Steven Mackintosh
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 57 |
Date of birth | April 30,1967 |
Zodiac sign | Taurus |
Born | Cambridge |
United Kingdom | |
Spouse | Lisa Jacobs |
Children | Martha Mackintosh |
Blythe Mackintosh | |
Parents | Dorothy Parris |
Malcolm Mackintosh | |
Siblings | Lynda Ellingham |
Job | Child actor |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 433997 |
Underworld: Rise of the Lycans
Underworld: Evolution
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels
The Muppet Christmas Carol
Stan Lee's Lucky Man
The Mother
Our Mutual Friend
Different for Girls
Prime Suspect
The Sweeney
Blue Juice
Set Fire to the Stars
Kick-Ass 2
Twelfth Night or What You Will
Sugarhouse
Inside Men
The Secret Life of Words
The Jacket
The Criminal
Robot Overlords
The Land Girls
First Born
The Daisy Chain
London Kills Me
Modern Life Is Rubbish
Lady Audley's Secret
The Buddha of Suburbia
The Aryan Couple
Urban Hymn
The Escapist
Rang De Basanti
Saving Lives at Sea
The Amazing Mrs Pritchard
Kiri
Criminal Justice
England Expects
The Jury
The Grotesque
The Scouting Book for Boys
Small Engine Repair
The Return of the Native
The Ebb Tide
What Remains
The Great Ghost Rescue
Lost Christmas
Shiny Shiny Bright New Hole in My Heart
Elfie Hopkins
The Other Boleyn Girl
Wanderlust
Rocketman
The Postcard Killings
The Halcyon
Steven Mackintosh Life story
Steven Mackintosh is an English actor and narrator. He is perhaps best known for his role as Andreas Tanis in the action horror films Underworld: Evolution and Underworld: Rise of the Lycans. Mackintosh received a British Academy Television Award nomination for his leading role in the BBC One television film Care.
John Travolta recalls near-death experience in the sky
By Steven McIntoshEntertainment reporter
The London screening for a new Disney+ film is already running half an hour late - But it isn't John Travolta 's fault.
The Star of the short film in question, The Shepherd , is already sitting in The Audience , patiently waiting to see The Story on a big screen for the First Time , 30 years after he first dreamed of adapting it.
When it becomes clear that there are more people entering The Tiny screening room than there are seats, he happily gives up his chair and perches at The End of The Row .
Despite taking place on Christmas Eve and being called The Shepherd , The Story is not what you might expect. Set in 1957, It Follows a young Royal Air Force pilot Returning Home for Christmas who runs into trouble when his plane suffers electrical failure.
With navigational systems down and his radio not working, he accepts his fate. But through The Darkness and fog, The Pilot suddenly spots another plane, flown by A Man who offers to help guide him to safety.
The Story is an adaptation of The 1975 novella by Frederick Forsyth - One of The Other famous faces in The Audience at the screening. By The Time Travolta came across The Book , he had coincidentally just had a near-death experience of his own when piloting a plane.
" The kismet of The Project is, I actually experienced a total electrical failure, not in a Vampire But a corporate jet, over Washington Dc , prior To My discovering The Book , " he tells journalists after the screening.
" So when I read The Book , it resonated more because of this experience I personally had had.
" I knew what it felt like to absolutely think you're going to die. Because I had two good jet engines But I had no instruments, no electric, nothing.
" And I thought it was over, just like This Boy , portrayed so beautifully [by actor Ben Radcliffe ]. He captured that despair when you think you're actually going to die. "
The Grease actor adds: " I had My Family on board and I said, 'This is it, I can't believe I'm going to die in this plane. '
" And Then , As If by a miracle, we descended to a lower altitude. I saw the Washington Dc Monument and identified that Washington National Airport was right next to it and I made a landing just like [character Freddie] does in The Film . "
Travolta did not discover Forsyth 's book until a few years after is own brush with death.
" I had just purchased a Vampire jet just like The One in The Film . I had flown it for two years and I'm doing a film in Canada and I'm at a book store, and I see a small novella with a Vampire jet on The Front of it, and I said, I have to read this. "
When he read The Novel , Travolta says he was struck by The Feeling he had experienced in Real Life .
" I instantly fell in love with this book. And it was my dream to One Day make it into a film. So a couple of years later I purchased the rights to this book, But because it was right after Pulp Fiction , I was doing One movie after another.
" So after 10 Years , I let it go and decided I was never going to get to do it. Then this hero [director Iain Softley ] came along who had also fallen in love with it, and brought me back into The Group . "
When Travolta first had the idea of starring in The Film More Than three decades ago, he envisaged himself portraying the young pilot who runs into difficulty.
Instead, The Film sees him play the older man who helps him. " I was Young Enough then that I could've play that part, " he jokes. " But I had to wait 30 years to play The Shepherd . "
The Film was shot largely in the UK, which explains why taking selfies with fans.
Most viewers will see it on Disney+ when it is released on the streaming platform in December, and at 38 minutes it is the kind of snackable, family-friendly tale that could make easy viewing over The Holidays .
The Film also stars Millie Kent, Simon Wilson and Steven Mackintosh , while Oscar winner Alfonso Cuarón, who directed Gravity and Roma, serves as producer.
The Shepherd has previously been adapted for The Stage and radio, including by The Bbc . In Canada, The Story has been read on radio network CBC almost every Christmas since 1979.
" One of the reasons I think it is so enduring is the genius of The Story , " says Softley. " It makes you question and examine what home means and what is important.
" And it goes beyond that. It's about the kind of sacred nature in a lot of religions of bringing people home and looking after The Lost traveller.
" And it's self-sacrifice, " he adds. " I think also At Christmas , you don't only think about your loved ones, it's a time when you think about Other People who are less fortunate.
" I think it encapsulates all of that, and I think that's why people find it moving and resonant. "
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com