Sir Bob Geldof: the movie

Last updated: July 15th, 2010

Sir Domhnall Gleeson

Sir Domhnall Gleeson

Sir Robert of Gandalf

Sir Robert of Gandalf

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sir Bob Geldof is about to be played in a film by Domhnall Gleeson, son of award winning actor Brendan Gleeson. Can you see the resemblance? That’s right, they are both Irish.

Shooting has started in Dublin on a BBC2 drama, When Harvey Met Bob, about the battle to stage Live Aid. At the time the film is set, Geldof was 34. Gleeson is a mere stripling of 27, and will be seen playing Ron Weasley’s older brother Bill in the next Harry Potter film. Like the character, he sports a great shock of red hair. But actors are cunning when it comes to things like that. For Geldof, he will presumably resort to dye. Or a wig. And high heels maybe, Geldof being considerably taller than young Gleeson.

I am sure Domnhall will do a great job. Physical resemblance often seems to be of the least concern when casting a biopic,

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The Reel Deal

June 14th, 2010
My brother and I were recently interviewed for the Killing Bono film promo. A heavily edited version appears on the official Killing Bono website. I’m sure I said much more than that. Indeed, it would have been impossible to have said less. But it’s, er, interesting to experience this process from the other side of the tape recorder. Bastards.
Neil & Ivan McCormick, circa 1986

Neil & Ivan McCormick, circa 1986

Have you ever wondered which actor would play you in the film of your life? Perhaps you’ve also wondered if anyone would bother to tell a mass audience the story of your spectacular failures in the face of trying to make it to the big time? If you happen to be Neil McCormick, wondering is no longer necessary. With the film based on his life growing up in the shadow of his former school mates U2 now in post production, Killing Bono ensures Neil’s story of the underdog who never quite makes it, is soon to be immortalised forever.We had a chat to the real Neil and Ivan McCormick about having some of the hottest young actors playing themselves and would-be-probably-soon-to-be-real fame:

How close did you really get to becoming rock stars?

Ivan: As close as possible without it actually happening … and yet it always felt so far away

Neil: We got a deal from Warner then got dropped ’cause they didn’t like my hair

Ivan: Well, it was a crap haircut.

<<Read More at The Official Killing Bono Blog>>

“Look what they done to my song, ma”

The Undertakers first gig, Ivan (Robert Sheehan) & Neil (Ben Barnes)

The Undertakers first gig, Ivan (Robert Sheehan) & Neil (Ben Barnes)

I know there’s been a lot of interest in this in some quarters, so now that Hot Press has let the cat out of the bag, here’s a few moments from the set of Killing Bono, including the one that could upset the balance of the universe forever and send us all spinning off in some awful time bending paradox, the moment when I first met my younger self …

One of these Neil McCormick's still thinks he could become a rock star. But which one?

One of these Neil McCormicks still thinks he could become a rock star. But which one?

And here’s my brother Ivan and I in our cameo, as a couple of old paddys in the 70s. People used to wear these suits, you know. In fact, my brother still does.

Neil & Ivan, in a time warp. One of these men still thinks he could become a rock star, too

Neil & Ivan, in a time warp. One of these men still thinks he could become a rock star, too

And here’s an excerpt from ‘Look, That’s Me Up There on the Screen!’ by Olaf Tyarensen in the current issue of Hot Press

“Shortly after 3pm, having just jetted in from London, a rather wary-looking Neil McCormick arrives onto the set (he’ll be filming a small cameo tomorrow). A tall, handsome and silver-haired man in his late forties, he doesn’t look like a ringer for Barnes. (Or is it vice versa?).

“It’s all very surreal,” he remarks, looking around at the small army of actors, extras and technicians all dedicated to putting his life story onto the big screen. “They’ve been sort of keeping me away, which I kind of understand. I take everything in my stride, always. I probably didn’t when I was that age, but I’ve learned. You know, a little bit of failure, that joy-ride will teach you to be a bit Zen about everything.

Neil being interviewed by Olaf, whose handheld recorded can be seen on the left

Neil being interviewed by Olaf, whose handheld recorded can be seen on the left

“But I had weird anxiety last night about coming here and being confronted with my younger self, and the fear that I might want to take my younger self aside and tell him a few home truths, and we end up having a bit of a Star Trek moment, where you step back into the portal of your own past, and I’m wondering if maybe I can change things now.”

McCormick still hasn’t actually met Barnes. “I haven’t met him, though I’m about to!” he says, looking mock-nervously around. “We did talk about this – Ben wanted to meet me and I wanted to meet him, obviously – you know, the guy that plays you. But then, it’s not like a biopic. In a biopic – you know, Bono is a real character in this, people know him, and the actor has to get him right, and has done a fucking incredible job. I see him walking around here and I see the younger Bono I used to know. But nobody knows who I am or cares. I’m just the catalyst, and the actor has to bring himself to it.

“Nick’s fear was that the actor would meet me and immediately start saying, ‘Well, he doesn’t talk with an Irish accent, so I’m not going to talk with an Irish accent’. But I’ve been in London for 27 years or something. And he did rather insult me, Nick did. He said, ‘You know that funny little thing you do with your mouth?’ And I said, ‘Yeah?’ Basically, only one side of my face seems to work. He said, ‘He’s going to start doing that, and the first two weeks of shooting I’m going to have him talking out of the side of his mouth’. So I said, ‘Fine, I’ll stay away’. So, because of that I didn’t meet him beforehand, and he’s got his performance together, and now I finally… I have the feeling that I’m going to walk in there and disrupt his concentration a little, when he sees the gap that exists between me and him. So it’s going to be interesting.”

McCormick certainly doesn’t have any complaints about Hamm’s casting Barnes to play him.

“I was talking about this with The Edge, and he was saying, ‘I want Brad Pitt to play me’. Everyone wants Brad Pitt to play them. Of course. But I’ve got Ben Barnes playing me. The only thing I was thinking was that he’s a bit too fucking handsome, because I figure that with my talent and his looks we could have really gone somewhere. I don’t think any record company would have been booting me out, looking like that.”

Unfortunately, the producers – wisely! – wouldn’t grant McCormick his biggest casting request. “I really wanted them to cast Colm Meaney as Bono,” he laughs. “That would’ve been the ultimate revenge!”

Has he discussed the movie with his old nemesis recently?

“Not recently. He has been very supportive throughout this process, as have U2 in general. I mean, he doesn’t know too much about it, and I think it’s best to keep it that way. Ha, ha!”

While he’s obviously thought about it a lot, McCormick is still trying to get his head around the concept of a movie being made about his own life.

“Embarking on this whole process is just kind of weird. I do think to myself, and I had thought to myself in the beginning, the book exists and that is going to stay there no matter what. And that if anybody wants to see what the story was from the inside of the story then they’re going to go back to the book, and nothing’s going to change in the book. But everything else is going to change, because if this film is successful – which is a big ‘if’, because who knows what happens with these things, they can come out and they can go straight to video, and they can disappear – but they seem to be doing an amazing job.

“I think it’s got a great script, it’s very funny, there’s a lot of energy, and Nick Hamm is doing a great job – but the weird thing for me is I’m not going to be me anymore. I wrote this book about being in the shadow of Bono, and I’m about to become a shadow of myself! People are going to think that I’m Ben Barnes!”

A new look Shook Up! poster

A new look Shook Up! poster

 

and the original picture of Ivan and I on which it was based

and the original picture of Ivan and I on which it was based