Stellan Skarsgård Breaks Down His Career, from 'Mamma Mia!' to 'Dune: Part Two'
Released on 02/29/2024
I can't decide to become an actor.
It's not something final in my life.
So I'm doing it as long as I think it's fun,
and when I grow up and become old, I'll get a real job.
[bright music]
I'm Stellan Skarsgard,
and this is a timeline of my career.
[music concludes]
[boys speaking foreign language]
It was a TV series.
It was a kind of Swedish Huckleberry Finn,
and there was only one channel in Sweden at the time.
Can you imagine? One TV channel.
That means that everybody sees it
and everybody knows about it.
I tried for it, there were thousands of kids trying for it,
and I tried for it, and then I got it,
and then I became like a pop star
and I was only 16
and there were girls fainting and screaming and, Ah!
It was a kind of experience that would've broken me
if I hadn't had such good parents
because they made sure to bring me down to reality.
You do realize
that I will have to go back soon, don't you?
When I read Breaking the Waves,
I said, Yes!
Finally a love story that I can relate to,
because it was more about the very idea of love
than about if they would get married
or if they would have a happy life or everything.
It was a very beautiful script.
Wonderful Emily Watson. It was her first film as well.
For an English actress, young actress, to come out
and do a film with a kind of weird Danish director
and a middle-aged Swedish man
and doing a lot of sex scenes with that,
it was very brave of her.
How could you take it?
How could you keep away from the boys?
I waited for you. [Jan laughing]
I had a smaller international career before that.
It generated a lot of jobs.
It had premiered in Cannes and they went crazy.
Since I had had thousands of teenage girls screaming
when I was 16, I could deal with any pressure.
I learned one thing,
and that is that it's always a tomorrow.
There's always a day when you don't have a job.
There's always a day when it has faded away,
the fame and beauty and fuss about the film.
But more important is what you do with your life.
It is, after all, just a film.
[Will] The commute is killing me.
Yeah, sure, but did you think of the possibility-
That's right. It's right.
Just take it home with you.
I was shooting at Rhode Island with Spielberg.
I got this call.
They wanted to see me in Boston,
so they sent down a limousine and I traveled up there
and I met those guys and I read the script in the limousine
and it was very good.
We talked about it and we read and we sat down
and we changed things immediately
and everybody was so excited
and the collaboration was so, so vivid.
And then we went out and got drunk
and that limousine had to wait all night.
We were in South Boston,
which was at that time very dangerous.
And we had this big limousine
standing outside of those seedy bars,
but the limousine eventually delivered me
to Rhode Island again. [laughing]
I liked them very much.
It was obvious that they were very talented
and it made me very happy later on
that when the film was such a success,
it gave them more possibilities to work.
He pushes people away
before they have a chance to leave him.
It's a defense mechanism, all right?
And for 20 years he's been alone because of that.
Robin Williams. He's a fantastic man.
He's like he has three brains
working high speed at the same time.
And there are funny things coming out all the time.
I think it's a sort of security thing
because he is not that funny when you are alone with him,
and then when the more people comes,
he become more funny.
He improvised a lot.
You didn't know exactly what was gonna happen in the scene,
and I liked that, all actors told,
but suddenly he was sounded like another actor,
like a director he knew or something.
It was something weird going on all the time.
And we had a lot of fun so we laughed a lot,
but eventually, of course,
we had to retake many of those scenes.
[dramatic music]
Gore Verbinski called me
and he showed me some pictures of the guy
and I saw that it was all barnacles.
And he said, No, no, don't worry about it.
You won't wear that all the time.
You'll just have two or three
and then they do the rest with the CGI.
And then we started trying out the makeup
and it was so beautiful.
It was Joel Howard who did it,
and he was painting it by hand, you know, and the details.
And so we decided to go full makeup for the whole time.
That meant that I came every morning
at two o'clock in the morning, I came,
and sat in the chair till eight o'clock.
Then the rest of my crew came in.
The other sailors on the boat, they put on the pajamas,
all gray and four dots here, and then going in.
It was really hard,
but I like that character, not because he...
I don't care about if they're big or small roles.
It's something about the...
When you find a unique personality,
whether it's an exterior or interior,
to play with, it's fantastic.
Gore Verbinski, he's not a very commercial director.
In some ways he's an absurdist director.
On the set, you felt that you were working
on a much smaller film because you had much more freedom
and everything was accommodating you.
They moved the camera.
That was also what made the first one so good
because the actors had freedom.
But might I suggest that we all reconvene on your boat?
Good idea.
No.
Why? It's an adventure, Harry.
It's good for you. Oh.
It was absurd to ask me to be in a musical.
I can't sing, I can't dance.
And then I saw it was also Pierce Brosnan and Colin Firth
and they can't sing and dance either.
So I felt a little safer there.
And then I understood that we were just supposed
to be like in a film that is produced by men
and directed by men and with men in the leads,
you have the bimbo,
and we were the bimbo in this female production.
We didn't have to be anything but look cute and be silly.
There's only one thing that was asked of us
and that was have fun,
because if we don't have fun, it won't be a film.
Me and Colin coming to dance lessons
with blokes in our slacks and our little Paul Smith shirts
and everything, and everybody.
The 60 dancers that are dressed up, like dancers are.
We really tried for a month and a half
trying to dance to Voulez-Vous
and we failed.
Okay. [Thor and Erik laughing]
Oh, I still don't think you are the God of Thunder.
but you ought to be. [Thor chuckling]
The film was fun.
We lived in Santa Fe
where they have more Birkenstocks and gray ponytails
than anywhere else in the United States.
No, I wasn't excited.
I was... What the fuck?
I didn't know much about Thor...
Or I knew about the real Thor,
but I didn't know much about the comic books.
So the thing was that Kenneth Branagh was directing it
and he's good.
I said, Okay, I'll do it,
but the thing is, that when you sign up for one of these,
you sign up for four.
So I felt I sold my soul to the devil, but I didn't,
because especially that first one, I had a lot of fun.
It was me and Kat Dennings and Natalie Portman, the trio.
We were constantly together in all those scenes,
and I had so much fun and I learned so much about girls
because most of the time, we were stuck in a car
and we were waiting and it was a film car,
and I just listened to those two girls talking about men.
Yeah, I mean, I didn't think it was like that.
You learn.
Why did I continue to do Marvel after that?
I had a contract and it was fun doing those small things.
You don't have to be too pretentious about what you do.
It's not a crime
to do not-high-brow material.
I'm here tonight playing a sort of double role.
On Michael's side, I'm the best man,
but coincidentally, I'm also the employer of the bride.
When I worked with some of the kids,
you almost can't take it seriously, you know?
It's like, Really? You are that character?
Mm-hmm. Yeah.
It doesn't work.
Like I worked with one once on Gustaf
in a period piece, and we both had beards on
and the first time we came on set, we started laughing.
We couldn't stop.
But it's lovely because you have the same kind of humor,
you have the same kind of the way of reading the script
and it's very easy and it's very safe.
And also, you feel loved.
It's very nice.
It is really full of love that Lars von Trier says.
It's fun.
Even if he does films about horrible things,
he's very dark in this material,
you have fun when you do it.
We laughed a lot during that.
[Liv] But it can't just be swept under the rug.
What can't? Harriet.
Well, we can talk about it later.
Uh...
We can talk about it now.
Fincher decided to make a Swedish independent film
for 100 million dollars.
He came to Stockholm and tried to find a crew
that could even move a set in two hours.
But there's nobody
who can move a set in two hours in Sweden.
I met him first and he asked me if I wanted to do this role,
and I said, yeah, I wanted to do the role.
And he said, But you don't wanna work with me. he said.
Oh, why not?
Because I take maybe 20 or 30 or 40 times.
I do takes of each scene, he said,
and I said, Well, it's fine if I can do whatever I want.
That means I got freedom.
I can fuck up 39 takes of them. So that's good.
And I don't think he understood that freely,
but it was like that.
I felt totally safe.
I could do whatever I wanted.
[ethereal music] What happened to her?
I was very calm during those takes.
It was wonderful to torture Daniel Craig to Enya.
Is this really the way it all works?
An uninformed, arbitrary decision that will cost
who knows how many lies made by some apparatchik,
some career party man?
I'm a career party man.
You should watch your tone, Comrade Liazo.
Well, the first thing was,
I looked at the picture of the real person.
I decided that was not his look.
So I took another look.
There was a Soviet leader called Kosygin at the time,
and he had white hair and he would've a little brush up.
So I based it on Kosygin.
Nobody knows but me.
The thing is that not even HBO thought
that it would be a success,
but they thought it was important to do it.
That was HBO back then. In those days, it was...
It's different now. It had no plus after.
And they didn't expect it to become a success,
but they thought it was important to make it,
and they wanted to make it as a quality production.
Fortunately, it had an enormous impact
and a lot of people saw it.
And I hope they understand
that it is about the sort of cowardice
of everybody in society.
It goes for everybody.
It's not only in the Soviet society,
it goes to our society too.
The cowardice of sort of accepting the rule
and the power of the time.
The Golden Globe, the year after, were sort of discredited,
so it doesn't matter. [laughing]
They're all sort of weird, those...
It's fun.
It's fun when you're appreciated. You know it.
And you get the statue
and it says that you're appreciated,
because I'm appreciated.
I did something.
You can point at it, but of course,
it's meaningless, those.
You know how many millions it cost to get an Oscar?
Would you rather give it all at once to something real?
What would we be stealing?
The quarterly payroll for an entire imperial sector.
Human beings are more than two characters.
We are different when we meet our family
and when we are with our friends and when we are...
It's sort of a natural state,
but played two characters here in Andor, or it was like...
First of all, it was very well written.
It was Tony Gilroy who wrote it.
It's like Star Wars for grownups.
It's a very oppressive society, it's a fascist society
and you feel the presence of it.
The characters are very well drawn.
Kindness, kinship, love.
I've given up all chance at inner peace.
I made my mind a sunless space.
I share my dreams with ghosts.
[Interviewer] And you said that you had
to do this speech 10 times.
Had to do?
I did it 10 times because it wasn't good.
I mean, not exactly, but if you know
that something is wrong...
Ah, you know it's wrong, you know it's wrong, you know...
Ah! It's not wrong.
Finally, I got a script that was like a character
that I wanted to play as a 10-year-old.
And then of course, who doesn't want to fly a ship?
A spaceship? Who doesn't want to shoot with ray guns?
I mean, it's the little boy in me.
You tried to kill me?
This morning you were a playboy.
Feared and envied.
but tonight you're a hero.
I was so attracted by Denis Villeneuve.
I've seen his films and he's a great cinematic poet
and at the same time, he makes his film popular,
box-office hits.
It's a unique combination.
It was also that the role wasn't that big
so you could survive
and it was good that it was so concentrated.
I suggested that they cut out some scenes
because you wanted to make him more like a stock
that has boiled very well together.
So when he comes in, you should notice it.
You shouldn't waste him by throwing him in
in every second scene or something.
It was a terrible mistake to take the role, [laughing]
if I wanted to be comfortable.
And when I was naked, I had eight hours
in the stool every day.
It was painful.
I didn't drink all day because I couldn't pee, right?
And I ate Imodium every morning,
so it was not good for me, but I managed to do it
without shitting and peeing for a week. [chuckles]
I've been very, very lucky.
I have eight kids and I've managed to be with the family
and see my kids grow up.
I really enjoy that life.
And sometimes I take a film because I like the crew
and the people working on it
and I don't give a fuck if it's good or...
It's wonderful.
I think everybody should envy me.
[bright music]
Hans Zimmer Breaks Down His Legendary Career
Jeff Goldblum Breaks Down His Career, From “Jurassic Park” to “Isle of Dogs”
Jodie Foster Breaks Down Her Career, from “Silence of the Lambs” to “Hotel Artemis”
Hank Azaria Breaks Down His Career, from “The Simpsons” to “Brockmire”
Jada Pinkett Smith Breaks Down Her Career, from “True Colors” to “Girl's Trip”
Michael Douglas Breaks Down His Career, From "Wall Street" to "Ant-Man"
Jason Bateman Breaks Down His Career, From "Arrested Development" to "Ozark"
Jeff Goldblum Is Not Afraid to Express Himself Through Fashion
Atlanta’s Lakeith Stanfield “Does What Feels Right” with His Red Carpet Style
Drew Barrymore Breaks Down Her Career, from "E.T." to "Flower Beauty"
Natalie Portman Breaks Down Her Career, from “The Professional” to “Jackie”
Laura Dern Breaks Down Her Career, from “Jurassic Park” to “The Last Jedi"
Richard Linklater Breaks Down His Career, from Dazed and Confused to Boyhood
Lupita Nyong'o Breaks Down Her Fashion Looks, From the Red Carpet to the Met Gala
Wu-Tang’s RZA Breaks Down 10 Kung Fu Films He’s Sampled
Maggie Gyllenhaal Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Donnie Darko' to 'The Dark Knight'
Jessica Lange Breaks Down Her Career, from King Kong to American Horror Story
Miranda Lambert Breaks Down Her Career, from First Shows to Superstardom
Rob Lowe Breaks Down His Career, from 'Austin Powers' to 'Parks & Recreation'
Scarlett Johansson Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Her' to 'Avengers: Endgame'
Jamie Lee Curtis Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Halloween' to 'Freaky Friday'
Michael B. Jordan Breaks Down His Career from 'The Wire' to 'Black Panther'
Kathy Bates Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Titanic' to 'American Horror Story'
Jude Law Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Holiday' to 'The New Pope'
Willem Dafoe Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Boondock Saints' to 'Spider-Man'
Kerry Washington Breaks Down Her Career, from Django Unchained to Scandal
Kristen Stewart Breaks Down Her Career, from Panic Room to Twilight
Billy Eichner Breaks Down His Career, from Parks and Recreation to The Lion King
Julia Louis-Dreyfus Breaks Down Her Career, from Seinfeld to Veep
The Russo Brothers Break Down their Career from "Arrested Development" to "Avengers: Endgame"
Richard Dreyfuss Breaks Down His Career, from Jaws to Daughter of the Wolf
John Turturro Breaks Down His Career, from "The Big Lebowski" to "The Night Of"
Terry Crews Breaks Down His Career, from 'White Chicks' to 'Brooklyn Nine-Nine'
Kumail Nanjiani Breaks Down His Career, from 'Silicon Valley' to 'The Big Sick'
Harrison Ford Breaks Down His Career, from 'Star Wars' to 'Indiana Jones'
Anthony Mackie Breaks Down His Career, from 'Avengers: Endgame' to '8 Mile'
Martin Freeman Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Hobbit' to 'Black Panther'
Mark Wahlberg Breaks Down His Career from 'Boogie Nights' to 'Ted'
Richard E. Grant Breaks Down His Career, from 'Downton Abbey' to 'Star Wars'
Kristen Bell Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Gossip Girl' to 'Frozen'
James Marsden Breaks Down His Career, from 'X-Men' to 'Westworld'
Justin Roiland Breaks Down His Career, from 'Rick and Morty' to 'Adventure Time'
Kristen Bell, Terry Crews, Jeff Goldblum & More Break Down Their First IMDb Credit
Anna Kendrick Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Pitch Perfect' to 'Twilight'
Simon Pegg Breaks Down His Career, from 'Shaun of the Dead' to 'Star Trek'
Judd Apatow Breaks Down His Career, from 'Superbad' to 'Freaks and Geeks'
Seth Green Breaks Down His Career, from 'Family Guy' to 'Austin Powers'
Wu-Tang's RZA Breaks Down His Career From Music to Movies
Joseph Gordon-Levitt Breaks Down His Career, from '10 Things I Hate About You' to 'Inception'
Cinematographer Robert Richardson Breaks Down His Career, from 'Kill Bill' to 'The Hateful Eight'
Ralph Macchio Breaks Down His Career, from 'Karate Kid' to 'Cobra Kai'
Black Lives Matter Co-Founder Alicia Garza Breaks Down Her Career
Michael K. Williams Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Wire' to 'Lovecraft Country'
Obama's White House Photographer Breaks Down His Photojournalism Career
Jim Parsons Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Big Bang Theory' to 'Young Sheldon'
Gerard Butler Breaks Down His Career, from '300' to 'Law Abiding Citizen'
'Joker' Make-Up Artist Breaks Down Her Career
Frank Langella Breaks Down His Career, from 'Dracula' to 'The Americans'
Aaron Sorkin Breaks Down His Career, from 'The West Wing' to 'The Social Network'
Dolly Parton Breaks Down Her Career, from '9 to 5' to 'Hannah Montana'
Glenn Close Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Fatal Attraction' to '101 Dalmatians'
David Oyelowo Breaks Down His Career, from 'Selma' to 'Come Away'
Gillian Anderson Breaks Down Her Career, from 'The X-Files' to 'The Crown'
BTS Breaks Down Their Music Career
Louis Vuitton's Nicolas Ghesquière Breaks Down His Fashion Career
Justin Theroux Breaks Down His Career, from 'Mulholland Drive' to 'The Leftovers'
Zack Snyder Breaks Down His Career, from 'Watchmen' to 'Justice League'
Eric Bana Breaks Down His Career, from 'Hulk' to 'Dirty John'
Kathryn Hahn Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Bad Moms' to 'WandaVision'
Tom Hiddleston Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Avengers' to 'Loki'
Mary J. Blige Breaks Down Her Career, from 'What's the 411?' to 'Respect'
Gael García Bernal Breaks Down His Career, from 'Y Tu Mamá También' to 'Coco'
Sandra Oh Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Grey's Anatomy' to 'Killing Eve'
Jay Duplass Breaks Down His Career, from 'Transparent' to 'The Chair'
Regina King Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Friday' to 'Watchmen'
Rebecca Ferguson Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Mission: Impossible' to 'Dune'
Jeff Daniels Breaks Down His Career, from 'Dumb & Dumber' to 'The Newsroom'
Kirsten Dunst Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Jumanji' to 'Spider-Man'
Jeremy Renner Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Hurt Locker' to 'The Avengers'
Jared Leto Breaks Down His Career, from 'Dallas Buyers Club' to 'House of Gucci'
Halle Berry Breaks Down Her Career, from 'X-Men' to 'Bruised'
Mahershala Ali Breaks Down His Career, from 'Moonlight' to 'Swan Song'
Javier Bardem Breaks Down His Career, from 'No Country for Old Men' to 'Dune'
Priyanka Chopra Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Kaminey' to 'The Matrix Resurrections'
Succession's Brian Cox Breaks Down His Career
John Goodman Breaks Down His Career, From 'The Big Lebowski' to 'The Righteous Gemstones'
Sebastian Stan Breaks Down His Career, from 'Captain America' to 'Pam & Tommy'
David Duchovny Breaks Down His Career
Tony Hawk Breaks Down His Skateboarding Career
Jake Gyllenhaal Breaks Down His Career
Jane Fonda Breaks Down Her Career, from '9 to 5' to 'Grace and Frankie'
Lily Tomlin Breaks Down Her Career, from '9 to 5' to 'Grace and Frankie'
Chris Hemsworth Breaks Down His Career, from 'Thor' to 'Spiderhead'
Dakota Johnson Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Fifty Shades of Grey' to 'The Lost Daughter'
Julie Andrews Breaks Down Her Career, from 'The Sound of Music' to 'The Princess Diaries'
Jeff Bridges Breaks Down His Career, from 'The Big Lebowski' to 'The Old Man'
Sean Combs Introduces Sean "Love" Combs
Johnny Knoxville Breaks Down Every Injury of His Career
Susan Sarandon Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Thelma & Louise' to 'Rocky Horror Picture Show'
Mila Kunis Breaks Down Her Career, from 'That '70s Show' to 'Black Swan'
Andrew Scott Breaks Down His Career, from 'Fleabag' to 'Sherlock'
Eddie Redmayne Breaks Down His Career, from 'Fantastic Beasts' to 'The Good Nurse'
Bill Nighy Breaks Down His Career, from 'Love Actually' to 'Pirates of the Caribbean'
Song Kang-Ho Breaks Down His Career, from 'Parasite' to 'Broker'
Jean Smart Breaks Down Her Career, from '24' to 'Hacks'
Michelle Williams Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Blue Valentine' to 'The Fabelmans'
Black Panther's Costume Designer Ruth E. Carter Breaks Down Her Iconic Costumes
Russell Crowe Breaks Down His Career, from 'Gladiator' to 'The Pope's Exorcist'
Ben Affleck & Matt Damon Break Down Their Careers
Michael Shannon Breaks Down His Career, from 'Boardwalk Empire' to 'Man of Steel'
Patricia Arquette Reflects On Her Career, from 'True Romance' to 'Severance'
Robert Downey Jr. Breaks Down His Career, from 'Iron Man' to 'Oppenheimer'
Michael Fassbender Breaks Down His Career, from 'Inglourious Basterds' to 'X-Men'
Julianne Moore Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Children of Men' to 'May December'
Paul Giamatti Breaks Down His Career, from 'Big Fat Liar' to 'The Holdovers'
Stellan Skarsgård Breaks Down His Career, from 'Mamma Mia!' to 'Dune: Part Two'
Alfred Molina Breaks Down His Career, from 'Boogie Nights' to 'Spider-Man'
Jennifer Connelly Breaks Down Her Career, from 'Top Gun' to 'Requiem for a Dream'