Joel Kinnaman On How To Turn The Tide Of A Seemingly Bleak Future
Esquire Singapore|December 2019
There’s a fascination to joel kinnaman when he’s on the big (and small) screen. Off-screen, his own life holds just as much appeal. But what about the parts unseen? We find out more.
Wayne Cheong
Joel Kinnaman On How To Turn The Tide Of A Seemingly Bleak Future

OBSERVE

Instead of a rooftop shoot that we had planned, we’re indoors at Dune Studios on Water Street. Outside, the weather is every writer’s dream: “It is an ash-streaked sky that portents a downpour.” “Like a warning, steel wool hangs overhead.” “A dishevelled blanket of grey that drifts languidly like detritus in a muddied pond.” A wet weather doth not a good shoot make.

When Joel Kinnaman arrives, the first thing you notice is how large he is. Bigger than life, broad-chested, he sometimes stands astride, like he’s about to break the spirit of a wild stallion. Then, there’s that presence; a sort of aura that’s quiet but still strong-arms you for your attention.

Just as the fashion shoot is about to start, Kinnaman asks if he could put on his own playlist for the shoot. He brings up his Spotify playlist, titled ‘For some of mankind’. ‘What Becomes of the Brokenhearted’ by Jimmy Ruffin plays.

“The playlists are just for fun,” Kinnaman tells me. “I’ve made a playlist for every project that I’ve been in.”

The project that this particular playlist was made for is For All Mankind, now playing on Apple TV+. It’s a show that puts forth the idea: what if America lost the space race to Russia?

Created and written by Ronald D Moore, the visionary behind the reimagined Battlestar Galactica and Outlander, For All Mankind stars Kinnaman as Edward Baldwin, a NASA astronaut who works alongside Buzz Aldrin (Chris Agos) and Neil Armstrong (JeffBranson). Kinnaman’s character isn’t based on a particular historical figure, instead, he is a composite or a representative of the ‘all-American’ astronauts of that era..

This story is from the December 2019 edition of Esquire Singapore.

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This story is from the December 2019 edition of Esquire Singapore.

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