They want to tell a story that they imagined a long time ago and they’re going to stick to it, and I love that.Stream It Or Skip It: 'Christmas Is Canceled' On Amazon Prime Video, Where A Widowed Dermot Mulroney Starts Dating His Daughter's Frenemy They’re not swayed by audience appeal or fandom or any of that. In fact, they’ve been able to continue that, and I know that because there are times when we think, God, that character isn’t back and oh, my God, why would they get rid of that? And it’s because they are so connected to what their intention was in the beginning. "So, I’m talking to Lisa in general at the very, very beginning, all those years ago, they have stuck to their initial plan of where this is going. Although why has Dolores put him in that position? Is she really that interested in humanity having a leader? Why? Is it just an experiment for her? Step out to pop up to a whole other planet and start doing shit over there? I just think it’s worlds within worlds. I don’t think it’s going to be as simple as Caleb just continues the work that Dolores is doing. "And you know, Maeve’s relationship with Caleb, that’s interesting, too, because we’ve had very little of that. So yeah, I’m fascinated in how Maeve will, if she plays into that. I mean, I loved that evolution and they start with Hale just so distraught and clinging to her creator, Dolores, and by the end she wants to destroy her creator. It is really interesting that Dolores has spawned these children basically because they very quickly separate themselves from her.
I mean, it’s really interesting, isn’t it? It’s like the apple falling far from the tree and all that. "Hale, is fascinating to me now, as an extension of Dolores. Meanwhile, Newton's hoping Charlotte and Maeve's relationship gets deeper (via Deadline). And on a visceral level, I just can’t wait to watch Ed kill everyone." " winds up becoming this thing that he's controlled for so long. "I’m a big believer in being guided by irony," he said while speaking to The Paley Center for Media. Nolan has also spoken about what The Man In Black will mean for the characters in the next batch of episodes. He was very blunt about it, and slightly cryptic about other questions I had, but confirmed that yes, the Dolores that we know is gone." "So called me up and broke the news to me. It's one of the reasons why I think it's challenging to work on, but also what makes it exciting," she continued. We get a general idea at the beginning of each season they tell us where our characters are at, what their mission is, and then go. "We really find out the arc of our characters episode by episode. "I found out halfway through, or towards the end," Wood said of her character's fate on the Variety and iHeart podcast The Big Ticket. Meanwhile, Ed Harris's the Man in Black was killed by Thompson's 'Halores' but in typical Westworld fashion, he was replaced by a host, which she controls, which means Harris will be back for more in round four.Īs for Evan Rachel Wood, who played Dolores Abernathy, her future feels uncertain. I mean, literally our lives depend on art because art is being removed from us."
It's not literally, but I just think it's fed us all in a way, like our lives depend on art now in a different way. It is so rich and there's something about the pandemic. "For me, no truly, for me, it's got all the best elements from one, two, and three are here. "It's so good, man," Newton said (via ComicBook).
Hopefully, we can do some rightful damage."īut she's certainly enjoying the season-four scripts she has seen. "I have no idea what they have planned for me," Newton said at The Paley Centre for Media (via Looper): "I'm teamed with Tessa, I know.