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This weekend the universe told me to post about how awesome Robert Carlyle is. It probably felt the need to prod me because I recently finished The Last Enemy and haven't yet publicly squeeed about how awesome it is that his character had not one line of dialogue in the first episode, but was still the scariest character pretty much ever.  I just typed out a huge spoiler and then backspaced it.  I loved the entire thing, and hopefully there will be spoilers in the comments here as anyone else who watched it chimes in, but I'm going to leave the body of the entry spoiler-free, just in case.

So I was in an art supply store just wandering around looking for present ideas, and I picked up this book:



and flipped to the middle-ish, caught a flash, ended up a few pages earlier, and thought, 'hey, that was Robert Carlyle'.  Sure enough, one of the 30 Great Ads was the Johnnie Walker ad - The Man Who Walked Around the World.

I'm sure most of you have probably seen it, but it's totally worth a re-watch and, hey, he did it in one take, so he deserves a little extra worship from us.  Edited to add - oh dear, apparently RC did any number of takes and was willing to keep going - so he not only presents us with a single, flawless take in the end, but we can now all pine away for the outtakes...



Oh, hey, is anyone watching Perception on TNT?  I was all - Hey!  A Numb3rs knockoff!  Sweet! - so now I'm catching up.

Date: 2012-08-04 03:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chloris.livejournal.com
I approve of the universe! It has good taste. :D

I watched The Last Enemy a few months ago and found the ending quite bleak. (and felt rather closed in as I watched) I did love how Carlyle managed to convey menace without even any dialog - though I must admit I ended up not sure of what he wanted in all of it, though that's an issue writing not in acting.

As for the Johnnie Walker video - it is quite awesome. Even though it took two days for them to get a flawless take it was still one camera continuously rolling as he talked which means he had to get the whole thing completely right from beginning to end. I posted about it back in December when I first watched it: a picspam, some facts, and excerpts from an interview with the director. It turns out their biggest problem was that one of the props was in the wrong place and was screwing up his timing. As soon as they fixed it he did it perfectly.

Date: 2012-08-04 06:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] impulsereader.livejournal.com
I was honestly really pleased that they gave TLE the bleakest possible ending. Television doesn't do that terribly often, and given the premise of the series it was completely appropriate to break the mold in this instance.

I agree that his character was - I'll go with 'mysterious to the point of confusion'. It seemed to me that the writers kept his motivations murky on purpose in order to use him to keep things moving.

The video is amazing, and your post is excellent!

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