"And then there were times when I was walking around with my balls out because I'm stark bollo*ck naked so that was kind of yeah" - "that was a laugh" interjects Sophie - "that was a laugh" repeats Matthew, "for everyone else than for me. So that's good. Brings comedy to the set."
A rare interview with Matthew and Sophie (young and adorable) standing next to each other, with a very funny moment of them laughing at the fact Matthew was butt naked on set (the (in)famous fridge scene). This is beyond cute.
Link to fridge scene GIFs:
Gary Spargo Very bad boy, the kind your mother might have warned you against. Dangerous and violent, robs banks, uses vulnerable people to
Here is the full footage of the red carpet interview (🔊 on):
Matthew also talks about working with director Scott Frank - a first time director with The Lookout but already an established and widely respected screenwriter who had worked with the great and good of the like of Spielberg. Department Q's creator, director and screen writer is noone else than Scott Frank!! His other credits include the amazing The Queen's Gambit, also for Netfilx - go to My Story for some more info about Scott Frank. Dep Q is going to be quality 💥
In the interview, Matthew also talks about his character Gary Spargo, a villain but a multi-dimensional one with an interesting back story.
The thing is, I don't remember that we learned much about Gary's background in the film so this backstory might well have been off script, but Matthew's acting really conveyed an intriguing depth about his character (also, I have always thought it fascinating that Gary was a wine drinker 🍷 given where the story was taking place, may be I am stereotyping).
And I love this quote from Scott Frank aboit casting Matthew:
"I met him and he had a spectacular energy to him. He was all over the room. He had a real danger to him, yet he was also funny and charming, which were two really important things to me."
The screenwriter behind "Minority Report" and "Out of Sight" talks about making his noirish directorial debut & the lessons he learned from
I highly recommend The lookout, an underrated gem of a film noir (the 🎶 score is 👌🏼).
📷 Matthew Goode, Sophie Dymoke and Scott Frank at the premieres of The Lookout in LA and NY, March 2007. My edits from photographs and video from Getty/WireImage/Alexandra Wyman/Lawrence Lucier + IMDB










