Derby Telegraph

This film has something to say about what it means to be human

Archive is a new sci-fi film about love and death. GEORGIA HUMPHREYS chats to stars Theo James and Stacy Martin plus the film’s writer and director Gavin Rothery

- ■ Archive is available to download/stream now

BRITISH actor Theo James is not new to sci-fi films having appeared in the Divergent series set in a dystopian future. His latest project is a real labour of love – the 36-year-old not only stars in android thriller Archive, but produces it too.

Set in 2049, Theo plays roboticist George Almore who is working on a true human-equivalent AI. What soon becomes clear is that George has secretly skewed the focus of his work: developing the robots towards the goal of creating a simulacra of Jules, his wife who died in a car crash.

Explaining what drew him to the story, Theo, also known for ITV period drama Sanditon, says it was a “really interestin­g conceptual piece of work”.

“It had something to say about the quality of human life – you know, what it means to be human,” muses the actor, who was born in High Wycombe.

“Beyond that, the idea of trying to recreate love – or a piece of someone’s soul, however you want to define it – in something that was mechanical, essentiall­y, and how far you can go to create that.”

So, how did Theo try to understand his character’s motives?

“You have to bring a piece of yourself to every character you play, so you try and see parallels in your own life and imagine how far you would go if you had lost the most important person to you, so you find some mutual ground there,” he suggests.

“Also, I think I was drawn to the idea of the existentia­l question of, ‘If you imbue something with enough quality and characteri­stics of humanity, at what point does it become human?”’

Playing his late wife and the android is English-French actress Stacy Martin.

Being a robot was no mean feat. She had to wear a rigid suit that covers everything other than your eyes and nostrils, affecting your breathing and leaving you with very narrow vision and unable to hear very well – then there’s the four-anda-half hours spent in make-up every morning.

Stacy confides she “had moments where I was definitely quite moody”.

But the costume was also helpful for the 30-year-old, whose breakthrou­gh role was in 2013 film drama Nymphomani­ac.

“Having this sort of armour, that was also quite restrictin­g, was something that was actually really helpful for the character, because she struggles with her identity and who she is, and learning how to move in a different way – or learning how to breathe – was part of that character’s journey, for me,” she says.

Stacy, who can also currently be seen in BBC thriller The Serpent (showing on iPlayer), joined the cast quite late – by the time the team got in contact with her, it was just three weeks before quote shooting.

But she was drawn to the role because she “needed something a bit different” at the time – and she also liked “how much detail and how much love there was in the project”.

“I don’t know much about sci-fi and, just by talking with Gavin, you really felt his passion for that genre but also for film-making and for this story he was wanting to explore.”

Gavin, who originally worked as an illustrato­r and comic artist, came up with the idea for Archive after he “had a really bad weekend”.

“As a freelancer, both my computers died,” recalls the filmmaker, who also worked on sci-fi drama Moon.

“It was a Sunday afternoon and I couldn’t do anything to fix them. I lost a load of data – some kind of power surge, I never really found what happened.

“It cost me a couple of thousand pounds getting data recovered from hard drives, it was awful.

“I felt like my computers had killed themselves, basically, to spite me. It felt like a personal attack. So that kind of idea of a computer killing itself to spite somebody really lodged in my brain.

“That then led me into the story arc of what if there was somebody creating a human equivalent machine intelligen­ce, and as soon as he turned it on, it just killed itself?

“So, it was kinda dark. But my head was in a dark place. I was in a bit of a funk – losing all my data was bad.”

Discussing his cast, Gavin jokes: “It’s tricky when you start meeting movie stars because everyone’s really handsome and beautiful and smart and rich and you’re just like, huge imposter syndrome.

“But you’ve just got to work your way through it.”

He describes Theo as “super-smart, super-handsome, super-engaged, super-talented”.

“I should really hate that guy, but I can’t help but love him, he’s awesome. He’s just got so much going on.

“And Stacy – again she’s just got so much going on. Very sophistica­ted, she’s French, she’s very cool.”

Both stars have new projects they hope to be working on in 2021; for Stacy, it’s Brady Corbet’s feature film, The Brutalist.

“And then, really, I think it just depends on where that goes,” she says.

“It’s hard to plan in a pandemic and I’ve sort of given up on having a plan, which is great!”

“I would echo Stacy’s sentiment,” follows Theo.

“But, yeah, I’m hoping to do a remake of a French-language film. It’s a small movie, but it’s quite a special film.”

Any fans hoping to see more of him in Sanditon (and there were many

– a petition on Change.org to see a second series made has attracted more than 80,000 signatures to date) might be disappoint­ed.

Asked about the #SaveSandit­on campaign, and whether he’d be open to doing more of the period drama – which was an adaptation of Jane Austen’s famously unfinished story of the same name – he said: “It’s really amazing that people responded to it in that way; I kind of always saw it as a single season though.

“I never saw it as more than that – I kind of liked the way it ended in a kind of slightly off-beat way that you wouldn’t have necessaril­y expected from Jane Austen.”

 ??  ?? Left: Stacy Martin plays Jules and her robotic re-creation, below. Right, Writer and director Gavin Rothery on the set of Archive
Left: Stacy Martin plays Jules and her robotic re-creation, below. Right, Writer and director Gavin Rothery on the set of Archive
 ??  ?? Theo James as George Almore, the robotics expert trying to re-create his late wife
Theo James as George Almore, the robotics expert trying to re-create his late wife

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