10:16 AM: “Man, I love that part,” Sutherland says of Jack shooting people multiple times after they were dead.
10:17 AM: Sutherland rewatched season 1 before going back to play Jack. He notes, “There was so much hope in this guy…and the evolution of this guy with everything he’s lost, he’s run out of patience…he’s done.”
10:18 AM: What was Jack thinking at the end of LIVE ANOTHER DAY? “The fact that he managed to save Chloe gave him some satisfaction, and the fact that the day had been finished, that gave him satisfaction,” Sutherland says. “We went through so many ideas for that ending. We thought, maybe for the DVD, Jack will put out a hand grenade, and just blow it up. We had never had that kind of freedom before.” “Your response to the end and this season was really gracious,” Sutherland says of
10:22 AM: On returning stars: “Kim Raver specifically: this is one of my dearest friends,” Sutherland say. He recalls their first scene together that they shot for a DVD set where Jack and Audrey had to make out against a wall — and he had just met her five minutes before they shot it. “I had not seen her in two years, and literally, [our dynamic] picked up exactly like that.” He jokes Chloe has basically a halo around her, and he knows they can’t kill off Chloe…people would rather Jack die than Chloe. Cassar and Sutherland are jokingly mocking William Devane, who complained in England about not having enough food or TV channels available. They both praise his work, and Cassar says to pay attention to Heller’s clothes in LAD when you rewatch — they credit it all towards Devane.
10:26 AM: Sutherland notes that when he started, television was the kiss of death. “24 was part of it, but ER, and there were certainly fantastic shows before us. SOPRANOS was a perfect example: if you look at Tony Soprano’s character from the beginning to the end of the show, the character was vastly different.” He says he’s told other actors that, and that television is “one of the greatest acting opportunities.” He says he barely goes to the movies any more, he watches a lot of TV.
10:30 AM: “As it was written, I come through the window and shoot her,” Sutherland says of killing Michelle Fairley on-screen. He really wanted to be able to say he worked with her, had a scene. “She’s the strongest, shortest person you’ve ever met,” he laughs. “I never got to have a scene with her, because I spent the entire time trying to hold her still. So by the time I chucked her out the window, I was very happy.”
10:17 AM: Sutherland rewatched season 1 before going back to play Jack. He notes, “There was so much hope in this guy…and the evolution of this guy with everything he’s lost, he’s run out of patience…he’s done.”
10:18 AM: What was Jack thinking at the end of LIVE ANOTHER DAY? “The fact that he managed to save Chloe gave him some satisfaction, and the fact that the day had been finished, that gave him satisfaction,” Sutherland says. “We went through so many ideas for that ending. We thought, maybe for the DVD, Jack will put out a hand grenade, and just blow it up. We had never had that kind of freedom before.” “Your response to the end and this season was really gracious,” Sutherland says of
10:22 AM: On returning stars: “Kim Raver specifically: this is one of my dearest friends,” Sutherland say. He recalls their first scene together that they shot for a DVD set where Jack and Audrey had to make out against a wall — and he had just met her five minutes before they shot it. “I had not seen her in two years, and literally, [our dynamic] picked up exactly like that.” He jokes Chloe has basically a halo around her, and he knows they can’t kill off Chloe…people would rather Jack die than Chloe. Cassar and Sutherland are jokingly mocking William Devane, who complained in England about not having enough food or TV channels available. They both praise his work, and Cassar says to pay attention to Heller’s clothes in LAD when you rewatch — they credit it all towards Devane.
10:26 AM: Sutherland notes that when he started, television was the kiss of death. “24 was part of it, but ER, and there were certainly fantastic shows before us. SOPRANOS was a perfect example: if you look at Tony Soprano’s character from the beginning to the end of the show, the character was vastly different.” He says he’s told other actors that, and that television is “one of the greatest acting opportunities.” He says he barely goes to the movies any more, he watches a lot of TV.
10:30 AM: “As it was written, I come through the window and shoot her,” Sutherland says of killing Michelle Fairley on-screen. He really wanted to be able to say he worked with her, had a scene. “She’s the strongest, shortest person you’ve ever met,” he laughs. “I never got to have a scene with her, because I spent the entire time trying to hold her still. So by the time I chucked her out the window, I was very happy.”