USA TODAY International Edition

Malek taps into quiet of evil to oppose Bond

- Bryan Alexander

Even with an Oscar on the mantel for transformi­ng into rocker Freddie Mercury in “Bohemian Rhapsody,” Rami Malek was understand­ably intimidate­d entering the hallowed halls of Bond villainy in “No Time to Die” ( in theaters Friday).

Some of the greatest villains in cinematic history have achieved cultural immortalit­y facing off against James Bond across 25 films.

“It is, of course, daunting thinking about the rich legacy,” says Malek, who was given license to create his eerily contained Lyutsifer Safin, working in collaborat­ion with director Cary Joji Fukunaga.

“One thing we both wanted was to avoid creating a cackling megalomani­ac,” says Malek, 40. “I kept saying to myself, let’s make him meticulous, fastidious and precise in his kills and his methodolog­y.”

Malek earned notice as the haunted, disturbed World War II soldier Merriell “Snafu” Shelton in HBO’s 2010 miniseries “The Pacific.” Two years later, the actor met Bond producer Barbra Broccoli on the set of his 2013 drama “Short Term 12.”

“She sat with me at a table for lunch and said, ‘ One day, we’re going to work together,’ ” Malek recalls. “She held on to her promise. Which is really cool.”

Portraying Mercury to global acclaim sped up those conversati­ons – and helped ease the trepidatio­n.

“Playing Freddie Mercury gave me all the confidence in the world to step into this role and remove that sense of fear or doubt,” Malek says.

Safin is a new villain in the Bond canon. He was written to intertwine with Bond’s returning “Spectre” love interest, Léa Seydoux’s Madeleine, the daughter of assassin Mr. White ( played by Jesper Christense­n in earlier films).

The villain’s “No Time to Die” back story reveals that Mr. White poisoned Safin’s entire family with deadly dioxin, with only young Safin ( Malek) surviving. The dioxin poisoning disfigured Safin’s face – think of the real- life 2004 dioxin poisoning of Ukrainian president Viktor Yushchenko – and affects Safin’s slow, deliberate movements.

Grown- up Safin comes for revenge on a global scale, stealing a DNA- triggered government bioweapon developed off the books by MI6. He plans to unleash the gas from his own private island.

The full facial scarring required 21⁄ hours a day in the makeup chair for Malek, which helped him tap into his deliberate villain.

“I took the time in the chair to be very still, very centered,” Malek says. “That would lead me right into the correct path every day on set.”

Safin’s white mask is creepy as heck, but it’s not worn out of vanity to cover his face. Safin wants to protect the idea that he’s dead even when vengefully hunting down Mr. White at his home amid security cameras, like a “phantom coming out of nowhere to extract revenge” in the film’s early flashback scenes, Fukunaga says.

It’s here that Safin has a pivotal meeting with young Madeleine.

Rami only revealed the rest of the character – down to the slightly Eastern European accent – shooting Safin’s first scenes with Seydoux’s adult Madeleine.

Malek watched documentar­ies about empathy- lacking despotic dictators, but never turned too inward for inspiratio­n.

Life- destroying villains “are not in my DNA. Thankfully, this character transforma­tion was a stretch,” Malek says. “Usually I can find some part of my soul that I can attach. There were moments of that with Safin, but they were fleeting.”

Bond fans live for the moment when 007 faces off with the resident villain. For his turn, Malek kept his performanc­e subdued in “No Time to Die.”

“When you raise your voice, it’s probably because you’re panicking,” he says. “I found it very compelling to think about someone who draws you into them because they have power, they have the control.”

The actor went so far as to strip out any banter from the dialogue, which is standard for Bond interactio­ns.

“I thought that we didn’t need quips and one- liners and Daniel was in the same head space,” Malek says. “A few years ago, I might’ve said, ‘ Give me more jokes.’ But the importance of the moment is as serious as it could possibly be and has ever been for James Bond.”

During their meeting, Malek’s Safin kept his disturbed chill even opposing the world’s greatest movie spy.

“I kept reminding myself that James Bond might be powerful and a hero to all,” Malek says.

“But there is no greater adversary, greater power or more intelligen­t human being than Safin. That’s his vision of himself.”

 ?? NICOLA DOVE/ MGM ?? Rami Malek found that tapping into stillness was key to playing the villain Safin in “No Time To Die.”
NICOLA DOVE/ MGM Rami Malek found that tapping into stillness was key to playing the villain Safin in “No Time To Die.”

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