Michael Fassbender

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Haha omg just read that imdb post and I attended that event as well! Gugu was there it's true, I was like love-struck and kept staring at her, like to me she really was the most beautiful woman of the night. But alas I didn't get the occasion to talk to her nor spot her with Fassbender as the one on imdb did, I spotted her with Chiwetel for a few seconds as I passing by though. I managed to approach Chiwetel a bit later, we shook hands and I told him I admired his work and he was very polite and very nice, we suddenly started talking about our African roots and right there his girlfriend arrived with 2 glasses and we shook hands; I felt a bit like imposing and I said I had to find my colleagues and we hugged and he said "nice to talk to you, take care!" :yahoo:

I walked passed the Draco Malfoy dude and bumped into Lupita and fell in love with her dress, some red-orange colour, just stunning on her and I couldn't help but stop and ask who the designer was and she told me Bernardi (sorry I'm not good with fashion but dropping the name in case anyone is interested); then she asked me where I was from and liked my braids hehe; then she had to go, it was very brief like a couple of minutes or even less. I was about to reach the patio as I saw my boss towering over everyone when one tapped my shoulder from behind and said "Oi!???" I turned around it was Fassbender; he had his leather jacket on one hand and a drink on the other and basically the almost usual : we pointed at each other, laughed and hugged (dude had his old grey t shirt on!). Then he genuinely said "I see you an awful lot!" and asked about my job; then after explaining I told him TYAS was amazing and he said thank you and we high 5'd. I asked where was Brad and he laughed and he said he'd look around (Brad Pitt wasn't there so I take it that he was joking anyway), then I said I'd catch Idris the next day at the press conference and right there my boss yelled my name out of the patio crowd doing frantic sign language to join him, and Fassbender said "Oi! She's coming!" and my boss had a wtf look on his face it was hilarious. The he suddenly asked "hey how is your boyfriend?" and I said he's fine and he put a thumb up and after another high-5, I left with my boss as we had to attend another buyers late party, I thought it was on a Sunday but it was that Saturday... urgh! Buuuut I got to bump into Fassbender a couple of days later and once again :D
Gugu, Chiwetel, Michael...too many pretty people in one place. That's cute he asked about your bf. Future bromance.
 
Gugu, Chiwetel, Michael...too many pretty people in one place. That's cute he asked about your bf. Future bromance.

Haha no I doubt it (but yes boyfriend would be thrilled of course!); I think we're just the sort of people who bump into each other, share a good laugh and then that's it really. I know my post may look long but the convo with Fassbender was literally 5min max, I chatted much longer with Chiwetel.
 
Haha no I doubt it (but yes boyfriend would be thrilled of course!); I think we're just the sort of people who bump into each other, share a good laugh and then that's it really. I know my post may look long but the convo with Fassbender was literally 5min max, I chatted much longer with Chiwetel.
I would love to sit and talk with Chiwetel. He seems like someone you can chat with for hours. Just a classy guy. Was Steve there?
 
Chiwetel and crazy Michael playing paintball with the 12 Years crew.

paintball_zps9d866519.jpg


Does anyone think that the guy behind Chiwetel looks like Papa Fassy?
 
I would love to sit and talk with Chiwetel. He seems like someone you can chat with for hours. Just a classy guy. Was Steve there?

Yes Chiwetel really seems like that, and his answers and thoughts are very well placed (re-we were talking about Africa for a bit). Yes Steve McQueen was there, he was sitting in a corner. Really didn't try to approach him I was sort of scared :shame:
 
Chiwetel and crazy Michael playing paintball with the 12 Years crew.

paintball_zps9d866519.jpg


Does anyone think that the guy behind Chiwetel looks like Papa Fassy?
Yeah that's him.

Yes Chiwetel really seems like that, and his answers and thoughts are very well placed (re-we were talking about Africa for a bit). Yes Steve McQueen was there, he was sitting in a corner. Really didn't try to approach him I was sort of scared :shame:
I really think there's a sweet guy underneath that gruff exterior.
 
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbi...ent-week-thinking-going-axed-Woody-Allen.html

Confirmation that Slow West is going forward with MF, Kodi Smit-McPhee, and Ben Mendelsohn. Someone from Imdb posted a short synopsis from a casting notice:

Set at the end of the 19th Century, SLOW WEST is an American western filtered through the eyes of European filmmaking. The story centers on 17-year-old Jay who has travelled from Scotland to Colorado to be reunited with the woman with whom he is infatuated. He is quickly confronted by the dangers of the frontier and so teams up with a mysterious traveller named Silas, who agrees to protect him for cash. Jay’s journey is fraught with danger, double-crossing and violence as he comes to realize America is not easy on the innocent.

It shoots in November and December of this year, so MF won't be working the LA "awards circuit".
 
New interview.
Michael Fassbender wants you to know that he is not irreversibly drawn to playing twisted characters. In recent years, audiences have seen him play an IRA terrorist (The Hunger), a self-hating sex addict (Shame), and an evil android (Prometheus). His new film, The Counselor, directed by Ridley Scott, presents him in a slightly better light, that of an overly ambitious lawyer drawn into the highly lucrative yet dangerous world of drug trafficking.

“I suppose I haven’t played the most noble characters lately but they were all superbly tragic,” Fassbender says. “I think we’re all attracted to flawed people – we want to try to understand why we don’t always do the right thing or why life turns out to be much uglier than we want it to be. That’s what makes human beings so fascinating.”

In The Counselor, Fassbender’s lawyer soon finds that his dealings with Reiner, a drug lord played with delicious manic malevolence by Javier Bardem, may be more of a Faustian bargain that he imagined. Brad Pitt and Penelope Cruz also co-star in this tense drama based on a script by Cormac McCarthy, whose book No Country for Old Men was the basis for the Coen Bros. film of the same name that earned Bardem an Oscar.

The 36-year-old Fassbender has spent the summer working in Montreal where he is reprising his role as Magneto in Bryan Singer’s X-Men: Days of Future Past, co-starring Jennifer Lawrence and Hugh Jackman. The film is slated to be released next summer. In the meantime, the handsome Irish-German actor will be seen playing yet another villain in 12 Years a Slave, co-starring as a slave owner in 1841 Louisiana. The film is directed by Steve McQueen, whose Shame turned Fassbender into a major star as well as a sex symbol.

Michael Fassbender still maintains his principal residence in London. He is rumored to be dating British Olympian Louise Hazel although this summer in Montreal he was spotted at various times with an unidentified lithe blonde woman.

Michael, what’s it like having Penelope Cruz as your girlfriend in The Counselor and Javier Bardem playing opposite you as well?

Penelope is a wonderful actress and it’s of course a joy to work with her. They’re both incredibly talented and professional and I don’t think Javier was at all worried by my scenes together with Penelope. His character was sufficiently intimidating in the film that I wouldn’t have noticed whether there was any added factor that went into his performance. (laughs)

This film is based on a Cormac McCarthy script. Did Javier remind you at all of Chigurh, the evil guy he played in No Country for Old Men?

No, but he still has a strange haircut in this film, too, just not as weird. Javier laughed about his hair but I don’t think he suffered with it. He just wanted something to add to his character’s level of menace. It’s great to be able to work with Javier and see him transform his expression from inviting to vicious in a few seconds. That’s part of what makes him such a brilliant actor.

What drew you to this film?

Ridley Scott sent it to me and as soon as I had finished it, I told him I was in. The screenplay is brilliant with so many dark references and things going on underneath that you feel very much part of a world that seduces you and also frightens you. That’s part of the world that Cormac McCarthy likes to describe. And of course Ridley is a master director and one of the best in the business.

How would you describe your character?

My character is our way of getting inside this very strange world of drug dealing. He’s like a passenger along for a very dangerous ride that sees him and his girlfriend getting involved with very dangerous people. He has no idea what he’s getting involved with and that’s part of what makes the film very compelling.

Is he seduced by the money?

He’s seduced by the money and the glamor. He wants to be able to lead this kind of high life mixed with a bit of danger. His arrogance gets the better of him, however, and his greed is making him do things that he ordinarily never would have considered. It’s not going to be as easy and smooth a ride as he expects.

You actually wanted to become a lawyer when you were a teenager, didn’t you?

Yes. I was attracted to the idea of working as a barrister but I’m a slow reader and I began to realize that the profession requires reading a lot of thick files and going through law books day and night. So that discouraged me. Then I had ambitions of becoming an architect but that didn’t work out when I failed my technical drawing class. (laughs) Then acting came along when a former classmate of mine who was studying at the Irish Theatre School staged a play and offered me a role in it. So I was hooked from that moment on. I had always had an interest in acting ever since I saw Peter O’Toole in Lawrence of Arabia and as soon as I had the opportunity to perform. I immediately loved it.

You were also interested in becoming a musician?

That too! When I was 13 or 14 I started playing the guitar and I decided I was going to be a heavy metal guitarist. I tried forming my own band with a friend. But living in a small town we could never find a decent drummer. I thought I was a pretty decent guitarist until a friend of mine visited me and we started jamming in the garage. He suddenly launched into this incredible guitar solo and I saw that I wasn’t nearly as good as I needed to be. That was the end of my musical ambitions. (laughs)

You’ve been filming the new X-Men film this summer. What’s your take on it?

It’s been interesting to see characters from the different X-Men films all get together on this one. Audiences are going to love the way this story plays out. I’m very grateful to be able to go back to Eric (his character in X-Men) and be part of this incredible sci-fi world. The relationships and the characters are very well-developed and you enjoy the process that much more because you can add many layers to your character and it’s not just driven by the special effects.

How are you settling in your status as a sex symbol and movie star?

It’s much better than being a struggling actor! (laughs) I don’t think it’s affected how I live other than dealing with the paparazzi. But it’s more of a nuisance than something that affects how you live. I enjoy the good side of being recognized and having people tell you how much they appreciate your work. I’m about as happy as I can be the way things have worked out for me.

Is it hard to maintain relationships in this business?

What makes it difficult is the fact that you’re always working in a different part of the world and you simply don’t get to spend the time together you need to if you want to have a serious and committed relationship. I also wasn’t ready to make that kind of a commitment when my career was taking off and work became an obsession. I waited so long to have these kinds of opportunities I’m having now that I’ve been very focused on work.

It’s not fair to a woman to put your work ahead of everything and you feel guilty if you’re not giving someone the kind of attention you know you should be giving. And you can’t do that when you’re shooting a film for four or five months and then spending several more months on the road promoting it. But things are beginning to settle down now.

Your parents have been married for nearly forty years. Would you like to get married one day?

I’m not thinking about that right now. It’s difficult enough just being able to enjoy a relationship and find the kind of happiness you’re seeking from that. But I’m a romantic. I really would like to be able to enjoy spending time with a woman and enjoy sunsets on a beach or traveling through Europe and experiencing those kinds of moments.

Do you still enjoy traveling?

That’s one of my great passions. I took a motorcycle trip with my father in Europe a few years ago and I love being able to wander into different cities and experience the kind of wonder and escape you find in those moments.

Your father is German. Does that give you a greater sense of being European as well as Irish?

I would like to know more about German culture because I would like to improve my German. My parents are both fluent and they tried to teach me but living in Ireland made that hard. I would occasionally visit my grandparents in Germany while they were alive and that helped my German. It’s easy for me to follow a conversation in German and watch German films but it’s harder for me to speak it with any fluency. At some point I would love to make a film in Germany.

How difficult was it for you growing the son of a German father and having a German name in an Irish town?

(laughs) You have to suffer through a fair amount of teasing and it kind of toughens you because you’re forced to defend yourself against bullies. You also become tougher mentally because you learn to talk back and develop a smart mouth yourself and not be intimidated by the name-calling and taunts. You get a thick skin and I think that’s helped me over the years deal with the rejection you have as a struggling actor. You learn not to give up no matter what and that kind of attitude eventually paid off for me.
 
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What do you value most in life?

I think it’s a sense of freedom. That’s why I love riding my motorcycle and traveling so much. That frees me from the intensity I apply to my work and the characters I’ve been playing. Having worked a lot lately, I’m very conscious of taking time off to appreciate my life and finding out what makes me happy. All I need is a few books, my motorcycle, and my helmet! (laughs)

And when it comes to a woman?

I love a woman with a good sense of humor about life and a sense of independence. Someone who’s not jealous and possessive.
 
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