Entertainment
Key changes, karaoke and the importance of timing: The 2025 Grammys roundtable
Thoughts on the visual appeal of musical waveforms. Memories of the late Quincy Jones. Debate over the role of peer pressure in the popularity of New Kids on the Block. These were among the points of pre-roundtable chitchat on a recent afternoon in West Hollywood when The Times gathered five musicians nominated for prizes at February’s 67th Grammy Awards.
Our panelists:
• Songwriter Amy Allen, 32, who’s nominated for songwriter of the year for her work with Sabrina Carpenter, Olivia Rodrigo and Koe Wetzel; song of the year for Carpenter’s “Please Please Please”; album of the year for Carpenter’s “Short n’ Sweet”; and song written for visual media for “Better Place,” from “Trolls Band Together.”
• Musician, songwriter and producer Annie Clark, 42, who performs as St. Vincent and who has nods for alternative music album with “All Born Screaming,” alternative rock performance with “Flea” and rock song and rock performance with “Broken Man.”
• Musician and songwriter John Legend, 45, who’s up for children’s music album for “My Favorite Dream” and an arrangement award for a rendition of “Bridge Over Troubled Water” he recorded with Jacob Collier and Tori Kelly.
• Producer and songwriter Daniel Nigro, 42, who’s nominated for producer of the year for his work with Rodrigo and Chappell Roan, album of the year for Roan’s “The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess,” record and song of the year for Roan’s “Good Luck, Babe!” and song written for visual media for “Can’t Catch Me Now,” from “The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes.”
• Musician, songwriter and producer Willow, 24, whose last name is Smith and who’s up for an arrangement prize with “Big Feelings,” from her album “Empathogen,” which received a nomination for engineered album, non-classical.
Several of the artists were meeting for the first time; some went way back, including Nigro and Allen, who co-wrote a song on Rodrigo’s 2023 “Guts” LP, and Clark and Legend, who once teamed up to cover Minnie Riperton’s “Lovin’ You” with help — for some reason — from Zach Galifianakis. (The latter two also share a friend and collaborator in Sufjan Stevens, who produced Legend’s “My Favorite Dream.”) Yet all of them agreed that in a music industry fueled by gossip, they’d heard only good things about the others.
“There’s plenty of people I’ve heard bad things about,” Legend noted with a laugh. “Not this crew.”
Willow
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)
1. ‘Obsessive about the sounds’
You all come from different backgrounds and represent different traditions. But one thing that unites the five of you, I think, is a real devotion to craft. Put another way: You all have a touch of music nerd about you. Is that fair?
Legend: I’ve always been a nerd. I was a 16-year-old going to college.
Clark: You went to college at 16?
Legend: And I was homeschooled before that.
Smith: Me too! Shout-out to homeschool kids.
Legend: We made it.
What does it mean to be a music nerd?
Smith: You study.
Legend: You care about the details and about understanding the history and the legacy that you’re carrying forward.
Allen: And figuring out why your favorite things are your favorite things. That’s how I geek out: What’s actually happening in this Dolly song or this Tom Petty song?
Smith: Is it the chord progression? Is it the words they’re using? Like, what exactly?
What’s a detail in a song by each of you that people might not recognize but that you love? For me, an example is the bridge in “Good Luck, Babe!” where you can hear Chappell panting in the background.
Nigro: That’s literally what I was thinking about. I wanted people to notice that it sounds like she’s getting out of breath.
Smith: It adds to the feeling.
Legend: I have this song called “Safe,” and there’s this one moment when I do this run and Sufjan has this arpeggio going the opposite direction. It’s just this simple thing, but it’s my favorite moment on the album.
Smith: Every album I make, I try to come to the songs with something different about my vocal approach. For this album, I was listening to a lot of Indigenous music, and there’s something that a lot of Native American singers do — this kind of ancestral call. I do it on “Big Feelings.”
Annie, you produced your album yourself, which I assume means you were especially attentive to the sounds.
Clark: Very attentive to the sounds — obsessive about the sounds. On the song “Broken Man,” I had my friend and great drummer, Mark Guiliana, come over and play around on that song at my studio, and he played this fill that was so sick. Later, we recorded some drums and bass at Electrical Audio in Chicago —
Steve Albini’s studio.
Clark: Rest in power. And I’d gotten so attached to that fill that I had Mark replay it but with sounds from Electrical Audio.
Allen: I remember when Jack [Antonoff] did the key change in “Please Please Please.” We were all really excited about it in the room. I don’t know if the common listener would know there’s a key change in the second verse. But I’ve had a lot of family and friends be like, “There’s something that happens halfway through that song that just lifts me.” Being able to really lean into the musicality of pop right now is so exciting.
I’d call “Please Please Please” the key change of the year, but that would suggest I can think of a bunch of others.
Allen: Not a lot of competition.
Clark: If Shania was in the room you might have some. Shania loves a key change.
Smith: Just keeps going up and up and up.
Allen: Same with Beyoncé in “Love on Top.”
Legend: “Love on Top” is the key change of the decade.
Anyone foolish enough to try “Love on Top” at karaoke?
Smith: Only the Talking Heads at karaoke. That’s my go-to.
Legend: I used to cover “Burning Down the House” in my early demo days.
Smith: For a singer, I feel like doing karaoke —
Allen: It’s a trap.
Legend: It’s not for professionals.
Allen: It’s lose-lose because if you kill it, everybody’s like, “F— that guy.” And if you underplay it, they’re like, “John, why didn’t you go harder?”
Nigro: I did karaoke for the first time at like 34 because I was so intimidated. Although I do remember at my cousin’s wedding — this is 10, 12 years ago — they had a timbale player along with the DJ, and I was so smashed that I stole the timbales at one point and started playing them. My dad was like, “You know, for a musician, you really suck.”
Annie Clark, a.k.a. St. Vincent
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)
2. ‘Unruly in a good way’
What’s a musical era you wish you’d been around for?
Smith: Earth, Wind & Fire, Ohio Players, that whole era.
Legend: The series of Stevie Wonder albums in the mid-’70s when he won three album of the year Grammys — I wish I were alive when those were being made. Those were probably the most inspiring albums for me coming up.
Clark: It shows.
Allen: I think about vocalists back then — how locked in you had to be from the jump. Watching people record harmonies in real time, everyone on one mic, having to match the tonality of everybody else.
Legend: A computer allows you to do so much manipulation. They had to come in and just deliver a take.
Nigro: It’s interesting how our ears have become so adjusted to everything sounding perfect now. In my 20s I was really into Van Morrison’s “Astral Weeks” — listened to it all the time. I hadn’t listened to it in years, and then I put it on the other day and I was like, I can’t believe how out of tune this guitar is. For the first time, it was driving me crazy. And I didn’t want it to drive me crazy.
How’d you deal with that desire for perfection on the Chappell album? It doesn’t sound —
Legend: It feels unruly in a good way.
Nigro: For me, it’s time — sitting with the song, listening to it, what it makes me feel like. I’ll listen, then I’ll walk away and come back: “Oh, that vocal’s rushing — I’m gonna move the vocal.” It’s natural, but there’s definitely editing being done.
Legend: Are you writing on these songs too?
Nigro: Yeah.
Legend: When you’re in your songwriter moment versus your producer moment, what’s the difference?
Nigro: I never care about any production when we’re writing. I’m lucky enough that when I work with Olivia or with Chappell, they don’t care either — they just want to get a song. Sometimes with Chappell, we’ll put a beat on so we know what tempo we’re writing to.
Smith: That’s so cool. So you record the whole song with no production?
Nigro: “Good Luck, Babe!” was just a kick, a snare, a vocal and a synth — not even any chord changes. The chords are the same in the verse and the chorus.
Is that cheating?
Clark: I was just looking at every Madonna hit from the ’80s — just studying chord progressions for fun — and it’s a classic move.
Legend: We’re not nerds at all.
So then what distinguishes the chorus from the verse?
Legend: Sometimes just changing the melody over the same chords can make it feel completely different.
Nigro: Although there’s lots of hit songs where even the melody for the verse is the same as the chorus melody. Calvin Harris and Rihanna, “We Found Love” — same chords, same melody. The whole thing never changes. But the song feels like it’s propelling.
Allen: Tale as old as time, that trick. But it’s really hard to do.
John Legend
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)
3. ‘The best version of herself’
Last year, Taylor Swift’s “Cruel Summer” — which Annie co-wrote — topped the Hot 100 four years after it came out because people on the internet decided it should be a hit. This is a thing that happens now.
Smith: I put out “Wait a Minute!” years ago and then TikTok was like, “Oh, we love this song.” Yo, I’ve put out three albums since then!
Nigro: “Pink Pony Club” did that. It’s going now, and it came out almost five years ago.
When an old song takes off, you ever hear something in it you wish you could change?
Nigro: The crazy thing is that you can. Chappell and I changed “Femininomenon” six months after it came out. I’m not really a dance producer, and the drums [on the original recording] just didn’t hit the way I wanted them to. Every time I heard it, I was like, “The fricking snare’s just not right.” I hated it more and more as time went on. So when we were set to put the record out for real, I called a friend: “Can you please change the kick and snare in this for me? I have like a week before we have to hand in the vinyl.” And we ended up swapping it out.
Annie, you just remade your latest album in a Spanish-language version.
Clark: Sí.
Why?
Clark: I’ve been lucky enough to play a lot in Mexico and in South America and Spain, and I was always blown away by the fact that people will sing along to my songs in what might be their second or third or fourth language. So I thought if they can do that for me, maybe I can meet them halfway in their language.
Legend: How much did you find yourself revising the lyric to make it sing better in Spanish?
Clark: It’s wildly different — kind of a full rewrite.
When you’re writing with an artist, Amy, do you think in terms of absorbing their language?
Allen: When I was really getting into songwriting like six years ago, I would hear what an artist wants to talk about and then try to put myself in their brain and write the song from their perspective. But I had this pivotal moment two or three years ago where I realized I was making it so much harder than it needed to be. Why don’t I just, when they’re venting about something, figure out the closest thing I have within me and then write in a parallel line with them? Sabrina is a special case because I have so much chemistry with her.
Legend: It seems like y’all had fun. My daughter is really into Sabrina right now, so I hear her in the car a lot.
Allen: We can hit the ball back and forth, and it’s unlocked something for her to become the best version of herself. My dream job is not having to sit there and come up with the funniest line. It’s allowing a chemistry to develop where those lines are just second nature.
Smith: It’s coming from the relationship that you guys have created with each other.
Legend: I love that.
Allen: It took me a long time as a songwriter to get there with an artist.
Amy Allen
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)
4. ‘The vision is clear’
Chappell, Sabrina, Charli XCX: Artists who’ve been working for a long time finally made it happen in a big way this year. Is this a story about artist development? Should the music industry be patting itself on the back?
Legend: I don’t feel like that’s what’s happening.
Clark: Can they reach their backs with those wads of cash in their hands? Is that possible?
Legend: What’s happening with labels is they’re not really in charge anymore. They’re not the gatekeepers as much as they used to be. The audience has so much power.
Smith: Social media is a huge part of this. And I feel like it’s a balance: There are situations where the creation of the art is pinnacle, and there are situations where that’s really, really not the case. We all know what it’s like to feel that straitjacket of opinions about what’s gonna make a hit record.
Nigro: Every artist says they don’t care. But there are artists that want to appease everybody and there are artists that really just do whatever the hell they want to do. I think the truth is that the artists have the power, but if they’re not sure about what they want, then they can easily get wrapped up in the major-label —
Smith: Rigmarole.
Nigro: It’s easy to get lost in that. Everyone wants to be successful.
Seems worth pointing out that Sabrina broke through with her sixth studio album.
Clark: That’s her sixth album?!
What does that tell you about a career in pop?
Clark: It’s telling me I got a shot [laughs]. I mean, theoretically, if you do something a lot, you get better. A doctor on their sixth surgery is better than a doctor who’s on their first. For some reason, music is the only place where people are like, “No, that first surgery was the best.”
Legend: But sometimes it’s true — sometimes the first one is the best one.
Clark: And sometimes you pierce somebody’s trachea.
Willow, your debut single came out when you were 10 years old. Do you feel connected now to that earliest instance of your musical life?
Smith: What I’ll say is that the message of my music has always been to love yourself and to love others and to live loud with all of your gusto. So “Whip My Hair” definitely doesn’t go against anything that I stand for now — it actually fits the journey that I’ve had. I look back at my first album and I’m like, I definitely wouldn’t do that now. But like Annie said, the more you do something, the more you refine it.
Legend: And it can take a while to figure out your voice. I’m thinking about the six albums for Sabrina, because now it feels like, OK, she found it. Not saying the other ones weren’t great, but they felt a little more unsettled as far as who she was as an artist. Then I hear these songs and they sound like this is her personality. The vision is clear.
Allen: Also, the world needs to be ready. There’s so many dominoes that need to fall for something like “Good Luck, Babe!” or “Please Please Please” to have the impact we want it to have.
Nigro: We wrote “Good Luck, Babe!” while we were writing Chappell’s album. But if we’d put it out when the album came out, I don’t think it would have done what it did.
Smith: Timing is so important.
Nigro: And I feel like Sabrina needed “Nonsense” to happen for the next iteration to take place.
Allen: It was all stepping stones.
Daniel Nigro
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)
5. ‘I wish I made this song’
Present company excluded, what’s a song or an album that you loved this year?
Legend: Tyler, the Creator’s album. I love his mom talking through every track and the storytelling and the personal journey.
Smith: Esperanza Spalding and Milton Nascimento put an album out, and I just sat in my room with the lights off and was like, I need to ingest this into every cell of my body.
Nigro: The first time I heard “Million Dollar Baby,” I was like, Oh man, I wish I made this song.
Allen: I loved this new Adrianne Lenker album that came out this year. She’s defying every rule that I as a pop writer feel is floating around.
Clark: I’ve been listening to the new MJ Lenderman record, “Manning Fireworks.” It’s so creative and clever, but it doesn’t lose its heart in the cleverness.
’Tis the season for holiday music. You’ve made a Christmas album, John, and you’re on a Christmas tour as we speak.
Legend: Call me Father Christmas.
Have any of the rest of you tried to write a Christmas song?
Nigro: Every year, I call up the artists that I work with and I say, “Hey, let’s write a Christmas song,” and they’re like, “Yeah, sure.” And then we never do.
Legend: I said that every year for 14 years until I finally made one.
Clark: I wrote a Christmas song — sort of. It’s on my last record, and it’s called “… At the Holiday Party.” It’s sad and depressing.
Allen: That definitely counts.
Smith: If I ever made a Christmas song, I feel like it would have to be from the dark side. Or maybe like a pagan perspective.
Clark: You should absolutely write that.
Are Christmas songs hard to write?
Legend: The thing about Christmas songs that endure is that they endure. So there’s a lot of pressure on any new song to make it stand up to all the ones that have lasted for 50 years. And they’ve lasted for 50 years for a reason — people still love them. To try to make your new thing stand up to that canon is quite a challenge.
Clark: Eat s—, Bing Crosby.
Movie Reviews
Mana Shankara Vara Prasad Garu Review: USA Premiere Report
U.S. Premiere Report:
#MSG Review: Free Flowing Chiru Fun
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It’s an easy, fun festive watch with a better first half that presents Chiru in a free-flowing, at-ease with subtle humor. On the flip side, much-anticipated Chiru-Venky track is okay, which could have elevated the second half.
#AnilRavipudi gets the credit for presenting Chiru in his best, most likable form, something that was missing from his comeback.
With a simple story, fun moments and songs, this has enough to become a commercial success this #Sankranthi
Rating: 2.5/5
First Half Report:
#MSG Decent Fun 1st Half!
Chiru’s restrained body language and acting working well, paired with consistent subtle humor along with the songs and the father’s emotion which works to an extent, though the kids’ track feels a bit melodramatic – all come together to make the first half a decent fun, easy watch.
– Mana Shankara Vara Prasad Garu show starts with Anil Ravipudi-style comedy, with his signature backdrop, a gang, and silly gags, followed by a Megastar fight and a song. Stay tuned for the report.
U.S. Premiere begins at 10.30 AM EST (9 PM IST). Stay tuned Mana Shankara Vara Prasad Garu review, report.
Cast: Megastar Chiranjeevi, Venkatesh Daggubati, Nayanthara, Catherine Tresa
Writer & Director – Anil Ravipudi
Producers – Sahu Garapati and Sushmita Konidela
Presents – Smt.Archana
Banners – Shine Screens and Gold Box Entertainments
Music Director – Bheems Ceciroleo
Cinematographer – Sameer Reddy
Production Designer – A S Prakash
Editor – Tammiraju
Co-Writers – S Krishna, G AdiNarayana
Line Producer – Naveen Garapati
U.S. Distributor: Sarigama Cinemas
Mana Shankara Vara Prasad Garu Movie Review by M9
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Entertainment
‘The Night Manager’ Season 2 returns with explosive reveals: ‘Every character’s heart is on fire’
This article contains spoilers for the first three episodes of “The Night Manager” Season 2.
It wasn’t inevitable that “The Night Manager,” an adaptation of John le Carré’s 1993 spy novel, would have a sequel. Le Carré didn’t write one and the six-episode series, which aired in 2016, had a definitive ending.
But after the show’s debut, fans clambered for more. They loved Tom Hiddleston’s brooding, charismatic Jonathan Pine, a hotel manager wrangled into the spy game by British intelligence officer Angela Burr (Olivia Colman). And at the heart of the series was the parasitic dynamic between Pine and his delightfully malicious foe, an arms dealer named Richard Onslow Roper (Hugh Laurie).
The show was so good that even the story’s author wanted it to continue. After the premiere of Season 1 at the Berlin International Film Festival, Le Carré sat across from Hiddleston, a twinkle in his eye, and said, “Perhaps there should be some more.”
“That was the first I’d heard of it or thought about it,” Hiddleston says, speaking over Zoom alongside the show’s director, Georgi Banks-Davies, from New York a few days before the U.S. premiere of “The Night Manager” Season 2 on Prime Video, which arrived Sunday with three episodes, 10 years after the first season. “But it was so extraordinary and inspiring to come from the man himself. That’s when I knew there might be an opportunity.”
Time passed because no one wanted a sequel of less quality. Le Carré died in 2020, leaving his creative works in the care of his sons, who helm the production company the Ink Factory. That same year, screenwriter David Farr, who had penned the first series, had a vision.
“We didn’t want to rush into doing something that was all style and no substance that didn’t honor the truth of it,” Farr says, speaking separately over Zoom from London. “There was this big gap of time. But I had this very clear idea. I saw a black car crossing the Colombian hills in the past towards a boy. I knew who was in the car and I knew who the boy was.”
That image transformed into a scene in the second episode of Season 2 where a young Teddy Dos Santos (Diego Calva) is waiting for his father, who turns out to be none other than Roper. From there, Farr fleshed out the rest of the season, as well as the already-announced third season. He was interested in the relationship between fathers and sons, an obsession of Le Carré’s, and in how Jonathan and Roper would be entangled all these years later.
Teddy Dos Santos (Diego Calva) is revealed to be Roper’s son.
(Des Willie / Prime Video)
“Teddy crystallized very quickly in my head,” Farr says. “All of the plot came later — arms smuggling and covert plans for coups in South America. But the emotional architecture, as I tend to call it, came to me quite quickly. That narrative of fathers and sons, betrayal and love is what marks Le Carré from more conventional espionage.”
“There was enormous depth in his idea,” Hiddleston adds. “It was a happy accident of 10 years having passed. They were 10 immeasurably complex years in the world, which can only have been more complex for Jonathan Pine with all his experience, all his curiosity, all his pain, all his trauma and all his courage.”
Farr sent scripts to Hiddleston in 2023 and planning for Season 2 began in earnest. The team brought Banks-Davies on in early 2024, impressed with her vision for the episodes. Hiddleston was especially attracted to her desire to highlight the vulnerability of the characters, all of whom present an exterior that is vastly different than their interior life.
“Every character’s heart is on fire in some way, and they all have different masks to conceal that,” Hiddleston says. “But Georgi kept wanting to get underneath it, to excavate it. Explore the fire, explore the trauma. She came in and said, ‘This show is about identity.’ ”
“I’m fascinated with how the line of identity and where you sit in the world is very fragile,” Banks-Davies says. “I’m fascinated by the strain on that line. In the heart of the show, that was so clearly there. I’m also always searching for what brings us together in a time, particularly in the last 10 years, that’s ever more divisive. These characters are all at war with each other. They’re all lying to each other. They’re deceiving each other for what they want. But what brings them together … instead of pushes them apart?”
The new season opens four years after the events of Season 1 as Jonathan and Angela meet in Syria. There, she identifies the dead body of Roper — a reveal that suggests his character won’t really be part of Season 2. After his death, Pine settles into a requisite life in London as Alex Goodwin, a member of an unexciting intelligence unit called the Night Owls.
Angela (Olivia Colman) and Jonathan (Tom Hiddleston) meet in Syria, four years after the events of Season 1.
(Des Willie / Prime Video)
“He’s half asleep and he lacks clarity and definition,” Hiddleston says. “His meaning and purpose have been blunted and dulled. He is only alive at his greatest peril, and the closer his feet are to the fire, the more he feels like himself. He’s addicted to risk, but also courageous in chasing down the truth.”
That first episode is a clever fake-out. Soon, Jonathan is on the trail of a conspiracy in Colombia, where the British government appears to be involved in an arms deal with Teddy. It quickly becomes the globe-trotting, thrill-seeking show that captivated fans in Season 1. There are new characters, including Sally (Hayley Squires), Jonathan’s Night Owls’ partner, and Roxana Bolaños (Camila Morrone), a young shipping magnate in league with Teddy, and vibrant locations. Jonathan infiltrates Teddy’s organization, posing as a cavalier, rich businessman named Matthew Ellis. He believes Teddy is the real threat. But in the final moments of Episode 3 there’s another gut-punching fake-out: Roper lives.
“The idea was: We must do the classic thing that stories do, which is to lose the father in order that he must appear again,” Farr says. He confirms there was never an intention to make “The Night Manager” Season 2 without Laurie. “What makes it work is this feeling that you are off on something completely new,” Farr says. “But that’s not what I want this show to be.”
Hiddleston compares it to the tale of St. George and the dragon. “They define each other,” he says. “At the end of the first series, Jonathan Pine delivers the dragon of Richard Roper to his captors. But after that, he is lost. The dragon slayer is lost without the presence of the dragon to define him. And, similarly, Roper is obsessed with Pine.”
Jonathan realizes the truth as he sneaks up to a hilltop restaurant to listen in on a meeting. Banks-Davies opted to shoot the entire series on location, and she kept a taut, quick pace during filming because she wanted the cast to feel the tension all the way through. She and Hiddleston had a shared motto on set: “There’s no time for unreal.” Thanks to her careful scene-setting, Roper’s arrival and Jonathan’s reaction were shot in only 10 minutes.
“I felt everything we talked about for months and everything we’d shot up until that point and everything we’d been through was in that moment,” Banks-Davies says. “There are so many emotions going on, so much being expressed, and it’s just delivered like that. But it was hard to get us there.”
Farr adds, “It is the most important moment in the show in terms of everything that then follows on from that.” He wrote into the script that Roper’s voice would be heard before Laurie was seen on camera. “It’s more frightening when something is not instantly fully understood and seen,” he says. “You hear it and you think, ‘Oh, God, I know that [voice].’ ”
Hiddleston wanted to play a range of emotions in seconds. He describes it as a “moment of total vitality.” Right before the cameras rolled, Banks-Davies told Hiddleston, “The dragon is alive.”
“After all the work, that’s all I needed to hear,” he says. “This moment will be memorable to him and he’ll be able to recall it in his mind for the rest of his life. He is wide awake, and reality is re-forming around him. His sense of the last 10 years, his sense of what he can trust and who he can trust, the way he’s tried to evolve his own identity — the sky is falling. There is a mixture of shock, grief, disenchantment, disillusionment, surprise and perhaps even relief.”
As soon as Jonathan arrives in Colombia and meets Teddy, a calculating live-wire dealing with his own sense of isolation, he becomes more himself. Hiddleston expresses him as a character desperate to feel the edge. Despite his layered duplicity, Jonathan understands and defines himself by courting risk.
Teddy (Diego Calva), Jonathan (Tom Hiddleston) and Roxana (Camila Marrone) get close. “This is a character who pushes his body to the limit and sacrifices enormous parts of himself at great personal cost to his body and soul,” Hiddleston says of Jonathan. (Des Willie/Prime Video)
“This is a character who pushes his body to the limit and sacrifices enormous parts of himself at great personal cost to his body and soul,” Hiddleston says. “He goes through a lot of pain, but also there’s great courage and resilience and enormous vulnerability. That’s what I relish the most, these are heightened scenarios that don’t arise as readily and in my ordinary life.”
“I could feel that shooting moments like this,” Banks-Davies adds. “Like, ‘It’s right there. Are we going to get it?’ Our whole show exists in that space between safety and death.”
Roper’s presence sends a ripple effect across the remaining three episodes. As much as Jonathan and Teddy are in opposition, they are parallel spirits, both with complicated relationships to Roper. Hiddleston describes them as “a mirror to each other,” although they can’t quite figure out what to be to each other. And neither knows who the other person really is.
“It is interesting, isn’t it, that my first image of him was 7 years old and that stays in him all the way through,” Farr says. “This sense of this boy who is seeking something — an affirmation, a place in the world. And he’s done terrible things, as he says to Pine in Episode 3. All of that was present in that first image I had.”
Hiddleston adds, “There is a competition, too, because Roper is the father figure, and they both need him in very different ways. Teddy is a new kind of adversary because he’s a contemporary. He’s got this resourcefulness and this ruthlessness, but also this very open vulnerability, which he uses as a weapon. They recognize each other and see each other.”
The characters’ dynamic is at the root of what drew Banks-Davies to the series. “It’s not about where they were born, it’s not about their economic status or their religion or their cultural identity,” she says. “It’s about two men who are lost and alone and solitary, and see a kinship in that. They are pulled together on this journey.”
Season 2, which will release episodes weekly after the first drop, will lead directly into Season 3, although no one involved will spill on when it can be expected. Hopefully they will arrive in less than a decade.
“It won’t be as long, I promise,” Farr says. “I can’t tell you exactly when, because I don’t know. But definitely nowhere as long.”
“That was the thrill for us, of knowing that when we began to tell this story, we knew we had 12 episodes to tell it inside, rather than just six,” Hiddleston says. “So we can be slightly braver and more rebellious and more complex in the architecture of that narrative. And not everything has to be tied up neatly in a bow. There’s still miles to go before we sleep, to borrow from Robert Frost, and that’s exciting. It’s exciting for how this season ends, and it’s exciting for where we go next.”
Movie Reviews
Primate
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Detroit, MI1 week ago2 hospitalized after shooting on Lodge Freeway in Detroit
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Technology5 days agoPower bank feature creep is out of control
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Dallas, TX3 days agoAnti-ICE protest outside Dallas City Hall follows deadly shooting in Minneapolis
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Dallas, TX6 days agoDefensive coordinator candidates who could improve Cowboys’ brutal secondary in 2026
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Delaware2 days agoMERR responds to dead humpback whale washed up near Bethany Beach
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Iowa5 days agoPat McAfee praises Audi Crooks, plays hype song for Iowa State star
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Health1 week agoViral New Year reset routine is helping people adopt healthier habits
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Nebraska4 days agoOregon State LB transfer Dexter Foster commits to Nebraska