Immagini dal set di Willed To Kill

Ross ha twitterato alcune immagini dal set di Willed to Kill.

Ecco il Det. McNabb.

Fonte: https://twitter.com/#!/maccageezer





Foto dal twitter di Ross – Band of Brothers BBQ


Nuovo progetto per Ross – “It’s Not You, It’s Me”

Vivica A. Fox, Joelle Carter e Ross McCall saranno gli interpreti principali della commedia “It’s not you”, che inizierà le riprese a Los Angeles nelle prossime settimane.

“It’s Not You, It’s Me” è diretto dallo sceneggiatore Nathan Ives della Mule Films ed è basato su una sua sceneggiatura. Il progetto è stato sviluppato e prodotto da Marie Rose della Indie Rose Films, ex dirigente della Disney e della MGM.

“It’s Not You, It’s Me” racconta la storia di un trentenne allergico agli impegni che rompe con l’amore della sua vita grazie ai consigli contrastanti delle sue oltraggiose voci interiori – e dice l’unica cosa alla quale riesce a pensare per ammorbidire il colpo: “Non sei tu, sono io.”

Joelle Carter (“Justified”) interpreta l’ex-fidanzata le cui voci interiori stanno spingendo ad andare avanti a cercare un altro ‘amore della sua vita’.

FONTE





[Gallery] Altra immagine dal photoshot di Ben Miller






[Gallery] Altra immagine dal photoshoot di Ben Miller – Portrait

Photoshoot > Servizi fotografici > Set #06





[Gallery] Un’altra immagine dal photoshoot di Ben Miller

Photoshoot > Servizi fotografici > Set #06






[Gallery] Screencaps White Collar 3×11

Cinema e TV > White Collar > Screencaps 3×11

PLEASE CREDIT US IF YOU TAKE THEM. THANKS.





[VIDEO] Ross McCall nel nuovo video postato da Tim DeKay

Nel video postato da Tim Dekay durante la visione dell’episodio 3×11 possiamo vedere ripreso anche Ross :)






[Gallery] Photoshoot by Ben Miller

Uno splendido – a dir poco – photoshoot di Ross ad opera del fotografo Ben Miller

Photoshoot > Servizi fotografici > Set #06





Ross McCall intervistato per l’Examiner [eng]

Eccovi una bellissima intervista a Ross. Purtroppo non ho il tempo di tradurla, ma spero che apprezzerete comunque.
Grazie a Ross stesso per averla segnalata sul suo twitter!

*****

Actor Ross McCall dominated the stage of London for over a decade before launching to worldwide fame for his starring role in HBO’s monster size hit mini-series, Band of Brothers. Oh ye-ahhh. The massively talented and fabulously magnetic Scotsman powered on to star in colossal hits including Green Street Hooligans and Crash.

Right this sec-sec, McCall plays the deliciously diabolical nemesis Matthew Keller on USA’s super smash hit White Collar (fresh new season premieres Tuesday, January 17th at 10PM. Check it!). McCall took a time out from White Collar to talk about everything from his own real-life Keller ways…to how his dad encouraged him to make it in Hollywood.

MM: Your role as diabolical nemesis Matthew Keller on White Collar is just insane. How amazingly cool is it playing a fugitive whose everyday activities include everything from smuggling Egyptian antiques to escaping from jail in a cloud of smoke? Honestly!

Ross McCall: Keller is the coolest guy. The writers on “White Collar” give me so much love. Keller kidnaps people, smuggles art, flys helicopters. To top it all off, we were just shooting on Park Avenue. I just thought “Wow.” They closed down the streets and there were 100 people taking pictures and I was trying to keep 2 pages of dialogue in my head.

MM: All while dressed in a killer Keller suit…

RM: Yes, Keller dresses so well [laughs]. It’s all about the fitted suit.

MM: Do you have any real-life Keller in you? Ever escaped from maybe not prison…But a bad date?

RM: I did escape from prison one time – I’m joking. To the happiness of my mother, I’m very different from Keller. I’m not a sociopath or sex addict. I like to think I’m a bit normal, a bit boring. I don’t know how the first thing about hijacking a helicopter [laughs].

MM: More than 10 years later, and Band of Brothers continues to be a monster global hit…

RM: It’s the biggest selling TV DVD in history – that’s what I’ve been told. It’s a classic. When the first show came out, a lot of guys in their 20s watched the show. During the second airing, girls starting saying “hi” and their hellos to me [laughs]. Now it’s the third airing – and guys in their 40s are buying it for their dads. It’s growing and growing. I now do work with the World War II Foundation. We travel America and go to fantastic places. We get up in a room and meet great people and salute the heroes of that generation. It inspires me.

MM: What was the coolest thing to happen to you since starring in Band Of Brothers?

RM: So many amazing, beautiful things. One of the great things about “Band Of Brothers” was we got to teach our generation about World War II. We learned in school but it wasn’t in depth. “Band Of Brothers” opened up World War II to my generation.

“Band Of Brothers” also gave me 12 new brothers. We’re still super tight and close. And it brought me to America. I’d been working in London for 10 years doing shows before getting the call for “Band of Brothers.” As a kid, I watched Steven Spielberg movies and always dreamed about going to America and working with Spielberg. And “Band Of Brothers” opened that door and that dream.

CONTINUATE A LEGGERE QUI