!~SaM nEiL FaN zOnE! pg 1 -New

WillSmith456 thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Dazzler Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 17 years ago
#1









Sam Neill
Birth name Nigel John Dermot Neill
Born September 14, 1947 (1947-09-14) (age 60)
Omagh, Northern Ireland
Resides: Sydney, Australia[1]

AFI Awards
Australian Film Institute Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
1989 Evil Angels





Sam Neill, DCNZM, OBE (born 14 September 1947) is a New Zealand film and television actor. He is perhaps best known for his role in Reilly, Ace of Spies and playing paleontologist Doctor Alan Grant in Jurassic Park and Jurassic Park III. Most recently he is in a Showtime production of The Tudors as Cardinal Wolsey.

Biography

[edit] Early life

Neill was born Nigel John Dermot Neill in Omagh, Northern Ireland, the second son of Dermot Neill, a Harrow and Sandhurst-educated army officer and third generation New Zealander, and his English wife, Priscilla. At the time of Neill's birth, his father was stationed in Northern Ireland. The family were the owners of Neill and Co., the largest liquor retailers in New Zealand.

Neill returned with his family to New Zealand in 1954, where he attended the Anglican boys' boarding school Christ's College, in Christchurch. He then went on to study English literature at the University of Canterbury, where he got his first exposure to acting. While at Canterbury University he resided at College House,[2] where he held the position of Chief Castigator and Crime Crusher (CCACC). He then moved to Wellington to continue his tertiary education at the Victoria University, from which he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in English Literature.

[edit] Acting career

After working at the New Zealand National Film Unit as a director and actor, Neill was cast as the lead in the New Zealand film Sleeping Dogs. Following this he appeared in the Australian classic, My Brilliant Career (1979), opposite Judy Davis. This appearance led to his being selected to play Damien Thorn in Omen III: The Final Conflict in 1981, one of the sequels to The Omen. In the late-1970s his mentor was the notable British actor James Mason.

After Roger Moore made his last James Bond movie in 1985, Neill was seriously considered for the role in The Living Daylights. He impressed people with his screen test and was the preferred choice of director John Glen. However, Cubby Broccoli was not as impressed by Neill, and the role eventually went to Timothy Dalton instead. Since then, Neill has played heroes and villains in a succession of film and television dramas and comedies. In the UK, he became well-known in the early-1980s, starring in dramas such as Ivanhoe and notably in the title role of Reilly, Ace of Spies.

Neill is known for his leading and co-starring roles in major films including Dead Calm (1989), The Hunt for Red October (1990), The Piano (1993), Sirens (1994), Jurassic Park (1993), Event Horizon (1997), The Dish (2000) and Jurassic Park 3 (2001).

The film Cinema of Unease: A Personal Journey by Sam Neill (1995) was written and directed by Sam Neill and Judy Rymer. In it Neill narrated his personal recollection of New Zealand film history. Neill was asked to play the role of Elrond in The Lord of the Rings by Peter Jackson, but turned it down because of his contractual obligations to another film, namely, Jurassic Park III (2001). He hosted and narrated a series of 2002 documentaries for BBC entitled Space (Hyperspace in the United States). He is currently starring in the historical drama The Tudors, playing Cardinal Wolsey, on the Showtime Network.

In 2006, Neill also lent his voice to a series of radio ads for Fifth Third Bank in the midwestern U.S.

Neill has said that he has not yet been asked to reprise his role as Dr. Alan Grant in the possible 2008 movie, Jurassic Park IV. Neil also appeared in Merlin (1998), a film based on the legend of King Arthur and the Lady of the Lake, portraying the ledgendary wizard. He also reprised his role as Merlin in the film's not-so-well received sequel, Merlin's Apprentice (2006), in which Merlin learns he fathered a son with the evil witch, Mab.

[edit] Personal life

Neill resides in Sydney, Australia and has one son, Tim (born in 1983), by New Zealand actress Lisa Harrow, and one daughter, Elena (born in 1990), by makeup artist Noriko Watanabe, whom he married in 1989. He is a supporter of the Australian Speak Easy Association and the British Stammering Association (BSA). Neill also supports the Australian Labor Party, Greenpeace, OxFam, and the World Wildlife Fund. He is a patron of the National Performance Conference. He also donated a pair of jeans to the Jeans for Genes auction; they were painted by artist Merv Moriarty and auctioned off in August 1998.

He is the owner of the Two Paddocks winery in Central Otago.

Neill is friends with New Zealand musicians Neil Finn and Tim Finn (of Crowded House and Split Enz) and with Australian musician Jimmy Barnes.


Filmography

[edit] Television

  • Ivanhoe (1982)
  • Reilly, Ace of Spies (1983)
  • Kane and Abel (1985)
  • Amerika (TV miniseries) (1987)
  • Simpsons episode 1F09 - "Homer the Vigilante" as Molloy the Cat Burglar (1994)
  • In Cold Blood (1996)
  • Space (2001)
  • Doctor Zhivago (2002)
  • Framed (2002)
  • Stiff (2004)
  • Jessica (2004)
  • To the Ends of the Earth (2005)
  • The Triangle (2005)
  • Two Twisted (2006)
  • The Tudors (2007)

[edit] Films

  • Sleeping Dogs (1977)
  • My Brilliant Career (1979)
  • Omen III: The Final Conflict (1981)
  • Possession (1981)
  • Attack Force Z (1982)
  • Enigma (1983)
  • Blood of Others (1984)
  • Plenty (1985)
  • The Good Wife (1987)
  • A Cry in the Dark (1988)
  • Dead Calm (1989)
  • The Hunt for Red October (1990)
  • Death in Brunswick (1991)
  • Until the End of the World (1991)
  • Memoirs of an Invisible Man (1992)
  • The Rainbow Warrior (film) (1992)
  • The Piano (1993)
  • Jurassic Park (1993)
  • Country Life (1994)
  • Sirens (1994)
  • Cinema of Unease: A Personal Journey by Sam Neill (1995)
  • In the Mouth of Madness (1995)
  • Restoration (1995)
  • Children of the Revolution (1996)
  • Event Horizon (1997)
  • Merlin (1998)
  • The Horse Whisperer (1998)
  • Bicentennial Man (1999)
  • The Dish (2000)
  • My Mother Frank (2000)
  • Sally Hemmings: An American Scandal (2000)
  • Jurassic Park III (2001)
  • The Zookeeper (2001)
  • Dirty Deeds (2002)
  • Perfect Strangers (2003)
  • Yes (2004)
  • Wimbledon (2004)
  • Little Fish (2005)
  • Irresistible (2006)
  • Merlin's Apprentice (2006)
  • Daybreakers (2008)





Pensacola.S_02 aka ANDRO😃



Created

Last reply

Replies

10

Views

3.3k

Users

2

Frequent Posters

WillSmith456 thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Dazzler Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 17 years ago
#2

Sam Neill

Man O-Men

by Kyla Ward

First Appeared in Tabula Rasa#4, 1994

He was wonderful to work with, extremely professional. He is certainly going to be an important figure in the next decade in the motion picture business. He walks into a room and everyone turns round.
Harvey Bernhard
producer, The Final Conflict, 1981

If an actor's filmography runs just over, numerically, the years of their career, it's a good sign. Sam Neill is one of those professional actors who may not be on the A-list, but who are always in work and have their own devotees. His trademark, instant style.

The Irish-born, New Zealand-bred actor is best known to horror fans as Damien Thorne in Omen III : The Final Conflict (Graham Baker) -- the child of the original grown into his powers, not the least of which is charm. It is a mesmerising performance, fortunately for the rest of the film. The review in the New York Times (March 20, 1981) makes note of how Damien exerts a hypnotic attraction on a number of large, black dogs, 'an effect the film is unlikely to have on the audience'. Mr Neill was thirty-four, and this was his first international role.

He had come to world attention in 1979, playing opposite Judy Davis in the role that made her career. Her Brilliant Career (Gillian Armstrong), you might say, one of those intermittent Australian features that make it overseas. He was the handsome squatter Harry Beecham, the temptation to be overcome, and provided it. This type of presence -- and the ability to wear period costume convincingly -- influenced the entire rest of his own career.

In interviews, which are infrequent, Mr Neill comes over as one of those inevitable actors. Nothing in his home environment suggested such a career; indeed, in answer to the young 'Nigel's' increasing interest in school and university productions, his father responded that no son of his would ever go on the stage. Sam was, in fact, a school nickname that was adopted. Neill in fact graduated from his BA, at Canterbury University, to work at a sensible job, whilst taking roles in University and independent films and even wrangling stints as a director out of the NZ National Film Unit's documentary section. His first lead role was in New Zealand in 1977. Sleeping Dogs was the first feature by Rodger Donaldson, who went on to do such as The Bounty and Cocktail. The offer for My Brilliant Career followed with steady Australian work until in 1980 he acquired his 'patron', the late, great British actor James Mason. The story runs that after seeing his performance in My Brilliant Career, Mason rang him up in Melbourne where he was working on the ABC series Lucinda Bradford, and offered to bring him to England and into the contacts he would need. Mason thought Neill would make the perfect James Bond. And he did eventually play Sidney Riley, the Ace of Spies, though not before an intriguing little piece called Possession. You can't play the Antichrist in a big-budget success and not get clamorous offers from any number of horror films. Possession was the one he did, in 1981, and it is available on video in Australia, if not quite as readily as Omen III.

In Possession, shot in Germany by Andrzej Zulawski, his screen presence is tested harshly by the camera and unsympathetically by the script. He comes out having turned harsh into realistic and sympathetic, in a drama which depends on three people being upset at each other in a small flat. Until the demon manifests physically -- it's not The Exorcist but it's a nice little piece.

Sam Neill made a perfect Briton in the BBC series Reilly, Ace of Spies (1983). This was when the tag of sexy Sam became widespread. He made Cleo magazine's list of most eligible bachelors. He also made the perfect slightly evil Eastern European, playing opposite Meryl Streep in the WWII film Plenty (Fred Schepisi, 1985). In the interim he had also done a French telemovie Le Sang des Autres (The Blood of Others, 1984), so we may speculate. His next Australian appearance was in 1985, the telemovie Robbery Under Arms (Donald Crombie, SAFC). There were other films, he even played the Pope in a TV show, which has to make the mind boggle, (From A Far Country, 1981). Of necessity I am selective.

Sam Neill is just not quite the boy next door. This is probably what has kept him from the mainstream 'hero' roles, he has to be some kind of an exotic. In this context I would like to mention the film The Umbrella Woman, (US title -- The Good Wife, Ken Cameron, 1986). In this case he plays Neville, a smooth, polished stranger in a small country town, who has taken a bar-tending job. He is new. He is different -- and local housewife Marge becomes obsessed. It was on the set of The Umbrella Woman that he met the artist Davida Allen, who provided a quite unique series of works 'starring Sam Neill'. Davida Allen has won the Archibald Prize, the premier Australian award for portraiture and regularly exhibits in the international Biennale (modernist and expressionist art). These paintings, 1986 -- 87 were openly a series of fantasies centring round the actor. One of her recurrent themes is expressing ideas of desire.

'Exotic' can have a number of implications, and this seems to be what Mr Neill himself is more interested in exploring -- at least, by the roles he has taken in the past six years. Then again, casting Sam Neill as a rather ordinary character is a good way to provide extra depth, such as the husband in Dead Calm (Phillip Noyce, 1987). While Nicole Kidman interacts with one of Billy Zane's early maniacs, Sam Neill interacts with a sinking ship in a way that has to be seen to be believed. Then there is his portrayal of Michael Chamberlain in Evil Angels (US title -- A Cry In The Dark, 1989), for which he won an AFI award. This film reunited him with Meryl Streep and Fred Schepisi, who with the actual Chamberlains took up most of the news space. Better, perhaps, than being upstaged by the special effects, the fate of all that wonderful group of actors they collected for Jurassic Park (Steven Spielberg, 1993); or Elle Macpherson in Sirens (Jon Duigan, 1994).

In 1991 he played not the hero, but the narrator of Until the End of the World (Wim Wenders), a massive co-production exercise in search of high-definition television. This 'film', originally a 7 hour mini-series, deserved a bit more attention than it actually received, with a script by Peter Carey that fitted Neill like a glove.

But the role he has stated he particularly empathised with was Carl Fitzgerald in Death In Brunswick, another Australian film that made a splash in 1991, (John Ruane). Carl is an exotic, yes, in the form of an introduced weed. Something different, something awkward, that doesn't fit. That is the thrust of this wicked little comedy, recommended to all on the strength of the 'hiding the body' sequence.

Which brings us quite naturally to The Piano -- bodies and all.

His performance in this twisted, claustrophobic masterpiece is essential, and another he has admitted affected him deeply. In that corner of the triangle that would perhaps be read as the villain, he finds another exotic, out of place and wilting under the violent new influences in its environment. When an actor thanks the director, Jane Campion, for allowing them to achieve the performance they have, the audience is in for something special.

Sam Neill's simple sincerity, matched only by the late Peter Cushing's ability to take his role seriously no matter what (just see The Legend of the Seven Golden Vampires), makes him an asset to any film. And it is nice to see he does not despise the genre that brought him originally to the big screen. In 1994, he has completed shooting John Carpenter's upcoming feature, In the Mouth of Madness, in which he plays a novelist, who gets a little too close to the Necronomicon in what can be described as a Lovecraft pastiche. Hopefully Australia will be included soon in the release, although almost certain to be straight to video.

So that is the Sam Neill story. No drugs, no scandals. Two marriages, in 1981 to the actor Lisa Harrow, who played the reporter and mother of Peter in Omen III; later divorced and married Noriko Watanabe, whom he met when she was working as make-up artist on Dead Calm. Houses in Sydney, Los Angeles and New Zealand, one son from the previous marriage, one daughter, one step-daughter. Few awards, but a long line of impressive and worthwhile performances, and a lingering reputation for a certain, non-mainstream sexiness. The simple fact it lingers makes it seem just that much more worthwhile.

Edited by Pensacola.S_02 - 17 years ago
WillSmith456 thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Dazzler Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 17 years ago
#3
Pictures :-

Sam Neill in First Look Pictures' Little Fish - 2006

Sam Neill in First Look Pictures' Little Fish - 2006

Sam Neill and Joan Allen in Sony Pictures Classics' Yes - 2005

Joan Allen and Sam Neill in Sony Pictures Classics' Yes - 2005

Sam Neill and Kirsten Dunst in Universal Pictures' Wimbledon - 2004

Kevin Harrington, Tom Long, Patrick Warburton and Sam Neill in Warner Brothers' The Dish - 2001

Tom Long, Patrick Warburton, Sam Neill and Kevin Harrington in Warner Brothers' The Dish - 2001

Sam Neill, Tom Long and Kevin Harrington in Warner Brothers' The Dish - 2001


Patrick Warburton and Sam Neill in Warner Brothers' The Dish - 2001

Sam Neill in Warner Brothers' The Dish - 2001

Michael Jeter, Alessandro Nivola, Tea Leoni, Sam Neill and William H. Macy in Universal's Jurassic Park 3 - 2001

Tea Leoni, Trevor Morgan, William H. Macy, Alessandro Nivola and Sam Neill in Universal's Jurassic Park 3 - 2001

Sam Neill as Dr. Alan Grant encountering a group of raptors in Universal's Jurassic Park 3 - 2001
Edited by Pensacola.S_02 - 17 years ago
WillSmith456 thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Dazzler Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 17 years ago
#4
Avatrsa and Signatures, wallpapers

Actor Pics & Wallpapers for Sam Neill


  • The Dish
  • Sam Neill
  • Sam Neill
  • Jurassic Park III
  • Sam Neill
  • Jurassic Park
  • Sam
  • Sam
  • Sam Neill
  • Jurassic Park 3 - 2001
  • Sam Neill
  • Perfect Strangers
  • Sam Neill
  • Sam Neill
  • Sam Neil
  • Sam Neill
  • Sam Neill
  • Sam Neill
  • Jurassic Park 3 - 2001
  • Jurassic Park III
  • Looking like a good American
  • Sam Neill
  • Merlin
  • In the Mouth of Madness

😛


Edited by Pensacola.S_02 - 17 years ago
WillSmith456 thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Dazzler Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 17 years ago
#5
SAM NEIL VIDEOS!




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OA94fr7t0FI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gp3e3nhbwHc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9SuABGeeb8




aNDRO😛
Edited by Pensacola.S_02 - 17 years ago
WillSmith456 thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Dazzler Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 17 years ago
#6
WHERE are you you all ???😊
WillSmith456 thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Dazzler Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 17 years ago
#7
Sam Neill Knows Nothing About "Jurassic Park 4"
by Scott Weinberg | March 09, 2007
He capably anchored the first and third "Jurassic Park" movies, but it looks like Sam Neill won't be invited back if and when "Jurassic Park 4" finally gets underway.

The L.A. Daily News indicates that "JP4" is set to begin production some time this year, which means that Mr. Neill won't be included -- mainly because he already has his next two projects locked in, but also because he hasn't received the call. Regarding earlier reports that Neill's character would be coming back, the actor dismissed those reports as internet rumors.

And that's all we got, news-wise. Personally I think it's a mistake to boot the guy from the series. The actor brings a world-weary gravity to "JP1" and "JP3" that a more "actiony" hero would probably lack. Plus Sam Neill's just a cool actor, period.

Source: L.A. Daily News
Edited by Pensacola.S_02 - 17 years ago
WillSmith456 thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Dazzler Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 17 years ago
#8
JURRASSIC PARK 4 (2008)
Cast & Crew:

Keira Knightley, Sam Neill, more

Synopsis:
The dinosaurs once more get to terrorize the humans with "Jurassic Park 4." more

MPAA Rating: Not Rated

Release Company: Universal Pictures

Genre: Action/Adventure, Action, Adventure, Science-Fiction, Dinosaurs

WillSmith456 thumbnail
18th Anniversary Thumbnail Dazzler Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 17 years ago
#9
I am just soo excited for his 2008 movie. He will be there in JP4 coz he is in the cast and crew 😛
bluntbrain883 thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
#10
wow......seeems u r mad bout him 😊 .....good work

Related Topics

Hollywood Thumbnail

Posted by: priya185

4 months ago

Blake Lively at a premiere new video

Blake Lively at a premiere new video https://www.instagram.com/reel/DG6p1PxyODL/?igsh=OTJhOHoydTB2dWt0

Expand â–¼
Top

Stay Connected with IndiaForums!

Be the first to know about the latest news, updates, and exclusive content.

Add to Home Screen!

Install this web app on your iPhone for the best experience. It's easy, just tap and then "Add to Home Screen".