Richard Gadd’s visceral transformation from Child Reindeer’s pub pushover Donny Dunn to alpha-male biker Ruben Pallister within the HBO/BBC follow-up sequence Half Man actually proved to be a speaking level as Emmy season began to assemble steam. It’s controversial, nevertheless, that Gadd’s secret weapon was his alternative of co-star; enjoying Ruben’s stepbrother Niall, Jamie Bell appears at first to be the harmless sufferer of Ruben’s pent-up rage. Because the six-episode mini-series progresses, nevertheless, Niall reveals himself to be the actual agent of chaos on this darkish story of males in disaster. Bell spoke to Deadline from Birmingham, the place his enjoying the grown-up Duke Shelby in a brand new sequence of Peaky Blinders. The comparisons will not be misplaced on the 40-year-old Northerner. “Advanced males, yeah,” he laughs. “That appears to be the best way of it on the minute.
DEADLINE: When did you first get entangled with Half Man?
JAMIE BELL: A few years in the past. It was known as Lions on the time, and Richard wasn’t even in it. I overlook how this labored, however I believe I used to be despatched episode six they despatched to me first, which was most likely sensible as a result of that’s the primary one which I used to be going to be in. So, I used to be studying that and seeing this downward spiral of self-destruction that this man was in, and the flamable relationship that he shares with this man Ruben — all of the disgrace and repression that’s plaguing him, and the fixed horrible choices he retains making for himself. I used to be so intrigued by it. I used to be simply so intrigued by the oblivion of all of it, of how these two males may presumably get thus far. And so, very avidly, I went again and skim chronologically by way of the opposite episodes. Richard’s writing is simply so extremely visceral. On a sensory stage, it actually takes you to these locations in your life that you simply’ve held onto however you conceal away. It’s very private writing and you’ll’t assist however deliver your personal sense of private reminiscence to it and private expertise to it as properly.
Then I met Richard in LA, and he informed me that he wrote the half with me in thoughts, which, clearly, I used to be very flattered by. I imply, extremely, that’s by no means occurred to me earlier than. After which after I heard that he was going to be in it, I used to be like, OK, that is undoubtedly, we may very well be onto one thing right here. When folks requested me, “What’s it about?” I used to be like, “It’s about these two males and their relationships over three a long time.” And I really like issues like that, as a result of it’s a chance for an actor to flex, it truly is.
DEADLINE: What do you assume tipped the scales to make him wish to be in it?
BELL: I didn’t have a whole lot of conversations with him about it. I did, on our first assembly, very plainly say, “Why aren’t you doing it?” I simply assume it was not one thing that he had thought of. He conceived it very otherwise in his mind. So, I believe it took a second for him to heat as much as it. I don’t wish to communicate for him, however I’ll say this. After I informed him he ought to be in it, what I then didn’t think about was that he was going to must placed on 60-70lbs — he was going to must morph into this virtually animalistic creature.
It’s a whole lot of work on his half; it’s not a straightforward half. There’s quite a bit that he has to do to rework. And I believe perhaps greater than something, he noticed that as a chance for himself to essentially do one thing wildly completely different after Child Reindeer. He’s sporting so many hats on this; he’s enjoying the half, he’s the showrunner. He does have a whole lot of opinions about efficiency and the way issues are run, all that stuff. And I believe he solely simply bought completed with it a few weeks earlier than it began airing. So, it’s been an odyssey for him for positive.
DEADLINE: Had you seen Child Reindeer earlier than you dedicated to it?
BELL: I knew about it as a result of everybody was watching it, however I didn’t know what it was, simply that the title was so odd. My spouse was watching it on the time and I believe I then put two and two collectively and went, “Oh, I believe I’m assembly him subsequent week.” She was like, “What?” And as she was watching it, I stumbled into the room whereas his character was doing this type of monologue on stage, and he’s wearing his standup outfit and he’s going by way of all of the gamut of feelings. He’s hilarious and he’s damaged, all this stuff, simply the entire gamut of feelings. And I used to be like, “Oh my God, wow.”
I imply, he’s additionally an unbelievable performer. He not solely wrote this, however he’s bought this unimaginable energy as a performer. And so, I knew after that, particularly that him lending himself to Ruben in that means, that he would perceive what’s beneath Ruben. It’s not only a hulking mass. There’s quite a bit occurring beneath it. Yeah, I believed if he may deliver even an oz. of that to Half Man, it will be one thing.
DEADLINE: So what number of scripts did you see? How secretive was Richard concerning the course of?
BELL: Once more, he can most likely communicate to this higher than I can, however I believe he writes in a means the place… [Pauses.] If it’s coming to him, he writes that stuff first, which implies he doesn’t write so as. I believe he was extra assured about how it will finish than what was going to occur within the center. In order that’s why, I believe, six was delivered to me first. 5 was by no means prepared for a very long time — an extended, very long time — so I had, like, one, two, three, 4 and 6 and this type of lacking center bit of 5. By the best way, I additionally bought to see all of the assemblies of all of the work that the actors enjoying the youthful variations of us had completed — that Mitchell [Robertson] and Stuart [Campbell] had completed. So, earlier than I had even began, I had seen a whole lot of the present. Truthfully. I knew what it was.
DEADLINE: I’m solely utilizing the phrase secretive in the best way that Ken Loach retains his scripts from actors. It’s not about being secretive as such; it’s simply he doesn’t need you to be uncovered to the storyline simply but. If that is sensible.
BELL: Yeah, in fact. However I additionally don’t like that strategy — I have to know. I get very antsy. I have to chart and begin imagining and considering and creating issues. So, I wouldn’t have appreciated that anyway. I believe it was extra that he was simply up in opposition to it, and Child Reindeer had taken up a lot of his bandwidth. After which after we began capturing, he was like, “I’ve to get the present completed.” I imply, he was nonetheless writing up till days earlier than we had been filming as properly. It was type of continuously evolving, continuously altering.
DEADLINE: How a lot time had been you capable of spend with Mitchell, who performs the youthful you?
BELL: Effectively, that is what’s humorous about that. It’s like after I learn these early episodes, particularly one and two, I used to be reaching out to Richard, saying, “Pay attention, I might love a Zoom assembly with Mitchell. I’d love to speak with him. I’d love to simply be on the identical web page with him. I’d like to get a way of him, simply see him, present my face, introduce myself and all that stuff. Do you assume Mitchell can be OK with that? Is that each one proper? I don’t wish to make it bizarre for Mitchell or something. If Mitchell’s OK.”
They usually had been like, “Yeah, Mitchell would most likely be tremendous with that. I don’t actually see any drawback with it.” As a result of, in my thoughts, I believed he was going to be a 15-or 16-year-old child and what we really had was somebody of their late 20s who was going to fake to be 15 or 16. So anyway, I had all this sensitivity about this younger actor who hadn’t completed quite a bit and I didn’t wish to overwhelm him or no matter. And the truth is, he’s virtually 30 years previous, I believe he can deal with a Zoom name. So, that was type of fairly bizarre. However like I stated, we did Zoom, we talked for a little bit bit, not very lengthy, emailed a little bit bit all through, however greater than something, I simply watched his work. Which was nice as a result of you have got this dwelling, respiratory, emoting backstory to attract from, to tug from as you’re doing it. In order that was actually useful.

Jamie Bell and Richard Gadd in ‘Half Man’
HBO
DEADLINE: How did you discover the character? What’s nice concerning the present is we predict that Ruben is the monster — however is perhaps Niall the monster. He’s the extra unmoored, the extra unhinged, the extra harmful particular person.
BELL: Frankly, there’s a little bit little bit of Patricia Highsmith there, a little bit little bit of Ripley. I imply, I do see him as somebody who’s sporting many faces. He’s somebody who’s pretending to be somebody he’s not. He’s 100 folks a day and he doesn’t like every of them, and none of them are actually who he’s. Ultimately — a lot to your level — I believe he does turn into the far more malevolent particular person. Somebody who presents as meek and mild-mannered and never threatening and never intimidating, however, actually, beneath all of it is extremely calculating.
I discover that to be far more transgressive than somebody who’s hulking and dominant and intimidating and bodily succesful. I like that the character begins off as this harmless boy who’s clearly skilled familial dysfunction and all this stuff which can be type of going to plague him all through his life, however he’s not knowingly merciless. I believe Niall is somebody who in the long run does turn into type of fairly knowingly merciless to folks, as a result of he is not going to cope with himself on any actual phrases by any means.
DEADLINE: Why was Episode 5 so tough?
BELL: I don’t know. I simply assume it wasn’t written. I believe he actually simply hadn’t gotten round to it. I don’t assume it was something greater than that. In a means, it’s type of a bridge episode to get you to the finale, as a result of when you’ve had the massive coming collectively, they lastly meet one another. And what I like about Episode 4, within the hospital, is that on the finish of this scene, it doesn’t finish with them killing one another. It ends with them hugging one another. You assume once they come collectively once more, all that historical past is simply going to return to the fore they usually’re going to be at one another’s throats, nevertheless it’s not that means in any respect. So, what occurs subsequent? I discover that, really, Episode 5 is the place the actual Ripley-esque, Patricia Highsmithy stuff does come out. It actually may be very disagreeable, fairly reprehensible conduct. I imply, that is the lede of the present, however the complexity of it, I really like. The duality of [the brothers’ relationship], I actually like quite a bit.
DEADLINE: I discussed John Steinbeck, which Richard appreciated.
BELL: [Laughs.] I wager he did!
DEADLINE: However there’s such a stress between your characters, though you two clearly get on very properly. As an actor, how do you foster that sense of unease?
BELL: I believe it was born out of the best way we began the present. We began our work collectively in that barn. Actually, the very first thing we did was attempt to kill one another, and that type of work is not only stunt work. I do discover it as intimate as love scenes, as a result of the opposite man’s physique is bodily on high of you. There’s spit and sweat and closeness, and I’m in a state as an actor the place I’m preventing for my life. what I imply? That’s what I’m replicating.
I burst a blood vessel in my eye that day, and it was there for 2 weeks afterwards. In the event you look, there’s a burst blood vessel in certainly one of my eyes — that’s due to him strangling me, or slightly it’s me holding my breath, simulating being strangled. So, in that sense, what we shared collectively, what we went by way of in that barn, it actually did really feel like we’d been by way of 10 rounds with one another. He was sweating, I used to be sweating on the finish of it.
We had been exhausted. It was like a baptism of fireplace, actually, however that is the place these characters exist, on this house of brutality but in addition closeness and intimacy. Unpleasantness, however actual, real care. That was the North Star for the entire thing. However Richard’s very humorous, and he’s very self-effacing, and clearly very intelligent, and a whole lot of the time we’d be laughing after we weren’t purported to be. I’m positive they needed to reduce round that quite a bit.
DEADLINE: Did you have got combat coaching? I imply, as a result of it appears to be like pretty-
BELL: No, none of that stuff. I imply, it was vaguely plotted out, vaguely deliberate out. However no, in the long run, you simply throw your self within the dust and also you simply begin doing it. It was intense.
DEADLINE: You’ve since completed press for the present. What do folks speak to you about, and what questions have they got for you?
BELL: I’m clearly engaged on one thing else on the minute, so I really haven’t completed a whole lot of press on it, just because I simply haven’t been accessible to do it. So, I’ve been seeing from afar everybody else do it, which is nice. However what has been good is simply the type of unsolicited messages that you simply get, which is generally folks going, “Holy shit, this present is so intense. How did you get by way of it?” I bought one thing from my mom the opposite day, which was identical to, “I hope you’re OK.” I’m not going to lie; it was troublesome to make.
It was arduous. It was simply one of many more difficult issues I’ve ever completed. Richard writes a lot dialogue. Plenty of the scenes are simply two folks speaking, five-page scenes, 15-page scenes, and the schedule for me was — because it most likely was for Mitchell as properly at first — simply unforgiving. We had no cash to make the present. Plenty of the time there was no additional time, actors can be talking and the lights would come on. They’d be like, “Sorry, that’s it.” And be like, “Do I get to complete the take?” They’d be like, “No.” At instances it was disagreeable to go to work. I used to be like, “I don’t wish to be on this bodily house anymore. It’s not a pleasing place to be.”
DEADLINE: Did the character stick with you?
BELL: Solely to the purpose the place I undoubtedly noticed sure components of the character which can be me, for positive. I’ve a whole lot of self-loathing. I actually do. And particularly in my job, particularly in my work, I’m all the time like, “That’s shit. Why are you losing everybody’s time?” Stuff like that. So, that I absolutely perceive. I actually perceive that on a microbial stage. I’m attempting to be higher at that as a result of I do know it’s not useful and I do know that it places you on this unfavourable mindset. However that’s the method for me; like, “It’s not adequate, it’s not adequate, it’s not adequate.” And it’s all the time been that means. I don’t know how you can do it any completely different to be sincere. So, I’d wish to say it was very straightforward to depart Niall on the door, however I additionally know that a whole lot of him can be me. That stated, I’m by no means the perfect particular person to say whether or not I depart it on the door. One of the best folks to inform you’re your folks and your loved ones. They’ll inform you in case you’ve left it or not. They’re those who inform you, like, “You’re bringing all that power again residence, and we don’t need any of that.” I used to be alone in Glasgow making this for nevertheless lengthy it was — three months or no matter — so I didn’t see all of them that a lot. However yeah, it was undoubtedly intense. It was intense for positive.
