NEW YORK, NY.- The kookiest characters on screen this season may be the ones played by Dan Stevens.
This batch of charismatic weirdos joins the collection of peculiar roles he has amassed since the 2014 thriller The Guest, his post-Downton Abbey breakthrough. Stevens, 41, lands somewhere between leading man and character actor, and he revels in the mischievous tone required for these offbeat parts, some of which he describes as funcomfortable.
Right now in theaters he can be seen as a winning monster veterinarian in Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire and as a corrupt cop-turned-bloodsucker in the horror comedy Abigail. This summer, he will appear in Cuckoo, a sci-fi horror mashup set in the Alps, in which he plays a German scientist whose welcoming facade hides a fascination with a bizarre endangered species.
Stevens, who is British, recently spoke with The New York Times over coffee in the Silver Lake neighborhood of Los Angeles. He wore a long-sleeved T-shirt bearing the defining image of The Holy Mountain, Alejandro Jodorowskys 1973 cult classic: a man seated and wearing a pointed hat, framed by two women.
During the interview, Stevens talked about his interest in genre movies and why his goal is always to make a director laugh. Here are edited excerpts from the conversation.
Q: I have to ask about your Holy Mountain shirt. Thats a great, trippy midnight movie.
A: Im a huge fan of Jodorowsky. Hes a true visionary dreamer. I absolutely love filmmakers who present you with unforgettable imagery. Hes a common touchstone with a lot of great filmmakers I admire.
Q: What were you watching growing up?
A: It was somewhere between Amblin movies [such as The Goonies and E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial] and John Carpenter. But I also watched a lot of British comedy. Ive always had very mixed tastes.
Q: Do you consider yourself a horror fan?
A: Yes, but Ive met real horror fans and I wouldnt go toe-to-toe with them in a quiz. Horror shares something with comedy, which I love just as much, in that you instantly know if its working in a crowd. The audience feedback tells you. Filmmakers in both are actively looking to poke the audience and evoke a reaction.
Q: Have you always been a fan of genre films? Or is that the impression we get from your body of work?
A: Ive done more horror than any other genre, although one could say period drama is a genre as well. Ive always been attracted to horror. Mainly because theyre such playful films and usually the filmmakers are themselves very playful people. I like being part of that game-playing aspect of filmmaking, with the audience and sometimes with the actors.
Q: Would you say weird characters are inherently more enjoyable to play?
A: From the output this year, that seems to be what I enjoy doing. [Laughs] Im looking to continue that trend. But it can be all sorts of different kinds of characters within that remit. Straight leading men dont tend to be that interesting. Its rare that theyre written as the most interesting role in the script. [Laughs].
Q: How do you know when a peculiar character, like the ones you play in Cuckoo or Godzilla x Kong, is working?
A: It has to be something that makes the filmmaker smile, that gives them the right kind of laugh thats going to see them through the making of this thing. That usually transmits through the screen. Audiences tend to enjoy something weve mischievously enjoyed creating.
Q: How would you describe the vampires in Abigail?
A: It seems that when people get turned into vampires in the world of Abigail, they just become worse versions of themselves. [Laughs] There are certain vampire movies where the vampires become very sultry, or sexy or have superpowers, but in ours, they just become [expletive].
Q: They are also criminals. They dont come from a wealthy lineage of vampires.
A: No. These are new-money vampires.
Q: For Trapper, the vet who treats Kong, were you channeling any specific personality?
A: Theres probably a bit of Kurt Russells Jack Burton [from Big Trouble in Little China] in there. A smattering of Ace Ventura and a lot of those 80s action figure guys. But also, a bit of a British pop star that emerged in the last few years called Sam Ryder. He was in the Eurovision Song contest. Hes such a sweet, optimistic, happy chap. I thought it would be lovely to see a British character like that.
Q: You recently voiced a character in the English dub of The Boy and the Heron. Is voice acting for animation something you are actively pursuing?
A: I have had ambitions to get involved for a while. Since I was a kid, Ive always enjoyed doing voices. Its some of the earliest evidence that I was into this at all, making cassette tapes and doing silly made-up radio shows with different voices. There are characters you can play in animation, in voice-over, that you could never play in live action.
Q: Did you ever intend to pursue a more traditional leading-man career?
A: I dont think I had my sights set on that. Other people assumed thats what I wanted and maybe put those things in front of me. It just didnt quite click. Character leads are my sweet spot, whether theyre actual lead roles or just fun parts within an ensemble. Thats the stuff that tends to light me up.
Q: Growing up, were there any actors whose path you hope to emulate one day?
A: Ive always admired any actor who is able to be in a family fantasy epic, and then in a weird, creepy horror, like Robin Williams. He was in something as sweet and innocent as Hook, and then years later in One Hour Photo. The fact that this performer was allowed to do that was so exciting to me.
Q: Do you use the word allowed because you feel the industry restricts actors?
A: Its one of the challenges, particularly if you make it big in something specific when youre young and people want to see that forever. Downton Abbey was on TV. Youre in peoples homes on a Sunday night. Theres a peculiar ownership people feel over your character. And they just want more of it. Audiences can get greedy, and I want to serve up something different. Thats not going to be to everyones taste.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.