![]() ![]() Compared to Vikings, for me personally, Bad Boys is just a dream. 90 percent of it I'd say doesn’t make it, but then that 10 percent that does can be freakin' beautiful and can change the game. That does not mean everything improvised made the final cut, though. When it came to Bad Boys for Life, there was more freedom for things to naturally unfurl. On the set of Vikings, there was not a lot of ability for Alexander Ludwig to try different takes on the King of Kattegat. And I thought Bjorn initially getting left out of that major scene in the latest Vikings episode was brutal! Television sounds intense, but Ludwig credits it with being a “master class” for acting. Alexander Ludwig revealed that Vikings only called production twice, and it took a hurricane to stop it one of those times. There's no excuses, you've just got to make it. I honestly think for an actor, working on a TV show is one of the greatest gifts possible. ![]() For the most part, we're making it out and we're going to do our scene and we've got three scenes in a day and lots of dialogue. I think we've called it twice in my six years of shooting in Ireland. You get on a show, you've got - from my experience in Vikings, you're in Ireland in the elements, rain or shine you're out there. How is it different to do a TV show compared to a blockbuster movie like Bad Boys for Life? Alexander Ludwig weighed in and revealed some significant differences, telling Collider:Ĭertainly the pace. In the much-anticipated third installment in the popular Bad Boys franchise, Alexander Ludwig plays Dorn. ![]()
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