TV & Satellite Week

KNIGHT TO REMEMBER

OSCAR ISAAC plays a Marvel superhero whose powers derive from an ancient Egyptian god

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Moon Knight

Available from Wednesday 30 March, Disney+

SUPERHERO FANS LOVE a good origins story, and they don’t come much stranger than Moon Knight, the latest entry in Disney+’s universe of films and TV shows based on classic Marvel comics characters.

The six-part series, being released weekly, stars Scenes from

a Marriage actor Oscar Isaac as Steven Grant, who works at the gift shop in the British Museum, and who has difficulty distinguis­hing his dreams from his waking life.

It transpires he has a multiplepe­rsonality disorder, and has unwittingl­y been switching between mild-mannered Steven and mercenary action man Marc Spector, while experienci­ng strange and terrifying hallucinat­ions.

However, when Steven receives a mysterious phone call from a woman who recognises his voice as that of Marc, he realises he hasn’t been imagining things.

Soon, an even darker mystery with a link to an ancient Egyptian god starts to unfold, revealing yet another persona – the crime-fighting Moon Knight, a caped figure with more than a passing resemblanc­e to an ancient Egyptian mummy.

We caught up with 43-year-old Isaac to unravel the mystery behind Moon Knight…

WHAT CAN YOU TELL US ABOUT STEVEN

AND HOW THE STORY UNFOLDS?

We are introduced to this world through Steven Grant, who works at a gift shop in a museum. He is someone who’s desperate for connection, but hasn’t developed the proper skills for that. He is also living with this condition that is a mystery to him.

HOW DOES HIS CONDITION MANIFEST

ITSELF?

He has blackouts, and he is not sure if he has a sleep disorder, or exactly what is happening. Whole chunks of his memory are missing at different times, and that just compounds the situation of isolation that he has.

WHAT APPEALED TO YOU ABOUT THIS

STORY?

For me, it was critical that

Moon Knight was an authentic exploratio­n of what it feels like to live with dissociati­ve identity disorder in a different way. It’s been looked at in films, but generally it’s sensationa­lised or demonised.

WHAT’S YOUR TAKE ON THIS UNUSUAL

PERSONALIT­Y DISORDER?

To me, it’s an actual superpower that someone who has been subjected to horrible trauma and abuse over an extended period of time can have. In order to survive, they create an alternativ­e personalit­y that has no knowledge of this kind of trauma.

WHAT WAS IT LIKE PORTRAYING SUCH

A COMPLEX PERSONALIT­Y?

The superhero movies are the big show in town right now, like the Busby Berkeley musicals of the olden days. But to survive, the genre has to keep evolving, otherwise everybody’s going to get bored. The basic idea in Moon Knight of someone who doesn’t know their own mind was an interestin­g starting point, and I saw a lot of opportunit­ies to do something unique within the genre.

ETHAN HAWKE PLAYS THE GURU-LIKE

FIGURE ARTHUR HARROW. IS IT TRUE

YOU GOT HIM ON BOARD?

I’d been watching him in the TV series

The Good Lord Bird, and I was astounded by his work in that, and mentioned him to one of the directors. Ethan lives right around the corner from me, so we got together, and I got him drunk on tequila and made him say yes!

WHAT WAS YOUR PERSONAL HIGHLIGHT

FROM FILMING THE SERIES?

It was the first time I put on the Moon Knight costume, because it was such a powerful moment. For the first few months we’d been focusing on other elements of the story. But when I came out as Moon Knight, everyone was like: ‘Oh yeah, we’re making a superhero show!’

‘The genre has to keep evolving, otherwise everybody’s going to get bored’

OSCAR ISAAC

 ?? ?? THE CONSPIRACY DEEPENS…
OSCAR ISAAC AS MOON KNIGHT
FROM
DR ARTHUR HARROW (ETHAN HAWKE)
THE CONSPIRACY DEEPENS… OSCAR ISAAC AS MOON KNIGHT FROM DR ARTHUR HARROW (ETHAN HAWKE)
 ?? ??

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