Benjamin-McKenzie.org is an unofficial, non-profit fansite. The administrators of this website do not know Mr. McKenzie personally and do not have any official affiliation with him or his representatives in any way. All copyright is to the respective owners. No infringement ever intended. Please read our disclaimer and FAQ for further information. Thank you.
Batman: Year One (2011)
Ben as Bruce Wayne/Batman Info |
Photos |
Official Site |
IMDbScooby-Doo! Mystery Incorporated (2010)
Ben as Odnarb Info |
Photos |
Official Site |
IMDbThe Glass Menagerie (2010)
Ben as Jim O’Connor Info |
Photos |
Official Site |
Facebook |
Twitter |
YouTubeSouthland (2009-2010)
Ben as Ben Sherman Info |
Photos |
Official SiteSin Bin (2010)
Ben as Michael Info |
Photos |
Official Site |
Blog |
Twitter |
Flickr |
YouTube |
IMDbThe Eight Percent (2009)
Ben as John Keller Info |
Photos |
FacebookJohnny Got His Gun (2008)
Ben as Joe Bonham Info |
Photos |
Official Site |
MySpace Facebook
SouthLAnd star Ben McKenzie appeared on local Dallas/Fort Worth television show Good Morning Texas to promote the premiere of the show on TNT next Tuesday, as well as his appearance at tonights screening at The W Hotel in Dallas.
Amy Adams (Ben’s co-star in the movie ‘Junebug’) also did an interview that day and she mentioned Ben. You can watch Amy’s interview here.
“…We didn’t do anything right about making this,” says rookie director Rowan Joseph, who comes to film after a long theater career. “We didn’t play the festivals because we wanted this out before the election; it’s a one-man film. We had everything working against us (including the show’s tiny, just-over-$80,000 budget), yet here we are.”
Joseph overstates only slightly. True, an independent film getting picked up for distribution is essentially a one-in-a- million sort of long shot. But the effort is helped by the fact that the novel remains timely after 70 years, and, perhaps more importantly, that the one person in the cast is Ben McKenzie, who played Ryan Atwood in Fox’s “The O.C” and appeared in “Junebug,” another indie film.
“I couldn’t resist this,” says McKenzie, joining the trio in the booth by phone. “I hadn’t read the book, but once I knew the story, I knew it was a great role. And when I read the novel and the script (by Bradley Rand Smith), I realized just how strong the material was.”
A lead on the hit TV show ‘The O.C.,’ actor Ben McKenzie has also dipped his toes into the world of independent film.
Ben McKenzie was an unknown when he was cast in “The O.C.” But after the show became an overnight hit, so did the actor–especially with the program’s female viewers. The 27-year-old McKenzie recently made his film debut in the independent film “Junebug.” McKenzie plays Johnny, a struggling young man who lives in North Carolina with his parents and pregnant wife (Amy Adams), and receives a visit from his Chicago brother (Alessandro Nivola) and wife (Embeth Davidtz). With the “Junebug” DVD coming out this week, McKenzie spoke to NEWSWEEK’s Ramin Setoodeh. Excerpts:
NEWSWEEK: As an actor, what’s it like to transition from a television show to a movie?
Ben McKenzie: It can be difficult if you want to satisfy all sorts of aims–the studio’s demands, the director, the screenwriter and yourself. But because this was an independent film, the process was different. It was made easier by the fact that the core group of people involved was motivated by the same things. The script was so good, we just wanted to help the story. The downside was that we weren’t sure it was going to go anywhere. (more…)
“Junebug” is a movie that understands, profoundly and with love and sadness, the world of small towns; it captures ways of talking and living I remember from my childhood, with the complexity and precision of great fiction. It observes small details that are important because they are details. It has sympathy for every character in the story and avoids two temptations: It doesn’t portray the small-town characters as provincial hicks, and it doesn’t portray the city slickers as shallow materialists. Phil Morrison, who directed this movie, and Angus MacLachlan, who wrote it, understand how people everywhere have good intentions, and how life can assign them roles where they can’t realize them. (more…)