She’ll read off the most upvoted questions, he’ll answer them, and she’ll type.
Nowadays artists are sharing their latest bowel movement on Instagram. This is a man who came up in the old school era where you remained elusive and mysterious. Davey seems amused by this thing they’re doing. Margo heads over to Davey’s enormous mansion in the hills and is immediately charmed by the 70 year old legend in spite of herself. That wholesome quality has made her popular with artists, and that popularity results in the Johnny Cash-esque David Dollar requesting that Margo personally direct his AMA (“Ask Me Anything”) on Reddit, where he’s promoting yet another greatest hits album. Margo is that rare Los Angeles publicist who’s actually sweet. But can someone build an entire narrative around people asking questions? Let’s find out. And that makes them potential fodder for a movie. While AMAs aren’t rolled-off-the-assembly-line-yesterday new, they’re new to most people. In fact, a quick way to circumvent the issue is to choose a subject that’s only recently been added to the public lexicon. One of the hardest things to do in screenwriting is to find an idea that nobody’s come up with yet. Wikstrom is repped by one of the last big spec agents in Hollywood, David Boxerbaum. The writer, John Wikstrom, is a Florida State grad who has a couple of short films under his belt.
Read the (excellent) interview in full over at Reddit.Premise: A highly publicized AMA session with an aging musician goes off the rails when a hacker starts revealing dark secrets from his past.Ībout: This script finished in the top 10 of last year’s Hit List. "HAHAHAHAH! Because he's not mine! Little bastard!" Who would win in a fight, Boromir or Ned Stark?įinally, why didn't he teach Jon Snow anything? "I don't know?! I mean, how am I supposed to know? Does anybody know? I don't think he's mine." When asked to give a cryptic hint about Jon Snow’s real parents: "You mean anybody? I'd say Nigel Clough." Who he would most want to see on the Iron Throne? Would he rather fight 100 Tyrion-sized Mountains or 1 Mountain-sized Tyrion? We just kicked it around like a football!" "It was a bit strange, yeah, a bit creepy. How did he feel seeing his severed head onscreen in Game of Thrones? The one role he wished he had had for longer: "I did apologize to Frodo, didn't I? Or I told somebody to tell him I was sorry. Would he rather apologise to Frodo for trying to steal his ring in LOTR or tell Jon Snow about his mother? Why not Aragorn? If Robert got ahold of you, he'd crush you. Would he rather fight alongside Robert Baratheon or The Lord Of The Ring’s Aragorn? But it was the manner in which it was done, it was all the more tragic for that." I don't know, you kind of just have to imagine what it's like to have your head chopped off, Ann Boleyn and how she must have felt. The scene was shot in Malta, in this big square in Malta, I think they built it, like a big public square, and it was good, it was weird, you know? Because they made a cast of my head with hair on it, I've got some pictures of me holding my head. Especially after Ned Stark thought he'd got some agreement between Joffrey and the various factions, and for them to renege on that deal was pretty shocking. I mean, I knew it was coming, you know?īut when I read it, you know, it just comes out of the blue and was a nasty shock. Here are the former Lord of Winterfell’s Game Of Thrones answers, in full. Last night Bean took to Reddit to take part in an “Ask Me Anything” session to address this worrying trend, his feelings towards Jon Snow and his thoughts about who he’d like to see on the Iron Throne. However, the observant Sean Bean fan should have seen it coming – the actor is renowned for his on screen deaths in everything from Goldeneye to Red Riding to The Lord Of The Rings. The beheading of Ned Stark by Ser Ilyn Payne was the moment that first made audiences sit up and take notice of Game Of Thrones.