an expert but
I’ve been watching them since I was a kid so that’s part of my
growing up.

Who
is your favorite Bond villain?

My
favorite villain must be the Jaws guy, mostly because he scared the
shit out of me. And
those are the films I remember best.

Yeah,
I remember him, he scared me too.
So what’s next for you after this?

Hopefully
a small break; get back and rebuild the house and see how big the
kids are, stuff like that. And
then a couple of Danish projects which are still waiting for a
“go” on.

Is
it hard for you to be away from your family so often?

Yeah,
normally when you do a Danish film you shoot for a couple of months
and that’s about it and that will be in the area where you live
kind of. So, yeah it’s
tough but they come with me sometimes and I come home on the
weekends whenever I can, so we get by but it is different here.
I mean, it’s nice for a couple of days to be with yourself
but then you start missing people and that’s the way it is.
Then you realize how important they are and that’s good as
well.

Back
home are people going crazy over this film [Casino Royale]?

I
don’t know because I haven’t been home.
Not that much though. I
think it’s kind of interesting you know.
When something good happens for a Dane – a fellow Dane that
will hopefully [go that way] for another Dane.
And it’s such a small country, we tend to be proud of what
happens to our fellow Danes… we’ll wait and see.

How
do you like it here in

Los Angeles


?

I
like it, I’ve been here before [a few] times.
It’s an acquired taste as people say.
You gotta get yourself a car, you gotta find yourself the way
around here but once you get there it starts growing on you.
It’s not the easiest place to go, it’s easier to go into
New York

, it’s like this is

New York


, this is like, oh, where’s the center.
But it’s great, I’m getting there.

I
wanted to ask you a little about Pusher; that was the one that got
you into the public eye a little bit, right?

Yeah,
I did that film when I was in drama school on my last year and for
some reason we’re not allowed to work, even in the vacations when
we do drama school but I did it anyway so I got kicked out… and
uh, they took me back again so…

So
what made you go back for Pusher 2?

It’s
a rare opportunity to go back and work with a character ten years
later to see what happened to him.
And we knew that right away when we did the first film that
there was a lot of characters in the first film that we might want
to stop with later on, so he (Nicolas
Winding Refn)
waited and waited and he just called
me and – now’s the time, I got the story [from] him and we worked
on that for some months and then we shot it.

What
kind of preparation did you do for that?

A
lot of script preparation because we wanted to nail the story, we
wanted to figure out what this character was.
And in the first couple versions of the script he (his
character Tonny) was running the scenes, he was the engine of the
scenes and the key for that was, I think it was like a week before
shooting but we liked the script but we didn’t like that he was
the engine. So we turned
that whole thing around and he was made into like, a supporting
actor in every scene which he was in the first film.
So when we made that slight change it just fell into a
positive fit.

I
actually haven’t seen the sequel yet?

Oh,
you should see all three of them.

I
will. Are there any
other roles that you’d want to go back to like that?

Ah,
not necessarily, when a film was done that was it.
There might be one – I did a black comedy called The Green
Butchers, I was a very, very annoying character that I played with
an enormously big forehead, sweating all the time and lying the
whole film and it was so funny playing him.
I’d like to go back and do something with him if I had the
chance.

How
much of your work do your kids see?

Ah,
not a lot. I mean, a lot
of the stuff I’ve done, it has been, uh… [Laughing] what do you
call it… X…

X-Rated?

Yeah,
it’s… some of the stuff has been really tough stuff and so they
can’t see. But
they’ve seen some of the TV I’ve done and some of the comedy.

Well,
there’s a certain freedom in

Denmark


to kind of push the envelope which I think Americans do not tend to
do.

Yeah,
on a certain level I mean you’re making films for an enormous
budget you have to make sure people want to see it.
And to be honest with you the Pusher films are good, good
films and they do cross the border sometimes, they do scare people
away. It’s not an
enormous crowd that’s watching, it’s a strong crowd but if you
want to make some other kind of money with a big budget you have to
pull back a little.

Do
you think about box office or do you just try to forget about it?

Oh,
if I do a film like Pusher I look at the box office in terms of what
we expect, and we hope it makes that, of course, then we’re all
happy and I will be happy as well, we achieved our goals.
And I will definitely look at that on this film as well
because what’s anticipated on this film is also what I anticipate;
I mean that’s why we do this.

You
spent eight years as a dancer?

Yeah,
eight or nine years.

How
old were you when you started dancing?

Um,
I must have been eighteen or something.

You
started a little bit late didn’t you?

Yeah,
I started late but I was [based] as a gymnast so it [grew up] from
the gymnast part of me, like I was good at jumping and turning and
spins and all that kind of stuff but I had to pick up the basics as
well as dancing, I’m not sure I ever got that but I was good at
jumping [laughing].

Does
that help you with the action films?

Yeah
it… definitely, I do get injured because I do it a little more
wild than I’m supposed to but I’ve done a couple of things that
I’m pretty proud of as a stunt guy as well.

Thank
you Mads, it was really nice talking to you.

It
was nice talking to you.

Let
me know what you think. Send
questions and comments to [email protected].

Source: JoBlo.com

About the Author

3161 Articles Published

JimmyO is one of JoBlo.com’s longest-tenured writers, with him reviewing movies and interviewing celebrities since 2007 as the site’s Los Angeles correspondent.