Alexander Skarsgård is no longer the villain; now he's a TV-addicted robot do sex

Alexander Skarsgård is no longer the villain; now he's a TV-addicted robot do sex sex to

May, 13 2025 04:37 AM
Alexander Skarsgård is a robot who loves TV in funny new Weitz brothers series MurderbotBy Stephen A RussellABC EntertainmentTopic:TV Comedy37m ago37 minutes agoTue 13 May 2025 at 3:59amMuderbot is based on Martha Wells' best-selling, seven-part book series, The Murderbot Diaries. (Supplied: Apple TV+)abc.net.au/news/alexander-skarsgard-for-murderbot/105282296Link copiedShareShare articleSwedish star Alexander Skarsgård made a big mistake when depicting the security cyborg at the heart of Apple TV+'s kooky sci-fi comedy show, Murderbot.Adapted from the Hugo and Nebula Award-winning books by American author Martha Wells, the show casts Skarsgård, who also executive produces, as a 'SecUnit'.Fast Facts about MurderbotWhat: A darkly comic sci-fi show adapted from The Murderbot Diaries novels by American author Martha Wells.Directed by: Filmmaking siblings Chris and Paul WeitzStarring: Alexander Skarsgård; David Dastmalchian; Noma DumezweniWhen: Streaming on Apple TV+ from May 16Likely to make you feel: Less bad about watching too much TVPart cloned human material, part AI-driven machine, it — SecUnit's preferred pronoun — is designed to protect humans who live and work in space colonies spread across the galaxy. It was not built for fun.An early eye-popping scene establishes SecUnit has a mound where its bits would be."I made this really stupid call to wax my entire body for that shot," Skarsgård chuckles from the back of a car racing across London."I thought it would be funny if Murderbot was completely hairless, to really emphasise the Ken doll look. But I came to regret that, because it was excruciatingly painful. Then I realised I had to commit to that for a six-month shoot."Filmed in and around Toronto — which stands in for meteor-bound mining colonies and strange new worlds overseen by an all-pervasive corporation — the show's big twist is that SecUnit has hacked the programming that prevents it from harming humans.Humans are completing top-secret missions or scientific research as they colonise other planets, with SecUnits used as security. (Supplied: Apple TV+)Hence the self-chosen nickname Murderbot, with plans to eliminate the scientific expedition under its care, including nominal leader Mensah (Noma Dumezweni, The Little Mermaid) and scientist Gurathin (David Dastmalchian, Late Night with the Devil).Instead, much to Murderbot's annoyance, being around humans begins to rub off. SecUnit mostly watches hours of streaming TV, particularly Days of Our Lives-like soap opera The Rise and Fall of Sanctuary Moon, featuring a fun cameo from Star Trek actor John Cho."I love that Murderbot gains free will and its inner monologue is all about these great adventures that it's going to go on, but it ends up procrastinating," Skarsgård says."That's very relatable. You have all these great plans, but you've just got to watch one more episode of your favourite show."Lighten upViewers have had a long run of loving to hate Skarsgård: as skeevy tech bro Lukas Matsson on Succession; as Nicole Kidman's abusive husband Perry on Big Little Lies; and as conniving vampire Eric Northman on True Blood. He's also played full-of-himself tourist James in body horror film Infinity Pool and a vengeful Viking in The Northman.With SecUnit pretty lax on The Terminator front, Skarsgård could have a bit more fun."I was eager to lean into comedy a bit more with a character who's not so self-assured," he says. "When I first heard about a sci-fi story called Murderbot, I was expecting something very different from this socially awkward android who just wants to be left alone to watch his soap operas.""I really didn't expect this to happen … with a little novella about an angry, sarcastic security android with a rich interior life," Martha Wells said when she received her first award for the Murderbot Diaries. (Supplied: Apple TV+)As a child of the 80s who grew up watching Star Wars, Skarsgård was hooked in by Murderbot's original spin. "There's a lot of sci-fi out there, and some of it is very fun, cool and original. Others are a bit more derivative. This felt unique."SecUnit's laconic narration is a big part of that, with Skarsgård combining snarky narratorial monologues with The Mandalorian-style masked acting. So much so that he and showrunners Chris and Paul Weitz (About a Boy) kept tinkering with it."We spent three weeks together recording and re-recording that, because it's such an integral element of the show," Skarsgård says. "In the end, Apple TV told us to stop it, because we had to release the show."Reality bytesBeyond the immediate threat of Trump's film tariffs, the rise of AI plays on many a screen-industry figure's mind."Chris and I used to have a schtick that we did about Hollywood," Paul Weitz says. "We'd say, 'We're down on our luck, don't crush us. We can still make you money.' I think we might be saying that to AI fairly soon."Paul Weitz (L) made his directorial debut with American Pie in 1998. In 2002 he and younger brother Chris (r) wrote and directed About a Boy, for which they received an Oscar nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay. (Supplied: Apple TV+)Wells joined the brothers in the writing room. "Martha was our first audience," Chris says. "There's no point adapting this stuff if it doesn't fit what she had in mind. She's the quickest route to understanding why it appeals and was very generous in how we would expand on her story, bouncing things back and forth."Chris worked with director Gareth Edwards on Star Wars prequel Rogue One and The Creator as co-writer, learning a lot about bedding in fantastical worlds."Gareth is really amazing at shooting very naturally, then amending it with CGI," he says. "That influenced our decision to shoot in real locations whenever possible, even complicated stunt sequences. We visited every single slag heap, quarry and mining installation in Ontario."Reality matters in sci-fi. Paul reveals that some of the details they folded into Gurathin's backstory came from Dastmalchian himself."David talks very openly about being a recovering addict," he says. "Combining that with the idea that the character was an intelligence operative lends further architecture to this brilliant series."Dastmalchian starred in 2024 horror film Late Night with the Devil, written and directed by Australian brothers Colin and Cameron Cairnes. (Supplied: Apple TV+)And Paul suggests we have more in common with SecUnit than we might realise."We're constantly dealing in the drug of our own personality," he says. "SecUnit just has some clarity. It doesn't want to fall in love or anything physical. It just wants to do its job, which is to protect these space hippies, then watch its shows."This angle captivated Chris. "One of the great things about Martha's book is the mundanity," he says."People aren't speaking highfalutin' science fiction talk. They're all hot messes and, in some ways, it's a workplace comedy of manners. Murderbot maintains that, even in the future, people are going to have complexes and neuroses, anxiety and depression."Chris agrees."Especially the people we have manufactured as our instruments."Murderbot premieres on Apple TV+ with the first two episodes on Friday, May 16.Loading YouTube contentPosted 37m ago37 minutes agoTue 13 May 2025 at 3:59amShare optionsCopy linkFacebookX (formerly Twitter)Top Stories'We should all share responsibility': Sussan Ley says of Liberals' election resultLIVEPhoto shows Susan Ley talks while standing behind a lectern. 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