
Star Wars Palpatine actor Ian McDiarmid ‘thought he'd gone much too far' in Revenge of the Sith duel
The 80-year-old actor - who has portrayed Emperor Palpatine in the sci-fi saga since 1983's 'Return of the Jedi' - battled Jedi master Mace Windu (Samuel L. Jackson) during director George Lucas' 2005 prequel blockbuster, though has now admitted he thought he had overdone it during the fight.
He told Variety: 'I thought I'd gone much too far, and George said, 'No, no, you can go much further.' It's the moment when the monster becomes available and he is ecstatic with delight because he can lose the hypocritical face.
'When we were doing 'The Phantom Menace', George said, 'You should think of your face as a carapace' - as if we'd made me up, and underneath was the real person. That was great, because to believe that my own face and voice were utterly manufactured was a huge help.'
McDiarmid added he found playing Palpatine in 'Revenge of the Sith' to be 'more satisfying', as he got to work more closely with Anakin Skywalker actor Hayden Christensen and featured more in the story.
He said: 'I had more to do in 'Revenge of the Sith' - I had more screen time, more time with Hayden - so that was more satisfying.
'I also had no idea that Palpatine would have power with a weapon, so to find that he was very good - to give my stunt double full credit - with a saber was interesting.'
Even so, McDiarmid recalled Palpatine's arc from a scheming senator to the authoritarian galactic dictator 'wasn't mapped out at all' when he was brought back for the 'Star Wars' prequel trilogy with 1999's 'The Phantom Menace'.
He explained: 'When I first got the part, I had no idea what the world was that I'd be in charge of as the Emperor.
'So it started off as a big mystery. I had no idea that Palpatine would figure [into the story so heavily]. But by then, it so happened that I was young enough to play the younger senator.
'When I first met George about it, he said, 'Do you know anyone who wants to play an Emperor?' I said, 'I think you know the answer to that question.'
'And then I got the script and realised that he was more than one character, which made it even more fascinating to play - an ordinary, everyday, fairly hypocritical politician with a monster hiding inside his body.'
After 'Revenge of the Sith', McDiarmid returned again in 2019's 'The Rise of Skywalker' to do battle with Rey (Daisy Ridley) and Ben Solo (Adam Driver), though the Sith Lord's unexpected comeback was met with backlash from some fans.
While McDiarmid 'thought there might be a bit of a fuss about bringing [Palpatine] back' after his apparent death in 'Return of the Jedi', the actor insisted 'it seemed entirely probable that Palpatine had a plan B'.
Speaking about the controversy. The actor said: 'Well, there's always something, isn't there? I don't read that stuff and I'm not online. So it'll only reach me if someone mentions it.
'I thought there might be a bit of a fuss about bringing him back. But as I said, mine and Palpatine's logic was entirely reasonable. This man who was horribly maimed thought maybe one day it might happen to him, and we've got to have a plan B.
'I loved the whole idea that he should come back and be even more powerful than he was before. Though this time, he had to be utterly destroyed. So I think he's dead.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
a day ago
- Perth Now
Alden Ehrenreich on link between new movie Weapons and school shootings
Alden Ehrenreich has discussed the link between his new movie Weapons and school shootings. In Zach Cregger's horror movie, Alden, 35, stars as a police officer whose small town is rocked by the sudden and mysterious disappearance of 17 children and Alden admitted there is 'clearly some relationship' between school shootings and the movie. He told Variety: 'Trying to boil it down to a thesis is probably in vain, I think this story is more like a dream. It's more poetic than rational. We had some conversations, [for instance] there is a moment where a gun appears in the sky. 'I think there's clearly some relationship between that gun and a bunch of missing children and school shootings. He didn't say that, but to me it feels like it's there in a poetic sense. The thing that feels more concrete to me is that all of these characters are an expression and a part of Zach. Julia [Garner] said, during our press tour, that she kept making certain choices wearing T-shirts and glasses. In the end, she saw she was just dressing like Zach. It's proof positive that filmmakers should take more personal risks. It smells original, in the same way that the audience can smell when something's formulaic and they've seen it a million times.' Alden put on weight to play police officer Paul Morgan in the movie in order to better portray 'someone moving through a life that really isn't his own'. He explained: 'One of the more important things for the character was to be carrying around as much weight as possible, physically and emotionally. I wear a bulletproof vest, and production was going to spare me because we shot in Atlanta and it was so hot, but we wound up keeping it. I gained some weight for the role, not so much to play a cop but to play someone moving through a life that really isn't his own. Someone in a circumstance, a relationship and a job, that's not genuine to who he is. And that is what's tonally unique about Zack. Francis Ford Coppola told me on my first movie [Tetro] that if you write something really personal, it will become something no one has ever seen before. Because each one of us is completely unique and original. I think that's true of this movie.'


Perth Now
3 days ago
- Perth Now
Sam Nivola proud to have found work himself
Sam Nivola is "proud" he's never relied on his famous parents for help with his career. The White Lotus star is the son of actors Emily Mortimer and Alessandro Nivola and the pair banned him from auditioning for roles before he turned 18, but a year before then, his high school drama teacher helped him land an audition for White Noise and he sent in a self-tape in secret. Once he made it through to the next round to play the son of Adam Driver and Greta Gerwig's characters, he confessed to his parents and they said: 'Holy f****** s***, it's a Noah Baumbach movie?! You have to do the callback!' And asked about being a "nepo baby", he laughed to Variety: 'Other tha my genes, I don't think I can attribute much of my success to my parents. I feel proud that I've done it for myself, and sometimes in spite of them.' "[With my first role] I didn't get my dad's agent to call up so-and-so. I did it by myself. I didn't want to give anyone an excuse to be able to say that anything I've achieved has been because of anyone other than me. And I'm proud of that.' Emily and Alessandro were further "upset" when Sam, now 21, dropped out of college after just one semester studying Latin and film at Columbia. He said: "My parents were upset. It totally scared them, which is understandable. I wasn't happy at the time because I couldn't dedicate everything in me to acting. "And, I have problems with authority figures.' Despite growing up with parents in the public eye, Sam was unprepared for the level of fame The White Lotus would bring him. He said: "When The White Lotus was at its peak, I literally couldn't walk down the street in Brooklyn — my hometown — without being swarmed.' To escape the attention, the Perfect Couple actor and his friends asked ChatGPT to find "the worst bar in the East Village" and ended up in a taproom where speaking was banned. He recalled: 'We're yelling, 'This place is f****** awesome!' and everyone's like, 'Shhh!''


Perth Now
3 days ago
- Perth Now
Tyla reduced to tears over pressure to conform to pop
Tyla was reduced to tears being told to conform to pop music. The Water hitmaker had viral success with 2023 hit, however, she admits that being pressured into making music that wasn't authentic to her left her "crying". The South African star told Variety: '[Those songs] didn't feel like me at all. I remember being in my hotel room and my managers were calling me: 'Come down, we need to cut the song.' I was crying and thinking, 'This is not what I want. I didn't get signed to do this'. 'They had to [coax] me out of that room. But through doing that, I realised how much more I love African music. It made me more persistent in keeping my ideas.' On recording her breakthrough track, she admitted: 'I think back to recording Water, and I couldn't have been more closed off to the outside world. 'It was just me, my engineer and his pregnant wife in the studio. I used to be so shy.' Tyla recently admitted she felt "trapped" following the success of Water. The 23-year-old singer's life changed overnight thanks to the success of Water. She recently told The Sun newspaper at an event in London: "For a while, especially last year, I felt so trapped. "Like, 'Oh my word, I blew up and I just have to have everything right and everything has to be perfect now because the world is looking.' "It was kind of stressful for me." Tyla recently released We Wanna Party, her debut mixtape, and she relished the experience of being able to "experiment" with new sounds and ideas. She explained: "I wasn't planning on doing this. I was just making music at the beginning of the year. It was mainly for an album. "But as I got closer to summer, I was like, 'Hey the songs I was making were too good ... where are the summer songs? "We need some summer songs right now' and I am just too excited to hold on to them. I really just want people to hear it and party to it, and see how I've grown through the years and just see who I am now." Tyla thinks having "a little bit of arrogance" has helped her navigate the stresses of the music industry. She said: "I just always knew I had something in me. "I just always had that kind of peace knowing that this is the life I'm gonna live. "I don't let anybody or anything limit me or put me in a box. I think I'm just confident. "A lot of people say arrogant, but I think everyone needs a little bit of arrogance, especially to make it in this industry and to make people believe in your music. "If you're not that proud and you don't believe in your stuff as strongly as you should, why would someone else?"