New York (AFP) – Colin Farrell resisted rewatching iconic mob drama “The Sopranos” while preparing for his turn as a gangster boss in “The Penguin,” the Irish star of the new Batman universe series told AFP on Tuesday.
“The Penguin” chronicles the gritty rise of a low-level player in the criminal underworld against a backdrop of societal dysfunction in grimy Gotham City, with New York City used for filming. Farrell’s anti-hero character, Oz Cobb, who is dubbed the Penguin for his unsteady walk from a mishandled case of club foot, has drawn media comparisons to the larger-than-life mob boss Tony Soprano, played by James Gandolfini.
Farrell, who spent hours a day being transformed into a grizzled, chunky villain, said he had drawn on “anything I ever read or seen about that world” for inspiration. “To be honest I didn’t need references because the script was just — you use your imagination — we’re given fantastic writing,” he told AFP at the New York premiere Tuesday.
“There’s no doubt anything I’ve ever seen (inspired me)…from Untouchables to Sopranos — I’m not comparing myself (to the Sopranos). It inhabits a similar world. No (I didn’t rewatch it) — that would mess with me, why would I do that? That would mess with me because I’m very susceptible to influence,” he said. “All those films that I have seen in my past are part of my Rolodex of what I now own as my imagination.”
“The Penguin” is the latest of several productions set in the Batman universe, but without the presence of the eponymous hero. This eight-episode DC Studios series follows Matt Reeves’s film “The Batman,” starring Robert Pattinson as the caped crusader. “The Penguin” airs on HBO and streams on Max from Thursday.
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