Why did you decide that you had to be from Iceland and not Sweden, considering that your wife is Swedish?
We thought about being competitors from Sweden—but unfortunately for the movie, Sweden has had too good a track record. They have won [the Eurovision Song Contest] too many times. And we just really liked the idea of a smallish country that’s coming from the outside, not being typically one of the favorites, and we liked the idea of keeping it Scandinavian because that was a fun accent for me to play around with. And it just seemed like, outside of Iceland’s remarkable football team, you don’t hear so much about Iceland in a way. Even though—I take that back—now it’s become a huge tourist destination and rightly so, it’s such a beautiful country. But it felt like the perfect backdrop to be from this small town in Iceland.
And also, it was interesting to talk about what if a country of 300,000 people had won the contest, then you have to host it, and that becomes a subplot that we used in the movie as kind of a little jeopardy plot that made it interesting as well. So it was based on all of those factors.
Can you broadly tell us what the film is about?
Rachel McAdams and I play Lars and Sigrit. We’re from Iceland and we have the band called Fire Saga. It’s kind of a lovable loser story. We kind of get into the competition on a technicality and we are in way above our heads. And the broader themes are kind of art versus commerce, and that winning isn’t everything, and that you really should be true to yourself as an artist. It takes place in the insane world of Eurovision.
What was it like shooting in Iceland?
It was great. Shooting on those lava fields was something I’ll never forget. That was where we shot the “Volcano Man” sequence (photographed below), and that was our last day of filming. And even though it was freezing cold, what an amazing environment it was to shoot in.
Here we were, ostensibly shooting a really silly music video in the middle of nowhere, and it was just one of the cooler days of filmmaking I had ever done. The people couldn’t be better, so it really is a very film-friendly place.