KIEFERSUTHERLAND24.COM - ALL KIEFER ... ALL THE TIME

January 31, 2010

'24' Filming In LA

The following is a blog entry from someone who observed 24 filming at her office building last week in Los Angeles. Thanks to "Call Me K" and her blog: copper-spoon.blogspot.com. Also thanks to Lisa (@K2293 on Twitter) for sending me the link.

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Hangin' with Jack Bauer

As if it's not distracting enough to work in an office, where nearby conversations, furies of keyboard clattering and different musical preferences are forced to meld together, add a Hollywood shoot to the environment and the level of perplexity becomes immediately intensified.

From Wednesday through Friday, the cast of the hit Fox show 24 took over the lobby, elevators and outdoor area of my office building, One Bunker Hill. Kiefer Sutherland and gang could be seen throughout the day acting in various different scenes, from some sort of bank heist, to action scenes in the elevators and on-foot chases overtaking the sidewalks.

Kiefer playing chess during a break on the set.

Freddie Prinze Jr. getting ready for shooting to begin.

Freddie and Kiefer in between takes. Photo taken from inside Coffee Bean, my coffee shop of choice.


It was clear from the hot dog stand, long line of yellow cabs, and extras dressed in buttoned-up black that the episode is meant to take place in NYC rather than LA. The only thing that remained true to the laid back style of the West coast was the relaxed nature of the crew, including Sutherland, who was nice enough to pose for a shot with me.


Kiefer and I before his next scene began.
 

January 29, 2010

Nazneen Contractor revels in mystery on 24


Actor Nazneen Contractor was blown up at the end of the second season of CBC's The Border, only to land on her feet on the eighth season of the U.S. hit 24.

She plays the daughter of the president of a fictional Middle Eastern country, a role that began as a couple of scenes and now looks to be taking off in a new direction.

"I know nothing about what's going to happen," Contractor said Friday, describing how the writers of 24 develop the script as the season progresses.

"They just sort of fly by seat of their pants and are inspired by what happens in the world and what happens on the set," she said in an interview with CBC's Q cultural affairs show.

She'll admit her role has grown and she even has a stunt double for an upcoming scene, but says that like every actor in the show, she does not know how the plot will twist until she reads the next week's episode.

"Because I'm a recurring character, I don't even know if I'm going to be in the next episode or not but it just so happens, every time I get a script, I'm in it," she said.
 "They do say, if you are going to die, they call you beforehand."

On the set of 24, she's working alongside Kiefer Sutherland, the Canadian actor who is both agent Jack Bauer on screen and executive producer on the set. She said Sutherland is a strong influence on the shape of the show, working with the director, calling shots and helping with the camera.

'Learning experience'

The season also stars Cherry Jones as the president, Iranian-American actor Necar Zadegan as the mother of Contractor's character and Katee Sackhoff, formerly of Battlestar Galactica, as one of the data analysts.
It also features Anil Kapoor, the Slumdog Millionaire actor who is one of India's biggest stars. He plays Contractor's father, the president of the fictional nation who is subject to an assassination attempt.

"He is such a treat to work with. Not only that you're on the floor with a star who's been in more than 100 films and knows how to work the camera like nobody's business — it's a learning experience," Contractor said.

"But there's also a cultural aspect to it because he's the George Clooney of India and it's his first time doing American TV."

Success at Stratford

Contractor was born in Mumbai and raised in Nigeria and London before immigrating with her family to Canada. She trained as a classical ballerina before discovering acting and finding success on the stage at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival.

She said she'd tried to get attention in Los Angeles before landing her part as Sgt. Layla Hourani in The Border.

Contractor said she was "disappointed" to be written out of The Border script, but that opening has done wonders for her career.

"After The Border, I went to L.A again. I wanted to try it. I thought the timing was right. I could take everything I had and kind of jump in with both feet in Los Angeles," she said.

A huge fan of 24, she is thrilled to be involved in making the series.

"There's no other show on televison that's as compelling in the writing and the fact that it takes place in real time is a very smart gimmick on the producers' behalf," she said. "My character is a very slow burn but I have some fantastic story from it."

January 25, 2010

24’s New Recruits: Mykelti Williams & Freddie Prinze Jr.





by Tara Bennett
Jan 25th, 2010 | 10:10 AM 

If you’re a fan of ‘24,’ (Fox Monday 9pm) then you know that the Counter Terrorist Unit (or CTU) isn’t exactly the most stable place to work. Way back when, Jack Bauer was the Head of Field Ops at the Los Angeles branch of CTU and despite saving the country three times from terrorist plots, even he was canned. Since then CTU’s had a revolving door of directors, managers and underlings, from the adversarial George Mason (Xander Berkeley) to the beloved Bill Buchanan (James Morrison), either assisting or thwarting Jack’s effort to save the day. Most of them have had little patience for Jack’s methods which in turn have translated into plenty of verbal fireworks and fiery confrontations between Bauer and CTU brass. The smarter ones were eventually able to swallow their pride and work with Jack, but plenty of others learned the hard way and were lucky to make it out of CTU with a job, much less their lives.

For ‘24’s’ eighth season, yet again there are new CTU faces, this time guiding the New York division. Over the next few weeks we’ll talk to some of the movers and shakers tearing up the screen with Jack this season. First off we’ll introduce some newbies: CTU Director Brian Hastings played by Mykelti Williamson and NY Head of Field Ops Cole Ortiz, played by Freddie Prinze Jr.. Together with Bauer, they’ve already thwarted the assassination attempt of Middle Eastern leader Omar Hassan (Anil Kapoor), but rest assured there’s still a mess of trouble waiting for Hassan, President Taylor (Cherry Jones) and the country as the hours tick away.
Williams and Prinze Jr. talked to Fancast about joining ‘24’ and what their characters bring to the mix.

Mykelti Williams: Brian Hastings

Was ‘24’ a show that was on your radar before you got cast?

This project has always been on my radar as a show to watch. I Tivo’d the show. I have the box sets of every available season. When I was asked to join the cast it was a no-brainer.

Being a fan, did you feel more pressure joining the show and adding to the pantheon of either beloved or detested CTU directors?

It was exhilarating at first but then it became almost immediately scary because I love the show and I don’t want to be responsible for screwing it up. It sounds funny but I am very serious about that. Kiefer is also a dear friend. His work is always at the highest level and elevates the rest of us all the time and that is still the case even on ‘24.’ So it was fun to know that I would back into that and get to work with a friend of mine that I love so much like a brother and just to be a part of the ‘24’ legacy because that is television history.

Brian Hastings is the director of NY CTU and as we have already seen, he’s tightly wound. Was it tough shaping the character so he stood out from others that played that position?

You know who I actually talked to? [Executive producer] Howard (Gordon) and I would just check in but the person that I did a lot of soul searching with is [executive producer/director] Brad Turner. Brad helped to shape the character that you see on the show this season. We had so many heart-to-hearts, almost on a daily basis, because I didn’t want to repeat beats of previous heads of CTU. He reassured me that we were not going to do that so he was really instrumental in guiding me along this entire season. I tip my hat to Brad.

So who is Brian and what can we expect from him as day eight goes down?

There are a couple of things I don’t want to give away but I can tell you that Brian Hastings is a control freak. He’s a pillar of strength but he is afraid that he may be found out because he feels like he may be out of position and not the right man for the job. You will watch that unfold with his head bashing with Chloe (Mary Lynn Rajskub) because he thinks she is useless. But he will see that he has a great learning curve ahead of him as it relates to Chloe.

Freddie Prinze Jr.: Cole Ortiz

Most people know you from your comedy work. How is it working on a drama now – better or worse?

I don’t know if I have been doing it long enough to accurately compare. As far as something I have wanted to do but never had an opportunity to; I chomped at the bit. I auditioned for this. It wasn’t something that came my way. They were casting in LA and I read for this in New York. I didn’t see anyone else in the lobby and told the casting director “Look, there is nobody else in there so we are doing this until we get it right. I want this job!” She let me do it a few times and sent the tape. I sent her some cookies and that was it. (Laughs)

We’ve come to see that Cole is in a relationship with fellow CTU agent Dana Walsh (Katee Sackhoff) and problems are already a foot?

Yeah, they are engaged and there is a past to her character that he wasn’t aware of, so as it comes to light it constantly intersects with the main storyline and it affects his relationship with her, Jack and his boss.

Speaking of Jack, a lot of people are already speculating if Cole is the heir apparent to Bauer, but we’ve seen similar characters before with Agents Chase Edmunds (James Badge Dale) and Mike Doyle (Ricky Schroder). How similar or different is Cole from them?

They are always going to have certain things in common just because they always have a lot to learn. Jack’s been burned and these characters usually haven’t so in that regard you are stuck within those confines. What you really try to do is personalize it and have discussions with the writers and really try to figure out what makes this guy tick.

And what makes Cole tick?

Well because the show is taking place in New York, when I went and auditioned I played him as a local boy, a New Yorker that was inspired by 9/11 events and joined the military for the right reasons. And even if that was sort of motivated by revenge it was quickly replaced by discipline and the ability to effectively execute a game plan. So the foundation that has failed Jack for the last seven seasons hasn’t failed Cole. It’s shaped Cole and built Cole.

Is he going to help or hinder Jack this season?

They have a lot of similarities in the fact that they are both ex-Marines and Cole holds the position that Jack held in season one – he is the head of filed operations for CTU. Where they differ is that the government has failed Jack numerous, numerous, numerous times. Cole is proud of who he is, so they butt heads a lot.

Ha! They always start that way but by midday the newbies yet broken. Is Cole in for a rude awakening?

Yeah. They told me they would destroy that suit of amour by the time the season is over to see what makes him tick. As his foundation starts to get chipped away and you see this kid’s morality get challenged he has to make choices all of a sudden that he’s never had to make and that’s what shapes you. They never tell you how it’s going to end; they just tell you it’s going to shatter. (Laughs)

In two weeks, Fancast talks to the new chief of staff Rob Weiss played by Chris Diamantopoulos and the President of the Islamic Republic of Kamistan Omar Hassan played by Anil Kapoor.

Source: Fancast.com

January 24, 2010

24 Preview: 8PM-9PM Video Clips









Source: cinemablend.com
(Thanks, 24Spoilers)

Annie Wersching on '24': Action role is 'just so fun'



 
If there was any doubt that Renee Walker is a Jack Bauer kind of gal, it evaporated last week when the 24 character cut off a Russian mobster's thumb.

"Gosh, I loved it," says Annie Wersching, when she learned what her character was supposed to do. "I was a huge fan of the show from the very beginning, so I was immediately like, 'Oh, my God, I kind of have a hacksaw moment.' " (Renee used a small power saw; Jack, as fans such as Wersching know, used a hacksaw to cut off the head of a man he killed in Season 2.)

Even before Renee went digital, fans of 24 (Fox, tonight, 9 ET/PT) were calling her "Jacqueline Bauer" for the power and intensity she has shown in bringing wrongdoers to justice. Kiefer Sutherland, who plays the iconic Jack, credits Wersching for pulling that off.

"If she's sitting absolutely still, even if her eyes aren't moving, there's a fire you can feel in there. There's a real energy," Sutherland says. "(Executive producer) Howard Gordon's idea, and what I thought would have been really interesting, was to have a female kind of Jack Bauer, someone who can handle themselves that well, (and) they would have a chemistry, because there are very few people that can do those kinds of things. All of that, she's just amazing."

St. Louis native Wersching, 32, who has a degree in musical theater, appeared on General Hospitaland had numerous TV guest roles when she was cast in Company Man, a pilot made by 24 veterans. "I played the wife of the lead. It could not have been more different from Renee. She was quiet and meek." That led to the Renee audition. When she got the role, she says she was told, "We had no idea that person was in there somewhere as well."

Wersching, who grew up playing sports and performing Irish dance, has the physicality needed for a demanding action role, Sutherland and Gordon say.
"A lot of the stuff with fights and moving around (is) more like choreography than anything else, and just so fun," says Wersching, who acted in an independent film, Below the Beltway, between her two 24 seasons.

Renee started last season as a law-and-order foil to Jack, before adapting more of his hard-edged approach to law enforcement. By the time she returned last week, she had lost her boss and her job, and appeared on the verge of losing her soul. Brought back in for an undercover assignment, she doesn't seem to care if she lives or dies.

"She's a wild card, and that can be more dangerous, because you don't know what she's going to do," Wersching says.

Life only gets messier in upcoming episodes, as Renee risks her life, and Jack, who had planned to move far away from the Counter Terrorist Unit, does all he can to keep her alive. "That was really Jack Bauer's involvement this year, Jack's perceived responsibility for who she is and what she's become that brings him back into this story in a really charged way," Gordon says.

As the season's stakes rise, so will emotions. "Renee knows Jack in a way no other woman ever has. She understands Jack in a way no other woman ever has," Gordon says. And, he adds, " 'romantic' isn't necessarily the wrong word" to describe their feelings.

Whatever the relationship is, it won't be traditional, Wersching says. "She has absolutely nothing to live for at the start of this day and, throughout, Jack is trying to help her, trying to be there for her," she says. "It's never going to be your stereotypical romance. It's going to be their own twist on things, but I think the question definitely comes up as to whether or not he is for her something to live for, and her for him."

Renee Walker is a "female kind of Jack Bauer," says Kiefer Sutherland. "She's a wild card," says Wersching.

AddictedTo24 Exclusive: Thoughts About Season 8 Premiere



 


****SPOILER ALERT: IF YOU HAVE NOT YET SEEN THE 24 SEASON 8 PREMIERE, THIS ARTICLE CONTAINS SPOILERS****


Jack Bauer: "What have you done?!..."This is over!"

Renee Walker: "I'm just getting started." 

Episode 4, 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm


Well, it's finally here! The season premiere 24 season 8.

First off, I'd like to say I haven't enjoyed a premiere as much as this one since the premiere of season 5. It is amazing to me that after being on since 2001, this show continues to do a great job of drawing the viewer in and leave you wanting more.

Here are some initial observations and thoughts I had about the first 4 hours:

New York Setting: I absolutely love the new season being set in NYC. New York City definitely does fit the energy of 24 and Jack Bauer.

Jack As A Grandpa: It was good to see Jack in a happy place for a change at the beginning of the season. Retired and babysitting his granddaughter; certainly a very different place for Jack Bauer. A very sweet scene between them when he's trying to find a cartoon for Teri to watch. I also liked later in episode 2 where she sees him at CTU and she gives him the picture she drew. Very sweet and very unusual for 24.

Peace Conference/Assassination Threat Storyline: I like this storyline as well. Rather than a big threat such as a nuclear bomb, bioweapon or nerve gas, I thought it was a good idea for the threat to be against one person, President Hassan. Shades of Season 1, which I loved. The threat is similar as in season 1, but different too because it involves a world leader rather than a U.S. Senator.

The New CTU New York: Really like the new high-tech CTU New York. Very cool on using the drones to monitor the city. I really like the whole look and feel of the new CTU. I'm glad it's back too. The FBI was good last season but I missed CTU.

New CTU Characters: Not sure yet what I think of the new CTU characters. I need to see them in more episodes but in general I'm liking them. The Dana Walsh "I've got a secret past" storyline is somewhat interesting, but it's still so early, I can't make a judgment yet. I do like what I've seen so far of the Freddie Prinze, Jr. character, Cole Ortiz. It was good how he maneuvered his car to help save President Hassan and then when the Russian assassin (Davros) had him hostage I liked how he told CTU he was with him knowing he would being killed. Of course, Jack came in at that moment and blew the assassin away! :) Arlo who works the drones at CTU hasn't had much screen time yet (other than flirting with Dana Walsh) so I don't know what to make of him yet. He didn't know who Jack Bauer was! Where has he been?

They Pull Jack Back In (Again): This isn't exactly a new storyline, Jack has been out of government service before and has been pulled back in, but this time he is more reluctant than ever to be of service to CTU. I like how gradually, little by little Jack helps out and gets pulled further and further back in.

Kim and Jack: I know there are a lot of fans who never really liked Kim Bauer, but I was never one of them. There were times she drove me crazy but I always liked the character. I really enjoyed the scene between Jack and Kim when her family went by CTU to see Jack and she told him to go back into CTU and help Chloe.

I wasn't expecting Kim to do that and what I liked about it was that she finally showed some maturity and understood Jack's sense of duty. She knew if something happened and the assassination threat succeeded, Jack would regret not trying to do anything to stop it.

This scene was very well written and acted by Kiefer Sutherland and Elisha Cuthbert. My favorite scene of the first two episodes.

Jack and Chloe: Another good scene prior to the Kim/Jack scene was when Jack was leaving and Chloe begged him to stay and help her. I liked how she brought up all the times she's helped Jack and did a lot of crazy things for him and she never let him down. Jack still said no, which surprised me. I really felt bad for Chloe when Jack rejected her like that.

New CTU Director: I think I'm actually going to like the new CTU Director, Brian Hastings but right now he's driving me nuts because he's SO dense! He is certainly no Bill Buchanan. I really like the actor who plays him so I think I will grow to like the character. How many CTU Directors is this now who won't listen to Jack?

Awesome Jack Bauer Kill: One of the best all-time Jack Bauer kills in episode 1: sudden ax to the chest! Epic! The fall from the staircase by one of the bad guys was excellently shot as well.

The Return of Renee Walker: What can you say about Renee's return? Wow! She is certainly not the by-the-book FBI agent we saw at the beginning of Season 7. I love everything about the turn this character has taken so far. From her awkward conversation with Chloe when she first arrives to CTU, to her reunion with Jack Bauer and briefing at CTU.

This character has certainly been through a great deal to say the least since she was fired by the FBI. Clearly damaged and more dangerous, Renee put all this on display with what she did to Ziya at the end of episode 4. Renee at this point reminds me very much of Jack at the beginning of season 2.

It appears Renee had her "I'm gonna need a hacksaw" moment in the closing moments of episode 4. I think she even scared Jack after what she did to Ziya! Jack clearly has his hands full trying to keep this one under control.

Final Thoughts About Premiere: As I mentioned at the beginning, I haven't enjoyed a 24 premiere more since season 5. I am really pumped for this season and I am really looking forward to seeing what happens with all the storylines.

I can finally look forward to Monday's now!

-By 24FanForever

January 23, 2010

24 Season 8 "I'm Not Bluffing" Promo

Amazing 24 Season 8 Promo, aired 1/23. Lots of awesome Jack Bauer action! Check out what he does with those spark plugs LOL! http://twitter.com/24spoilers



Thanks, 24Spoilers

January 22, 2010

24: Five Ways Jack Bauer Has Changed Television

As 24 returns for an eighth series, Patrick Smith explains its TV legacy.

By Patrick Smith
Published: 5:43PM GMT 21 Jan 2010


A DAY IN THE LIFE: Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland) in the action-packed thriller 24

On Sunday on Sky1, Jack Bauer, the maverick counter-terrorism agent played by Kiefer Sutherland, returns for the eighth and reportedly final series of 24. Since it first aired in the US in 2001, the compulsive thriller has won millions of viewers thanks to its taut plots, explosive action sequences and innovative format. (For the uninitiated, each series of 24 follows a single day in the life of Bauer and his Counter Terrorism Unit colleagues as they foil various outlandish terrorist plots. These preposterously eventful days – in which no one ever appears to sleep or go to the lavatory – play out in “real time” over 24 hour-long episodes.)

24 is now broadcast in more than 50 countries, has won 17 Emmys, and has influenced dozens of subsequent shows. So as Jack Bauer prepares to save the world yet again, here are five ways 24 has changed television:

1) Movie stars on the small screen
Alongside Martin Sheen in The West Wing, Kiefer Sutherland (Stand by Me, The Lost Boys) was one of the first of a recent wave of Hollywood actors to take a starring role in a long-running television drama. The success of 24 made Sutherland the best-paid actor on television (he reportedly earns $550,000 per episode). During the last decade a host of actors best-known for working in film followed Sutherland’s lead by transferring to the small screen. They include Glenn Close (Damages), Tim Roth (Lie to Me), Gabriel Byrne (In Treatment) and Alec Baldwin (30 Rock).

2) Helped create “box-set DVD culture”
Nowadays it is commonplace for viewers to watch complex, long-running TV dramas (especially American ones) on DVD, so that they can watch episodes at a time and pace that suits them. 24 was one of the first dramas to be avidly followed in this way: fans were so hooked by its suspenseful plots they preferred to buy a whole series on DVD and then watch it in multi-episode binges. Indeed, on its release, the first series of 24 shot to the top of the UK DVD charts, outselling The Lord of the Rings. This was the first time a non-feature-length DVD had taken top spot. Thanks to the show’s “real-time” format, 24 episodes are well-suited to being watched on DVD: some square-eyed fans sit through a whole series in 24 hours, or watch the DVDs at 24-themed parties. (The series has even inspired a drinking game, in which viewers must drink a shot every time Jack Bauer says, “Damn it.” Bauer’s episode record is 14 “Damn its”.) DVD sales of 24 haven’t waned: 154,000 copies of Series 7 have been sold in the UK and 4,000 Bauer completists have bought the ultimate box-set (Series 1-7) since it went on sale in October.

3) Brought Hollywood production values to television
In previous decades, the stunts and action set-pieces in the average TV drama couldn’t hold a candle to those seen in the cinema. But with its slick editing (including a now much-copied split-screen storytelling device) and Hollywood-sized budgets (each episode costs several million dollars to make) 24 has raised the bar for TV dramas. In 24 aeroplanes blow up, nuclear bombs detonate and characters are menaced by cougars (all on camera). Now fans of US TV dramas expect 24’s Hollywood-style production values, forcing series such as Lost, Heroes and FlashForward to operate on a similarly blockbusting scale.

4) Courted political controversy
Despite its absurdly OTT plots, 24 tries to reflect current political issues, even to the point of controversy. (In fact, in some cases it’s tapped into the zeitgeist so well it now seems eerily prescient, e.g. its very first episode, made a year before 9/11, showed a terrorist blowing up a jumbo jet. Series 1 also features a black American President.)
More controversially, 24 also shows Jack Bauer employing ends-justifies-the-means torture methods to extract information from those in his way. During the Bush administration US interrogation methods became a political talking point – as did Jack Bauer. In 2008, 24 was widely criticised by leading US politicians after barrister Philippe Sands wrote a book about Guantánamo Bay in which military officials cited the series as an inspiration for what happened there (Bauer, one officer claimed, “gave people a lot of ideas”). Other TV dramas have since taken note: the writers of Spooks, for example, now edit their scripts as close as possible to broadcast to make the political storylines more topical.

5) Reinvented the cliff-hanger
The average episode of 24 contains more twists, turns and cliff-hangers than most dramas get through in a series. As an illustration, over the previous seven series Bauer has been: abducted by the Chinese government; become addicted to heroin; saved the world from a corrupt president; been seemingly killed (twice); and murdered 225 people. This ludicrous plot overload is one of the reasons the series is so compelling: the viewer is bombarded with dozens of major (and frequently unexpected) plot developments to keep them constantly guessing. Dramas such as Lost and Heroes work in a similar way. Like Jack Bauer and 24, they refuse to allow the viewer a moment’s respite from the suspense.

24 is on Sunday on Sky1/Sky1HD at 9.00pm 

Two New Promos For Episode 5 - 1/25/10





Source: 24season8videos.blogspot.com

January 21, 2010

Cherry Jones Interview

Cherry Jones says episodes 15, 16, & 17 of 24 Season 8 are among the best in the entire series:

[Can't WAIT!!]



Source: TV.com 

(Thanks, 24Spoilers)

Extended Scene From Season 8, Episode 4

***SPOILER ALERT TO THOSE WHO HAVE NOT SEEN EPISODE 4 YET***



Source: spoilertv.com

24’s Annie Wersching Has a Bloody Good Time



By William Keck January 19, 2010 04:12 PM EST

24's two night four-hour premiere event concluded with Kiefer Sutherland's Jack Bauer witnessing Renee Walker's brutal amputation of a mobster's thumb (and a good chunk of hand too!) To lighten the mood on set, Annie whipped out her iPhone and snapped a silly shot of her goofing around with her victim - and his fake prosthetic thumb.

“I love taking wacky pictures on set," Annie tells me. "We actually had some problems with the fake saw that was supposed to look like it was cutting his hand and spurting blood up against his face and mine. The blood just drizzled out, so the director was like, ‘NO, we need more spurting on the face!’”

Annie was all too willing to reshoot the scene. Watch out for this one!

Source: tvguidemagazine.com

January 20, 2010

Anil Kapoor - 24 Season 8 Interview

Anil Kapoor video interview where he reveals a VERY exciting scene he filmed with Kiefer:



Source: YouTube and FOX Source 
(Thanks, 24Spoilers)

January 19, 2010

Kiefer Sutherland Interview from 24 NYC Premiere Screening (FOX 5 NYC)



Source: YouTube


Thanks, Lisa (@K2293) for recording this

Annie Wersching: I love playing Dark Renee!

January 19, 2010 ι Jarett Wieselman


Last year, "24" introduced us to by-the-book, tough as nails FBI agent Renee Walker. But after the events of Day seven -- where Renee was forced to shatter protocol, abide torture and watch as her boyfriend perished at the hands of terrorists -- a new, angrier Renee has emerged. And Dark Renee (as fans will inevitably call her) promises to ratchet up the tension, drama and bloodshed in season eight!

The fourth-hour of "24's" season premiere painted Renee as the most dangerous player in this year's terrorist plot -- not because she's aligning with the forces of evil, but because she's a wild card with nothing to lose!

I chatted with Annie Wersching about her character's redirect to the dark side and found that she's not only loving the change, but can't wait until fans see how far Renee actually takes it this season!

PopWrap: How much fun are you having playing this new Dark Renee?
Annie Wersching: Oh my god, I am loving it! I really am. I loved where she got to go last season -- Renee had such a great arc from where she started to where she ended -- but when I found out the plan for this year, I couldn't believe they thought of more!

PW: Were you apprehensive about turning this character on her head?
Annie: I definitely wasn't nervous -- even last year when she would do something that was a little Jack Bauer-esque, it obviously affected her. So I think that laid such great groundwork for this season and I totally embrace it.

PW: Last night we saw that Renee had been dodging Jack -- why?
Annie: Not only was she fired from the FBI, but she lost her career, her partner and absolutely had nothing to live for. So when she got word that Jack was OK, I think she realized he was in a good place and she was not. Renee probably felt that she wasn't good for him at that point.

PW: And now? Do you think after all is said and done Jack and Renee could still walk into the sunset together?
Annie: Totally! I think this new Renee just adds a really cool dynamic to their relationship. They went through a lot last year and made a deep connection in just one day. Now he needs to keep tabs on her because, A) Jack cares about Renee and B) he's probably thinking, "what have I created?"

PW: So you're fully Team Renee, not Team Audrey?
Annie: Definitely! Audrey Rains can stay wherever she is in that catatonic state! [laughs]

PW: Obviously, last night's "impromptu amputation" is just the beginning of things to come for Dark Renee, right?
Annie: Oh yeah. I seriously can hardly contain myself and wait for everyone to see what's coming next! I'll admit I was a little bummed not to be in the first three episodes, but Renee comes back with a big enough bang that it was more than OK!

PW: So what can you tease about future episodes?
Annie: I really love the Russian storyline that starts out the new season. Renee gets deeper undercover and goes to some pretty ugly places. Jack also comes in as her arms dealer, so he goes undercover as a German, so now they're both together in the underworld, completely undercover.

PW: Lots of characters have been so badly burned by the events of one day they return the next season with the potential to switch sides, do you think Renee would ever turn against Jack?
Annie: I don't think she would ever be a Tony -- but then again, you never know! We're only on episode 18, so we'll see. But I think the reason she's so completely dangerous this year is because she has nothing to lose! She doesn't care if this mission kills her and that's what Jack is really worried about, that Renee will just lose herself in this undercover world. Because the only thing more dangerous than a hero or a villain is the wild card!

"24" airs Mondays at 9 pm on Fox
 
Source: NYPost.com


Source: fox.com/24/sprint

Scenemaker: Season 8, Episode 3



Source: YouTube and FOX Broadcasting

January 18, 2010

Sutherland 'turning into 'Jack Bauer

Monday, January 18 2010, 7:56am EST
By Dan French, TV Editor

Sutherland 'turning into Jack Bauer'
WENN

Kiefer Sutherland's 24 co-star Anil Kapoor has said that he is turning into his alter ego Jack Bauer.

Speaking during a conference call, Kapoor - Omar Hassan on the real-time drama - also praised Sutherland for making him feel part of the team.

"I'd heard a lot about Kiefer before I started and in my head, I imagined he'd be a bit slack because he's been working on the show for eight seasons," he said.

"But when I came on set, I felt as if this was his first season - the same enthusiasm and excitement was there. I was taken aback by his commitment and professionalism. He's become more Jack Bauer than Kiefer Sutherland!"

Kapoor added that Sutherland paid him compliments, which helped to relax him when he started on set.

"The first time he met me, he said he has seen Slumdog Millionaire and he liked my work so that eased my nerves a bit. He paid me compliments and relaxed me," he said.

"There was a certain kind of respect for my work that I've done in India. He never made me feel like an outsider, and that was really great."

24 continues tonight at 8pm on Fox.

Source: digitalspy.com

Scenemaker: Season 8, Episode 1



Source: YouTube and FOX Broadcasting

January 17, 2010

Sneak Peek: Season 8



Source: fox.com/24/sprint

Early TV Review: 24 - SEASON EIGHT - 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. - Season Premiere (iF Magazine)



The four-hour, two-night event is all the good things you would expect from a new season of the venerable series, plus New York is in the mix for the first time

Grade: B+

Stars: Kiefer Sutherland, Mary Lynn Rajskub, Cherry Jones, Annie Wersching, , Mykelti Williamson, Katee Sackoff, Freddie Prinz Jr.

By CARL CORTEZ, Contributing Editor
Published 1/17/2010

Each new season of 24 brings its out set of problems. While there will always be the constant of Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland) and Chloe O’Brian (Mary Lynn Rajskub), with the addition of so many new characters and settings (last year it was D.C., this year New York), in many respects you’re watching a whole new show each new season.

But one of the brilliant things about the format and the venerable show itself, is that these re-inventions continue to keep the show fresh and re-invigorated.

Plus, Fox, for many years now, has employed the four-hour, two night event strategy, which essentially gives you enough time to up to speed with all the different characters, set some major events in motion and of course, end with a huge bang so you’re hooked for the rest of the twenty hours.

This year, the show moves to New York and actually finds Jack in a happy place. He’s recovered from the radiation effects of his heroics last year and is now playing the dutiful grandfather to daughter Kim’s (Elisha Cuthbert) new baby girl.

Of course, nothing is easy for Jack. Trouble finds him as a Russian lackey ends up on his doorstep wanting immunity for the information he has regarding an assassination attempt on a Middle Eastern President Omar Hassan (SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE’S Anil Kapoor) while negotiating peace talks at the U.N. with President Taylor (Cherry Jones).

Jack wants nothing to do with it – he’s already agreed to get on a plane and go back to Los Angeles with his daughter and leave his do-gooding ways behind. Yet, as much as he gets away from things, he gets pulled right back in. He agrees to transport the lackey back to the newly reformed New York CTU and then will leave after that.

Don’t count on things turning out the way Jack expects.

Since this is an early review, it’s not fair to spoil the first two hours, let alone the full four (which I’ve seen), so I won’t get into heavy details, otherwise it will spoil the surprises ahead. Suffice to say, it’s a whopper opening to a show that continually proves to have new life in it.

Chloe is back, this time rejoining CTU because her husband was recently laid off. She doesn’t really want to be there, but she grins and bears it. Providing some ample comic relief, is that this is the first time the technology is greater than Chloe and she has a hard time moving as fast as everyone else. It’s a nice turnabout to her know-it-all abilities she’s had since the beginning on the show.

Still, one thing that Chloe does know, from working with Jack over the years, is smelling rats and traps. So, even if Chloe isn’t as fast as she used to be, she also has the street smarts to figure out when something is rotten in Denmark, and it leads to a sort of redemption before the four hours are over.

Of the new characters, there’s new head of CTU Brian Hastings (Mykelti Williamson) who is a bit of a buffoon and who manages to hide his failings from others by keeping everything close to the vest. Freddie Prinze Jr. fits in nicely as CTU agent Cole Ortiz who has great respect for Jack, and I can’t wait to see these two pair up down the road. Cole’s fiancée is CTU analyst Dana Walsh (BATTLESTAR GALACTICA’s Katee Sackoff) who has a deep dark past. And there’s the various people surrounding the president and assorted bad guys too numerous to mention until this episode has aired.

One of the strong points of this season, is the seamless way the writers have found a way to bring Jack back into CTU, but without it being a burden or an immediate “this guy is too rouge.” It’s a satisfying variation, and continues to prove why Jack is the best at what he does.

New York, as a character, also brings a nice little change of pace. There’s different obstacles with a city like this, including unforgiving N.Y. cops who act on emotion, rather than asking questions first. It proves to be a nice little obstacle for Jack during the course of the premiere.

Whereas last year felt like the great conspiracy thriller movies of the ‘70s (THREE DAYS OF THE CONDOR, ALL THE PRESIDENT’S MEN), this season, while still dark, has a brighter feel to things augmented by Jack Bauer smiling for the first time in many a moon.

The new CTU also has a slight futuristic feel (with one element in particular felling like it’s straight out of DOCTOR WHO). It’s very cool looking, and again, adds to the unique feel of this season.

For anyone who has enjoyed 24 over the years, they can respect how, every year, the show comes back better than ever. Even when there’s some rocky detours (remember the rocky Season Six), it’s still one of the most compelling and enjoyable series currently on television.

With an unconventional format that audiences have embraced and a continuous run of its 24 episodes, 24 is appointment TV and if Season Nine is any indication, the show has enough energy to sustain itself for a few more years to come if the producers (and Fox) decide to keep the show going.



Source: ifmagazine.com

24's Jack Bauer - the New American Superhero


By Tara Bennett
posted: 17 January 2010 12:12 pm ET

Sometimes it almost seems impossible that Jack Bauer (played by Kiefer Sutherland), the iconic hero of Fox’s mega-popular action hit “24,” started out as a pretty average guy.

Back in 2001 when the experimental real-time show debuted, Bauer was just the smart, well-trained Head of Field Ops for the Los Angeles Division of CTU (Counter Terrorist Unit). He was also a husband in a damaged marriage and the father of a typical rebellious teen. Yet in the seven ensuing seasons, Jack’s ability to thwart cataclysm after cataclysm has evolved the character into a modern day American superhero, the kind that could have easily originated from the pages of classic sequential art.

At the dawn of Jack’s eighth very bad day (the new season debuts with a two-part, four hour premiere on Jan. 17 and 18), it becomes clear that Bauer really launched into the realm of superhero after the murder of his wife, Teri, in the last moments of season one. Before that Jack had just been a wily, resolute hero with a passion for justice. After Teri’s death, he instantly morphed into a tragic hero who lost what was most precious to him in exchange for the safety of no less than the country.

From that moment on Jack shared the burden of so many traditional superheroes, from Spider-Man to Superman, who trade personal sacrifice for the greater good. Just in Jack’s case, the subsequent extreme days of peril also revealed some liberal dashes of The Punisher thrown in too.

And even though Jack’s costumes of choice include no latex or shiny shields, his bulletproof vests, dark jackets (and the occasional messenger bag) have become just as synonymous to him as the cape and cowl are to Batman. Though many may argue that Bauer’s “powers” of deduction, freakish bravery and dogged persistence against the enemy don’t have the pure comic book originations of say the bite of a radioactive spider, experimental serums or a metallic suit, in the eyes of the audiences that adore him around the world he’s no less potent or relied upon to bring evil down wherever it lurks.

The funny thing is that behind the scenes at “24” it’s now become a constant struggle for the entire creative team to prevent Jack Bauer from simply becoming the boundless superhero that the world at large accepts him to be. “24” executive producer and showrunner Howard Gordon admits that grounding the series in some semblance of reality by creating credible boundaries for Jack against the backdrop of the threat of nuclear destruction, bio-warfare genocide, or as is the case this season an assassination attempt that could impact world stabilization, is no walk in the park.

“I think it happens with any show where the thing threatens to become a parody of itself,” Gordon explains. “You have to grow the character and be mindful of that but also deliver what people come to expect. I think it’s a fine line that you know when you see it. And sometimes maybe we dip our toe over the line. Kiefer acknowledges it too. He’s established this iconic trademark character and it’s a potential hazard, but I think we’ve minded it fairly well.”

Maintaining that balance is where comic book heroes and their creators live all the time as their stories unfold, so it’s no surprise “24” is in the thick of that creative quandary too. The best comic book arcs are the ones that create real consequences no matter how outlandish the premise, and the best seasons of “24” are the ones that play out that thru line as well. And like the hero-centric books where characters can rise above instances of weak story, “24’s” remains such a dominant force because the show continues to orbit around the character of Jack Bauer and the man who plays him.

Executive producer and primary season eight series director Brad Turner says Kiefer really is the key.

“I think it’s the fact that he humanizes the character so much,” the director muses. “This guy has been a drug addict, screwed things up and is partly responsible for his wife’s demise. This character has flaws and [Kiefer] doesn’t mind playing the character that way and that’s one of the reasons we feel he could be the guy flying the plane or the helicopter or the guy driving the bus with kids to school. He’s not Spider-Man. Spider-Man can really do anything. But he’s kind of Spider-Man the bus driver, but he never puts his suit on. He’s so accessible and I think it’s why people really relate to his character. And he is great because I’ve seen him protect that character like I’ve never seen an actor protect a character. If we aren’t doing the right thing for [Jack], he will correct us and that’s a great thing. He’s now a person that you can actually believe that exists and live down the street from you. I think the first episode of [season eight] really exemplifies that more than anything because he’s just a grandpa. He’s not a superhero, he’s just a grandpa.”

“Jack is emotionally happy for the first time since season four,” Gordon confirms. That’s a turn in tone that’s just about as shocking as the nuclear bomb detonated on domestic soil in season six.

For his part, Sutherland says he loves that Jack is again motivated by very personal motivations. “Certainly in episode one of season eight, everything is tied to the fact that he is rebuilding a relationship with his daughter [Kim Bauer] and he is developing a relationship with his granddaughter. All of a sudden you’ve taken Jack from this very dark place that he’s been in for a number of years and you’ve given him a great deal of hope. So everything that happens to him over the course of this day, there is something great at stake. Again the motivation for Jack in almost every season up until now has been to run into the burning building and this year he is trying to stay out of the burning building so it’s a nice dynamic shift.”

But as day eight devolves into the chaos viewers have come to know and love, Sutherland says Jack’s convictions are what will see him through even when circumstances are at their most dire. “I think one of the things that I’ve always loved about Jack Bauer is that he never was a hero to me. The character is not a black and white character. He lives in a very murky, grey world. He saves the [future] President of the United States but he loses his wife. It’s not clear-cut for him. He doesn’t win the day in the conventional sense. There’s always collateral damage and there’s always something he doesn’t manage to protect. What grounds Jack to reality is that this is a character that regardless of whether he is always right or not, believes that what he is doing is the right thing to do and is doing it from a very good, sincere, honest place. As long as you try to play that cleanly the rest should follow...I hope,” he smiles.

And that to Howard Gordon is what makes Jack and “24” worth watching.

“He is a hero,” Gordon says emphatically. “You feel safe with him. You kind of want him on your side but you don’t want to go up against him. He cuts through the bullshit and those are attractive things.”

Source: Newsarama.com

January 15, 2010

Anil Kapoor Interview (Today Show)



Source: today.msnbc.msn.com

Kiefer Sutherland on a '24' movie, season 8 and that dress



 We caught up with Kiefer Sutherland last night at the New York premiere of 24’s eighth season. The star (and executive producer) gave some hints about the NY-set season 8 (premiering Sunday) and the possible 24 feature film. He also addressed (pun intended) his Wednesday night appearance on David Letterman.

On changes in Jack: In Season 8, we’ll see a more hopeful Jack Bauer than we’ve  seen before, as the prospect of starting a family again (SPOILER ALERT: Jack’s a Grandpa now!) makes him initially averse to diving back into the world of CTU-style intrigue. “In Seasons 1 through 7, Jack Bauer runs into the burning building. In this season, he’s trying desperately to stay away from the burning building.”

On that dress: Yes, he feels humiliated. If he’d won the bet, his friend would have had to wear a dress to his eight-year-old son’s baseball game. Which, in his opinion, is much worse than being humiliated on national TV.

On the future of 24: He wants a ninth season, and he’s also thinking about the movie:

“What excites me about the idea of doing the 24 film is that it would be a two-hour representation of a 24-hour day, so we would not be restricted by the time limits of going from 6th Avenue to 10th Avenue in three minutes. As you watch this season, in this amazing 24-hour period, New York is functioning perfectly. Unless of course we run into a traffic jam, and then it’s not.

“If we did a film, it would be very feasible to get from Eastern Europe to England in the course of a 24-hour period. Planes, trains, automobiles, things that we’ve never been able to do before. Any time you change the physical dynamic of where we’re shooting, I think it becomes that much more interesting to the audience.

“I’ve always felt that [the movie and the TV show] can both co-exist. I actually tried to convince a few people of this. In a media world that is changing unbelievably fast, a television series can either act as a great trailer for a film, or a film can act as a great trailer for a television series. And I think the first person who actually does that is going to change the way television interacts with feature films.

“I think the resistance to it is because, in my father’s generation, if you did films, you didn’t even think about television. That was a death knell. And if you did television, you wouldn’t be allowed to do films. That was when we had three networks. We have six hundred now, and if I want to see Paul Newman in a movie, I don’t have to go out. And so the game has changed. And I think we’re going to have to adjust with it.

“I love doing the series. The film would be different. I would love that opportunity, and so, we’ll have to see what happens with the series.”

For more coverage of 24, come back to EW.com on Sunday for interviews with the show’s supporting cast, including Mary Lynn Rajskub, Freddie Prinze, Jr., and Katee Sackhoff.

More 24 Season 8 Premiere Pictures (NYC) - 1/14/10

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Source: 24Forever