Posts Tagged ‘Peter Dinklage’

The Chronicles Of Narnia: Prince Caspian on DVD and Blu-ray: Dec. 2

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Return to the magical world of Narnia in the second installment of C.S. Lewis’ timeless epic, The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian, coming to market on December 2, 2008 from Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment. Packed with exclusive featurettes, interviews and deleted scenes, the entertainment title of the year is available on DVD and Blu-ray Hi-Def, as well as a special two-disc Collectors Edition perfect for holiday giving. The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian packaging also includes a special DisneyFile, a digital copy of the movie that can be viewed on a variety of portable devices for the whole family to enjoy anytime, anywhere.

From the creators of The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Prince Caspian features even more groundbreaking special effects and breathtaking action than its predecessor. William Moseley, Georgie Henley, Anna Popplewell and Skandar Keynes return as Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy, the Pevensie siblings, along with Academy Award® nominee Liam Neeson (1993 nominee for Best Actor, Schindler’s List) as Aslan the Lion and Academy Award winner Tilda Swinton (2008 winner for Best Supporting Actress, Michael Clayton) as the White Witch. They are joined by Ben Barnes (Stardust) as Caspian, heir to the Narnian throne, with Sergio Castellitto (Arthur and the Invisibles), Eddie Izzard (FX: The Riches), Warwick Davis (the Harry Potter films) and Peter Dinklage (The Station Agent) appearing as new residents of Narnia. The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian is fantasy adventure that will delight the entire family.

Lewis’ seven-book Chronicles of Narnia series is regarded as one of literature’s most enduring classics, selling over 100,000,000 copies in more than 35 languages, making it the second biggest book series the world over.

In The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian, the Pevensie children face a perilous mission and a greater test of their faith and courage. They find a world in which 1,300 years have passed. The White Witch is gone, the realm is ruled by a cruel tyrant and Aslan has been missing for over a thousand years.

The four children embark on a remarkable journey to restore magic and glory to the land. Accompanied by Trumpkin, a valiant dwarf, Reepicheep the talking mouse and a suspicious Black Dwarf named Nikabrik, they raise an army of Narnians to rise up against the evil king Miraz.

BONUS FEATURES:

DVD

Special audio commentary by director and actors

Collector’s Edition DVD

All of the above, plus:

Special audio commentary by director and actors, a behind-the-scenes interview with the cast and crew, a tour of the film’s locations and sets, inside view of the technology and production behind the movie, bloopers, deleted scenes and much, much more!

Blu-ray Hi-Def Exclusives

All of the above, plus:

Enhanced Disney’s BD-Live Network exclusives, interactive Narnia game, downloadable features and much, much more!

Circle-Vision Interactive: Creating the Castle Raid – Walt Disney’s famous Imagineers introduced the world to Circle-Vision in the 50’s and 60’s, which immersed Disneyland visitors in 360-degree film tours of America, and later, China and Canada. Now, through HDRI camera technology and the rapidly-evolving interactive capabilities of Blu-ray, the Disney team has taken the first step towards advancing this unique and memorable experience. Only on THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: PRINCE CASPIAN on Blu-ray Disc can fans take a 360-degree look behind the scenes of the castle raid sequence and get unique access to the secrets of how this latest adventure to Narnia was pulled off. It’s all a part of CIRCLE-VISION INTERACTIVE: CREATING THE CASTLE RAID. First, start off in the CIRCLE-VISION preview lobby, and choose to get a private tour of the castle raid from Director Andrew Adamson, Producer Mark Johnson, or a number of other key filmmakers and artists who brought the latest adventure to NARNIA to life. Then, select one of the exclusive CIRCLE-VISION experiences to be virtually transported to the set in the Czech Republic. The moment you enter these panoramic worlds, you will be able to turn in any direction, and fully-explore how this compelling sequence was painstakingly created. Discover a myriad of progression reels, developmental animatics, 13 audio commentaries, pop-up facts, slide shows, and a treasure trove of behind-the-scenes footage with cast and crew that is revealing, interesting, compelling, funny and exclusively accessed through this new-reimagining of a classic idea. It’s all a part of CIRCLE-VISION INTERACTIVE: CREATING THE CASTLE RAID, only on THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: PRINCE CASPIAN on Blu-ray Disc.

The DVD of The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian has a suggested retail price of $29.99 (U.S.) and $35.99 (Canada). The Two Disc Collector’s Edition is $39.99 (U.S.) and $46.99 (Canada). The Blu-ray disc is priced at $35.99 (U.S.) and $45.99 (Canada).

NYC Prince Caspian: Day 2 – Interview with Anna Popplewell and Peter Dinklage

Friday, May 30th, 2008

We’re getting to the home stretch of the interview series from Day 2. This one features Anna Popplewell, who played the role of Susan Pevensie in both Narnia films, and Peter Dinklage, who played the role of Trumpkin. There are some spoilers in this interview, so if you’re still avoiding those, then tread carefully. Otherwise, have fun. It was another great interview. At the end, learn who is next in the interview series.

All of us: Hi!

Anna Popplewell: Hi!

Peter Dinklage: Hi!

Reporter: So what’d you guys think of the film, last night?

Peter Dinklage: Umm..
(laughter)

Reporter: It was your first time seeing it, right?

Peter Dinklage: Yeah, it was great. I just.. I have no perspective on it, my wheels are still turning, and I have to see it again to sort of watch it with a clearer head.

Anna Popplewell: Yeah, I feel a bit speechless about it. I was very excited and nervous to see it, and I need to see it again so that I can watch it without thinking ‘oh but this day we were here and then we were over there’ and watch it as a movie rather than making so many connections. But I was really pleased with it.. I was really excited by it.

Reporter: Peter, what was it like being welcomed into the Narnia family?

Peter Dinklage: They welcomed me with big open arms. It’s great working with a bunch of people, like these guys and Andrew and some of the producers and one of the effects people had worked on the first movie. So they already have a built in relationship that you sort of walk into, which was sort of… you get passed the meet and greet stage. A lot of the times on a movie, for an actor, you sort of meet somebody and five seconds later you’re doing a love scene with them, and it’s so disorienting and crazy but it happens. But for this movie, for people that hadn’t been a part of the first one, felt like you were walking into a whole world that had already been created. And relationships. And they really welcomed myself and Ben and anybody else who had not been on the first movie.

Reporter: I’m wondering if they kinda had any traditions set up or ways they spent their down time that might have struck you as a little odd at first.

Anna Popplewell: We’re very eccentric people.

Peter Dinklage: They’re very eccentric. They stay in one trailer together. They have these pamphlets they’re always trying to convert us to (Anna Popplewell: Yeah, it’s more of a cult, really.) some sort of cult thing: The Pevensie Way. (laughter) They would chant on lunch breaks, it was creepy, but uh… what was the question?

(laughter)

Reporter: You’re answer is good enough, thank you.

Peter Dinklage: Okay.

Reporter: Anna, Peter, are there any particular messages you wanted your character to convey?

Peter Dinklage: Wow, uh..

Anna Popplewell: I don’t know, I think… people often… I think from the first film, Susan is kind of not very likable because she’s always the one saying ‘well hold on a minute, this doesn’t make sense.’ And I think that a lot of people forget that actually, if you’re treating it at all realistically, and you’re plunged into the world of Narnia, then someone is gonna stand up and say ‘well hang on a minute.’ And she’s kept that element this time around. She’s still asking questions and posing problems, but I think she’s a lot more human this time, so I wanted people to be a little bit more sympathetic and kind of see where she’s coming from.

Reporter: She’s also a bit more of a warrior princess in this one, too!

Peter Dinklage: She kicks..

Anna Popplewell: Yeah, yeah. We were talking about the death count after we saw the movie last night, and you know it’s a PG film so you don’t see a lot of people dying and you don’t see a lot of blood, but I think I probably win the death count. I mean, Will kills a lot of people in the night raid, but they’re on his own side, so that counts negatively.

Peter Dinklage: So death count’s important to you!

Anna Popplewell: Yeah.

Peter Dinklage: Sorry..

(laughter)

Peter Dinklage: Death is.. killing is good to..

Anna Popplewell: Maybe not killing, but the whole…yeah.

Peter Dinklage: Yeah..

Anna Popplewell: Yeah

Peter Dinklage: Good.

Anna Popplewell: But, yeah, I was really… I really enjoyed being part of the action sequences this time around, because it wasn’t something I got to do last time, and it was fun to be involved in that.

Reporter: What about you, Peter, what did you feel that your role conveyed? You have a very strong character.

Peter Dinklage: Healthy cynicism. A little bit of comedy. I think in this world of wonderment and exploration, it’s important to have somebody who’s like ‘I don’t want to do that.’ You know, like ‘I want to go eat a sandwich!’ You know, just somebody who kind of.. for a Narnian it’s weird to be the character that sort of roots it in reality, cause it’s sort of an oxymoron, if you will, right. I just, sort of, love that disgruntled hero, if I can call Trumpkin a hero. Yes.(to Anna) I save you, don’t I?

(laughter)

Reporter: Anna, how was the kiss with Ben? Was there a lot of practice?

Anna Popplewell: Umm, there was no practice, whatsoever. We filmed it right at the end of the shoot, so we did it after we’d known each other for five months already. And it just felt like, okay, this is something that we’re gonna do on set.

Peter Dinklage: That’s not what Ben said. Ben was looking forward to that a long time!

(laughter)

Anna Popplewell: I thought it was gonna be really awkward and it wasn’t at all, so it was fine.

Reporter: Did you have any extra archery training on this one because of the extended battle sequences you had to be in?

Anna Popplewell: Yeah, I had some more of that. I mean, I’m not a perfect archer. I’m sure if you put something in front of me, I’d probably fire behind or something. But they make me look good with CG arrows and things. And I really enjoyed knowing how it’s done. It’s just that you then have to alter it to fit cameras under your arms and over your head and things like that. The nice thing about this movie is that it’s not just kaboom, I get to use the bow more creatively and throw arrows around.

Peter Dinklage: Alan Poppleton is our stunt coordinator, and he was the stunt coordinator on the first one as well and he worked on Lord of the Rings. He’s really really good at what he does. And he has a great team. They’re a New Zealand company. They make us look really good. I mean, all that stuff is because of them and the training they put us through.

Anna Popplewell: We’re not like real life action heroes, really.

Peter Dinklage: No. Kind of scared of that.

Anna Popplewell: Kind of ordinary.

(laughter)

Reporter: Peter, is this the most action you’ve done in a film?

Peter Dinklage: Yeah, I guess so, right? Yeah. I’ve done a lot of emotional action but..(laughter) alright, I’m gonna stop now. (laughter) Sorry. What’s wrong with me? I can’t help it!

Anna Popplewell: It’s the coffee, Peter.

Peter Dinklage: It’s the coffee. I’ve had a lot of coffee. But, yeah, definitely.But it’s fun. When you get a sword and a bow and arrow, and you’re in armor you, it really helps with the make-believe. It really does a lot of the work for you. It really puts you into that world.

Reporter: Anna, you’re studying at Oxford now?

Anna Popplewell: Yes.

Reporter: So, how difficult is it for you to be acting and juggling your education?

Anna Popplewell: Well, I should be writing an essay right now, so actually I should.. (gestures for the door) (laughter) No, it’s, I’ve been doing bits and pieces since I was about seven on sets and things, so it’s always been part of the routine for me, studying in the evenings or during lunch or whenever I can. And I’ve always been really determined about juggling the two, and I think if it’s something that you want to do, you manage it. So while I’m in Oxford, I’m doing lots of student drama and when I’m not, I hope to do some stuff in the holidays, and I’m just gonna see how it goes and try and keep both up for as long as possible.

Reporter: Do you have any upcoming dramas at Oxford?

Anna Popplewell: I’m doing Spring Awakening in a couple of weeks. Not the musical version, because I just can’t sing for toffee, but the play.

Reporter: So your major is drama?

Anna Popplewell: I’m actually studying English literature.

Peter Dinklage: Sing for toffee? I like that.

Anna Popplewell: British expression.

Peter Dinklage: Sing for toffee.

Anna Popplewell: Can’t sing for toffee.

Peter Dinklage: I’m gonna use that with an American accent.

Anna Popplewell: If somebody offered me toffee, then could not sing.

Peter Dinklage: I can’t sing for toffee.

Reporter: Peter, do red heads have more fun?

Peter Dinklage: Do red heads have more.. oh Trumpkin’s a red head, right! (laughter) I’m like ‘Hello, back there! Let me think, what magazine do you work for?’ (laughter) Yeah.. apparently. Although Trumpkin is losing his red hair, isn’t he? He needs to go to Red Hair Club for Men. (laughter) Yeah, that was fun. That was all yak hair and human hair. Somewhere on a mountain top, there’s a very cold yak, because of my make-up. But I made sure the yak was treated properly. Yeah, it’s fun. It’s a little toasty in the hot weather of Eastern Europe.

Anna Popplewell: Pete was amazing. You know, in a battle scene I have a leather bodice on, and bits of chain mail and stuff.

Peter Dinklage: You had a corset though, you could breathe!

Anna Popplewell: Yeah. And I feel uncomfortable, and I look at Pete and he has a yak on his face. (laughter) And he’s still smiling.

Peter Dinklage: Some days, I was smiling.

Anna Popplewell: Occasionally.

Peter Dinklage: Yeah, Occasionally I’d smile.

Anna Popplewell: Yeah, every now and then.

Reporter: What was it like working with Ben?

Peter Dinklage: Ben’s great. I have a new friend. He’s really funny. We have a very similar sense of humor and that’s always important and I loved his performance last night in the film. Movie acting’s tricky. I think with a lot of it, you can’t tell. I mean, I’ve worked with some great actors, and when you’re doing scenes with them, you sort of can’t tell if they’re acting. You can’t see their greatness, really, and then you see it on screen and it’s amazing. I think Ben has that quality and he made the eight months much easier. I think he has a great career ahead of him.

Reporter: Peter, you’re a star in your own right.

Peter Dinklage: Thank you.

Reporter: James McAvoy’s career really soared after Narnia. Do you have great expectations after this film?

Peter Dinklage: Uh.. yeah.. I mean. You know, expectation is a funny thing. I enjoy working. As an actor I think you’re lucky if you’re working, so you just sort of surround yourself with good people and good scripts and hopefully it will pay off. And apparently I’m doing the next one. I can say that because our producer announced it at comic-con last week, so I’m looking forward to that.

Paul Martin: So you worked with Warwick Davis a little bit.

Peter Dinklage: I did.

Paul Martin: Would you like to work with him again?

Peter Dinklage: Sure! If the opportunity arises, yeah. I don’t think we had enough in this film, so I’d love to work with him again. Yeah. Definitely. He’s a very good actor and very experienced with the make-up. I mean, that was sort of one of my first times in that heavy make-up, and Warwick has done so much of that work. He’s an old pro. So, yeah, he’s a good guy.

Reporter: Other than the Narnia projects, are there any other projects that’re coming up that you’re working on?

Peter Dinklage: Yeah, I’m gonna do a play over the summer. A Chekov play.

Reporter: On Broadway?

Peter Dinklage: No, summer theater, upstate New York. Then I’m doing about three or four independent films here and in Los Angeles, before the next Narnia.

Reporter: Did you audition for Narnia or not?

Peter Dinklage: No, I met with Andrew Adamson out in L.A. and I wasn’t actually completely sold on doing it until I met Andrew. I really loved the first movie, but I was a little wary of my involvement and my character because I hadn’t read the script yet. I had read the book. But meeting Andrew changed my mind. He brought me into the animation department where they were already storyboarding the whole movie on computers, and I saw that they had used my face as a reference for Trumpkin. And there I was all over the walls, and running with a bow and arrow on a computer. I was like, ‘That’s me as a video game! Hmm! I guess I can’t say no! I guess I gotta make their jobs easier!’ (laughter) But, not, that was interesting, but it was really meeting Andrew. He’s such a creative force and such a nice person in a great way. You know, cause you meet nice people all the time, but they are nice to sort of just to be a people pleaser. And Andrew’s just genuinely nice, and so talented and creative, so I couldn’t turn that down.

Reporter: Well you mentioned reading the book. When you have a movie that’s based on such a beloved book, do you feel the need to immerse yourself in it, or is the script enough to get you through it?

Peter Dinklage: The script and the director is enough for me. I mean, that’s all you have when you say yes to a movie, or no to a movie. You don’t know who you’re going to be working with. You don’t know what egos you’re going to be working with at that point. So, yeah, it’s all decisions that I make as an actor are all based on meeting the director. I have to meet the director before I say yes. And the script. Although I didn’t read the script for this, I just met Andrew, and that was enough. And seeing all the storyboarding and everything. And obviously the first film.

Reporter: Peter, it’s me back here again.

Peter Dinklage: Hello! (laughter) I’m ready for your sauciness. (laughter) Are you listening to music while we do this? (referring to her headphones) (laughter) What are you doing? (laughter)

Reporter: Listening to my audio.

Peter Dinklage: Are you with these people? (laughter) No, I’m just kidding.

Reporter: You have a serious persona, but yet you are funny in the movie. Was that scripted or did you improv at all, your lines?

Peter Dinklage: No. I didn’t improv anything. I mean, we had tweaked stuff a little bit, I guess, on set. And Andrew was always very willing to change things dialog-wise for everybody, if they weren’t working. Sometimes words on a page are different than words being spoken by an actor in the environment you are in. So that’s just common sense to sort of change things, and if you’re working with a really good director, who is luckily also – we’re lucky to have Andrew as one of the writers of the movie as well – you don’t have to call L.A. and get approval, Andrew just goes ’sure, alright, yeah, let’s change it, because you’re right.’ So that’s always nice. But improving, no. It was more about tweaking some dialog and mutually agreeing upon it.

Reporter: Anna, your character is not in the next one, and we talked with William about it and he actually seems ready to kind of move on, just like his character, move on and he’s learned all he can from this movie and he’s ready to move on. Do you have the same kind of feeling or are you kinda sad to see your end?

Anna Popplewell: I mean I think Will and I were both sad, you know, on the last days on set. This has been a big, long journey for both of us, purely in the amount of time that it’s taken up. let alone what has happened. But at the same time, I don’t think that I would gain a lot, or that audiences would gain a lot from me playing the same character seven times for seven months at a time. And so, I’m sad to go, but I’m happy to move on. I finished shooting in September, August/September, and I started Oxford in October and I’ve just been reading and playing and doing plays and things like that ever since. And having a great time, really.

Reporter: What do your friends think of you as like a movie star, or as a film star?

Anna Popplewell: I don’t think my friends really think of me as a movie star. (laughter)

Peter Dinklage: Friends are like that, aren’t they. (laughter) I guess that’s why they’re friends.

Anna Popplewell: Yeah! Well, I mean, the people I’m friending with are very cool about it, and not particularly interested in it really. I mean, I’m sure they’ll see the film, but they’re not sitting around.. uh..

Peter Dinklage: I think we both have friends who are outside of the business, which is very healthy sometimes.

Anna Popplewell: Exactly.

Peter Dinklage: Who are just like: ‘I don’t care.’ (laughter)

Anna Popplewell: Yeah, I mean, I don’t walk down the street in London with huge sunglasses and a sign saying ‘look at me, I was in Narnia.’ (laughter) I lead a pretty regular life.

Reporters: Thank you!

Peter Dinklage: Thank you guys!

Anna Popplewell: Thank you!

Reporter: What are some stuff that you indulge in or splurge on, like…

Anna Popplewell: Indulge in…um… I don’t know, really.

Reporter: Shoes, bags, music, make-up.

Anna Popplewell: All the normal stuff, really.

Peter Dinklage: With her? Books.

Anna Popplewell: Yeah, a lot of books, DVDs, that kind of thing.

Reporter: Favorite book?

Anna Popplewell: Oh, it changes all the time. At the moment, I’m really into Henry James.

Reporters: Thank you!

Coming up next in the day, producer Mark Johnson. Beyond him is the final interview in the series: Ben Barnes. Stay tuned!

Peter Dinklage Joins Narnia Family

Friday, April 25th, 2008

Peter Dinklage (Trumpkin) and William Moseley (Peter Pevensie)Peter Dinklage, who appears in The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian as Trumpkin the dwarf, told SCI FI Wire that it was easier than expected to join the hit film franchise.

“A lot of the actors and crew had worked on the first one, so you are entering into a family, but everyone welcomed me with open arms,” Dinklage said in an interview at New York Comic-Con last week. “It was a nine-month shoot. Sometimes you go and do movies for a few weeks or a month, and you are out and on to the next thing or your own life. But this becomes your life. Nine months is most of the year, so I saw these people more than my wife!”

In Prince Caspian, Trumpkin has lived through the destruction of Narnia and becomes a cynical survivor with little faith that the Pevensie children can restore his world to order. Due to some structural changes in the screenplay, his role is actually larger in the film than in the book.

“I love the books, but the adaptation that Andrew Adamson and the other writers did is my blueprint,” Dinklage (TV’s Threshold) said. “I think the greatest film adaptations of books are very different from the books and [are] their own entity. When things are too faithful to the books, it’s sort of like why make the movie when you can read the book? What I like about this is they tweaked things here and there and changed things, and maybe I’m speaking because they expanded my character quite a bit,” he added with tongue in cheek.

Dinklage Joins Narnia Family

New York Comic Con: Narnia Panel

Saturday, April 19th, 2008

New York Comic-Con Narnia PanelCast and crew for Disney’s upcoming Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian fielded audience questions this morning at the New York Comic Con. On hand were stars Ben Barnes (Prince Caspian), William Moseley (Peter Pevensie), Peter Dinklage (Trumpkin), as well as producer Mark Johnson.

Johnson said that the third Narnia film, Voyage of the Dawn Treader, will begin shooting this October and is looking at a May 2010 release date.

Following with the book, Caspian will be in the next movie, along with only two of the Pevensie children. While there are seven books in the Narnia series by C.S. Lewis, Johnson said that there are no plans at this time to make more Narnia films after Dawn Treader. Johnson followed up by saying that if the next two films are successful, there could be a possibility to continue with the film saga, with The Silver Chair being the next one.

Geeks of Doom for the rest!

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NYCC 08: Prince Caspian Panel Preview

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian, is currently in post-production and heading to theaters on May 16th. But first, the good prince — and the cast and crew of the film — will be stopping by Manhattan this weekend for the third annual New York Comic-Con.

Join IGN Movies’ Editor in Chief Eric Moro this Saturday, April 19th, as he moderates the Prince Caspian panel. Joining him for the event will be Ben Barnes (Prince Caspian), William Moseley (Peter Pevensie), Peter Dinklage (Trumpkin), and producer Mark Johnson for an audience Q&A and a screening of exclusive new footage from the film.

It’s one year after the events of the first movie, but over a thousand years have passed in Narnia when the Pevensie siblings return to the fabled land of Aslan. There, new adventures — and dangers, of course — await them as does a new ally in the person of the titular prince.

New York Comic-Con is, as always, being held at Manhattan’s Jacob Javits Center this weekend. So stop by the IGN Theater at the con on Saturday, April 19th at 11 a.m. All non-talking lions will be caged, we promise!

Visit IGN for more, and keep an eye over there for the conference

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USA Today: Peter Dinklage is big on dwarf role in ‘Caspian’

Monday, January 21st, 2008

Peter Dinklage has steadfastly avoided the sorts of roles that Hollywood tends to offer an adult actor who is 4-foot-5.

Santa’s elves, evil leprechauns, hobbit doubles.

So it is meaningful that he is willingly decked out like a warrior garden gnome in The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian, the second film based on C.S. Lewis’ seven-part book series.

Not even three hours of makeup each morning could discourage Dinklage as he was transformed into Trumpkin, the doubting red dwarf who joins the fight to reclaim Narnia.

“I’m not interested in doing something not fully fleshed out,” he says of his previous avoidance of such make-believe adventures. “Often, you get the hero and the villain and not much in between. Trumpkin is in between. He is not a lovable Snow White dwarf. Audiences appreciate these cynical characters. It helps parents and adults to go along with the journey.”

As director Andrew Adamson says, “Trumpkin is a great acerbic, curmudgeonly character.” After Disney production chief Oren Aviv looked at dailies last week, “He felt Peter was the heart and soul of the film.”

You can read the rest of the article at USA Today.

Further down the article, Anna Popplewell speaks a bit, about her role in the film as well:

As a father of two daughters ages 4½ and 2, Adamson made sure that the girls weren’t off to the side during the fighting but directly involved. “Susan really kicks (butt) in this film, and Lucy gets to use her dagger,” he says. “Georgie would have complained loudly if she hadn’t.”

Popplewell proudly notes, “I shoot lots of people with my arrows. We kept a sort of death count, and I reached 14 halfway through shooting.”

Not to worry. The film is still a family-safe PG.

Anyone who has read Caspian knows SPOILERS!that Susan and Peter are told by Aslan the lion that they are too old to visit Narnia again. The Dawn Treader, due in 2010, will set sail without them.END SPOILERS!

“We shot the scene near the end of filming, and it had a ring of truth to it,” Popplewell says. “It’s bittersweet. Yet, in some ways, it feels perfect.”

Peter Dinklage cast as Trumpkin in Prince Caspian

Monday, February 5th, 2007

peterdinklage

We’ve received word from publicist Ernie Malik:
Reepicheep and Miraz have NOT been cast yet. We’re still awaiting word on Doctor Cornelius. Trumpkin will be played by Peter Dinklage.

You may know Peter Dinklage from his role as Miles Finch in the comedy “Elf” with Will Ferrell. He also appeared in 2005’s excellent “Lassie.”

[View our Peter Dinklage page, here on NarniaFans.com!]