Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Radcliffe loved playing film villain

- By Peter Sblendorio

For Daniel Radcliffe, it felt good to be bad. The actor, who rose to fame playing the heroic Harry Potter, embraced portraying an eccentric villain in the adventure-comedy “The Lost City.”

“It’s always nice to do something different. It’s not something I do a lot of in my career, sort of as the bad guy, so it’s very, very fun,” Radcliffe, 32, said.

“There’s great stuff about playing a hero ... but it’s lovely to spend a film not having to be the emotional center of the film or the eyes of the audience or anything like that, and just to kind of go, oh yeah, I don’t even have to be sympatheti­c or likable or any of those things. There’s something very freeing about that.”

Radcliffe stars in the movie, now in theaters, as Abigail Fairfax, a bombastic billionair­e obsessed with recovering an ancient artifact from the Lost City of D. He kidnaps romantic novelist Loretta Sage, played by Sandra Bullock, after she references the Lost City in her book, hoping she can help him find the treasure. Loretta’s cover model, portrayed by Channing Tatum, then begins an ill-equipped rescue mission, kicking off chaos in the jungle.

Radcliffe enjoyed playing a villain in a comedy, saying he approached the antagonist role differentl­y than he would have in a straight drama.

“He is the least favorite son of a media mogul,” Radcliffe said of his character. “He is kind of amoral and villainous, but all of his villainy is motivated by a very human and slightly pathetic need to be liked, and (he) desperatel­y wants his dad to be impressed by him. The evil actions are almost from a very mundane and human place, which I think was clever.”

Production took place in the Dominican Republic, with many scenes shot in the actual jungle. The setting provided “extraordin­ary scenery” that’s featured throughout “The Lost City,” said Radcliffe.

“We had a proper helicopter unit on this, so (with) some of those shots of the ocean and of the mountains, you really feel the scope of it in a different way,” Radcliffe said. “It’s very, very cool.”

The actor said it was a thrill to work with Bullock and Tatum. “I grew up obviously on the ‘Potter’ films and working with extraordin­ary actors like Maggie Smith and Richard Harris, but I didn’t as a young child really have an appreciati­on for who they were and what their work had been,” he said. “Whereas I grew up watching Sandra’s movies, so to be on set with her is incredibly special. Very nerve-wracking at first, but thankfully she puts you at ease pretty quickly.”

“The Lost City” had its world premiere in March at the South by Southwest festival in Austin, marking Radcliffe’s first time at a cinema since the start of the pandemic. “It was just joyous,” he said. “It was so nice to sit in there with an audience and listen to them react to stuff. It was very much a reminder, like, oh yeah, this is why cinemas are good, and this is why I’ve missed this.”

April 10 birthdays: Actor Steven Seagal is 70. Singer Babyface is 63. Comedian Orlando Jones is 54. Singer Shemekia Copeland is 43. Actor Laura Bell Bundy is 41. Actor Harry Hadden-Paton is 41. Actor Mandy Moore is 38. Actor Haley Joel Osment is 34. Singer Maren Morris is 32. Actor Daisy Ridley is 30. Actor Sofia Carson is 29.

 ?? TIM P. WHITBY/GETTY ?? Daniel Radcliffe, who plays Abigail Fairfax in “The Lost City,” attends a screening in London.
TIM P. WHITBY/GETTY Daniel Radcliffe, who plays Abigail Fairfax in “The Lost City,” attends a screening in London.

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