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Showing posts with label Sarah Wayne Callies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sarah Wayne Callies. Show all posts

Thursday, June 18, 2020

Council of Dads: Episode 1x09 "Stormy Weather" Promo (HD) (Sarah Wayne Callies, Clive Standen drama series)

Here's a promo for next week's episode, episode 1x09 "Stormy Weather".

Thursday, June 11, 2020

Council of Dads: Episode 1x08 "Dear Dad" Promo (HD) (Sarah Wayne Callies, Clive Standen drama series)

Here's a promo for next week's episode, episode 1x08 "Dear Dad".

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Council of Dads: Episode 1x07 "The Best Laid Plans" Promo (HD) (Sarah Wayne Callies, Clive Standen series)

Here's a promo for next week's episode, episode 1x07 "The Best Laid Plans".

Friday, October 21, 2011

The Walking Dead Obvious Alert: More Deaths Ahead in "Super Gross, Super Scary" Season, Says Star-E! Online

Laurie Holden, Daryl Dixon, Shane Walsh, Jon Bernthal, Melissa Suzanne McBride, Sarah Wayne Callies, Chandler Riggs, The Walking Dead 
Did you squirm and cover your eyes during that gruesome zombie scene—yes, that one—in The Walking Dead's season-two premiere?

Beware then: If you have the guts (sorry!) to keep watching, you'd better "hold on to your seats," star Sarah Wayne Callies (Lori) warns, adding:

"It gets super gross—and super scary."

Yum—just the way like it! Besides the hungry undead, what else do our favorite band of postapocalyptic survivors have to fear this season? More than you think, Callies tells us...

MORE: The Walking Dead: Once More, With Squealing! Star Jon Bernthal Spills His Guts About Season Two

"[This season] is no-holds barred," Callies promises. "I love it—I love every minute of it."

More advice: Don't get too attached to the living. "In the second season, we lose a ton of people," teases Callies. "People are starting to realize no one is coming to save us...people start to get real ugly. When you push people to the very edge...they're really capable of anything."

MORE: Dying for The Walking Dead to Rise Again? We've Got Season-Two Scoop on the Hit Zombie Series!

So what about those nice-seeming folks we meet Sunday at Hershel's farm? "We encounter what looks like a perfect place to be, a really nice family [but] the longer we spend there, the differences between [our groups] start to become pretty significant. Some of us form pretty strong bonds with members of that family"—we're looking you, Glenn and Maggie!—"but the group [leaders] don't see eye to eye on a lot. [The question is] whether we'll be allowed to stay."

Shane (Jon Bernthal), at least, is sticking with the group after finding a redemption of sorts through Carl's accident. "He throws himself into saving Carl in pretty extreme ways," says Callies. "And I don't know a mother alive who couldn't forgive a whole lot if you went to the wall to try to save her kid—successful or not."

This article was written by Drusilla Moorhouse.

Link to the original article:The Walking Dead Obvious Alert: More Deaths Ahead in "Super Gross, Super Scary" Season, Says Star - E! Online

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Sarah Wayne Callies Previews Season 2 of AMC's The Walking Dead-TVLine




The second season of AMC’s gruesome, gritty, and incredibly poignant saga, The Walking Dead, is finally upon us (kicking off this Sunday at 9/8c). TVLine spoke with Sarah Wayne Callies — who plays perpetually conflicted alpha female Lori Grimes — about what shocks and gnaws Season 2 will bring. (Her response: More of the same, only better… and gorier!)


TVLINE | The Walking Dead‘s Season 2 premiere seems to elevate Lori to a whole new, take-charge level, particularly when it comes to her devotion to Rick. Is that the season-long arc for your character?
Everybody’s expectations start to wear on Rick (played by Andrew Lincoln) and erode him, and Lori becomes simultaneously very protective of him and also tries to take the burden off. Rick and Lori’s story in the first seven or eight episodes is that of two people trying to protect each other by shouldering responsibilities meant for the other person, and ultimately they collapse under the weight of trying to do that independently. Before the world went to hell, these two people hadn’t figured out in their marriage how to be a team or work together, which is why there is so much tension. The irony of the apocalypse is that it may be the best thing to ever happen to their marriage. [Laughs]

TVLINE | Talk a little about Lori’s relationship with Shane in the second season. It seems more conflicted than ever.
One of the most dangerous things that happened to Lori in Season 1 was Shane (Jon Bernthal) saying, “I love you, and I think you love me, too.” This season, she’s very torn about his decision to leave [the group]. On the one hand, it simplifies a lot of things for her; on the other, her husband loves him, [her son] Carl loves him, and he’s needed to protect the group. For whatever water’s under the bridge between the two of us, he’s also one of two people alive on the planet right now — as far as I know — that knew Lori in high school, and we’re in a world where you can never underestimate the value of somebody knowing your history. Letting go of Shane becomes much more emotionally difficult that she expected, and whatever choice he makes, she’s going to feel she made the wrong decision out of impulse.


TVLINE | How much of the season will be spent examining these two relationships of Lori’s? Or does she eventually lean more towards one of the men?
Certainly Lori goes back and forth with Shane’s decision to leave. A big decision she has to make this season is which of these two men can best keep her son safe? Is it Shane’s more pragmatic approach? Or is it Rick’s hope in the world? Rick and Lori have a whole lot of issues to work out — even though he may not be aware of what they all are. There’s a major secret hanging between the two of them that just gets more powerful the longer it’s left unspoken.

TVLINE | What is Carl’s journey this season? What’s that dynamic between mother and son?
Carl (Chandler Riggs) has a really interesting journey this season, and it’s a shorter one than Lori would have wanted. Something that happens during the premiere really changes Lori’s parenting decisions. There’s now a sense that keeping him too sheltered is a risk. It’s no longer a matter of how we can keep this kid safe until we reach safety. We now have to teach him how to survive in this world, because he’s got to grow up here.



TVLINE | Are there any standout moments for you so far in Season 2?
Lori finally does get involved in a more hand-to-hand combat way with some of these walkers. There is what I think is the grossest zombie we’ve had so far, and it shows up at a certain point and I’m in the scene, and the actor that the walker was closest to actually almost threw up. [Laughs] [Executive producer] Greg Nicotero is a mad scientist and keeps coming up with ever more-horrific ways of destroying the human body. There’s also a cool scene with a horse that was a lot of fun to shoot. And we’ve got some new actors this season, and that’s amazing. [Scott Wilson, Lauren Cohan and Pruitt Taylor Vince play Hershel Greene, his daughter Maggie and ranch foreman Otis.] Scott Wilson is something else, a real powerhouse and someone I have real admiration for. Working with him has been an incredible honor. I won’t spoil it for you, but there are also some amazing scenes between two characters you would never expect to give comfort to one another. They are some of my favorite scenes in the new season so far — just these new relationships, which are extraordinary and really human.

TVLINE | Having seen the second season premiere, there appears to be much more punch in every episode. Is that a safe assumption?
Absolutely. I thought Season 1 was amazing and I’m so proud of it, but somehow this season makes last year look tame! And I don’t quite know how they did that. [Laughs]

This article was written by Megan Masters.

Link to the original article:Sarah Wayne Callies Previews Season 2 of AMC's The Walking Dead