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An Epic Done at Epic Scale: Simon Pegg & John Cho on STAR TREK INTO DARKNESS

16 Thursday May 2013

Posted by cinepam in Interviews

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J.J. Abrams, John Cho, Simon Pegg, Star Trek Into Darkness

startrekintodarkness1In 2007’s Run, Fatboy, Run, Simon Pegg played a security guard training for a marathon, but even there he never ran the way he runs in Star Trek Into Darkness when his character, Enterprise chief engineer Scotty, sprints down a long corridor at full speed. The afternoon he shot that scene he thought he was going to be filming a lot of dialogue, but director J.J. Abrams had other ideas.

“I ran the length of it three times,” Pegg says on a recent visit to San Francisco. “J.J. said, ‘You have to run from there to there,’ and I did it once and I’ve run as fast as I’ve ever run since I was a kid. The quad bike that was filming couldn’t keep up. I just completely went for it. I felt so free. It was like being a child again.

“I got to the end and all the crew applauded. I felt so good about myself. Then J.J. said. ‘That was great. Can you do it again?’ ‘Yeah, no worries. Give me one minute.’ I did it after that and felt slightly funny after that, like something wasn’t right. And then J.J. said, ‘Just once more,’ and I did it, and I was convinced by the time I slowed down that something was going to happen, so I walked off set very quietly and just waved to everybody. And threw up.”

In a weird way, Pegg’s discomfort is a tribute to the sheer scale of the movie. As Capt. James T. Kirk (Chris Pine) and his crew face a mortal threat in John Harrison (Benedict Cumberbatch) and even greater forces, the story is epic. But so is the filmmaking behind it.

“The set we have now is biggest ever rendering of the Starship Enterprise in the history of the Star Trek story,” says Pegg. “We had a bridge that was connected to a corridor that went through to Med Bay, Engineering and the transporter room. So we could do long talking and walking scenes and have a sense of the ship’s size.”

Other sets were equally massive, including the National Ignition Facility (NIF) at Lawrence Livermore Lab, the massive laser that serves Star Trek Into Darkness as Scotty’s natural habitat, the Enterprise engine room.

“NIF was just extraordinary to be part of,” Pegg says. “ Aesthetically speaking, it formed a brilliant bridge between all the clean lines and that fantastically futuristic bridge to the industrial metal of the engine room, which is what J.J. always wanted it to look like, the guts of the Titanic. But in the middle of this you have the warp core, which kind of looks like a perfect mishmash of the two. You’ve got all this steel and yet it’s all modern looking.”

Adds Pegg’s costar John Cho, Star Trek Into Darkness‘ Sulu, “J.J. Is keen on having as much stuff around you physically as much as is possible and using CG as little as possible. It makes it easier for an actor certainly to look up and see things instead of a green felt cloth.”

The physical space might make it easier for an actor to simply act, but Pegg notes, it could be physically punishing – and not just when called upon to race down a long corridor at full speed for multiple takes. He recalls one scene where Scotty and Pike are running when gravity starts to shift.

“The set was too big to put on a gimbal, which is what you’ve seen in films where – like Inception, say, where there’s a corridor that moves – because the set was too big to move, we are on a wire, running on our sides, which is very hard to do,” Pegg says. “It enabled us to have that sensation, but do it on a much bigger scale. It was hard work.” – Pam Grady

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O Stoner Night: John Cho on HAROLD & KUMAR’s Xmas Adventure

04 Friday Nov 2011

Posted by cinepam in Interviews

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A Christmas Story, A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas, After Hours, Danny Trejo, John Cho, Kal Penn, Martin Scorsese, Neil Patrick Harris

In San Francisco to promote A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas, the third of the outrageous and outrageously funny stoner comedies that he has starred in with Kal Penn, John Cho ponders just what it is that accounts for the success of the franchise.

“I always feel like the key to doing a Harold and Kumar movie is you make it earnest,” he says. “And primarily what we do is make Harold and Kumar’s relationship and friendship believable. If Harold and Kumar are real and set up – as they always are – as a romance between the two guys in a tale of love, then almost anything goes around them. I feel that that’s the key and you just do that. I feel that this a Christmas romance movie between two men. If you just do that and have everything else happen around them, I feel like that’s the formula if there is one.”

In the latest installment of the pals’ continuing adventures, the movie opens with that bromance on the skids. Kumar (Penn) is still a stoner and a screw-up, while Harold (Cho) is successful in business and in his marriage. The hunt for a Christmas tree good enough to please Harold’s disdainful father-in-law Mr. Perez (Danny Trejo) and perhaps earn Harold a little of the old man’s respect brings them together. Chaos reigns in a movie that could be the Yuletide cousin to Martin Scorsese’s After Hours as bad breaks and bizarre encounters dog them through the night. There is even a reunion within the reunion as Harold and Kumar wander into a theater and are thrust on stage to back up their old friend Neil Patrick Harris in a holiday extravaganza.

“The song-and-dance number was the most delightful thing to film,” Cho says. “I was up close and personal watching the triple threat that is Neil Patrick Harris, the triple-named Neil Patrick Harris. Triple-named, triple threat. It was just so preposterous to me that in a Harold and Kumar movie, I would be doing this old Hollywood dance number. That’s the absurdity of that world, and to me, there’s no better example of that absurdity than us in toy soldier costumes.”

The laughs in A Very Harold and Kumar 3D Christmas are strictly adults only, including a preposterous, ribald tribute to the family classic A Christmas Story. Despite that bawdy humor, the movie perfectly evokes the holiday spirit and Cho thinks he knows why.

“We’re both paying homage to and perverting Christmas tradition,” he says. “Harold and Kumar, and hence the movies, are pretty well meaning. There’s a lot we couldn’t get away with if the movies at their core didn’t have that. There’s an innocence to it. Like this movie is a perversion of Christmas movies, but it’s also very traditional and it affirms family values and it’s about love between the two guys and it’s about love between their significant others. At their heart, that’s what they’re about, strangely enough, and the movies have a rather childlike, innocent attitude about them.” – Pam Grady

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