In “Again to Black,” Jack O’Connell’s Blake Fielder-Civil swaggers into the lifetime of Amy Winehouse — performed by an distinctive Marisa Abela — with seductive bravado, sweeping the singer off her ft on their first assembly in a London pub due to, amongst different issues, a lip-synced rendition of the Shangri-La’s “Chief of the Pack”.
Because the divisive biopic, directed by Sam Taylor-Johnson and launched within the U.Ok. by StudioCanal this Friday (and within the U.S. by Focus Options on Could 17), agonizingly portrays, the smitten pair rapidly descend into violent self-destruction — a “poisonous co-dependency” as Fielder-Civil later describes it within the movie — fueled by alcoholism and drug abuse.
Many could query the ethics of selecting at a tragic story that was closely chronicled and sensationalized by the media in real-time throughout Winehouse’s remaining years. However for anybody who’s been monitoring O’Connell’s profession, the chance to see the massively proficient star saunter confidently again into cinemas with a big position he can really get his enamel into is one thing to be relished.
“I suppose I can perceive why it got here my approach,” the actor tells Number of his casting as Winehouse’s estranged husband, soulmate, supply of her artistic inspiration and object of her addictive obsession.
Certainly, Fielder-Civil looks like a component virtually tailored for O’Connell, or at the very least the teenage and 20-something O’Connell when he’d incessantly play cocky, troubled youths (one thing he has beforehand said was influenced by his personal troubled youth). Because it seems, Taylor-Johnson solely had eyes for O’Connell, now 33, when she was casting “Again to Black,” explaining on the world premiere in London that he was “the one individual I might consider” to play the position. (O’Connell says he additionally is aware of screenwriter Matt Greenhalgh properly and “would have been fuming” had it gone to anybody else).
Spending a day with Fielder-Civil — “primarily speaking about soccer” — would additionally underline his near-perfect suitability.
“Once I met Blake, he resembled the sort of guys that I appeared as much as again within the day, the types of characters I’d be drawn to and need to have a drink with and spend time with,” says O’Connell, who — like his character and Winehouse — would bounce across the bars and dwell music venues of London’s Camden neighborhood within the mid ’00s. “So I felt like I had stuff in widespread with him and understood the kind of geezer that he’s, and wished to deal with that authentically and provides that portrayal a little bit of depth.”
This uncooked authenticity and depth has been a calling card for O’Connell because the very begin of his profession, even earlier than his TV breakout because the womanizing dangerous boy Cook dinner on hit teen collection “Skins” (a present that additionally launched audiences to Dev Patel, Daniel Kaluuya, Nicholas Hoult and Kaya Scodelario). It was his unmistakable expertise and display screen presence, particularly when it got here to displaying the vulnerability behind violent people, that charmed critics, even in in any other case poorly reviewed movies, and noticed him catapulted into the limelight and labeled Hollywood’s subsequent massive factor nearly precisely a decade in the past.
Having already turned heads as an incarcerated teen within the 2013 jail drama “Starred Up,” O’Connell really earmarked himself for main man greatness with a swift one-two the next 12 months as a younger British soldier in Yann Demange’s IRA thriller “’71” and as an American Olympian and military officer in WWIl drama “Unbroken,” directed by Angelina Jolie. The Nationwide Board of Evaluate gave O’Connell the Breakthrough Award, whereas he was voted 2014’s BAFTA Rising Star, an honor that may later go to John Boyega, Tom Holland, Kaluuya and Letitia Wright.
The roles quickly started touchdown. He appeared as a hostage-taker alongside George Clooney and Julia Roberts in 2016 crime thriller “Cash Monster,” a person executed for murdering his kids in 2018’s “Trial by Hearth” with Laura Dern, an undercover FBI agent within the 2019 Kristen Stewart-starring “Seberg” and as British racing driver Peter Collins in Michael Mann’s “Ferrari” final 12 months. Different introduced tasks, corresponding to an Alexander McQueen biopic through which he was to play the late designer (and somebody he notes was “influencing British tradition” across the similar time as Winehouse) and a brand new tackle the story of Bonnie & Clyde alongside Chloë Grace Moretz sadly by no means materialized past the event stage.
Of late, O’Connell has been seen extra incessantly on TV, starring in Andrew Haigh’s arctic miniseries “The North Water,” Netflix’s adaptation of “Woman Chatterley’s Lover” and Steven Knight’s navy interval collection “SAS: Rogue Heroes” (Season 2 is ready for launch on the BBC later this 12 months).
However whereas his fellow BAFTA Rising Stars have gone on to change into Hollywood family names — many fronting main studio franchises and tentpoles — O’Connell’s trajectory, at the very least on the massive display screen, hasn’t fairly matched the route that was promised again in 2014.
“There are specific methods to navigate all of it, and I wasn’t very well-versed within the methods on the subject of the surplus stuff,” he says of a dramatic business introduction that got here when he was simply 23. Whereas O’Connell refrains from going into element concerning the “extra,” round that point he credited his “Unbroken” director Jolie for serving to change his mentality, which had beforehand been to “have essentially the most enjoyable ever” every time he left the home.
“I didn’t prepare,” he explains. “I used to be actually studying on the job and that features the press circus of all of it and that parade you go on. However I can take loads of delight from how that factor panned out, and it was very flattering. I really feel it was a fantastic 12 months to display what I used to be about as an actor.”
2024 also needs to display simply that due to “Again to Black,” a massively buzzy characteristic that’s getting a big launch within the U.S., and one through which he’s capable of flaunt his appreciable display screen expertise.
“I actually again this movie. I really feel like, after we had been there, the entire means of being on this set and the way free I felt in entrance of the cameras… I can actually get behind it,” he says.
For O’Connell, for all of the noise — good or dangerous — about “Again to Black” or the varied journeys of his profession up to now, his focus is now very firmly on the work relatively than any strategic finish sport.
“My bread and butter is on set, be it on an indie, on a brief with no price range, or a large movie with a seemingly unending pot of cash, and the collaboration that occurs if you’re in there,” he says. “Typically it comes off, generally it doesn’t and it’s onto the following one. Nevertheless it’s the work first.”
There’s a distinction, O’Connell claims, “between movie stars and actors,” and whereas he notes it’s not for him to counsel which camp he could also be in, it’s clear he’s leaning towards the latter.
“Some folks can do each, however my bread and butter is certainly the craft,” he says. “I get off on the work.”
O’Connell’s standing as an actor is in little question, however he has not too long ago broadened his scope, making his directorial debut with the music video for a monitor from British music icon Paul Weller’s upcoming album “’66.” (A longtime pal, Weller had initially requested him to look within the video, however O’Connell recommended he directed it as a substitute).
And regardless of his assertations, he could be about to make good on what was predicted and change into that bona fide Hollywood star. O’Connell was not too long ago solid in “Black Panther” director Ryan Coogler’s secretive untitled supernatural thriller with Warner Bros., becoming a member of an ensemble that — up to now — contains Michael B. Jordan, Hailee Steinfeld, Delroy Lindo and fellow Brit Wunmi Mosaku. Particulars are scarce, however insiders declare its set within the Jim Crow-era South, might contain vampires and may even see O’Connell play a racist villain.
No matter occurs subsequent, O’Connell is clearly in a really totally different headspace to 2014 and appears to have the expertise, need and perspective to deal with each the expectations of the business and himself.
“After all, there are at all times belongings you’d do in another way,” he says, trying again. “Nevertheless it takes a very long time to be taught. It takes an extended, very long time to know how one can conduct your self and perceive what’s vital and what comes first.”
Is that the place O’Connell is at now with “Again to Black”?
“I’m getting there I reckon,” he says. “Effectively I fucking hope so.”