[identity profile] surya74.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] the_ckr_files


By Louis B. Hobson, Calgary Sun, October 3, 2002

Callum Keith Rennie insists he only looks like the busiest actor in Canada. In a decade of working in showbusiness, Rennie has appeared in more than 50 feature films and TV shows.

“I don’t take everything that’s offered to me, but there’s plenty of jobs to go around if you’re willing to pursue them,” says Rennie, adding, “but I like my career and I am happy with the way it has worked out.”

Rennie was born in England, raised in Edmonton and educated in Calgary and Victoria.

He has appeared in such films as Memento and on such series as Due South but it’s his dedication to small independent films that has made him one of the most respected Canadian actors of his generation.

He popped in from his home in Vancouver for the festival presentation of the powerful family drama Flower & Garnet which screens Oct. 4 at the Globe 2 Cinema at 9 p.m.

In Flower & Garnet, Rennie plays a man so devastated by his wife’s death that he alienates himself from his daughter and son. Eight years after her death giving birth to their son, he is forced to deal with more tragedies that his emotional absence has caused.

He has nothing but praise for Jane McGregor and Colin Roberts who play his children and for director Keith Behrman who he says “had a really delicate hand when it came to working with these young actors yet he never condescended to them which explains why he got the performances he did.”

For his part, Rennie says he “stayed his distance” from McGregor and Roberts.

“That was the relationship my character has with them and I thought it was important I have the same kind of relationship.

“A film like Flower & Garnet can be as emotionally wrenching for the actors while filming as it is for audiences as they watch the story unfold. Your emotions definitely get pushed and pulled. At certain times your own personal experiences resurface. I pretended I could just wash it all away at the end of each day but often it was just pretending. Things lingered.”

One thing that has not lingered and for which Rennie has no regrets is a decision he made in his first year as a struggling Vancouver actor.

He turned down the role of Alex Krycek on The X-Files.

“I didn’t have any money back then, but the offer they made me wasn’t fair. I refuse to have regrets. It’s the same as with a relationship that doesn’t work out. You move on forget about it.”

Date: 2010-01-18 01:49 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] spiderwebb.livejournal.com
i really loved that movie. the father/child relationship was so well done and was so moving, so true to life at times that it was hard to watch. i especially loved jane mcgregor's performance in the film.

Date: 2010-01-18 06:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] spiderwebb.livejournal.com
the one that really got me was the delivery scene. first of all, as someone who has actually given birth, that was one of the most realistic birthing scenes i have ever seen on film. it's the part where ed is holding flower's hand as she's breathing and then as the labor gets more intense, you can see him start to remember his wife and he lets go of her hand and leaves the room. that scene damn near broke me.

Profile

the_ckr_files: (Default)
A Callum Keith Rennie Archive

June 2018

S M T W T F S
     12
345 6789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 13th, 2025 05:40 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios