Tag Archives: FX Network

SDC 2016: FX’s FXhibition

FX NetworksFX Networks is headed to the City in Motion, bringing innovative activations and live entertainment to San Diego this July. FX Networks will take center stage at Hilton Bayfront Park during San Diego Comic-Con July 21-24, 2016 with groundbreaking activations and installations of fan-favorite shows Archer, American Horror Story, The Strain, It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia, and Sex&Drugs&Rock&Roll. FXhibition will transport guests to each FX series through a visually arresting, one-of-a-kind interactive art space featuring the riveting American Horror Story Fearless VR Experience.

For attendees who love a thrill, American Horror Story will curate a virtual reality experience unlike any other that takes participants on a unique journey through terrifying encounters inspired by the hair-raising series. The AHS Fearless VR Experience will be an opportunity for American Horror Story fans to become a part of their favorite show and test the boundaries of their own fear. To avoid waiting in long lines, fans can reserve a spot at AHSReservations.com, beginning July 19th.

FXhibition will also offer Comic-Con revelers iconic photo opportunities with some of the network’s most beloved series. Art installations include:

  • The Strain will erect a 25-foot “infected” Lady Liberty statue.
  • Sex&Drugs&Rock&Roll’s turbulent rock culture will be illustrated through a dramatic larger-than-life installation, featuring a smashed guitar with broken pieces several feet in size for a life size exhibit.
  • On display in the FX Sculpture Garden, fans can take advantage of social media worthy photo opportunities with iconic characters sculpted as busts including, Archer’s “Pam Poovey,” American Horror Story: Asylum’s White Nun, Man Seeking Woman’s Troll, The Strain’s “Quinlan,” Baskets’ Clown and It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia’s “Frank Reynolds” as the “troll” character from The Nightman Cometh.

It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia’s Paddy’s Pub will offer an escape from the heat providing water on tap for fans to stay cool throughout the day. A real bar will house the water taps and consumers will receive a branded collapsible cup to enjoy their drink. The FX Lounge will also be available throughout the day to provide shade and entertainment, where guests can rest their feet in seating inspired by some of the world’s most iconic chairs re-interpreted as notable props from various FX series, including the American Horror Story: Hotel Mattress as a Barcelona Bench and Archer’s Martini Olive as an Oliva Chair.

On Saturday, July 23, FX will host a broadcast of Archer Live! at the FXHibition space as part of a special “silent disco” featuring light up headphones, setting the park aglow for a late night screening. The first 300 people who arrive will receive an Archer 4-in-1 blanket.

FX Networks Picks up Legion

Dan Stevens stars as David Haller in Legion

Dan Stevens stars as David Haller in Legion

Marvel has announced that FX Networks has ordered the first season of Legion. The story follows a troubled young man who may be more than human. For comic fans, the character Legion has traditionally been David Haller, the son of Professor Charles Xavier and Gabrielle Haller. It’s unknown how much the show may tie into the various X-Men films.

The cast for the show’s cast includes Dan Stevens (“Downton Abbey”), Rachel Keller (“Fargo”), Jean Smart (“Fargo”), Aubrey Plaza (“Parks and Recreation”), Jeremie Harris (“A Walk Among the Tombstones”), Amber Midthunder (“Hell or High Water”), Katie Aselton (“The League”) and Bill Irwin (“Interstellar”).

Production on the eight-episode first season will begin this summer in Vancouver and the new series from FX Productions and Marvel Television will debut on FX in early 2017.

Below is the description released for the show.

“Legion” introduces the story of David Haller: Since he was a teenager, David has struggled with mental illness. Diagnosed as schizophrenic, David has been in and out of psychiatric hospitals for years. But after a strange encounter with a fellow patient, he’s confronted with the possibility that the voices he hears and the visions he sees might be real.

SDCC 2015: FX Networks Staging Massive “FX Fearless Arena” Fan Experience

FX NetworksFX Networks’ considerable presence at this year’s San Diego Comic-Con will take on historic proportions with the first-ever, large-scale “FX Fearless Arena” fan experience consuming the Hilton Bayfront Park next to the Convention Center. Building on the popularity of last year’s The Simpsons-based “Homer Dome,” FX Networks will build a theme park featuring massive activations for The Strain, American Horror Story: Hotel, Fargo and The Bastard Executioner, as well as numerous other on-site features including contests, collectibles and more. The “FX Fearless Arena” will be ideally situated between the Convention Center and the Hilton Bayfront Hotel, the two leading locations for SDCC panels and presentations.

Fans will be able to register for the activations early by going to www.fxsdcc.com beginning July 7th. The first 2,500 pre-registered fans who visit the Arena will receive a free, exclusive FX Fearless giant tote bag in the Welcome Area. Must be 18 or older to participate in activations for The Strain, The Bastard Executioner and American Horror Story: Hotel.

The Strain

Prove your fearlessness by entering a live-action virtual reality experience inspired by The Strain, the vampire thriller from Carlton Cuse and Guillermo del Toro, based off the best-selling book trilogy by del Toro and Chuck Hogan. Using the Samsung Gear VR – powered by the Galaxy Note 4, fans will be taken on a two-and-a-half-minute adventure created exclusively for Comic-Con and featuring series regular Kevin Durand (“Vasiliy Fet”). It’s the perfect preview for the second season of The Strain, which premieres on FX on Sunday, July 12th at 10 PM ET/PT.

American Horror Story: Hotel

Ryan Murphy’s hit anthology horror series American Horror Story is back this fall with its fifth installment, Hotel, and FX is building a two-story model hotel to give viewers a taste of the era. Then fans will be able to venture inside one of eight “gifting suites” in order to capture the most flying bills and earn prizes.

The Bastard Executioner

“Escape the Forest” is the ideal duel inspired by Kurt Sutter’s upcoming medieval drama The Bastard Executioner. Visitors don the mantle of “warriors” and square off against each other to prove their prowess with a high striker, a cross-bow, and a final puzzle challenge that will help them escape the “forest” and win a TBX-themed hooded t-shirt. The Bastard Executioner will debut on FX this fall.

Fargo

Aw jeez, a blizzard in San Diego? Step inside a giant 20-foot inflatable snow globe featuring snow flurries and a façade of a Waffle Hut – a key location in the second installment of the award-winning limited series Fargo which returns to FX this fall.

Numerous other on-site installations and opportunities for prizes, collectibles and more are available:

  • Archer-themed water fountain shaped like Pam Poovey’s Dolphin Puppet.
  • It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia sunscreen station.
  • Concert button giveaways for Sex&Drugs&Rock&Roll.
  • The Kwik-E-Mart Truck will be on-site on Saturday, July 11th offering free Squishees in honor of The Simpsons, whose entire 26-season run is available exclusively on FXX and FXNOW.
  • Sweepstakes featuring a grand prize trip to a luxury hotel in Los Angeles or New York City.
  • A mega LED wall showing clips of FX Networks shows, as well as a live social-media scroll featuring #FXSDCC.
  • Premiums including The Bastard Executioner t-shirts, American Horror Story key chains, and waffle-scented Fargo air fresheners.
  • Complete limited edition collectible trading card sets – and complimentary carry cases – with cards from American Horror Story, Fargo and The Strain. Cards include code for a 12-day trial access to FXNOW.
  • A massive – 238 feet wide x 226 feet tall – wrap on the Hilton Bayfront Hotel promoting the new season of The Strain.

“Who’s the Freak Now?” A Wrap-Up of American Horror Story: Freak Show

American-Horror-Story-Freak-ShowHaving just gone through my first week without an episode of Freak Show, I’ve had some time to process this installment of the American Horror Story anthology.

When it began I came to the show like anyone heading to a freak show, drawn by curiosity and the promise of more than a glimpse of the unusual, the bizarre, maybe even the morbid. What I got was a panoramic extravaganza, not just of a traveling tent show set in 1950’s rural Florida, but many aspects of American society writ large in the right now. Seduced by Elsa Mars’s performances of modern musical mash-ups channeling David Bowie and Marlene Dietrich, concurrently (though Else says it was Marlene who stole her act), I felt that the television show itself, though over-the-top at times, successfully blended the horrifying and deadly serious with enough heart and wit to make it incredibly entertaining. And so what if it was over-the-top? It’s shot throughout with the element of big-top circus spectacle. We should expect nothing less.

If one came to see the “freaks,” the members of Elsa’s company cease to be freaks in the normal (did I say normal?) sense over the course of the series, one by one becoming fully-realized, well-rounded, relatable, sympathetic characters, each with his or her own incredible journey to Fraulein Elsa’s Cabinet of Curiosities, including Elsa herself. The Bearded Lady, her son Jimmy the Lobster Boy, the Pinheads Salt and Pepper, Ma Petite, the Incredible Tattooed Seal Man, Dot and Bette, the conjoined twins, and Desiree, the woman with three breasts, among others, all cease to be what the public thinks of as freaks, but are just people who look out-of-the-ordinary trying to survive in a society that values conformity above all else. This is why the charms and thrills of the freak show seem so illicit and tap into the hunger for the exotic and forbidden that those proper Tupperware party ladies and button-down business men try to hide. It’s also why the ladies that have Tupperware parties hire Jimmy to perform sexual favors with his lobster claws as one by one they take breaks from their dainty snacks and perusing the latest in food storage to go into the bedroom for sexual release. Over-the-top? Perhaps, but this is just an illustration of the repression of the times, hence the need to go a little wild.

static1.squarespace.comThe freak show is a place to indulge those desires voyeuristically and when the so-called freaks leave the camp and go into town they get stares of fascination mingled with hostility. Their exoticism belongs in the dim confines of the red and white striped tents, not in the bright light of conventional day where the citizens of Jupiter, Florida are confronted with their extreme “otherness.”

Over the arc of Freak Show, it becomes glaringly obvious that the performers of Elsa’s show are not the real freaks. As author Flannery O’Connor once said, “Whenever I’m asked why Southern writers particularly have a penchant for writing about freaks, I say it is because we are still able to recognize one.” As Ms. O’Connor knew, the real freaks, southern and otherwise, are the ones you wouldn’t think twice about seeing in town. There’s Dandy, the handsome rich boy, whose good looks get him invited into the Tupperware party after Jimmy is banished for being drunk and unkempt. It’s also Dandy who perpetrates the massacre that takes place there, then pins it on Jimmy. There’s the policeman Dora’s daughter goes to for help after Dandy admits to killing her mother, but the policeman shoots her dead in exchange for the mountains of money Dandy promises him. There’s the enterprising grifter posing as a Hollywood agent also in it for the money who plans to kill the freaks and sell their corpses or body parts to a “museum” in Philadelphia that touts itself as somehow contributing to scientific discovery, but is really a bogus inversion of Elsa’s freak show, taking it out of the tent and putting it in bottles of formaldehyde for rich people to gaze upon. Once again, the real freaks here are the ones gazing at the lifeless spectacle along with the pretentious woman who runs the museum and purchases these–specimens. There’s also the upstanding-looking veteran who has a homicidal history stateside and looks to an equally homicidal wooden doll for advice. Jealousy is the source of his freakishness though his crimes will probably get him thrown into the asylum rather than prison.

Other factors are at work but greed drives much of the violence on the show. Greed and fear abound: two phenomenally destructive forces. Elsa’s “monsters” as she affectionately calls them (remind you of another famous pop star who refers to her adoring fans the same way?) are constantly persecuted, endangered and killed by the real freaks, whose morbid cravings are the source of their true grotesque freakishness. However, there’s some danger from within the tent city as well, especially from those heavily under the influence of those aforementioned “normal-looking” freaks (Strong Man, I’m looking at you).

There’s so much more I’d love to examine about Freak Show, but perhaps another time. All I know is that I was mesmerized by it every week from the very beginning. Things reached such operatic heights at times that I couldn’t imagine how so much chaos, pain, violence, betrayal and retribution could ever be contained by the final episode, but the show was never devoid of heart, soul and compassion. Chaos, pain and the other items on the above list are everywhere in the media: television, movies, video games, and of course, also in real life. What kept me coming back to Freak Show each week was that, like in the most violent scenes in King Lear (yes, that King Lear) where pain was inflicted there was someone who would come along soon to alleviate the pain. The ones they call freaks stick together. The ones who are the real freaks remain on the other side of the footlights, in the dark of the tent, and even darker night of the lost soul.

Interview: Kevin Durand – ‘The Strain’

the-strain-logo1

On Monday, I was fortunate enough to be involved in a conference call interview with Kevin Durand, who plays fan-favorite Vasily Fet on The Strain on the FX Network. There were many writers in line to ask questions and I happened to be the last one to be able to speak with him and ask a few questions, obviously geared towards the comic book aspect of The Strain and its influence on his role in the series. During my follow-up question I brought up how I had always pictured Mr. Durand as Abraham Ford from The Walking Dead comic book series and his response shed some light on who might play a future villain when that arc in the TV show adaption approaches. He was thankful that I thought about him as one of the characters from such a successful franchise and revealed he had been approached to play the role of the nefarious Negan of The Saviors. Here is the full transcript of the interview with Kevin Durand.

 

SPEAKERS

Tom Ruffner

Kevin Durand

PRESENTATION

Moderator            Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to The Strain conference call. At this time all participants are in a listen-only mode. We will be conducting a question-and-answer session throughout the conference. As a reminder, this call is being recorded.

I would like now to turn the conference over to your host, Tom Ruffner with FX Networks. Please go ahead.

 

Tom            Hello, and welcome to The Strain conference call with series star Kevin Durand. I’d like to thank everyone for joining us today, and remind you that this call is for print purposes only. No audio may be used.

The Strain season one finale airs Sunday night, October 5th, at 10:00 p.m. Eastern and Pacific only on FX, and, as always, we respectfully request that you do not post spoilers pre-air to help protect the viewing experience for the audience. Due to the fact that there are so many journalists joining us today we ask that you limit yourself to one question and a quick follow-up, and then get back into queue for any additional questions you may have.

So, with that said, let’s go ahead and take our first question.

 

Moderator            Our first question will come from Jamie Ruby from SciFiVision.com. Please go ahead.

 

Jamie            Hello, Kevin. Thank you so much for talking to us today.

 

Kevin            Oh, my pleasure. How you doing?

 

Jamie            Great. And I really love the show; I can’t wait for the finale next week.

 

Kevin            Thank you.

 

Jamie            But I’m curious, have you read any of the books or where did you get the inspiration for the way you play “Fet” from?

 

Kevin            Well, I read all three of the books before I fully signed on. And my inspiration to play “Fet,” I guess in reading the books I kind of saw him very similarly to the way that I’m playing him. I feel like a lot of it was on the page. I hear that he’s a lot more of a charming kind and happier than people had anticipated, but I kind of always saw that because through the journals and the books see how he really finds himself within this apocalypse and is blooming like a beautiful Ukrainian flower amidst the apocalypse.

 

Jamie            Right. Another thought, what’s been the most challenging for you so far?

 

Kevin            The most challenging. It’s just been such a blast and so much fun shooting. I mean we had long hours, it was cold. I know that a lot of the cast members found the climate to be a bit challenging; however I’m from 20 hours north of Toronto so I kind of felt really at home. So challenge wise I feel like all my preparation was there going in and my challenge was just to try to be the best that I could be every day.

 

Jamie            Great. Well, thank you so much.

 

Kevin            Thank you.

 

Moderator            Thank you. And our next question will come from Earl Dittman from Digital Journal.

 

Earl            Hey, Kevin, how are you this morning?

 

Kevin            Hello. How are you?

 

Earl            I’m doing great. Doing fantastic. So are you normally a horror fan or a thriller fan of films or television?

 

Kevin            Yes. Since I was a child, much to the chagrin of my father, my mother would keep me up and I would watch horror films with her since I was about four years old or five years old, so I’ve always been a fan. And they always say that you marry your mother, and my wife is the biggest horror fan ever, so I kind of experienced a rebirth in terms of my interest in the genre since I married Sandra four years ago. So when this opportunity came along we read the books. We were kind of like snickering and giggling like some little kids going, “Oh my God, this is going to be awesome.”

 

Earl            And what is it about this, I mean, the series is incredible, it’s unlike anything we’ve seen, what is it about it you think that is so appealing or is so appealing to a horror fan I think that we may not see in other things?

 

Kevin            Well, you’re seeing this story being told from the perspective of Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan. But Guillermo has his eye on every single frame and he brings a certain beauty to the most horrific things, and it’s very hard to look away. You can’t help but stare at the Master’s face when you’re in an extreme close-up and look at the beautiful, intricate details. I think he has such a unique take on horror. I remember watching Pan’s Labyrinth and just being in absolute awe of the things that scared me, because they were so beautiful.

 

Earl            Well, it’s fantastic, and you’ve done a great job. Appreciate it, and best of luck.

 

Kevin            Oh, thank you so much.

 

Moderator            Thank you, and our next question comes from Rebecca Murray from Showbiz Junkies. Please go ahead.

 

Rebecca            Good morning.

 

Kevin            Good morning.

 

Rebecca            Why do you think he was so willing to take the leap from exterminating rats to exterminating vampires? I mean he did take a little while to consider it, but he jumped in with both feet.

 

Kevin            Yes. Well, I think that “Fet” has this inner kind of warrior, this Viking warrior inside of him, and it was always kind of living within him. But in this specific circumstance, when all hell has broken loose and the vermin have turned into human bloodsucking vermin, it feels like way more of a natural transition than probably you would assume. He’s a master at exterminating, and this new world really needs him and I think he’s so happy to step up to the task.

 

Rebecca            That makes sense. Can’t wait for the finale.

 

Kevin            Thank you. Me, too.

 

Moderator            And our next question comes from Kristyn Clarke from Pop Culture Madness.

 

Kristyn            Hello, Kevin. Thank you so much for speaking with us today.

 

Kevin            Oh, it’s my pleasure. Thanks for speaking to me today.

 

Kristyn            So, I’m curious, as we gear up for the finale and everything, how satisfied are you with where that has landed at the end of the first season and going into season two?

 

Kevin            I have to say I feel so good about it. Even the way that from the first time that we get to see “Fet” and the journey to where he’s at now, I mean, the whole journey I’ve been just kind of tickled by. And to see where he’s at now you could see that things are getting more intense as the minutes roll by, and it’s kind of like seeing a great kind of prize fighter before a big fight staying really calm and relaxed and ready for action, and I think that’s where “Fet’s” at. I mean he’s making googley-eyes at this girl when the world’s going to crap. That’s because he’s very comfortable, he’s ready, he knows that if there’s anyone for the job that he’s the guy.

 

Kristyn            And as a follow-up, obviously we’ve seen that he has become kind of a full-fledged member of the team now. What kind of affect do you think that had on the character?

 

Kevin            Well, I don’t think he’s used to playing with other kids in the sandbox, but he’s a smart guy and he understands that there’s a lot of power that comes with numbers. He looks around the room and he has a genuine respect for everybody in that group and knows that we can all play our role in taking down the Master.

 

Kristyn            Great. Thank you so much.

 

Kevin            Oh, thank you.

 

Moderator            Our next question comes from David Martindale from Hearst Newspapers. Please go ahead.

 

David            Hello, Kevin. I love the show. You’re really wonderful in it.

 

Kevin            Oh, thank you so much.

 

David            Yes. Several weeks ago FX scheduled a call like this for Sean Astin on a Monday and his character died the Sunday night, so I’m kind of relieved that you’re okay. Is there a story behind how you hooked up with this show and with this character?

 

Kevin            I was prepping for a film at the time called The Captive that I did for Atom Egoyan; I lost like 40 pounds, and I had this little mustache, and I looked like a very different person. Then I found out that Guillermo and Carlton wanted to meet me on this project. So I had three days. I read the book, went in, and after I read that first book I was like there is no way that Guillermo del Toro and Carlton Cuse are going to see me at this big, robust, heroic, stoic fella “Vasiliy Fet,” because I was so skinny and sick looking.

 

And we had this meeting and sat down and I assured them that I was kind of starving myself just for this project I was going to do and then I was going to get back to normal. In the room they asked me if I wanted to be “Vasiliy Fet.” Every day since I’ve been so grateful for that meeting, because in playing him I don’t know if I’ve ever had so much fun, ever. And also in watching it, it’s been so incredibly gratifying to watch the season unfold.

 

David            Yes, I agree as a viewer. I was at Barnes & Noble a few weeks ago. There’s a whole wall of vampire fiction there, which is great, because teenage girls needs something to read. But I think it’s cool that this show has taken vampires back away from those books and TV shows and movies that want to make the vampire charming and sexy and brooding and angst ridden. Do you kind of take pride in being involved in a show that makes vampires truly bad again?

 

Kevin            Absolutely. I mean, obviously, I can’t take credit for that at all. It lays in the wonderful, crazy, beautiful, dark mind of Guillermo del Toro. Because he’s been having dreams about these vampires and making sketches and taking notes since he was a child, and that’s how these vampires came to fruition. They’ve been a part of his nightmares for decades. So what’s really satisfying is to see Guillermo, who is such a lovely, charismatic visionary, actually get those nightmares out of his head and onto the screen. And I’m so grateful to be a part of it and help him tell the story.

 

David            Cool. It’s been a pleasure. Thank you so much.

 

Kevin            Thank you. Thank you kindly.

 

Moderator            Our next question comes from Henry Otero from TVFanatic.com. Please go ahead.

 

Henry            Hello, Kevin. How you doing? You’re awesome on the show, by the way.

 

Kevin            Oh, thank you so much. How are you?

 

Henry            I’m doing all right.

 

Kevin            Good.

 

Henry            I was curious, since you’ve read the books is there a particular scene in the second book coming in the next season that you’re really excited to watch come to life on the show?

 

Kevin            It’s so hard to pinpoint a specific scene, because even in just trying to imagine what we’re going to do in the second scene, because the books have really served us but they’ve been almost like a skeleton, and then Carlton Cuse and Chuck Hogan and the amazing writing room they kind of like put the flesh and the blood and the muscle on that skeleton as the season goes. So I can’t even tell you what I might be up to.

 

And one thing that’s interesting in the transition is in the second book I have a lot of—well, in the first book it starts and then I have it all the way through the third book as well—but “Vasiliy” is journaling a lot. So for me I’m starting to read the second book again just so that I can try to figure out how to play that kind of between the lines of just kind of like he goes through this almost like a rebirth; as everything goes to crap “Vasiliy” keeps getting stronger and more confident and more able. So I’m really looking forward to that evolution.

 

Henry            Very cool. And quick follow-up, welcome to Twitter. I know you’re brand new to Twitter. What was that live tweeting experience like last night?

 

Kevin            That live tweeting experience last night – I was so excited and had so much fun. I’ve always been so against doing the social media thing. I don’t know, my head must have been up my butt. I’ve just been so scared to share stuff. I thought I should stay mysterious, kind of. But I have to say since I’ve joined I’ve really enjoyed being able to see immediately people’s reactions and have communications to people who are watching the show or other projects that I might be a part of. Luckily they’re not tweeting and saying, “Wow, Kevin Durand, you really suck.”

 

Henry            Yes, it helps that everybody loves “Fet.” Absolutely true.

 

Kevin            Exactly. Exactly. It could have been a very different experience. I might be Astin already if that was the case. But yes, it was just so lovely to get all that kind of support, and, yes, I really enjoyed it. I think I might want to do it again for the finale. I don’t know, we’ll see.

 

Henry            Oh, excellent.

 

Kevin            Yes.

 

Henry            That sounds good. All right. Take care. Thank you very much.

 

Kevin            Hey, thank you.

 

Moderator            And our next question comes from Mary Powers from TVGoodness.com. Please go ahead.

 

Mary            Hello and good morning.

 

Kevin            Good morning.

 

Mary            And just like everyone else said, I think you’re the bomb on this show. Just fantastic.

 

Kevin            Oh, thank you. I’m the bomb. The bomb.

 

Mary            Yes, the bomb. Yes.

 

Kevin            I love that. “Fet” loves bombs.

 

Mary            Okay, “Fet” thinks very quickly and has nerves of steel, even when he was facing that sleeping hoard of strigoi in last week’s episode. Given that, what do you think it would take to really unnerve this guy and put true fear in his heart?

 

Kevin            Wow, that’s a really good question. I’m not really sure, because we haven’t gotten that yet. I don’t know if we will. I mean I think he has—it’s going to be interesting to see him in a group of people like this, and when you’re in a group of people under such a high level of duress there is a very high, intense level of bonding amongst the group. So I think the idea that “Fet” will develop feelings for people within this group would definitely raise the stakes for him and probably put fear in his heart.

 

It’s just like “Setrakian” has told us before, he said love is our downfall. And I think of him being a loner up to this point, like even seeing that he hasn’t seen his father or mother, he’s been estranged from there for years. He hasn’t really had to account for anyone for a long time, and now he seems like he really, genuinely respected “Setrakian” at this point and I see a relationship budding there, like a father/son relationship. It seems like he’s kind of interested in “Dutch” as well. I don’t see a whole lot of love lost between him and “Eph” but, who knows, they may become friends. I don’t know. But I think that that might be the thing is connection to these human beings under that duress may take him to that point.

 

Mary            And then, just a quick follow-up, this was a question that came up several times I saw on Twitter last night, so what’s the deal with “Dutch?” Does he like this girl, or is it just harmless flirting, or what can you say about that?

 

Kevin            We haven’t really explored it a whole lot. I think that he sees a spectrum of things in her. Obviously, she’s not hard on the eyes, but she’s hyper intelligent, she’s rebellious like him, she’s tough like him, she doesn’t take any crap like him, and he really gets a kick out of it. I think he sees she’s kind of reflecting to him kind of like a mirror in some ways in the short time that they have known each other, so he’s just intrigued.

 

Actually, as you probably know if you’ve read the books, I mean she doesn’t exist in the book.

 

Mary            Right.

 

Kevin            So her fate and what she ends up doing within the show are completely a mystery to me. It’s one of those things that I’m so excited about with this show is that we really don’t know what’s going to happen. So if I make it through episode 13 then I’ll get to shoot a second season, and then maybe we can find out.

 

Mary            Well, thank you. I’m looking forward to the finale.

 

Kevin            Thank you. Me, too.

 

Mary            Yes.

 

Kevin            And I love, love your accent, by the way.

 

Mary            Well, thank you.

 

Kevin            It’s such a gorgeous sound.

 

Mary            Thank you so much.

 

Kevin            Have a good day.

 

Mary            You, too.

 

Moderator            And our next question comes from Terry Stanley from the LA Times.

 

Terry            Hello, Kevin.

 

Kevin            Hey, how are you today?

 

Terry            Dude, everyone loves “Fet.”

 

Kevin            Oh, that’s so good to hear.

 

Terry            And you know you’re the son that “Setrakian” never had, so you’re not going anywhere.

 

Kevin            Well, we’ll have to tune in to find out.

 

Terry            Yes. Well, you mentioned earlier, I thought it was really interesting, about “Fet” essentially being kind of an upbeat character, and sometimes I wonder if he really thinks things are going to turn out okay or if he just has no fear.

 

But anyway, talk to me about the role of hope. When we look at especially the first two books, The Strain and The Fall – super dark.

 

Kevin            Yes.

 

Terry            So talk to me about the role of hope in this series. Maybe it’s more important for the show than it was for the books.

 

Kevin            I think that when you’re going up against the odds that we’re going against, I mean even just putting our little group just against that one seven foot, eight foot, maybe nine foot tall Master, I mean that’s scary enough as it is, but now we have a population that’s just exploding with these things. The only thing that you really have is hope. The only thing that you have is optimism.

 

And I think that’s part of why people have been drawn to “Fet,” because he’s not kind of letting the fall of civilization get him down. I think he truly believes and truly has hope in his heart, and not just hope, though. I think he really believes that he is going to get through it, and he’s starting to understand that he’s going to be instrumental in that, and it really makes him feel good and strong and confident in himself.

 

Terry            Right.

 

Kevin            I don’t know if I answered that question. I kind of danced around a lot. I was trying—

 

Terry            No, I think you did. Well, the difference between the books and the series, do you feel like for a TV show it’s really important to give people, to give the viewers some kind of ray of light?

 

Kevin            Yes. Absolutely. Absolutely. I mean I think you have to have a reason. You can’t be watching this show for five seasons thinking that they’re all doomed. There has to be some chance that they could make it, and this is the group of people that I would hope for in a vampire apocalypse. I hope that there’s a real “Fet” and an “Eph” and a “Setrakian” and a “Nora” and a “Dutch” out there to help take us through it.

 

Moderator            Thank you. Our next question comes from Jasmine Alyce from Fanbolt.com.

 

Jasmine            Hey, Kevin. So nice to talk to you today. Thank you for joining us.

 

Kevin            Oh, thank you. Thank you.

 

Jasmine            If you could play any other role on the show which one would you pick and why?

 

Kevin            It’s so funny, because someone asked me that last night and I was so paralyzed by it, like I am now, because when I read the first book I didn’t even know that they wanted me for “Fet,” and “Fet” doesn’t start in the first book until about page 240. But even in the last, I guess it was the second half of the book, just off of that second half of the book I was like, “God, I hope I get to play that guy. I hope that’s who they want me for.”

 

In watching the show I guess maybe “Eichhorst” would have been fun, because I usually, up to this point, people usually see me destroying the world as opposed to helping to save it. So I can’t really think of who else I could have played, but “Eichhorst” would have been fun.

 

Jasmine            Okay. Cool. Thank you.

 

Kevin            But kudos, I mean how amazing is Richard Sammel as “Eichhorst?” I mean I don’t know if I could have in any way gotten to that same level of just sheer—

 

Jasmine            [Indiscernible].

 

Kevin            He terrifies me. Yes, he’s a terrifying dude. Terrifying opponent.

 

Jasmine            Absolutely.

 

Moderator            Thank you. And our next question comes from Erin Willard from SciFi Mafia.

 

Erin            Hello, it’s Erin Willard. Thanks a lot for taking the time to talk with us today. You’ll always be “Keamy” to me, but I forget about Keamy when I’m watching “Fet,” because “Fet’s” so awesome, too, just in a totally different way.

 

Kevin            “Martin Christopher Keamy.”

 

Erin            What a great character that is, too.

 

Kevin            Sure it. Thanks for bringing me back to “Martin Christopher Keamy.” Thank God for that character. Thank God for Carlton Cuse.

 

Erin            Well, tell me, what kind of an impact did that have on your career?

 

Kevin            For that one I got an audition, and I went in and I did this one scene that was kind of there wasn’t a whole lot of description or I didn’t really understand who this guy was, they didn’t really tell me much. It was so secretive.

 

Erin            Sure.

 

Kevin            And I went in and read, and I got it. I thought it was going to be one episode, and I thought, “Well, it would just be nice to go to Hawaii.” I went out there and we all kind of fell in love, and I loved what they were writing, they loved what I was doing.

 

And then all these years later I get a call that Carlton Cuse and Guillermo del Toro want to meet with me. I’m so grateful that Carlton thought of me for both characters, because I think these characters up to this point, and I’ve been doing this for like 23 years or something, they seem to be the characters that have had the most impact, and I’m so grateful for the fact that he thought about me for both times.

 

Erin            Well, earned. Obviously well done by you.

 

Kevin            Oh, thank you.

 

Erin            No. Absolutely. Then just as a quick follow-up, you’ve been in a lot of, a fair number anyway, you’ve been in so many different kinds of productions but you’ve been in a fair number of sci-fi related productions. What do you like best about it and what do you dislike the most about it?

 

Kevin            About sci-fi?

 

Erin            Yes. Sci-fi horror, that kind of genre work.

 

Kevin            Well, sci-fi done right is, as far as I’m concerned, is the greatest form of escapism. So not just as a reader or a viewer I’m a big fan of the genre, but even to be an actor stepping into that role it’s always just such a wonderful challenge and it’s always so exciting to kind of just – I always call it “drifting.” I always kind of drift off into these characters and become a part of these different worlds. Yes, it’s always been such a pleasure. When sci-fi is done right I mean there’s no limit to where we can take things and stretch our reality. And that’s why, it’s just limitless.

 

Erin            Sure. But is there a downside to it? Have you found a downside to it?

 

Kevin            Well, yes, it’s downside is when you don’t have enough money in the budget and you try to make these fantastical things happen, but there’s a lack of money and you see the lack of that money on the screen, and then it’s harder to kind of escape. It’s harder to get whisked away by something that the production just isn’t allowing you to go on that trip. Now when sci-fi is backed properly there’s nothing better.

 

Erin            Absolutely. Well, thank you so much for your work.

 

Kevin            Thank you. Thank you for your question and support. I appreciate it.

 

Moderator            Thank you. Our next question comes from Mary Powers from TVGoodness.com. Go ahead.

 

Mary            Hello again.

 

Kevin            Hey there.

 

Mary            I had just one other question. Last week’s episode where you were down in the tunnels and had to crawl through that tiny hole or passage that seemed like a very hard scene, and I just wanted you to talk about that. How in the world were you able to get through that?

 

Kevin            Well, you know what’s really funny about that is that they brought me in I think a week or two early and wanted to see if I could make it through that hole, because they knew that I was the biggest one in the group. So I came to work and I just shot through it really quickly, because I have way too much confidence in my athletic prowess. I was like, “Yes, look at that, big guy could do it really quick.”

 

I didn’t keep in mind, I didn’t do the math and realize that okay, well “Fet” has this really thick, bulky jacket plus his knapsack. So I got to set and Mía just shot through that thing like a lightning bolt, and I was like, “Oh, I have to beat Mía’s time,” in my head. I got in there and right from the start I could hardly move, and the panic on my face it was a real panic, like I don’t know how I’m going to get out of this. So it really happened, I really did almost get stuck. So it took a lot of me maneuvering muscles that I didn’t even know that I had just to move like half an inch forward. So, luckily I got out. I’m here right now still alive.

 

Mary            Yes. It scared the crap out of a lot of fans, though, I think.

 

Kevin            Well how fricking scary was that vampire coming after me?

 

Mary            Yes.

 

Kevin            I remember watching her go through that tunnel afterwards, and I mean I got chills, I got chills just watching the way that it was so subhuman; it was so like it was animal. It was really freaky. I’m glad that she didn’t bite me, thank goodness.

 

Mary            Yes. I think all the fandom out there is very glad as well.

 

Kevin            Good. Awesome.

 

Mary            Thank you.

 

Kevin            Well, thank you very much. Thank you.

 

Moderator            Thank you. Our next question comes from Dan Calvisi from Act Four Screenplays.

 

Dan            Hello, Kevin. My question is about the script that you get for the show, or maybe that your agent sends you for other films and projects. I’m wondering, what do you see as the difference on the page between genre material, like these thrillers and sci-fi and horror material or superhero movie like X-Men, versus more of an indie drama like Fruitvale Station, for example. I see that on your bio. I haven’t actually seen Fruitvale Station, but I’ve heard a lot about it and I know it’s more of a character driven type of thing.

 

Kevin            Yes. Yes. Well, from my perspective, I don’t approach the scripts in any different way. It all comes down to how the words on the page compel me or not, and I never really discriminate by genre. So if I have a visceral reaction to the words I’m reading then I know that I’m in the right place and that I’m interested.

 

So when I read Fruitvale I remember thinking I don’t think that I could play this guy, but there was a visceral reaction where I was like – so that means that I have to try. And it was the same thing when I read The Captive, Atom Egoyan’s The Captive, I was like there’s no way that I could play this guy. I was terrified, and I knew that I had to do it.

 

Reading “Vasiliy” every day, it’s not so much feeling like I can’t do it. I feel so stimulated by the opportunity to get to play someone heroic and stoic and good. And so it really just comes down to the quality of the words on the page as to what genre it lives in.

 

Dan            And which style do you prefer of shooting or directorial style working with the director; do you prefer more of a looser, getting a scene on its feet, maybe doing some more rehearsal and improve, or sticking to the script?

 

Kevin            It’s kind of funny, I’m kind of loosey-goosey, because I feel like I can learn from every experience. So some directors come in super regimented, like you said, and they have a very specific plan of attack, and I’m happy to be one of the players on the field and let’s attack your plan, let’s go, and let’s see what I can contribute. And then a lot of the times I’ve worked with directors where, like you said, like you could even stray from the page and just kind of find moments that might not be there, and I enjoy that, too. I don’t really have a preference. I’m just happy to be there, bro.

 

Dan            How about on The Strain, what is the style of shooting, are there very strict story boards or animatics?

 

Kevin            Well, the style of The Strain the directors are all different from episode-to-episode. So, for instance, on episode 8 we had Guy Ferland direct it, and he had a shot list that was I mean it was truly insane like looking at this shot list at the start of every day. I mean we were just looking at each other there’s absolutely no way that we’re going to be able to shoot this in eight days. And Guy, it was phenomenal how he attacked it. No one believed that he actually got it all done, and not only got it done but did it in a way where I just think he really killed it and hit all the moments, and it’s one of my favorite episodes.

 

Then you have other episodes that are just like Peter Weller had a different kind of style. That’s one thing that I really loved about being on a TV series was that I got to work and learn from all these different folks, like every week it was a different plan of attack. So it was always trying to hold onto who you think the character is and how he would react in a certain moment and kind of help educate them, but at the same time be open to these different people’s opinions. That was kind of one of the fun parts of being a part of a collective.

 

Moderator            Thank you. And our next question comes from Angie Barry from CriminalElement.com.

 

Angie            Hey, Kevin. I’ve been a big fan of yours ever since Dark Angel, and it’s just a real pleasure to talk to you. So thank you for talking to us today.

 

Kevin            Oh, wow. “Joshua.”

 

Angie            Oh, yes, I have a lot of friends that really loved “Joshua.” When they found out I was interviewing you they were like let him know that we love him for “Joshua.”

 

Kevin            That is so fun. “Joshua: was the first character that I played that when, because I spent so much time with him because I was in prosthetics for five hours in the morning and then two hours taking it off and it was about usually between twelve hours and fourteen hours between that, my days were so long that when that show ended I genuinely missed “Joshua.” I mourned “Joshua.”

 

Angie            Yes. I think everyone knows him. Okay, so my question. You’ve played some different nationalities and you’ve done different accents, and I was just wondering do you work with dialect coaches or do you devote a lot of time to practicing different accents that your characters call for?

 

Kevin            I have a funny kind of OCD. I’m a little obsessive compulsive with sounds and people’s idiosyncratic behavior, and I generally I don’t work with anyone. Sometimes the production will have someone that will kind of check up on me. But I’m so obsessive with this stuff that I usually just come to the table with what I end up doing.

 

For instance, for Robin Hood before Ridley had actually given me the job I moved to Scotland for two months and was frequenting a lot of hangouts in Glasgow and Edinburgh and just recording people, having conversations. There’s this one fellow, Bill Haggerty in Glasgow, that I’d meet at a pub about three times, four times a week and I would record our conversations, and I was trying to become Bill Haggerty.

 

So it’s always a different process, and I kind of go about it organically. With “Vasiliy” I wanted to find a way to meld a Ukrainian sound with a New York sound since he spent the first—

 

Angie            I think you do a masterful job with it.

 

Kevin            Oh, thank you so much. I really—

 

Angie            Yes. I had a lot of friends that are like, “Where is he from; is he British, is he,” and I’m like, “Oh, he’s Canadian.” They’re like, “I would have never thought that. I saw him in Robin Hood, and I thought he did such a good job on that accent.” Then I had people saying, “Oh, well he’s obviously Ukrainian, I mean I hear his accent in The Strain and it’s so good.”

 

Kevin            That’s so good to hear. It was definitely a learning process trying to think out the marriage between the two accents. Because “Fet” to me is like really like I mean he is New York, but it depends. And I think about it, because I’m French Canadian and so my natural accent is not the one that I’m speaking in right now. So I know that in certain situations I start to hear my accent again when things are a little bit more intense, or if I’m having a couple beers, or if I’m just talking to my mom and dad it all comes back. So I kind of implement that into “Fet’s” kind of life. If he’s hanging out and talking to his dad, like that one scene, it gets a little thicker, because it kind of brings out the Ukrainian. If he’s just hanging out with some dudes from the neighborhood then he definitely gets more New York. So it’s been really, really fun finding it, and I’m excited to keep finding it every day.

 

Angie            Yes, you’ve done a really good job, and I really loved watching you on the show, and I can’t wait to see what you do next. So thank you so much for talking to us.

 

Kevin            I appreciate that so much. Thank you.

 

Moderator            Our next question comes from Robin Sanderson, MovieWhole.net. Please go ahead.

 

Robin            Hello. Thank you so much for talking to us this morning.

 

Kevin            Oh, it’s my pleasure. How are you today?

 

Robin            I’m good. How are you doing? Okay.

 

Kevin            I’m doing really well. Doing really well. Yes, I’m excited to get to talk about “Fet” and about the show. It’s awesome to be a fan of something that I’m such a big part of.

 

Robin            That’s great to hear. So “Vasiliy Fet” seems to distrust people and he also seems to judge them, and he also seems to let his emotions drive his actions and relationships on the show [indiscernible].

 

Kevin            I’m having a hard time understanding you. I think I’m just hearing some crazy sirens behind you right now.

 

Robin            Can you hear– Sorry. Sorry.

 

Kevin            Yes. Would you mind just asking again?

 

Robin            Not at all. Can you hear me now?

 

Kevin            Yes. Yes. Let’s give it a try.

 

Robin            Okay. “Vasiliy Fet” seems to distrust people and he seems to judge them, and he seems to let those emotions drive his actions and relationships on the show. What are your thoughts on that?

 

Kevin            So “Vasiliy Fet” mistrusts people and he what?

 

Robin            And he judges them. I feel like he has a lot of judgment for the characters on the show, for “Ephraim” in particular.

 

Kevin            I don’t know. I don’t know if I fully agree with that. I think “Vasiliy” is very straight up and he reacts to people the way—he’s very reactionary. So “Eph,” off the top, just kind of gave him – I think he’s a little bit, he has a thing in terms of judging people. I think that he kind of gets set off a little bit, his temper gets set off a little bit when people look down upon him and when they just expect a lot less from him. People have been looking down on him for a long time because of his job, and I think he feels that from “Eph”. And “Vasiliy’s” a very learned man. He might not come off that way, but he never, ever sees himself as a step below “Ephraim” just because he’s a doctor. So he kind of takes people for the way that they react to him, I think. I don’t think he judges people.

 

Moderator            Thank you. Our next question comes from Preston Barta. Please go ahead. And that’s from Fresh Fiction.

 

Preston            Hey, Kevin. How you—

 

Kevin            I’m good. How you doing?

 

Preston            I’m doing great. So, as you mentioned earlier during this call, horror films were kind of your babysitters growing up.

 

Kevin            Yes.

 

Preston            What do you think your eight year old self would say about The Strain? You think he would be inspired by it?

 

Kevin            Well, I think that my eight year old self would be so inspired by it, so excited by it, and I really, truly think that he would love “Vasiliy Fet.” I think that I’d be like, well actually I still am to this day, I’m still like, “Man, when I grow up I hope I can be like “Vasiliy Fet.”” Yes, I think that young Kevin would be really into it. Yes indeed.

 

Preston            Great. Well, thank you, sir. Appreciate it.

 

Kevin            Thank you.

 

Moderator            And our next question comes from Adam Bellotto from StarPulse. Please go ahead

 

Adam            Hey, Kevin. Really love you on the show.

 

Kevin            Thank you so much.

 

Adam            Since “Fet” has joined this group of characters I mean he sort of developed this flirty relationship with “Dutch,” you have some really great chemistry going with David Bradley, but “Fet’s” interaction with the other characters is a little more limited. Is there a particular character that either you as an actor or maybe that you think “Fet” as a character would want more time with?

 

Kevin            I love working with Corey Stoll. Whenever we got to do scenes together there was just a shorthand. I think we’re both kind of as journeyman actors we’ve both been around, both done a lot of work over the years, and I think there was just like a really nice understanding between us. So I look forward to getting to work with him a lot more.

 

And also, I’m very, very impressed by Mía Maestro as well, and we haven’t had a whole lot of interactions yet, but I’m looking forward to more of those as well.

 

Adam            Yes, I’m hoping to see more of all you guys in season two.

 

Kevin            Yes. Yes. Hopefully I make it through episode 13, and then I get to come back and we get to explore all this stuff.

 

Adam            Yes. And then, just as a quick follow-up, I mean because for the first half of the season “Fet” is sort of unknown, he’s sort of stalking the streets as like the solo hero, and then about halfway through suddenly you’re in this big group dynamic. What is it like going through that change as an actor?

 

Kevin            I really, really appreciated the opportunity to have the first half of the season to find “Fet.” I was really kind of exploring, trying to really feel him out, and by the time we got into the group dynamic I felt like I had a good hold on who he was. So when I started working with this group, who are all like such great actors and people that I genuinely fell in love with, became friends with, it was really rewarding to get to bounce ideas off of each other and move the narrative forward and find moments. Yes, it’s just really great to be a part of that group.

 

Adam            Awesome. Man, thanks so much for talking to us.

 

Kevin            Thanks, braugh. Thank you very much.

 

Moderator            And our last question comes from George Nakhleh from Spoiler TV. Please go ahead.

 

George            Hi, Kevin.

 

Kevin            Hey, how you doing?

 

George            I’m doing good. Thank you for doing this interview. We all appreciate your time. I’m a big fan of yours.

 

Kevin            Oh, thank you so much, George. I appreciate that. Thank you.

 

George            My question is The Strain trilogy has also been adapted into a comic book series, and being a big comic book fan myself I was wondering if you read them and if they helped you prepare for your role at all?

 

Kevin            Yes, it’s really interesting. When I got the books initially and read the books Guillermo also gave me some of the graphic novels, and reading through them it was very informative to kind of see the physicality of “Vasiliy.” And even though my ideas were a little different, I still did take a lot from it. Very helpful to get to see an artist’s rendition of who your guy, who your character looks like, and even in every frame you get a sense of his movement and it just gives you more artillery to go into work with.

 

George            Yes. To be honest, when I was reading the comics I actually did picture you. I’m not just saying that.

 

Kevin            Oh, you did? Oh that’s nice.

 

George            Yes, actually I did when I was reading them. They came out about a year ago, but I did picture you. Which brings me to my follow-up question. I also pictured you as, I don’t know if you read The Walking Dead, but I pictured you as “Abraham Ford,” and I wondered if you were ever approached to do that role?

 

Kevin            You know what, I wasn’t. I wasn’t, but I heard that from people. Ultimately for me it’s just really nice; it’s such an incredible compliment that you think of me for these characters. I’m so grateful for that. But no, nobody ever talked to me about that.

 

But I think by the time they cast “Abraham” I think I was already “Vasiliy Fet” by the time they did that, I think. So I think even if they had thought about it I think it would have been too late anyways, because I became “Vasiliy Fet,” the exterminator.

 

George            Well, we all appreciate you as “Vasiliy Fet.”

 

Kevin            Oh, thank you so much. Thank you. I’ve had a lot of people with The Walking Dead talk to me, mentioned that they see me for a character named “Negan,” but I haven’t read the comic. But my ears are always open to what’s being said out on, and, like I said, I’m always honored to hear any of your thoughts. Bring it on.

 

George            It’s my pleasure. Thank you very much.

 

Kevin            Thank you.

 

Moderator            Thank you, and that’s all the question we have for today.

 

Kevin            Great. Awesome. We done did it.

 

Tom            Thanks so much, everyone, for joining us today, and especially Kevin Durand. We really appreciate your time.

 

Kevin            Oh, thank you very much. I had a lot of fun with you guys. Thank you, guys. Thank you. Enjoy the finale next week.

 

Tom            Thank you, Kevin. As a reminder, The Strain season one finale airs Sunday night, October 5th, at 10:00 p.m. Eastern and Pacific only on FX. If you have any lingering questions please feel free to give me a call at 310-369-0917.

 

You may now disconnect.

 

Moderator            Ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude your conference for today. Thank you for your participation and for using AT&T Executive Teleconference Services. Once again, you may now disconnect.

Interview: Sean Astin – ‘The Strain’

the-strain-logo1I had the fortunate opportunity to be involved in a conference call interview with “The Strain” co-star Sean Astin, who plays Jim Kent in the series. Although, I did not get the chance to ask a question, it was still a great experience. Sean Astin is one of my favorite actors and I watch all of his work. To be able to listen to him speak about various topics was a real treat and I wanted to share all of that with the Graphic Policy community. Be sure to check out Brett’s Reviews of each of The Strain’s episodes after they air as they are a great complement to the show.

FX NETWORK: The Strain
September 2, 2014 – 10:00 PDT

SPEAKERS

Tom Ruffner
Sean Astin

PRESENTATION

Moderator: Ladies and gentlemen thank you for standing by and welcome to The Strain conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later we will conduct a question and answer session. Instructions will be given at that time. (Operator instructions.) As a reminder, this conference is being recorded.

I would now like to turn the conference over to our host, Mr. Tom Ruffner. Please go ahead.

Tom: Hello and welcome to The Strain conference call with series star Sean Astin. I’d like to thank everyone for joining us today and remind you that this call is for print purposes only. No audio may be used. The Strain airs Sunday nights at 10 p.m. Eastern and Pacific only on FX, and as always we respectfully request that you do not post spoilers pre-air to help protect our viewing experience for our audience.

Due to the fact that there are so many journalists joining us today, we ask that you limit yourself to one question and a quick follow-up and then go back into queue for any additional questions you may have.

With that said, let’s go ahead and take our first question. I’ll turn it back over to you, Don.

Moderator – (Operator instructions.): And the first question comes from the line of Earl Dittman of Digital Journal.

Earl: Good morning, Sean.

Sean: Good morning, Earl, how are you doing?

Earl: Doing great. I have to say first off you are fantastic in this brilliant series and it’s just wonderful to watch every week.

Sean: Thanks, man.

Earl: You’re no stranger to television. You’ve done 24, things like that and feature films, of course the iconic Lord of the Rings trilogy. How has The Strain been different for you as a actor, in any ways?

Sean: First of all working with Guillermo is a unique experience for most people who are working on these shows, I would say one of the most exciting things about it is spending time with Guillermo. He’s just so full of life and creativity and his imagination and you always feel like he’s both incredibly well prepared and in the moment and able to be spontaneous, so that’s pretty great. And then I have not in my life been a vampire guy really except when I was 16 and I worked in a movie theatre where my friend Corey Feldman’s movie The Lost Boys premiered. That was probably the height of my vampire interest. I sort of missed the rest of the wave of Vampire Diaries and all the way through to the recent Twilight and everything else, so being like learning vampire lore was pretty cool for me, particularly in Guillermo’s—the cosmology of vampires in Guillermo’s mind is really cool.

Earl: Yes, yes, and a quick follow-up, as Jim, we don’t hate him; we don’t love him. We understand he’s empathetic. What do you think about him in a couple sentences?

Sean: Jim is basically a morally compromised guy and I think he has the occasional quips that he has, comedic quips reveals some kind of personality that it might be fun to interact with, but his wife is suffering and so he’s a compromised guy basically the way I see him.

Earl: Again, thanks for your time and thanks for your great work, I love the series and you.

Sean: Thank you so much, Earl.

Earl: I appreciate it.

Moderator: And the next question comes from the line of Hal Boedecker from Orlando Sentinel. Please go ahead.
Hal Thank you, Sean. Congratulations. What does it mean to be part of this series?

Sean: Since being in Lord of the Rings this wave, this pop cultural wave of franchise inclusion has swept the globe where people—these comic book franchises, bestselling book franchises, television reboot franchises, they just come in big waves and it’s almost like being in one particular movie or one particular show isn’t enough anymore. So the fact that Guillermo and Carlton Cuse came along with this new incarnation of a vampire world meant a new franchise and so I feel I’m grateful that Guillermo reached out and swept me up in it. When you go to Comic Con, you have a team.

Hal: I also wondered especially the convenience store episode is so memorable. Can you talk about the challenges of filming that?

Sean: Yes, it aired last night, so you guys are the ones who are responsible not to do any spoilers, but I don’t think it’s a spoiler now. Ironically the biggest challenge of it was how cold it was. Toronto suffered really the coldest winter in most of the crew members’ memory and it’s one thing to sit here in a 75º day in Los Angeles and talk about cold weather, but it was bitter cold. So you look outside at these vampires who were in their post mortem makeup and you just figured that it wasn’t too far off from where they’re going to be if they had to stand outside any longer. But the emotions of it, I was told in my very first meeting with Guillermo and Carlton that this character from the books, who didn’t last that long in the books, wasn’t going to last very long in the series, so they invited me to be a part of this show knowing full well that in episode eight my character is going to get killed off. So there is a little bit of the gallows anticipation that comes knowing we’re in episode five; it’s only a few episodes away now before I get to say good-bye to all my new friends.

And then when you find yourself actually in the convenience store doing the work, there is an emotional responsibility that you have to the relationship between the characters. And so blocking the scene where Eph and Nora discover that he’s been fully infected, it was really kind of cool the first bit where they use the UV ray to see the worm in my face and they go and lay me down and do this sort of butcher surgery or field dressing surgery, that was all kind of cool and relatively straight forward, relatively easy.

But then when we got into blocking, Jim discovers that it’s all through my back and then I realize that the only thing to do is for them to kill me and I’m saying I don’t want to turn out like the rest of them and I don’t want go after my parents and asking Setrakian to basically explain what that is with these vampires go to the ones closest to them. It was pretty powerful emotionally and everybody had this feeling that it was exciting to be doing maybe one of the first big deaths of the show. I guess there had been others, but for me it was the big death because it was me.

And this dual feeling that the show—the characters move on and the show moves on and that was definitely a dynamic, unlike 24 where I never knew from one week to the next what was going to happen and I open the script or sitting in the makeup bus for episode whatever it was 13 and my character has this spectacular Sentox nerve gas death. So you’re like it’s sort of shocking, but you know anything can happen on that show and that is a very heroic death.

This one, Jim’s redemption is kind of petty redemption. He’s—I think the first one to plug in the UV ray lights and is what I think is a kind of for me it’s iconic where I come out of the convenience store and I’m the first one to extend my arm with the thing and burn one of the vamps with this UV light; and then of course everybody does it because Jim did it. But that feeling is yes, I don’t know; it was cool. I was at Disneyland with my wife and kids. I had run a marathon, this Disney half marathon weekend, so we did a 10K on Tuesday and a half marathon.

So I’m walking around and my legs are sore and the kids are having a ball and I realized the episode is airing right now. I hadn’t really been paying any attention to my phone for three days, but we’re sitting on the train going through Fantasy Land and I’m looking at seeing all these messages saying all right, Jim, we’re going to miss you buddy. It was a sad way for you to have to go, Jim, but we tried to have fun with it. What are you going to do?

Hal: Congratulations, it was great.

Sean: Thanks.

Moderator: Thank you and the next question comes from the line of Mike Hughes for TV America. Please go ahead.

Mike: You know what I found really interesting was when you said that you were 16 and you were working in a movie theatre because back then you had already been a successful actor. How did you end up then working in a movie theatre and what’s it like to be a guy who’s an actor working in a movie theatre watching other people act?

Sean: It’s funny I was looking online right before I got on the conference call and there was this article about celebrities who live below their means or something, modest celebrities; and it talked about how Leonardo DiCaprio occasionally takes a commercial flight. When I was 16 my mom and I, I had a car for a little bit and then she wanted or needed the car back, so I basically was doing summer school and night school. I really wanted to graduate with a better GPA than I had earned throughout the rest of my high school year and I would take the bus into Westwood from my dad’s place in west LA. I just worked in a movie theatre. I worked at the Bruin and Mr. Francis was my manager. I started by taking tickets at the door.

The fun story I have is with my buddy Corey. It was his movie. It was the first I guess I worked a couple of days on, it was like the end of Superman’s run. I can’t remember what it was, but anyhow and then it comes in and there’s the big premiere and Corey walks in and I’m wearing my blue blazer with my gray pants and my name tag. I used my middle name and Patrick is my middle name. I used my middle name and all the actors are standing by the concession stand and Mr. Francis, who is I don’t know 147 at that point he’s since passed away and he’s just a known guy; he’s a known figure—character personality and he said “Sean, you got to go pick up that popcorn.” I grabbed the broom and dust pan and I walked over. I was like “Excuse me, Corey,” and he looked and he saw me and he’s like, “Sean, what happened?”

I worked my way up through the ranks. It took all summer, but by the end of it, I was making bank drops from the box office and I cleaned the butter maker and it was fun. I remember my mom sort of being shocked that I would do that job, but I liked it. And that couple hundred buck check meant more to me than the $10,000 check that I got when I was eight because that $10,000 check went into an account that I didn’t see till I was 18 and now I was 16 and I could go spend that money. I don’t know. I count that as one of the good experiences for me.

Mike: That’s great. Thanks a lot.

Moderator: Thank you. And the next question is from the line of Brent Hankins from Nerd Repository. Please go ahead.

Brent: Good morning, Sean, how’s it going?

Sean: Good. Good morning.

Brent: I really liked Jim’s arc on this season. I know going from the pilot where they set him up and you think he’s just a bad guy. Then as the season progresses, you see Sylvia and you see his motivation and it peels back this whole other layer of the character. I think that makes Jim one of the more relatable characters on the show because there’s this human element to this struggle—obviously he loves his family very much and would do anything for them. I think that gives just a whole deeper meaning to that character. What was it about Jim for you as an actor that really made you want to invest in that role?

Sean: I didn’t really care. Guillermo wanted me to do it, so I wanted to do it. And then the idea for me was figure out what it was that he saw in me that he wanted me to do it. I think you could take a wide range of actors and put them in that part and it would be a Rorschach test of who that actor is. I think what he liked is that as Samwise Gamgee I’m known for being a friend and loyal and likable, a nice guy; and I think he liked the juxtaposition of somebody doing something morally questionable or wrong, who is likeable at the same time that it would make—like you said it’ll be interesting for people to have to wrestle themselves with it.

There are all these apocalyptic franchises now and the question becomes how accessible, he used the word accessible—how, he used the word relatable, but how authentic if you can really feel like what would it be like if I was in that situation, if the power went out or if the grid went out or if there’s some terrorist event or some plague, the bubonic plague is around now, Ebola or whatever. So if you’re going to use a vampire story as a metaphor for that, you want to find ways into it that feel natural.

So, what I came to like about Jim, was the way that he wanted even though he did the wrong thing, he really wanted to be of service as a CDC guy, as an aide to Eph. He wanted to help and so I liked leaning into that. Then during the autopsy scene and during this scene in the eighth episode and a few other times, something will happen and he just sort of says what everyone else is thinking in a basic way. I think that made him even more entertaining in moments for folks.

Brent: You spoke about making it feel authentic. I think one of the most authentic things was his desire for not only redemption, because you called it earlier you said “petty redemption,” but he wanted so bad to be forgiven by Eph and by Nora and it’s sad that just as he kind of got almost to that point, we had to say good-bye to him.

Sean: Yes, it’s a study on human nature because Eph is reluctantly—Nora is sympathetic to him the whole time it seems like to me. Her compassion meter has a little more sensitively, but Eph finally kind of relaxes his anger towards Jim for a little bit as Jim has acquitted himself in battle really in the moment right before that. But then it’s Jim’s mortality that really provokes Eph’s empathy and he doesn’t want a patient to die, but he doesn’t want his friend to die. You can see it. He says at one point he’s my friend and that as an audience member watching it, I really like that. I really like that he showed something of himself and how he really felt. He would never have been that mad at Jim if he didn’t like him, because that’s what betrayal is. Otherwise it’s just villainy.

Brent: We think it was great and I’m going to miss you on the show.

Sean: Thanks.

Moderator: Thank you. And the next question comes from the line of Jasmin Alyce from FanBolt. Please go ahead.

Jasmin: Hello, Sean, thanks so much for taking the call today. I wanted to know what is one of your most fun experiences coming from the set and one of your funniest memories? Because the show is dark, how do you guys keep it light?

Sean: First there are lots of things that come to mind, but I always hit this. People don’t seem to remember, they don’t seem to talk about it very much. It was really, really, really cold. It’s a vampire show. Vampires you’re not supposed to be able to see their breath. It was a challenge I think for the effects people to do it how cold it was when there’s outdoor stuff and the vampires. But no, there was a moment where Corey came in on his phone playing this video game, the fighter pilot video game, so I downloaded it and the two of us with our phones or iPad mini’s in between dissecting vampires and bludgeoning the turned captain in the head with a fire extinguisher we were competing, frankly I was no match. Even over the holiday break when I had some time to practice, I showed back up and Corey was just an absolute, he absolutely dominated the game, so that was one fun thing.

And then frankly it was fun coming to work and seeing the different things that they had put together. I keep going back to the autopsy because I don’t think anything like it has ever been shown on television, a vampire autopsy. And they spent so much—it was such an expensive and intricate, I don’t know, was it a prop or special effect. We’ve been working with this actor and now we were dealing with his absolutely lifelike like corpse. It was really disturbing.

Another day we had when we’re at the airport hanger set and we come around, everybody had been filming for a few hours and they were on lunch break or something and my part started late, so I come in and I walk around and there’s nobody there, but a sea of 300 body bags all stuffed with dead bodies with the morning dew, they’d been filming all night long, over it. The lights reflecting off of it and it was really, really creepy and haunting and arresting—you pick the word and that’s the kind of stuff you’d get.

Jasmin: Right. Thank you very much.

Sean: Thank you.

Moderator: The next question comes from the line of Mary Powers from TVGoodness.com. Please go ahead.

Mary: Hello. After I went through my initial stages of grief after watching the episode this past Sunday, I went back and rewatched and one of the things I noticed was that Setrakian I don’t think severed Jim’s head. Now I don’t know how the disease works, but the question is are you quote “maybe alive”? Will we possibly have an opportunity to see a vamped out Jim or was that actually the end, period?

Sean: I’m pretty sure that Fet killed Jim properly.

Mary: Okay, okay.

Sean: He established, I think even in that episode, Setrakian reestablished that severing the head is one thing or injuring his—he goes into some description about how hitting certain bone things can hurt them this way and that way, but I think they’ve gone outside and shot them a lot. Eph and Nora are each shooting guns and killing them and Nora says he’s still coming and it’s like you got to shoot them in the head, so I don’t know how many times he pulled the trigger, but it felt like at least four or five at point blank range. I think Jim, I’m sorry to relate that Jim is—I appreciate the mourning. I feel close to Jim. My favorite thing was people with the hash tag RIPJIM. I kind of wanted to get that blown up and put that on the office wall.

Mary: Now what about Jim’s wife, Sylvia Kent, will we see her again? They just kind of left that storyline in some sense hanging.

Sean: The vampire says to me in the train station that now my wife is consigned to die with the rest of something or other, so it’s kind of a general comment and I suppose that that could mean whatever the normal course of cancer is can take place or as the plague sweeps the world, she doesn’t have any protection from it, but anything can happen. Jim could have an evil brother who wants to come and anything can happen, but I think in terms of the way the story is giving itself to the audience, I kind of think the Jim and Sylvia of it all has moved on.

Mary: Okay. We’ll miss you and thank you.

Sean: Thank you so much. I was surprised to see you doing an interview question because the word geek or nerd didn’t appear in the title of your blog.

Moderator: Thank you. And then next question comes from the line of Preston Barta from Fresh Fiction. Please go ahead.

Preston: Hello, Sean, thanks for taking the call today. I’m curious since you’ve been a part of a few horror affiliated projects like The Strain and Cabin Fever, do you have the capacity to be scared of your own projects?

Sean: When you say of my own projects, it kind of makes me think that you mean of the final product and when I watch it on television.

Preston: Yes, that’s exactly what I mean.

Sean: I don’t know. I’m sure I do. It just depends on when you see it. If you see it at the premiere maybe it’s fun to get really into it, but then you’re aware of like the cameras outside. I think there are definitely moments beyond the first run of a show when you discover something late at night or if you find some reason to watch your things. Mostly with the horror things, I find myself thinking, man, that’s cool. Like yes, I did that and if somebody else is really scared and I was never like this as a kid. I never liked the idea of watching horror movies. I always thought it was fine for people to do them, but the idea that filmmakers would say they really in a kind of amoral way like to terrorize people and see people scared and make them jump. They love that feeling of like laughing when they could make people scared and I never really liked that idea.

But now that I’ve done it a little bit, I definitely am more connected to the idea that if you do something well, if you really commit like in Cabin Fever to the idea of this horrible disease and of your role in it and the malevolence of it and if somebody responds to it, I don’t know. I get the attraction now, so I think that’s a cousin of retaining the ability to be scared by something I’ve been in, but I’m not sure. I’m more scared in the moment that we do it because I try and be invested in what we’re doing while we’re doing it, but I’m not so sure afterwards.

I find myself when people are really startled by certain things or they’re scared kind of pleasantly surprised. Like I like it when someone says that really freaked me out. I’m like “Really? It did? Wow, that’s cool!”

Preston: And as a quick follow-up, I’m calling on behalf of my university, so if you could teach a college course of your creation, what do you think you would teach?

Sean: I sort of think I am teacher in my disposition. I gave a speech just now at the University of Idaho and afterwards we met with a group of drama students. I really like talking about leadership and I don’t know that I’ve led anything all that great, but I think I understand the anatomy of what it takes to be a leader. And that theme gives you entrée into virtually everything in life and human experience. I was just giving a talk at the Disney, the run Disney Expo for the Disney marathon weekend and I spoke each of the days and I talked a lot about inspiration — so yes. I don’t know. I think leadership and my training is in history and American literature and culture, so maybe English or something. I don’t know. I don’t know.

Moderator: Thank you and next question comes from the line of Jamie Ruby from ScifiVision.com. Please go ahead.

Jamie: Hello, Sean, thanks so much for talking to us today.

Sean: Hello.

Jamie: So you talked about your last scene and everything, but I was curious, how did they do the sort of special effects with the worms and everything? Was it all digital or was some of it practical?

Sean: It was all digital. Basically they would put little orange dots, reference dots, all over the area where the worm would be, but you know what that is totally unfair what I just said. Scrap that. The actual prosthetic of the cut on my—I was immediately thinking of the worm effect, because that was the closest to me because I just saw it the other day for the first time. But no, they had a brilliant piece that they put on my cheek that they could sew and unsew and it was really, really good. People really responded to it on the set and I liked working with it, so it didn’t take very long to put on at all. It was a piece that started at the top of my inner eye at the bridge of my nose and went down right under the eye all the way around the eye basically kind of like in a half moon and then up into the hairline and down around the jaw and kind of underneath the jaw on the top of the neck and then up and around the same side of the mouth. So it almost looked like the Phantom of the Opera’s mask sort of like a miniature version of that or that with a convertible version of the Phantom of the Opera mask.

And then they painted it beautifully and then they added the—it was really cool was they pull the thread through it because if you’ve ever had stitches, I’ve had lots of stitches in my life and it felt the same. When they numb you, they put a long needle in and they numb the area that they’re going to give you a stitch, you can still feel it, but it doesn’t hurt and that’s exactly what it felt like when they’re threading the cut on Jim’s face. The actual worms, though, were orange dots.

Jamie: Okay.

Moderator: Thank you and our next question comes from the line of Angela Dawson from Front Row Features. Please go ahead.

Angela: Hello, Sean.

Sean: Hello.

Angela: I was going to ask you since you did have some fair warning of your character’s demise, have you had an opportunity to look around what you’re going to do next? It sounds like you’re not looking for a franchise, but looking for something unique like this was and so what’s coming up on your agenda?

Sean: I’m sort of the opposite. When a franchise, a really good one, comes along, it’s great to be included. Actually I meant the opposite of that, so I play the voice of Raphael in the Nickelodeon Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle franchise and I’m one of the many Raphael’s that there have been, so I kind of like that. Maybe I’m kind of a joiner, I don’t know.

The one thing I would say for everybody is that I knew that I was going to die, but I didn’t know how and when I got the script for it, which was only a few weeks I think beforehand, I loved it. Before that I had been a little bit kind of sullen over the fact that I was just getting to know everybody and enjoy everything and I knew I wasn’t going to be around very long. But when I saw how cool the episode was with this kind of “Butch and Sundance” battle royale out of a convenience store and then like the way that it was discovered on me and how the relationship is resolved and stuff, I absolutely felt like you couldn’t have asked for a better send-off. I was pretty happy with that.

I have an independent film that’s coming up called The Surface with me and Chris Mulkey. It’s a two-hander kind of a meditation on hopelessness and suicide, so there’s that. And then I also have a little animated film that I guess is being released independently called Ribbit about a poisonous tree frog, who believes he’s destined for something more than the life of a poisonous tree frog, so I play Ribbit. That’s coming out I think in September. I don’t know if it’s in wide release or not, but it’s on my radar.

And then I don’t know, I’ve been getting offered lots of fun things in the Sci-fi horror realm, which I haven’t grown too tired of yet, so as long as there’s something to play, I’m willing to keep thinking about that. And then I don’t know, looking for the next thing and the next thing to get excited about.

Moderator: Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Robert Samo from Fanboy Nation. Please go ahead.

Robert: Good morning, Sean. How are you?

Sean: Good, finally somebody with Fan Boy in the title.

Robert: I’m going to fan boy out for you right now. Rudy is one of the only movies that makes me cry.

Sean: That’s good.

Robert: Tell us about the trek through Guillermo del Toro’s mind. We’ve seen him from Pan’s Labyrinth and Hell Boy and everything else that he’s done. And to work with him that closely, there has to be some insight that you gathered to take that little stroll in his mind’s eye.

Sean: Now everybody expects something huge from Guillermo every time he opens the door, so I guess what really impressed me about him is that he continues to deliver in the face of overwhelming expectations and he does it in a way that is calm and fun. He just seemed—I’m not sure if it’s because he lived with this book for the years that he’s lived with it and wanting to make the show the way he’s wanted to make it and then getting to make it the way he wanted to make it, or if this is just the way he is everywhere he goes. But he was just happy, just a happy guy and when it came to giving direction, he was very specific, very detailed. If you had a question, he would relish in being able to elaborate on an answer as though this was the most fun part of the process.

And then you’d see him off to the side having a conversation with a digital effects supervisor about what the movement of the worm was supposed to look like and he would be in this enthralled state of bliss envisioning, making the fantasy of these worms in his mind “real” in the digital space. I guess he both loves the fantastic and the real and so and those things serve each other. Those interests serve each other, so it was fun. Yes, you’re right, it was really a privilege to interact with him.

Robert: Nice. Have you ever taken a look at The Strain comics and also you’re working with Feldman on Ninja Turtles, where he’s voicing Spike, correct?

Sean: Yes. I have seen the comic books. I haven’t read them all, but I think I understood a little of the story a little bit better when I glanced at the comic book the first time. I think I thought I get it now and that’s what that’s supposed to be, but somehow that seemed different. I listened to Ron Perlman read the audio books. That’s how I experienced The Strain the first time. I was riding my fancy bike in the middle of the night. I was in training and I would ride my bike all over the San Fernando Valley, which made me think of Tom Petty’s song about the vampire standing in the shadows freefalling. So the imagery, the ideas, the vocabulary for it was very richly drawn, beautifully performed by Ron Perlman; but when I saw the comic books, it seemed to me like somebody’s interpretation of it not like it was coming from the thing. I don’t know if that’s right or wrong; that’s just the way I came at it.

And yes, Feldman plays Spike. It’s fun to have my buddy Corey be my little turtle who then turns into a monster. It’s pretty fun because obviously he was around in the original time of that franchise, seems to be the word for the interview here, but yes, it’s pretty cool.

Moderator: Thank you. And the next question comes from the line of Matt Molgaard from Addicted to Horror. Please go ahead.

Matt: Sean, real quick, I just got to say as a father of a soon to be 13 year old girl who absolutely loves the Goonies and really just loves Mikey and a guy who was there himself in 1985, thanks for giving us a real slice of history that just can’t be replaced.

Sean: It was a privilege to be part of it. I have three daughters, 17, 12, and 9 and when you said you have to say on behalf of your daughter, I thought I was going to be in trouble like for [indiscernible] this awful horror stuff that’s going to give her nightmares for the rest of her life.

Matt: No, no, she won’t watch it, but no, she’s not going to bad mouth you. Listen, Jim Kent, he’s a really complex, conflicted character. I know a lot of actors that lean on personal experiences and engrained emotions to bring their characters to life in a believable fashion. Is there any part of Jim Kent that makes you say “I can totally relate to that; let me use my own familiarity to generate a real sense of authenticity.”?

Sean: I’m probably more like Jim Kent than I am Samwise Gamgee in as much as I have to make choices in my life that I’m not an ideal literary character because people always want to know if I was like Sam and I try and embody some of those traits that Samwise has, but for Jim, I guess my technique relies on trying to feel the emotions or the moments as the character would feel it in real time. That’s how I get the closest to manifesting something that’s authentic.

Having said that I don’t think I can help but bring a large part of myself to it. I just try not to draw one to one correlation between something in my life that I’ve experienced and something that it would evoke of an emotion that’s the same or similar to something that Jim would be feeling at that moment. I think that my empathy quotient is high enough that when I see he’s lied on behalf of his wife who’s got cancer or he’s trying to save people by plugging in a UV ray to maybe stave off some vampires or any of those feelings I find it very easy to be empathic for those feelings. And it’s easier for me because on take three and four and five and whatever as you reinvest in it, it might be harder for me to try and transplant emotions that I’ve had in my life a second time and a third time and a fourth time.

I do know a certain music that seems to be able to do things, but anyhow that’s my process.

Moderator: Thank you. And the next question comes from the line of Robert Fowler from AgentsofGeeks.com. Please go ahead.

Robert F.: Hello, Sean, thank you very much for taking out time this morning. I wanted to touch with you with regards to Jim’s overall role so far in the show and I guess not future. Being one of the senior actors in the show, what did you bring to the show with regards to perhaps adding your character development to the other people on the show?

Sean: I think you’re cutting out a little bit, but I think I get the spirit of your question. We did have these story meetings or not story meetings, but these sort of script sessions where we really try and carve out at least a week or two ahead of time some space for the actors to sit with Guillermo and the writers and maybe whoever was directing that episode just an opportunity to talk about it. It’s hard when you don’t have time to rehearse and particular at the beginning of a series. I think once people’s characters are really established and you’re going towards the end of the first season or into the second season, there might be a greater dexterity for working without—you know it’s sometimes scripts might come in at the last minute and that kind of thing.

But for us they had the scripts largely finished to my knowledge before we started, but they kind of rolled them out slowly at least to me; but I did participate several times in conversations where we would read through some scenes and we would say this makes sense to me or this doesn’t; “I don’t understand this” or “Can I say this this way?” and you really get to hear how each other are thinking about your characters. And they were very responsive to—there was a strong mutual respect between the creators and the actors. Everybody liked what was happening and wanted to make it better, so those were very rewarding conversations to be in.

And then I try and be myself, I try and bring my sense of comfort and confidence to the process and maybe that’s helpful to people, but at the same time I’m not immune from the anxieties of being in a new space and wanting to make sure that new space not just with a show that you’re doing, but knowing that the stakes for—and this is what’s kind of exciting, too. The stakes for a Guillermo del Toro project are high because the expectations are high. People really expect it to be great and that just means you have to try and do something new and interesting and it has to be believable.

I think you asked something about the other actors. I think you said something about the older actors, but David Bradley for example was someone that I had worked with in England on a project. And when he started bringing Setrakian to life it was just a privilege. The guy is indefatigable, just when everyone else, when I’m freezing cold and my jaw is chattering and my fingers won’t bend, he’s smiling and having a laugh and ready to keep going, so he led by example in a way that was quiet and wonderful. I think everybody feels that way about him.

I just watched Corey coming off of his show where he’s just had an incredible turn in House of Cards and it felt like a privilege to be around him. Richard Sammel… I could go through everybody on the show and to-a-person it was a positive interaction. Kevin Durand and I have the same lawyer, so our lawyer really liked the fact that one of his clients was killing the other one of his clients. I just have so much respect for him and I love him so much and Mia is just such a really whip smart, beautiful lady, a talented lady, yes, I could keep going on. I loved everybody; I’m sorry to be full on dead now.

Moderator: Thank you. And the next question comes from the line of Laura Bofill from EclipseMagazine.com.

Laura: Hello, Sean. This is Laura Bofill. First of all I want to say I’m a huge fan of you and I didn’t get to talk with you at Comic Con, so I’m happy to finally be able to talk with you now, so thank you. This is truly a privilege and I love the show.

Sean: My pleasure.

Laura: Yes, thank you. So I wanted to find out, you’ve had a rich career. What are the things that draws you to certain roles that you accept either on TV or in film?

Sean: I’m pretty promiscuous when it comes to what I do as an actor. Often times it comes down to whether I feel I can do it. If there’s a part of—in an animated thing, there’s a rake. I don’t mean a rake like a guy, I mean like an actual garden rake and I’m like can I see myself as the rake. Can I be the rake? And so if I feel like there’s—like I can do it credibly then I’m most of the way to doing it and it becomes about “Am I available?”

There are times when it’s clear that movies have been written and are getting made for reasons that are other than that are purely financial and people have figured out the formula. They figured out how to get money to make a movie. It’s really hard. I’m incredibly sympathetic to how hard it is to get things made, so there has to be an internal logic within the story. The dialogue has to be credible, but it doesn’t have to be Shakespeare for me to be willing to do it. I’m happy doing lower budget movies. I like doing big budget movies. It’s really just a question of if I’ve done a couple of really big things, things that have really scored, then I like the idea of scrounging around and finding low budget independent film where I can play a drug addict or where I can do something like that. If I’ve done a whole string of independent films that nobody has seen, then I find myself yearning to get back on the grid, so I think my career is very easy to interpret. It’s about working. I’m a working actor; that’s how I see myself.

Moderator: Thank you. And the next question comes from the line of Robyn Schlau from Moviehole. Please go ahead.

Robyn: Del Toro and Hogan stated that one of the reasons they had went with FX to take the series was because the network wanted the show to reflect the novels. Do you feel that your portrayal of Jim Kent is very similar to the Jim Kent in the novels or did you change him in any way?

Sean: I think that those guys wanted freedom, the freedom to make the books as close to the books that they wanted to or the freedom to move away from them if they wanted to. Understanding the essence of the books and the story of the books and the tone and the spirit of it and not shying away from the violence that’s in it and for all of those reasons, I’m sure is why and more. Creative freedom is why the lads would have chosen it.

But I don’t think that Jim Kent is exactly like the book. I think they wanted to—when I met them they knew exactly what they wanted Jim Kent to be. And when I experienced the book, I didn’t know what to make of how I might play Jim Kent, so I really was relying on the fact that they knew what they wanted and then it was my job to figure that out and give it to them. Jim’s character, I don’t think is that fully rendered in the books, so I hope I’m not telling tales out of school, but no, I think Jim is one of the characters in it that isn’t slavishly close to what’s in the book.

Moderator: Thank you. And the next question comes from the line of Theresa Argie from America’s Most Haunted. Please go ahead.

Theresa: Hello, Sean, thank you so much for talking to us today. I really enjoyed the series. I’m very sorry to see you go on the series, but I’m looking forward to seeing how this plays out this season and other seasons to come. But on a personal note, I was wondering you’ve done a lot of these horror type movies or supernatural slightly seen science fiction type movies. Have you ever had a supernatural or paranormal experience yourself?

Sean: I am fully prepared to accept the existence of the supernatural, but I don’t—not one that I’m confident enough to relate, but I don’t think it’s fun to live this life without the possibility of the supernatural.

Theresa: So if there was to be any sort of supernatural beings be it ghosts, vampires, any kind of cryptic creatures, what would be your vote for the most likely of these supernatural beings to actually exist?

Sean: I’m sort of boring, so I would kind of think that whatever it is it would be very close to human beings. Some other sensory, some other like mental psychological, psycho-spiritual something or other that could cause sort of group think or collective consciousness I would think is it. I don’t necessarily expect to see apparitions and vampires walking around, but I do know that the mind is a very powerful thing and that people are very suggestible and so I remain open to that and to extraterrestrial potentiality.

Moderator: Thank you. And the next question comes from the line of Bruce Eisen from HereIsTV.com.

Bruce: Good morning.

Sean: Good morning.

Bruce: So having done movies and TV and given what a lot of people think is the golden age of TV, do you have any preference at this point for doing TV over movies or movies over TV?

Sean: I really don’t. I really don’t. I like to change gears, so the rhythms of a television show play to my own—I like the rhythms of television. I like the speed of it. I like the dynamism of it, but I also like the sense of detail and immersion that you get in a film, so to me my work doesn’t radically change based on the medium as much as it does relative to the story and the characters.

I’ll tell you I’d like to do comedies right now. I’ve just been shot in the head by Kevin Durand and one of the great TV franchises of this new decade is leaving me, so I’d love to flip a switch and start working with a laugh track.

Moderator: Thank you. And our last question comes from the line of Angie Barry from CriminalElement.com. Please go ahead.

Angie: Hello, Sean. I’ve been a big fan my whole life. My question is you mentioned earlier that you really liked seeing the hash tag RIPJIM going around, so I was just wondering, do you keep up with fan feedback on your projects or are you the sort of actor that prefers to just let it lie and however it falls, that’s how it falls?

Sean: I like scanning through the Twitter feed now and then, but I don’t have a consistency to it. I think every now and then I’ll get really focused or there’ll be some reason if I’m working on a kick starter campaign or if there’s something that isn’t going to get promoted anywhere else that I really like whether it’s something I’m doing or something somebody else is doing, I get in there. A lot of people have a charitable or other very emotional things that they want or they ask or something like that and I find it really hard to pick and choose at that, so I try and release myself from any obligation to that, but every now and then I’ll find something that I feel like doing it, so a little bit.

I have a talk radio show on TradioV called Vox Populi Radio. It’s a political radio show, so I definitely once a week, find myself digging in and hoping and wanting people that are paying attention to the conversations that we’re having and trying to promote it and stoke people’s interest. During those moments, I’m acutely aware of what people are thinking and saying.

What I noticed is with the people that respond to me or whatever, it’s a very similar thing. It’s very, very rare. I think I might have only blocked one or two people in the entire time I’ve had Twitter because people are just basically decent and have thoughts. Even if somebody is critical, I usually agree with them; they usually have a point that they’re making that I don’t think is too far off, but I don’t live and die by it.

Moderator: Thank you. No more questions in queue.

Tom: Thanks so much to everyone for joining us today and especially Sean Astin. We greatly appreciate your time.

Sean: Thank you. I enjoyed it. I just wonder like when you finish the interview or when the person finishes interviewing if they hang up and jump off, because like they’re just waiting for their question or if people like hang around and they’re waiting to hear what their colleagues are saying or whatever, so it’s weird to be in a vacuum like that, but for anybody who is still listening, I really appreciated it — the questions were so good.

Tom: Great. As a reminder The Strain airs Sunday nights at 10 p.m. Eastern/Pacific only on FX. And if anybody has any lingering questions, please feel free to give me a call at 310-369-0917. Thanks again and you may now disconnect.