Viewing entries tagged
director

TOM CULLEN *Trespasses, Michael, and New Role Insights


TOM CULLEN *Trespasses, Michael, and New Role Insights


TOM CULLEN Returns Home

—
and Opens the Door to Something Wilder



 

interview + written ALBAN E. SMAJLI

 

Tom Cullen carries a certain voltage—quiet, direct, and sharper than he lets on.

 

In Trespasses, he steps into a story simmering with political heat and impossible desire, playing Michael, a Protestant barrister who keeps choosing love in a world that keeps telling him not to. Cullen treats the role less like a performance and more like a possession, letting the character seep in through dialect, costume, and the rugged Northern Irish landscape that became its own scene partner.

Off-screen, he’s in a different chapter: new fatherhood, a move back to Wales, a creative instinct shifting toward the messy, human corners of storytelling. He talks about vulnerability like it’s a craft, about giving editors “colors to paint with,” and about the artists who shaped his eye. We caught up with him to talk Trespasses, tenderness, and the strange freedom that arrives when life rearranges you.

 
LE MILE Magazine Tom Cullen Actor photo Will Aldersley lemilestudios Tom Cullen wears a total look by PAUL SMITH

Tom Cullen wears a total look by PAUL SMITH

 
Here you go:  LE MILE Magazine Tom Cullen Actor photo Will Aldersley lemilestudios COVER JOHNLAWRENCESULLIVAN

Tom Cullen wears JOHNLAWRENCESULLIVAN

 

Tom Cullen wears a jumper by JOHNSTONS OF ELGIN, a coat by WAX LONDON, trousers by 8ON8, and shoes by G.H. BASS

 
LE MILE Magazine Tom Cullen Actor photo Will Aldersley lemilestudios wears a jumper by JOHNSTONS OF ELGIN, a coat by WAX LONDON, trousers by 8ON8, and shoes by G.H. BASS
 
 


Alban E. Smajli
Trespasses explores intimacy and fracture within political tension. What drew you most to this story, and how did it live inside you while filming?

Tom Cullen
I was drawn to the powerful messaging that I derived from it. My character Michael, a controversial Protestant barrister, who defends young catholic boys against police brutality, says “We must have the bravery to choose freedom over fear”. It’s a message that is so simple, but when you dig into it, it’s surprisingly profound. Cushla and Michael are two people that choose to not be swept up in the narratives that surround them and they choose love instead, even at the risk of their lives. It’s very easy to get lost in these narratives and so it’s so important for us to take stock and not allow hate to win. It sounds altruistic and pious, but it’s true. Just look at the narratives today that are being pushed down our throats by those in power just to divide us. And it’s working. But we must choose freedom over fear.

How did you approach creating space for tenderness within a narrative so marked by conflict?

My partner, Alison Sudol, reads everything I do. She is a wise sage. She read Trespasses and said that Michael and Cushla were like two dandelions growing out of the smallest crack in a slab of concrete. I really attached myself to that image.

There is a lot on the page working against Michael. He is the hardest part I’ve ever had to play for that reason. You have to love him but there is also something unreachable about him. So the love and tenderness between Michael and Cushla was integral for the show to work. I just tried to lean into Michael’s vulnerability as much as possible. But it is his passion for life is that really opened the door to Michael and Cushla’s relationship. They find in each other a passion for life and that chemistry was very much found in my working relationship with Lola. Lola is mesmeric. They are fiercely intelligent, talented and compassionate human being. I just loved working with Lola and all the things that Michael loved in Cushla are the same things I loved in Lola. Lola’s passion for life is thrilling to be around. 

When you play a character shaped by history and division, where do you begin—voice, silence, or memory?

Obviously it’s a historical context which these characters exist in but the story itself is fictional and the characters are too. So while rooted in a history that I have quite a good understanding of - the majority of my work was character work - and thankfully I had an amazing resource to pull from with Louise Kennedy’s novel. 

A big part of my process as an actor - and I’ve got to be careful not to sound too pretentious here - is to just let the character flow through me. I have to step out of the way and just let who it is flow through. This is a slow, gentle process that comes through prep. Starting with dialect, costume, makeup…all these things help build the character from the source material and I just have to get the hell out of the way.

I can’t watch any playback when I’m working because in my head, I look like a totally different person. But when if I watch playback, I just see myself in the shot, it’s so weird and it can shatter the illusion in my head. It’s like one big episode of quantum leap!

What did the landscape of Northern Ireland give you that the script couldn’t?

It’s beautiful. And so is Belfast. The landscape itself is a character in the show.
Reminds me a lot of where I grew up in Wales. Something so calming about the rugged permanence of that landscape. It’s humbling in the best way. A reminder of your insignificance. 

 
LE MILE Magazine Tom Cullen Actor photo Will Aldersley lemilestudios Cardigan IODELE

Tom Cullen wears cardigan by IODELE, ants and T-shirt by A DAYS MARCH

 

Tom Cullen wears jumpers by JOHNSTONS OF ELGIN and pants by UNIQLO

 
 

In Trespasses, love feels both sacred and dangerous. How did you hold that balance?

Isn’t all love sacred and dangerous? Love is inherently dangerous. To love someone is a choice, but it’s a choice of pain, because all love will end one way or another. That’s what makes it the most beautiful, intoxicating and human choice to make; to make oneself vulnerable, to give yourself to another, is the single most profoundly brave action a human can make. We choose to love despite the pain. We choose to love in the face of grief. To love, is to accept death, right?

As an actor who also directs, how does awareness of framing and rhythm shift your process in front of the camera?

Directing and editing specifically, was the single most liberating lesson I’ve had when it comes to acting. I was lucky enough to have two brilliant actors in my first feature, Tatiana Maslany and Jay Duplass. The spectrum of performance I had to play with in the edit made my job as a director so easy. Since then I’ve enjoyed the freedom of delivering colours for the editor to paint with. It’s freeing and allows the best, most exciting work to happen. Where you’re not quite sure what will happen next. My favourite artists all exist between the lines of brilliance and disaster. I’m trying to exist there as much as possible. Let go of the control and the ego. Let it flow! 

What does this period of your career feel like—what’s anchoring you creatively right now?

Becoming a father has shattered any semblance of who I thought I was and in the vacuum left behind by sleepless nights, worry, nappy changes and the most powerful love. I have begun to reform myself as someone I like a lot more. It’s liberating to not give a toss about anything other than the very singular purpose of being a parent. Being a Dad is something I have always wanted but it’s changed me in a way that I didn’t expect.

You recently moved back to Wales—how does it feel being back in the place where your artistic instincts begin?

What a lovely question. I’d never thought about it like that. I’m reframing my move back home through the prism of this question and it’s making me quite emotional. We’re all on a journey, aren’t we? I’m not someone who really makes any plans. I turned 40 this year and that is something I never imagined happening, but having turned 40, I’m reflecting a lot. Reflecting on the journey. 

If I’d have told that little boy who grew up in the middle of nowhere Wales, making little plays for his mates on my council estate, that I'd be working as an actor one day…wow. What an incredible thing. 
And to move back to the place I had to leave to chase that dream? It’s immensely moving.

What do you find yourself searching for in the stories you choose now?

I’m interested in complexity. I want human stories, warts and all. Art should be an interrogation of the human experience. I’m inspired by filmmakers who capture the extraordinary in the quietest corners of life; Cassavetes, Joachim Trier, Chloe Zhao, Celine Sciamma, the Dardenne brothers. These are the filmmakers and the work I aspire to be a part of.

Quick fire, no commas:

A book that steadies you _____

Tom Cullen: Great Expectations 

A scene that keeps echoing _____

Tom Cullen: The dinner scene in A Woman Under influence 

A word you’re holding onto _____

Tom Cullen: Hiraeth

 
 
LE MILE Magazine Tom Cullen Actor photo Will Aldersley lemilestudios Tom Cullen wears a suit by JOHN LAWRENCE SULLIVAN, a T-shirt by A DAYS MARCH, and shoes by G.H. BASS

Tom Cullen wears a suit by JOHN LAWRENCE SULLIVAN, a T-shirt by A DAYS MARCH, and shoes by G.H. BASS

 
 

seen   WILL ALDERSLEY
styled   JACK MILLS via WERTHERS REPRESENTS
grooming   TRAVIS NUNES
talent   TOM CULLEN via TELESCOPE AGENCY

copyright LE MILE Magazine / Will Aldersley 2025

SANDRA YI SECINDIVER *Building Yutani and Trusting the Silence

SANDRA YI SECINDIVER *Building Yutani and Trusting the Silence

SANDRA YI SECINDIVER
on Building Yutani and Trusting the Silence

 

interview SARAH ARENDTS

 

Sandra Yi Sencindiver enters each project with precision that borders on ritual. Every element—tone, costume, space—serves a purpose. She talks about collaboration as architecture, where everyone builds toward the same tension.

 

In Alien: Earth, she gives shape to Yutani, head of Weyland-Yutani, a woman written into the myth of control. The world around her character mirrors her gravity, the sets by Andy Nicholson, the sculptural tailoring of Suttirat Anne Larlarb, and jewelry imagined from other planets.

 
LE MILE Magazine Sandra Yi Sencindiver Ian Kobylanski Cover wearing Loro Piana and Cartier earring
 
LE MILE Magazine Sandra Yi Sencindiver Ian Kobylanski wearing Loro Piana shoes

shoes LORO PIANA

 
 


“Even though I’ve done this my whole adult life, I still have the feeling that I’m just getting started.”

Sandra Yi Sencindiver speaks with Sarah Arendts
for LE MILE .Digital

 
 

Sencindiver recalls the process as a study in trust. “You don’t need to make it big or loud,” she says. Her Yutani moves through rooms built on deference, a force measured by stillness and authority.

 

Between acting and directing, she occupies two distinct frequencies. In Watch, her film that unfolds like a slow pulse, she shaped rhythm through minimalism and control. As a director, she speaks of patience, tone, and the invisible choreography between crew and camera. As an actor, she returns to intuition and the chemistry of shared focus. The conversation moves through laughter, sharp honesty, and the pleasure of making. She speaks of Geek Girl, of award nights that end in chaos and applause, of risks still waiting in the dark corners of arthouse cinema. Sandra Yi Sencindiver is refining energy, tuning stories until they vibrate at the right frequency. Each project marks another layer in a career defined by curiosity, precision, and presence.

 
LE MILE Magazine Sandra Yi Sencindiver Ian Kobylanski wearing Loro Piana and Cartier jewelry

total LORO PIANA
jewellery CARTIER

 
LE MILE Magazine Sandra Yi Sencindiver Ian Kobylanski wearing Loro Piana and Cartier jewelry eating orange
 
 


Sarah Arendts
When you step into Yutani in Alien: Earth, the room changes. Do you script that power in advance, or does it arrive in the moment, born out of breath, posture, accident?

Sandra Yi Sencindiver
There is no accident involved, but there is trust. I will get back to that. So many people build Yutani up to be Yutani. It all starts on the page, the way she is written. In the way other characters talk about her. How they pay reverence to her. Then there is the choice of venues, the exclusivity and grandeur of the locations. The way Andy Nicholson dresses the set with such beauty. Suttirat Anne Larlarb, who’s just brilliant, developed this whole concept for her: exclusivity, exquisite tailoring, reptilian, almost brutalist jewelry. We imagined she wears rare stones and metals from other planets. We talked about Yutani as a woman who dresses for no one—not for men, but simply because she takes pleasure in aesthetics, in peacocking for herself. And at the same time, she knows her pristine appearance reflects her role as head of Weyland-Yutani. So, we never see her casual, never informal.

Then you have Connie Parker and Sanna Seppanen, creating a new makeup and hair look for her every single time. They are amazing.

Now back to the issue of trust. With someone who is that powerful, I don’t think you need to make it big or loud. You need to trust that a few but precise choices will be enough. I remember Noah writing: “she has the poise of someone who owns a fifth of the entire planet”. And in episode 1 we even learn she owns a lot of the solar system too, ha! So, I thought that kind of power would translate to walking on water. And I made her soft-spoken, because she’s so used to being listened to. She doesn’t need to raise her voice or move loudly—people naturally give her space. Well, until she meets Boy K, who gives reverence to no one.

Season 2 of Geek Girl is loading—
in one word, tell me the energy of your character this time around. Now expand it into a sentence that only she could say.

“Filip, tell this journalist that Yuji cannot be reduced to one sentence!”

WATCH was yours from the very first line on the page. If the film had a heartbeat, what BPM would it tick at, and who or what sets the metronome?

A very slow heartbeat, that slowly but steadily rises into an eerie, panicked pace—but eventually finds a kind, restorative rhythm at the end.
I wanted everything to feel playful and harmonious on the surface, with just a hint of something slightly off. As if all the pieces are bright and cheerful, yet there’s an undercurrent of unease you can’t quite place. That subtle tension builds quietly, until the truth begins to reveal itself. Then, a few twists shift the focus—leading toward a kind of resolution, but not the one you expect.

Seeking Hwa Sun—nominated for the Danish Academy Award Robert, an echo across the industry. Do you remember the exact second the news reached you, and what sound was in the room?

Well, a couple of months before the announcement, a jury shortlists 10 films from all the Danish entries to Odense International Film Festival and then the academy votes. And on awards night at the festival, they announce the final five nominees. So, when they called out our names, there was this huge roar of excitement and applause from the packed venue. Quite thrilling and overwhelming.

 
 
LE MILE Magazine Sandra Yi Sencindiver Ian Kobylanski dress  NANUSHKA  tights  FALKE  jewellery  CARTIER
LE MILE Magazine Sandra Yi Sencindiver Ian Kobylanski dress  NANUSHKA  tights  FALKE  jewellery  CARTIER
 
LE MILE Magazine Sandra Yi Sencindiver Ian Kobylanski dress  NANUSHKA  tights  FALKE  jewellery  CARTIER

dress NANUSHKA
tights FALKE
shoes JENNIFER CHAMANDI
jewellery CARTIER

 
 

Draw me a split-screen: left side Sandra the actor on set, right side Sandra the director in the edit suite. What does each version of you whisper to the other?

They don’t speak at all, ha ha. The tasks are so different—they’re two completely different sides of me. On set, I try to be present in the moment, connect with the people around me, and focus on what the director, my co-stars, and the scene needs. I’m a piece of the bigger picture. In the editing room, I’m the one moving the pieces around, thinking about what came before and what comes after—deciding on the bigger picture. My brain is switched on in the editing room, whereas on set I try to let my body, intuition, and impulses guide me when on set.

Quick-fire, no commas:

book that shaped you

– “Trust” by Hernan Diaz, it really plays with and utilizes perspective as a storytelling device. It was conceptually something that inspired me a lot when writing Seeking Hwa Sun.

a scene that broke you

– oh, I’m such a softy when it comes to films and TV. I cry over so many beautiful and brutal pieces of art. I recently rewatched Parasite, and two scenes are just heartbreaking. The first is when Song Kang-ho’s character, the father posing as a driver, sees his daughter stabbed to death but can’t acknowledge knowing her—and so he can’t help her. And then the ending, when his son, played by Choi Woo-shik, spins this fairy tale about someday becoming successful enough to save his father from the basement. Both are devastating.

a silence you treasure

– when you’re with someone you know so well that you can share a space in silence and not feel the need to fill it with words.

a risk still waiting

– a female auteur offering me a dangerously dark part in an indie or arthouse film. Something Isabelle Huppert would have said yes to 20 years ago.

If tomorrow you had to build a film with nothing but three props and a window, what would you choose, and how would the story unfold?

Oh, what a fun task! I’d choose two characters who live in the same room but at different points in time, and they’d have the same three props: a cat, a bottle of milk, and a bed. You’d watch each of them live through one day in this room—two different people, the same three props, the same window view, but completely different perspectives on life.

Complete the chain for us:

On set I _____

try to be kind and patient. Actors spend a lot of time waiting between scenes—it takes an army to get everything just right. And then sometimes we’ll do the same scene over and over again from every possible angle. It can take hours of shooting to cover just a few minutes on screen. Both the waiting and the repeating can be exhausting. But you also want to give energy to your co-stars so they can shine, and at the same time conserve enough energy for your own moments in front of the camera—so they matter. And of course, the crew are under huge pressure too. There are so many moving parts, and the least we can do is be kind and patient, because everyone really is doing their best. Funny how the hardest work can also be the thing I absolutely love.

Behind the camera I _____

try to be calm and patient. Before I started directing, I thought it was mainly about sharing your vision and giving artistic direction. And sure, that’s part of it—but it’s just as much about setting the tone and the work ethic on set, and about seeing and bringing out the best in your cast and crew while still respecting budget and time. It was such an eye-opener to realize how important every single person and their role is. That experience has made me a more mindful actor, with even greater respect for everyone on set.

At home I _____

wish I were cooler and more patient. Most of the time I really do try to be kind—but why is it that the world gets your best bits, while the people you love most sometimes get the short end? Luckily, my husband and children show me an incredible amount of love and patience. And my kids, especially, are experts at calling me out when I’m being short-tempered. But they all know—because I tell them every single day—that they’re my favorite people in the world, and I love them to pieces.

In the future I _____

wish to bring more great stories to the audience. Even though I have done so my whole adult life, I still have the feeling that I am just getting started!

 
 
LE MILE Magazine Sandra Yi Sencindiver Ian Kobylanski total  THOM BROWNE  jewellery  CARTIER

total THOM BROWNE
jewellery CARTIER

 
 
LE MILE Magazine Sandra Yi Sencindiver Ian Kobylanski dress  ISSEY MIYAKI  jewellery  CARTIER

dress ISSEY MIYAKI
shoes JENNIFER CHAMANDI
jewellery CARTIER

LE MILE Magazine Sandra Yi Sencindiver Ian Kobylanski dress  TORY BURCH shoes  JENNIFER CHAMANDI  jewellery  CARTIER

dress TORY BURCH
shoes JENNIFER CHAMANDI
jewellery CARTIER

 
 


“She [Yutani] dresses for no one—not for men, but because she takes pleasure in aesthetics.”

Sandra Yi Sencindiver speaks with Sarah Arendts
for LE MILE .Digital

 
 
 

photographer + creative director IAN KOBYLANSKI
styling ELENA GARCIA
set design LOUIS TOLEDO
make up SASHA MAMEDOVA
hair ABI IGZ
lighting assistant NICOLA SCLANO