Alexander Skarsgård XVI

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Thanks Santress. Wow, did he take those shots with a macro lens? I can see just about every pore and hair on his face in the first one. Also, methinks Alex has a little man makeup on. Whatever. The photos from Roma are some of his best, even if his face was still looking a little thin.
 
Don't hate me but I'm going to have to root against the ancestral homeland and for Sweden. A win for Sweden will mean HappySkars (even if we don't get to see the pics).

We'll see tonight who'll be the last one standing. We've got home advantage. :sneaky: And even if they win it wouldn't mean we get to see the happy Alex.

Sort of O/T but since Skars refuses to indulge us with any more ladies for Free's collage, there is a nice, flattering feature piece on Alicia Vikander in this month's Elle magazine re her role in Anna Karenina. And no, it doesn't link her to Alex (or anyone), but I'll bring it back to him because Bill Skars is also in that film....she seems pretty grounded.

Bill got indeed cut from the movie. A tPF poster saw the movie and said he wasn't in it but the movie was in general crowded with characters and great actors were wasted in small parts. I have to say I also haven't read the best reviews about the movie.

Thanks Santress. Wow, did he take those shots with a macro lens? I can see just about every pore and hair on his face in the first one. Also, methinks Alex has a little man makeup on. Whatever. The photos from Roma are some of his best, even if his face was still looking a little thin.

I thought that too since they published the first pics from Rome. I think it isn't the first time he's using that. I noticed it because they tried to make his eyebrows darker so it doesn't look like he doesn't have some. It's subtle but you can tell. I guess he indulged a bit in Kristin's make-up artist.
 
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Oh, I love those pictures from the Roma Fiction Fest.

Maybe it's just me, but I think that those photos of Alex queuing for the toilets are pretty stalkerish. :shame:


I've met more than a few of my fellow Americans who can't tell Sweden from Switzerland. And apparently there really are Americans who think the US state of New Mexico is part of Mexico (bangs head on desk).



I see from the scan that they included dating and dating rumor pics (sigh).



Well, per an LATimes article from this spring, when he's at Joan's it's a meatloaf sandwich:

"Actor Alexander Skarsgard reportedly comes for the meatloaf sandwiches,"

http://articles.latimes.com/2012/apr/14/food/la-fo-joan-mcnamara-20120414

And thanks everyone for the architectural info.

So, you've met my new colleague? She firmly believes that Finland used to be part of the USSR and keeps telling us that she is surprised how well developed Europe is. Oh, and she denies the existence of Washington State which annoys my other colleague who is from Seattle. Happy times at the office!
So thanks to everybody for calming my nerves with all those lovely Alex-picture!
 
Oh, I love those pictures from the Roma Fiction Fest.

Maybe it's just me, but I think that those photos of Alex queuing for the toilets are pretty stalkerish. :shame:




So, you've met my new colleague? She firmly believes that Finland used to be part of the USSR and keeps telling us that she is surprised how well developed Europe is. Oh, and she denies the existence of Washington State which annoys my other colleague who is from Seattle. Happy times at the office!
So thanks to everybody for calming my nerves with all those lovely Alex-picture!

Whoa! You mean there's a state and a city called Washington? WTF?!!?! Next thing you tell me there's an Ireland and a Northern Ireland. And the thing about Europe? Well yeah, after we came out of our caves and discovered the fire we made great progressions.

Okay, which Waldorf school did she attend? Can she at least dance her name?
 
Whoa! You mean there's a state and a city called Washington? WTF?!!?! Next thing you tell me there's an Ireland and a Northern Ireland. And the thing about Europe? Well yeah, after we came out of our caves and discovered the fire we made great progressions.

Okay, which Waldorf school did she attend? Can she at least dance her name?

As far as I know she attended a high school somewhere in Tennessee, but maybe I need to double-check that. :D

To get back on topic: I took a quick look at the "InStyle Men"-magazine and the bit they did on Alex is really short, so I didn't spend € 5,- to buy the double mag-issue, but I will try and get hold of one here at work.
 
As far as I know she attended a high school somewhere in Tennessee, but maybe I need to double-check that. :D

To get back on topic: I took a quick look at the "InStyle Men"-magazine and the bit they did on Alex is really short, so I didn't spend € 5,- to buy the double mag-issue, but I will try and get hold of one here at work.

That's even more embarrassing. She doesn't even know the states of her own country. Following her logic the US only has 49 states. Or maybe she doesn't even know about Hawaii and Alaska and thinks it's just 47. If someone like that can get a job at your workplace I should try too, right? :D

I saw the mag too but only wrapped up with the normal InStyle. Won't buy it either.
 
From tumblr. It looks like his German GQ Style cover without the magazine lettering or a very similar outtake.

Alex-hotlads.jpg


(Source: Hotlads tumblr)

New interview:

MEN’S FASHION: Our exclusive interview with Alexander Skarsgard

BY DAVID LIVINGSTONE | OCTOBER 16TH, 2012 |

Alex-fashion.jpg


A pop phenomenon and a heartthrob, the Swedish actor can also be serious and low-key. Men’s FASHION editor-in-chief David Livingstone sits down with Alexander Skarsgard in New York

From the flow of his voice coming from behind the door, it’s evident that Alexander Skarsgard has taken to the role of spokesmodel with guileless good cheer.

As I sit outside a New York hotel suite, waiting in line to go face to face with the face of Encounter Calvin Klein ($87, thebay.com), this fall’s major new men’s fragrance, I can’t help hearing the interview before mine and thinking that the guy is not nearly as taciturn or inscrutable as he has been in the parts that have shaped his fame.

Born in Sweden in 1976, Skarsgard rose to North American stardom in 2008 with a one-two punch. On Generation Kill, an Emmy-winning HBO miniseries about the U.S. invasion of Iraq, he played a tight-lipped Marine nicknamed Iceman. After that came True Blood, the enthusiastically received HBO series (recently renewed for a sixth season) on which he plays an enigmatic vampire called Eric Northman.

When my turn comes, the man who meets me is not frosty but affable. Talk about friendly and warm! He even tells me, “I’ve had some good conversations, actually. It’s been journalists from all over the world, so that’s always fun.”

Skarsgard’s easygoing eagerness makes it impossible to begrudge his good looks. Tall, fine-featured and athletically built, he is spared from perfection only by a slight overbite, though even that has a page dedicated to it on Facebook.

As for the way he is dressed—white Calvin Klein shirt with Persol shades slung from its open neck, black Alexander Wang jeans, grey Converse high-tops—there is nothing to suggest it isn’t cool, except the way Skarsgard wears it, which is as if no thought of cool went into it.

However, Skarsgard did put thought into his decision to become a spokesmodel. “I’ve never done anything like this before. I’ve had some opportunities, but they haven’t felt right,” he says. “This one—just everything felt right about it. Calvin Klein is such a great house. I was flattered.”

Another reason for Skarsgard to participate in the Encounter campaign was the team working on it. He considers creative director Fabien Baron one of the best in the world. He had worked with photographer Steven Klein before, on a shoot for Interview magazine, and “had a blast.”

The film noir style of the campaign was another motivation. “The way they pitched Encounter, it almost sounded like something out of the German Expressionist movement, like an old Fritz Lang movie like M or Metropolis.”

Although True Blood has provided Skarsgard with a fan base in the Comic-Con culture, he is no stranger to high art. When asked about the current popularity of all things Scandinavian (from books to beer), he has no conclusive explanation, saying, “I just know that there’s a legacy in Sweden, with August Strindberg and Ingmar Bergman.”

Stellan Skarsgard, Alexander’s father and one of Sweden’s best-known actors, was directed by Bergman both in film and on stage, including one play that made use of a Skarsgard family photograph as part of a backdrop. Alexander jokes, “So I claim to have worked with Bergman too.”

There’s no fooling involved, however, when Skarsgard speaks of having acted in a 1999 Swedish film with Harriet Andersson, a Bergman alumna. He remembers it as an “amazing, amazing experience.”

Skarsgard’s taste in actors runs to the serious. He hasn’t worked with Isabelle Huppert, but that pale-faced French superstar is a favourite. He recalls seeing her in Michael Haneke’s The Piano Teacher and “being blown away.”

It’s “something very minimal” that he admires about Huppert’s talent, and that is also characteristic of Skarsgard’s own approach to drama. As a dim-witted male model in Zoolander, he may have put his overbite into overdrive, flashing a silly grin that brought Jim Carrey to mind, but he generally sticks to understatement. He took inspiration for his True Blood character from a lion he saw in a TV documentary. It was the animal’s “stillness” that mesmerized him: “You didn’t know if he was going to yawn and fall asleep, or pounce.”

In figuring out the nature of Northman, a vampire since 1077, Skarsgard says, “I wanted to capture someone so confident that he doesn’t have to go big to scare people.”

Remarkably for a guy who is six-foot-four and gigantically handsome, Skarsgard on screen manages a modest scale of reaction and gesture that is capable of evoking pity as well as fear. In Melancholia, by Danish director Lars von Trier, Skarsgard brought an affectingly innocent haplessness to the role of a bridegroom on whose wedding day his wife cheats and worlds are poised to collide.

In life, the collisions Skarsgard tracks are of the sporting variety. He’s a fan of European football and follows the NHL, “the best league in the world,” closely enough that he can rhyme off a list of Swedes who’ve played on Canadian teams, mentioning Mats Sundin, formerly with Toronto, and the Sedins, twin brothers with the Vancouver Canucks.

Vancouver also figured in Skarsgard’s itinerary. At our meeting in June, he told me that after wrapping up season five of True Blood in Los Angeles, and a quick trip to Sweden to hang out in Stockholm, he would be heading to British Columbia to work on Hidden, the first feature from filmmaking brothers Matt and Ross Duffer. Co-starring Andrea Riseborough, “a dear friend and a phenomenal actress,” the movie is about a family forced to seek refuge from a mysterious outbreak. Excited about the project and about being in Vancouver, Skarsgard says, “The only downside is I’ll spend the whole summer in a bomb shelter.”
http://www.fashionmagazine.com/blogs/society/2012/10/16/mens-fashion-the-talented-mr-skarsgard/
 
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