A list of puns related to "Joel Kinnaman"
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We should all together set up a petition, gofundme, or some type of avenue to convince Joel Kinnaman and RKM to allow/pay Joel Kinnaman to do an audiobook/live reading of Altered Carbon. If I was a rich man I'd make it happen myself. It wouldn't only be the second season we didn't get but it would help as incentive for all of the strictly show watchers to read the original creation, which any fan should certainly do. I was never a reader like that, Altered Carbon(show) is what got me into reading, not just for fun but passionately after a life of neglect. Truly one of the best pieces of literature ever created. Hearing Kinnaman voicing his absolutely perfect portrayal of Kovacs, with the absolutely perfect original "script" would be nothing short of... Well, Perfection. Insert magneto meme.
James Gunn rounded out an undeveloped character from the first film into someone anyone can root for.
That is all.
From The Hollywood Reporter:
>The downside of being a film journalist is that my time to watch TV is very limited, as there always seems to be a pile of film screeners hanging over me. So this is my roundabout way of confessing that Iβve yet to watch For All Mankind, even though everyone I know raves about it. Has the reception of this show been a pleasant surprise for you?
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>Yeah, weβre just about to start the last block of season three. The last two episodes. So when we shot the first season, it was on a brand-new platform that hadnβt launched yet [Apple TV+], but it was exciting to be a part of Appleβs latest push. The writing was fantastic, I loved the cast, and it was this very mature, thoughtful, character-building show that was everything I wouldβve wanted from a show. And when I watched the first season, I was like, βThis is really solid.β But then it opened to crickets, you know? Apple hadnβt really figured out their marketing, and people hadnβt found the platform yet. So it really felt like we did this project as a work of love. Everyone really enjoyed the experience and really believed in what we were doing, but it just felt like no one was watching. (Laughs.) There was zero awareness. So I was like, βOkay, I guess itβs just going to be a good experience and one of those things that people donβt see.β
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>Of course, I was quietly hoping that more people would find the platform by the time they started marketing the second season. That sort of thing has happened to shows before, but I wasnβt really expecting this groundswell that came around for the showβs second season. Iβve had some of my most emotional moments as an actor on this show, and the show and the character became really important to me. We dealt with the loss of a child, so we were really digging into these deep emotions, and it felt like we had a responsibility towards people who have gone through that horrific loss. And at the same time, the show was kind of revealing itself. The concept is so unusual on this show, and the first season doesnβt really reveal what the actual format of the show is. And by the second season, you start to understand it, but in the third season, youβll understand and say, βOkay, this is what the show is.β
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>The show jumps ten years between each season in
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