Welcome to Damian-Lewis.com, a website dedicated to British actor Damian Lewis known for his roles in Band of Brothers, Keane, Life, and the Showtime series Homeland. Here you'll find the latest news, photos, media, and more, so please have a look around and enjoy the site's content. If you have any comments, suggestions, or donations, please contact us!

‘The Sweeney’ Review

June 29, 2012 | posted by mokulen | in The Sweeney

The Sweeney opens in the UK on September 12. Click here at IMDb for more release dates. While there’s no release date for the US yet, according to ScreenDaily.com it does have a US distributor.

A seriously muscular and stylish bit of cops-and-robbers action, British crime drama The Sweeney delivers adrenalin-pumping thrills’n’spills as a tough team of London police take violent measures to try and get crime off the streets. Aimed very much as a solid mainstream release, it also has the humour and cinematic moves to appeal to festivals, especially those with a genre edge.

Picked up by eOne for multiple English-language territories, the film is set to open in the UK on September 12. Based on a hit British television series from the 1970s, The Sweeney will strike a chord in territories where the series (which ran into four seasons and two spin-off feature films) was transmitted, though this new version is non-period and resolutely set in the modern day.

The casting of rugged British actor Ray Winstone as head of the London police’s Flying Squad team (the title derives from ‘Sweeney Todd’, which is Cockney rhyming slang for ‘Flying Squad’) Detective Inspector Jack Regan works well, with him easily stepping into the shoes of acclaimed actor John Thaw who played the character in the original series and films.

Shrewd casting sees important roles for Hayley Atwell (seen in Captain America: The First Avenger) and Damien Lewis (feted recently for TV series Homeland), while British rap star Ben Drew (aka Plan B) takes on the key role of Regan’s sidekick, Detective George Carter (played by Dennis Waterman in the 1970s.)

The film is directed with a good deal of panache – and making the very best of a striking series of London locations, aided by lustrous cinematography by Simon Dennis – by Nick Love (who made impressive crime film The Business, and most recently The Firm), and while there is nothing overly new in terms of the story there is a real awareness of the cop movie genre as well as an underlying sense of affection for the style and format of the original series.


Read the full review at ScreenDaily.com

Watching ‘Waking up the Sleepwalking City’

June 26, 2012 | posted by mokulen | in Gallery

Damian Lewis watching a performance of ‘Waking up the Sleepwalking City’ – part of Brink Festival – outside Tate Modern in London on June 24th.

Source: ‏@MelissaJanineB

A couple more.

‘Diamonds Are Forever’ Preview

June 25, 2012 | posted by mokulen | in Download, Merchandise, Voice Work

AudioGO has added a short preview clip (2:51) of ‘Diamonds are Forever’ read by Damian Lewis on their Facebook page. You’ll need to be signed in to Twitter or Facebook to download the clip.

The title will be available from AudioGo for pre-order on August 1st and for download or purchase on September 6th.

Update: AudioGo had posted the clip to their Youtube page


Chef Damian

June 23, 2012 | posted by mokulen | in Gallery

Source: @THEHAREWOOD

Homeland Boss Dishes on Season Two

June 23, 2012 | posted by mokulen | in Homeland

Family will also be on Brody’s mind as he wrestles with his relationship with his now-suspicious daughter, whose call stopped him from blowing up the bunker.

“We ended with so many open questions that were not necessarily clear about what it really meant,” Gordon explains. “Like Brody, after he didn’t push the button, explains himself to Abu Nazir, says, ‘Let me stay and be a politician and I’ll influence policy from the inside.’ But I think that’s just what he said and Abu Nazir said, ‘Great, kill Walker and go home.’ But did Brody mean it? Did Abu Nazir trust him entirely? We’ll find out.”

Gordon hints that we’ll see more of Nazir next season as we learn whether Brody is a good guy or bad guy. He also adds that Brody and Carrie will still be drawn to each other in their own damaged way, although it’s unclear exactly what they’ll do about it.


Read the full article at E! Online.