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After
directing the Witchblade pilot movie, Ralph Hemecker is now
executive producing the series for TNT. Following is an interview
with Hemecker, in which he discusses many aspects of the show.
QUESTION:
What is the driving force behind the show? What makes it so
compelling?
HEMECKER:
Witchblade is compelling for a variety of reasons, but I think
there is a veil of mystery with a very primal energy over
the show that is played out through the characters. You never
quite know what's around the corner.
QUESTION:
Who are some of the guest stars going to be on the series?
HEMECKER:
We've got several really great guest stars. Roger Daltrey
gives a performance that will blow a lot of people away. People
obviously know him as a rock star, but he's actually an incredibly
talented and intense actor. Kim De Lury plays Sara Pezzini's
love interest, Conchobar, an Irish rocker. His singing voice
is the vocals of talented Grant Lee, former frontman of Grant
Lee Buffalo. We launched an extensive casting search for the
role of Conchobar in London, Dublin, Melbourne, Sidney, L.A.,
Toronto and New York. We needed a great actor -- someone who
could hold their own with Yancy Butler in a very intense relationship
and also someone who could pull off the musician part of the
role.
QUESTION:
Why did you choose Roger Daltrey to play a Catholic Priest?
HEMECKER:
I'd seen a lot of his other acting work and I was really impressed
by it. When this role came up it was an easy decision. We
needed somebody with a real intense energy. We needed somebody
who was very powerful.
QUESTION:
What about casting Yancy Butler for the role of Sara Pezzini?
HEMECKER:
Yancy has that incredible combination of toughness and vulnerability
that I think is very compelling and very appealing. She's
also very real. She's accessible and she's also tough. When
Yancy throws a punch, it's believable. She is a physical,
strong person. She IS Sara Pezzini.
QUESTION:
Is the Sara Pezzini character someone most people can relate
to?
HEMECKER:
She's real. She has a good heart. Her pain in the show is
very dramatic but very believable.
QUESTION:
Why is the bearing the blade such a struggle for her?
HEMECKER:
The Witchblade is a struggle for Sara Pezzini for a variety
of reasons. The first is that it's very unpredictable. She
can't always get it to work when she wants it to. It's lethal.
But what may be even a bigger part of the struggle is the
fact that the Witchblade alters the way that Sara sees and
perceives the world around her. Because of this expanded perception,
she often questions her own sanity. I think that's a big part
of the struggle that she goes through. She talks to a ghost.
She can see her ex-partner and have conversations with him.
When you see this on screen, it bring some of the drama to
a different level by the way this makes people around her
perceive her at times.
QUESTION:
Is the blade a living thing?
HEMECKER:
I would say that the Witchblade is a sentient artifact. You
know, it changes shapes and it interacts with Sara ultimately
on some sort of biological level.
QUESTION:
Could you walk us through a typical transformation?
HEMECKER:
Usually the Witchblade kicks in when Sara needs it. It usually
appears in a situation where Sara's in jeopardy or when somebody
that she cares about is in jeopardy and it manifests itself
in a variety of different forms. Sometimes it's a metal gauntlet
that looks like the gauntlet Joan of Arc used to wear. That
gauntlet sometimes has a blade that comes out of it, which
sometimes metamorphoses into what is basically an iron fist
with a longer sword that she can punch and stab people with.
The final manifestation of the Witchblade is a full suit of
armor, and there are several variations of that suit.
QUESTION:
What are some of her other struggles with the blade?
HEMECKER:
Part of the struggle for Sara is trying to figure out why
she's been chosen. Part of it is figuring out how to use it.
Part of dealing with the Witchblade is learning more about
previous wielders and what her connection is to them. And
that's something that you find out in the series, that there
have been a lot of other wielders throughout history -- a
lot of women warriors. And Sara is indeed linked to these
earlier women warriors.
QUESTION:
How do you see her curiosity building as the episodes progress?
HEMECKER:
I see Sara becoming more and more curious about the Witchblade
as she gets more information about it. It kind of whets her
appetite, and as she gains a little more mastery of it she
yearns for even more.
QUESTION:
What does a show like this say about strong female leads?
HEMECKER:
I think what a show like this says about strong female leads
is "look out fellas."
QUESTION:
What's a pretender?
HEMECKER:
A pretender is someone who feels entitled to the Witchblade
or feels that they deserve it, but who really is not worthy
of being a wielder. A pretender is someone who doesn't have
the necessary warrior mindset and mentality.
QUESTION:
Each individual episode is in itself a criminal justice story.
What are the advantages of that?
HEMECKER:
One of the advantages of having self contained episodes is
that the audience gets a sense of closure at the end of each
one. However, the mythology of the Witchblade will evolve
throughout all of the episodes. In each one, people will learn
more about the Witchblade, Sara's destiny and her past. But
they also get a story that comes to an end.
QUESTION:
Did you make a conscious decision to shoot each episode as
an individual feature?
HEMECKER:
We pretty much decided that we'd like to make each episode
stand alone so that someone who didn't see the first two or
three could turn it on and follow it.
QUESTION:
And finally, how closely will this show follow the comic book?
HEMECKER:
I think that we've tried to stay true to the essence of the
comic book. The guys at Top Cow really created an intriguing,
bizarre world, and we're trying to plume that world as much
as we can within the context of dealing in real time and space
with real people, which is different than doing it on a flat
page. I think that the comic book offers a lot -- it's a very
rich broth to draw upon. I think that we're staying true to
the essence of it, while changing it in some ways to make
it work for television.
QUESTION:
What most excites you about the show?
HEMECKER:
One of the things that excites me about the show is that it
really is unique. The combination of the subject matter, the
characters, and the way the stories are told will really give
audiences a different kind of episodic television experience.
We've got great stories and a great cast. It's a very strange,
very cool show.
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