Is mads mikkelsen gay

Mads Mikkelsen urges caution when discussing JK Rowling gender controversy

Mads Mikkelsen has said people should be “very careful” they know what they are talking about when discussing the controversy surrounding JK Rowling’s views on gender.

Critics have accused the Harry Potter storyteller of being transphobic, an allegation she strongly denies.

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Danish actor Mikkelsen, who plays evil wizard Gellert Grindelwald in the upcoming Fantastic Beasts movie, addressed the issue during an interview with GQ Hype.

He said: “People treat it a little flippantly, like, ‘Isn’t that a disgrace?’ And every time you seek somebody, you can’t really figure out what she said.

“But if the reaction is that crazy, we have to be very careful that we recognize what we’re talking about.”

In June 2020, Rowling wrote an essay explaining how she was partly motivated to speak about transsexual issues because of her experience of domestic violence and sexual assault.

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Mikkelsen, 56, said he had not read the 5,000-word blog and was not familiar with her views.

He added: “I have a practice of not commenting on t

MADS MIKKELSEN, DEVIL IN THE FLESH

Impassivity and silence are Mads Mikkelsen's trademarks, and roles without react his specialty. His sculptural allure is such that his mere presence takes on a dramatic dimension. For him, everything starts with the body. It's his main functional tool, which he shapes and engages for each movie. For the majority of world audiences, the Danish performer remains associated with his "villain" characters in Hollywood blockbusters - Casino Royale, Doctor Strange, Hannibal, Fantastic Beasts...

 

Yet he finds with uncommon ease a adjust between major American film franchises and more modest, confidential independent films. If the actor manages to move from one universe to another without organism stereotyped, it's because he has a very physical - thanks to his former career as a gymnast - and pragmatic approach to his art.

 

Film excerpts and contributions from prestigious directors will help us draw a portrait of this unusual actor. Among them: Jan Kounen, who shot Coco Chanel and Igor Stravinsky with Mads Mikkelsen, Arnaud Des Pallières, with whom he shot Michael Kohlhaas, Thierry Frémaux, and var

Continuing on my binge of Mads Mikkelsen films (see part one here) I’m going to be reviewing his roles in Blinkinde Lygter (Flickering Lights), Pusher I, and Nu. At this point my friends are probably going to assume I’m very cultured for watching so much Danish production. I was a film pupil, after all, so it’s not that crazy for me, but rest assured my Danish movie binge has to do with Mads completely and entirely. But hey, exposure to good cinema is good regardless of how I came about it, no?  And let me tell ya, there are a lot of fabulous Mads Mikkelsen films out there.  Let’s start with a gem I wasn’t really expecting to like as much as I did…

Blinkende Lygter

As far as physical appearances go, Arne is as far away from Hannibal Lecter that you can obtain. He’s grungy, kind of greasy, and he probably smells enjoy an ashtray.  His character also has some anger management issues and at one point beats a man to the basis and jumps on him repeatedly. Hell, that’s his characters first scene, actually.  It’s a attractive good summation of his character.  His solution to an engine that’s on fire? Shoot the engine. Friend shot through the gut and bleed

The tranlation is ok. But if you don’t trust my translation you can translate it by yourself. Here’s the original quote [x]:

Playboy: Interessieren Sie sich eigentlich für Mode? Mikkelsen: Ich mag die Sachen, die ich trage, aber ich kaufe keine Modezeitschriften. Playboy: Warum nicht? Mikkelsen: Ich   will   nicht   unhöflich   sein,   aber:   Die   meisten Männersachen werden von Frauen oder Schwulen entworfen. Damit kann ich mich nicht identifizieren. Die Modewelt ist für Männer nur schwer zugänglich.

And Mads didn’t state wrong. He didn’t say that he is bad toward gays or does not like playing them. He just say that he don’t understand fashion [I mean we all know his hobo/adidas style, he’s not lie] created by women and gays because he’s not one of them. Nothing false with that.

About kissing a man in movies. He didn’t say he was ‘happy’ about that. But he state ‘it was good’ or 'it feels good’, and we already knew he was totally ok with this from his interview about kissing Mikael Persbrandt. But it’s not contradicts to the quote from Playboy. He’s not same-sex attracted but he’s totally ok with them, have gay friends, gladly play them on screen. He’s normal modern bloke w