News Archive for the tag 'brian j smith'

Jul 25 2010

Brian J Smith Is Star Crossed On Universe

Published by Stargate Archive Team under Interviews

Brian J Smith has revealed himself to be a slight Science Fiction geek in his latest interview courtesy of Agent DVD, the budding actor takes us backstage on his life, what’s in store for Stargate Universe season two and much, much more.

Agent DVD: Did you have much exposure to sci-fi before joining the cast of “Stargate Universe”?

BJS: I was a big sci-fi fan growing up. When I was about 9 to 13, I was a secret geek. I was big into “Star Trek: The Next Generation.” My dad still works at the convention center in Plano, Texas. He used to take me backstage to meet people like Brent Spiner. I loved the Romulans. I still think they are the coolest sci-fi villains I’ve ever seen.

Agent DVD: What’s it like being on the other side of the convention experience now?

BJS: It’s really trippy. Our life on the set is so insulated. We work so hard and such long hours that often times we forget people watch the show. We go to the conventions and the people there can talk fluently about small details. I’m flattered they caught it. It catches me offguard sometimes. When I shoot a scene I’m usually thinking about what I’m going to have for lunch, or what to do on my day off. So it’s gratifying to see people express their enthusiasm for the show. It feels good to have people excited by something you’re making. One of my favorite things is going to conventions. I encourage fans to go to conventions so you can see a different side of us as people.

Agent DVD: How did you end up on the show?

BJS: I studied acting at the Juilliard school in New York. We came out to L.A. to do a showcase and I met Paul Weber, who turned out to be casting director for “Stargate.” About two years later he was putting together the ensemble for “Stargate Universe” and he remembered me. So really I can trace the job back to school.

Agent DVD: What do you think of the rest of the cast?

BJS: There’s a young energy on set, and the pups are always looking for advice. Whatever they do to get right group of people together they’re doing something right. Sometimes we get tired and express our frustrations, but if we have any problems between us personally it’s because we care so much.

Agent DVD: What’s the best advice you’ve gotten from your more experienced co-stars?

BJS: Louis (Ferreira, who plays Col. Young) frequently tell us not to play our ego, to play the character. And it’s hard to understand what he means until you are in front of the camera all day. You have to avoid the tendency to want your character smelling like a rose all the time because you have a desire for the audience adore you rather than appreciate the character’s humanity.

Agent DVD: What episodes stand out to you?

BJS: In “Human,” Robert Carlyle gives one of the best performances you’ll see on a TV series in that episode. It’s film-quality acting. Just watching what he does with that character is amazing. He actually directed an episode for season two and did a fantastic job. He got us to a level of performance I think is extraordinary.

Agent DVD: How much research into the “Stargate” franchise did you have to do to prepare for the role?

BJS: They kind of made a point this was a different show than its predecessors and said to watch shows like “Friday Night Lights” and “The Shield” to get a sense stylistically of what they wanted to do in their approach to characterization, acting and the way the camera moves.

Agent DVD: A lot of people have been comparing the show to “Battlestar Galactica.” Do you think that’s fair?

BJS: I’m probably the biggest “Battlestar Galactica” fan out there. I watched all four seasons twice. But “Battlestar” didn’t invent this particular style. It took things ‘The Shield’ and shows like that were doing and brought them to sci-fi. I believe “Firefly” did those kinds of things as well. Stylistically that’s the way TV is these days.

Agent DVD: Aren’t there also elements of BSG in how SGU portrays the conflict between military and civilian?

BJS: It’s designed to not make an attempt to glorify or idealize the people who are in a situation like this. How would human beings behave in this situation? People don’t always just get along and sing “Kumbayah.”

Agent DVD: So, Lt. Scott hooked up with Lt. James in the first episode, but on the ship hooked up with Chloe, who is good friends with Eli, but he’s in love with her. What’s your take on the love triangles they have been throwing at your character?

BJS: I’ll stick up for Scott, obviously. What happened between Scott and Chloe is not like a first college love where you meet at orientation and hook up. Destiny is a pressure cooker. It’s a life and death situation. Both have lost parents and they may never see Earth again. It’s much more about a connection of the soul.

I think Scott is aware of how much Eli is enamored with Chloe. But he likes Eli. Yeah he can be annoying and he talks a little too much, but he’s a good guy. So it makes it tough.

But I don’t think you can’t mess with the friendship that Chloe and Eli have. It’s on a very different level.

As for Lt. James, that’s where I think Scott has been dumb and maybe not as sensitive as he could be. He needs to have a talk with her.

Agent DVD: One of the rules of “SG-1” was to avoid romances between members of the military. Why has this show moved beyond that limitation?

BJS: I think the Air Force knew coming in that this was a different kind of show. I think it’s unfair to any military branch to just present cardboard characters. I’m proud in how we portray the military. It’s a humane military, comprised of people making an extraordinary sacrifice for their country. They try to do the right thing. But soldiers get horny sometimes.

Agent DVD: How much can Blu-ray Disc improve the experience of watching a show like this?

BJS: I’m really convinced this show was meant to be seen on Blu-ray. It has a lot of texture that can only be seen on Blu-ray. You don’t just get better resolution and cooler graphics, you get more story.

It’s a very serialized show, and we frequently torture fans with intense cliffhangers. So I think it’s more satisfying to watch a show like this all at once.

Agent DVD: How well do you think the show progressed?

BJS: It was very important to the producers and writers to really lay the groundwork up front to establish these characters and create a world the viewer could be immersed in right away. Once they had done that after the first 10 episodes, they could really throw these people into some crazy situations.

I think season two is even more intense. It’s hard to differentiate what we’re doing in season two from that back half of season one. We all walked away from season one satisfied that we were making something special.

Interview courtesy of Agent DVD

Jul 11 2010

Lieutenant Scott Will Begin To Question His Environment

Published by Stargate Archive Team under News

Brian J. Smith has revealed that his Stargate Universe character Matthew Scott will start to question his environment.

In an interview with SFX, Smith explained that Scott will become increasingly uncomfortable with the power held by Colonel Young (Justin Louis).

“The way my grandma would say, he’s got a good heart,” Smith said. “He’s really got a really good heart. But you kind of saw at the end of season one, he starts arguing. Not arguing, but questioning Colonel Young.”

Smith explained that Scott will feel obligated to address Colonel Young about his behaviour.

He said: “Not because he’s trying to be contrary, but merely because you’re seeing this man who’s got everyone’s lives in his hands and he’s doing some things, engaging in what looks like torture, and making some pretty unilateral decisions that affect everybody’s lives and put a lot of people in danger.

“And I think Scott, as much as he doesn’t want to, feels he has to confront him for that.”

Jul 05 2010

Brian J Smith Promises Exciting New Season

Published by Stargate Archive Team under News

Stargate Universe star Brian J. Smith has revealed that there are some exciting developments in store for his character Matthew Scott in the second season.

The actor told GateWorld that he is excited by the path his character is taking.

He said: “[Where] they’re taking him in the second season is really, really exciting, because there’s some qualities that are coming out in him that I really, really like and I’m glad to see explored.

“Scott is an emotional leader. I think his leadership style is much more emotional, so he’s much more bound to be loyal. He may also be more impulsive in a way, tend to get a little more hot-headed. But he’s learning.”

Smith also expressed his hopes that the Scott character would begin having a stronger impact on the programme’s storylines.

“[It's] going to be interesting to see if Scott gets to a place where decisions that he makes start to affect storylines, and if he’s able to change the course of an episode or how things turn out. That’ll be exciting to see.”

Executive producers Brad Wright and Rob Cooper previously revealed that the second season of the show would be “very dark”.

The new season of Stargate Universe will premiere on September 28 on Syfy

May 30 2010

Brian J Smith Talks About Whats In Store For His Character And Much More

Published by Stargate Archive Team under Interviews

BRIAN J SMITH is best known for his role as Lt Matthew Scott in Stargate Universe, which airs on Tuesday nights at 8pm on Sky1.

The actor, who also starred in the 2005 film Hate Crime, was born on October 12, 1981 in Dallas, Texas.

So what drew him to Stargate Universe and what he can tell us about what’s coming up, for the show in general and for his character?

Here he opens a stargate into the show’s success and where it may be headed…

FOR PEOPLE WHO HAVEN’T SEEN STARGATE UNIVERSE YET, HOW WOULD YOU SAY IT COMPARES TO PREVIOUS SHOWS IN THE FRANCHISE?

I guess it would be hard to compare them. They set out to do something so new and so far out of the Stargate dock with this show, it’s quite hard to recognise the similarities with the franchise. Stargate Atlantis and SG1 have a very specific look and a very specific feel and tongue is very firmly placed in cheek, I would say that this show just isn’t. It’s much more a character drama. The characters are probably handled a little more seriously, but there’s still some of that great Stargate mythology.

HAVE YOU FOUND YOURSELF EMBRACED BY EXISTING STARGATE FANS?

Yes and no. Mostly, what I get are the people who say, ‘I’ve never seen Stargate before, I’ve never had an interest, but this show gets me interested. I tried to watch the other Stargates, but I couldn’t get into the Furlings, I couldn’t get into the Wraith. It was really funny, but I never really believed the stakes, I never really believed that the characters were ever in any kind of dangerous situation.’ So, I think we’re definitely attracting a new kind of audience and at the same time people who have watched Stargate for years, they love this show, and really wanted to see the writers go deeper with the characters and to not have really convenient fixes to situations and stuff like that.

THERE’S CERTAINLY A GREATER FEELING OF JEOPARDY THAN IN ANY PREVIOUS STARGATE SHOW?

That’s something we definitely set out to do, to really create an atmosphere where anything could happen. In the first episode there was a suicide, and it was Chris McDonald, who’s a pretty big actor. There was another suicide later on, there are going to be some surprising things happening, I won’t say who or what, that will come up in the latter half of the first season and certainly in the second season. So we’re trying to create a feeling of peril or danger, and that’s very, very hard to do when you know everyone’s going to be there and jolly and back to reading War And Peace next week.

WAS IT THIS MORE DRAMATIC APPROACH THAT ATTRACTED YOU TO THE ROLE?

Yes, for sure, if I’m going to wake up at 5am in the morning and go to set and really, really be invested there’s got to be something that interests me as an actor. And I don’t know if I would be interested in a kind of a light-comedy type show. Even if it paid really well, I don’t know if that would keep me going, I would get bored. This show, it’s very, very challenging, the stakes are always very high, and that to me is very attractive and there’s something about the character that is really interesting to me and really, really moves me and has from day one. And I’m certainly impressed to see where they’re going with the character and certainly curious to see what’s going to happen later on this year.

TIME WAS A HIGHLIGHT OF THE FIRST HALF OF THE SEASON – DO YOU HAVE A FAVOURITE EPISODE FROM THE SHOW SO FAR?

Time is definitely one of my favourites. I also really, really like Life, which was a quiet show – there wasn’t a lot of people screaming and running down the halls with guns, but it was definitely emblematic of, “this is what we do too.” Like, we’d do the action and the adventure and then later on you’ll see the aliens and all that stuff. Anyone can do that, but doing a show that’s also about people and about sad, human problems, it’s completely in our bag of tricks as well.

WHAT IS THE MOST POSITIVE THING ABOUT WORKING ON THE SHOW?

I would say the most positive thing is just this group that we’re working with, it’s a very supportive group, it’s a very insulated group. There’s no real ego, everyone’s very much on the same page about what we’re trying to do here and we realise this is an ensemble show and my performance is impossible without someone else’s performance, and their performance is impossible without mine. We talk a lot, we hang out a lot, and also the crew as well.

HOW ABOUT THE MOST CHALLENGING THING? YOU DID SOME FILMING IN THE DESERT OF NEW MEXICO EARLY ON?

Definitely, New Mexico was a challenge. Again, it’s just one of the things with this show, you never know, you could be doing a scene back on Earth, finding your long lost son or something like that, and then you’re in the desert with other actors, looking for some chemical that’s going to save the crazy alien spaceship that you’re on. You never know what you’re going to be doing from month to month on this show, it’s challenging. New Mexico was very, very challenging, but also it was the most exciting thing I’ve ever done in my career. It was like shooting this big action film: They actually put cameras up on helicopters. It was amazing.

SO WHAT’S COMING UP FOR LT SCOTT IN THE SECOND HALF OF THE SEASON?

I think we did a really good job of establishing him in the first 10 episodes. I think what the last 10 episodes of the first season are about is getting into situations, into trouble that really test these relationships that we’ve established. You’re going to see some of the relationships he’s in fall apart, some relationships are going to get closer together. I think in some way he might start coming into his own, but after a lot of struggle. It’s hard to say because so much of the second half of the first season is about, ‘Okay, this is who we are, let’s go out and get into trouble.’

IN THE FIRST RUN, YOUR CHARACTER LEARNED HE HAD A SON BACK HOME, WILL WE SEE HOW THIS COMES TO AFFECT HIM?

Yes, you will definitely see the toll that something like that has. You know, Scott, he’s a funny kid, he doesn’t talk much about his problems, he doesn’t sit down and burden people with the things that upset him. He really keeps a lot of things close to himself – you’ll see that too, which is really interesting. There’s an episode I’m thinking of in particular where maybe his not talking about the fact that he’s a father has created a problem for him, and it starts to have an emotional effect on him. It’s done in a really smart sci-fi way as well, so I don’t want to say too much to spoil it.

WHERE WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE YOUR CHARACTER IN ONE OR TWO YEARS’ TIME?

You know, I think he’s got a lot of potential as a military mind. I think even though he’s very raw right now, and he may not have the command presence that Young (Colonel Everett Young) has, this ability to make decisions and to lead a ship, I think this experience is actually in some way going to be good for him. I think it would be interesting to see him grow and to see him overcome things, and also to make a lot of bad decisions, and to make mistakes. It will be interesting to see him carrying out orders a lot less and start to become more of a person who’s really changing storylines, who’s really making decisions that shift how things proceed. I think he has that ability as he continues to grow.

HOW EXCITED WERE YOU TO LEARN THAT THE SHOW HAD BEEN PICKED UP FOR A SECOND SEASON?

Getting picked up was really, really great. It was awesome that we have such great support. I think there’s just room for a show like this on TV, I think it’s actually hard to watch regular TV after you see a show like SGU (Stargate Universe). I’m glad that it’s starting to find an audience, I’m glad that people are sticking by it – I think those that have are really going to have a major payoff and certainly, as we finish the first season, and well on into the second season, here’s hoping it will continue for season three.

LASTLY, YOU’RE ALSO POPPING UP ON BRITISH TV IN POIROT, WHAT CAN YOU TELL US ABOUT THAT?

That was an amazing experience. You go from a spaceship to this art deco jazz-age train with Hercule Poirot, it was quite a transition, but I absolutely loved it. I was in London for like five or six weeks, getting to see theatre and working with these amazing actors from Britain, Germany, France and the States as well. It was amazing, Philip Martin, the director, did a great job, and I really think this is going to be something special.

May 09 2010

Creation Entertainment Adds A New Stargate Convention Event

Published by Stargate Archive Team under Conventions

Stargate fans that live in the central United States of America have a new reason to cheer today, a brand new convention has been added to line-up compared to previous years.

Creation Entertainment has added a brand new stop in this year’s official Stargate convention tour. Usually each summer brings Creation and Stargate to Chicago for a Midwest convention, which usually takes place in August.

However fans can now look forward to Stargate Conventions starting on June 12th and June 13th beginning in Marriott City Centre in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Scheduled guests so far include:

  • Joe Flanigan
  • Brian J Smith

Head on over to Creation Entertainments Stargate Minneapolis convention page for more information including ticket pricing, future guests and more as it is updated.

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