Tim Roth ‘hates’ Donald Trump: ‘There should be no concession to him’

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Tim Roth is a treasure. I used to be so obsessed with him as an actor, mostly because of my obsession with Quentin Tarantino’s films. Roth is one of Tarantino’s favorite actors, and those are probably Roth’s most famous roles (Mr. Orange in Reservoir Dogs, Pumpkin in Pulp Fiction, Oswaldo in The Hateful Eight), although Roth’s filmography is extensive. He’s been a working character actor for decades, and he’s pretty much capable of anything, although he’s often typecast as the bad guy. He’s English, but many people think he’s American because he’s worked so much in America and he lives in California with his family now. Anyway, Roth is promoting something (he’s got like seven projects coming out), and he chatted with The Guardian about life and politics. Remember, he’s been living in America for years. So he paid attention to the election. And he has many thoughts. Let me just say: this interview is an absolute delight!

He hates Trump: “I hate Trump. I hate everything that he stands for. He should never be forgotten or forgiven for anything he said on the road to the White House. There should be no concession to him. No ‘Let’s give him a chance’. None of it. ‘Grab them by the p-ssy,’ right? Look at where we are now and who is in charge of this country and, by extension, a good chunk of the world – someone with misogynistic tendencies.” Roth rooted first for Bernie Sanders, then Hillary Clinton (although, as a non-citizen, he could not vote). He says he predicted a Trump victory early on. “If you neglect the working class for so f–king long they will rebel against you. There was a dire need to stop a rise of fascism in America and we didn’t take it seriously enough.”

He think Great Britain is going down a dark path too: “I like working there, but I’m done living there. I fell out of love with it. I think the tabloid sensationalism world of it just became too overwhelming for me. It’s here, too, but you don’t notice it so much. And now with Brexit … I don’t know what to make of it all. Strange thing. It’s been taken over. It’s The X Factor, Murdoch, Rebekah Brooks, Tony Blair nature of it all.” He fancies Jeremy Corbyn, who may peel off his usual vote for the Greens, but he plans to remain in the US, even though he cannot vote here. “I can handle this a bit better, weirdly. There are a lot more lefties out here.”

He was part of the working-class actor wave: “It was an extraordinary thing … none were toffs.” They thrived, but the gates seemed to shut behind them. The wealthy and middle class now dominate Britain’s creative industries. “Rich people have a safety net … so they can afford to fail, they can afford to be unemployed, which is most of what you are when you’re an actor. I’m not sure it’s about the toffs so much as cost. You’re in debt for f–king life if you want to go to drama school. The government isn’t going to support you any more; that’s all over. There are no grants.”

He likes everyone, will work with anyone: “My father-in-law is a Republican. He’s one of the most decent men I’ve ever met. He’s a good human being. I work with Scientologists; it doesn’t matter to me. I work with Catholics; Jesus, figure that one out. If people are good, they’re good. If they have different political convictions, it’s irrelevant, unless they’re harmful. If they can bend a bit … I think you’re all right.”

He doesn’t believe in being beautiful:
“You want to have real men, not fake men … none of that gym culture.” He pities hostages to six-pack tyranny. “If beauty is your worth, or that version of beauty is what you’re paid for, you have to keep that f–king up.” Ryan Gosling, for one, is too savvy to be trapped, he says. “He’s used it well and will absolutely escape that nonsense. Fortunately, I make a living not out of that.”

[From The Guardian]

He also says that he doesn’t care about the critics, but he loves chatting with the guys who work at his local supermarket in LA, and that the grocery guys tell him what they think of his movies and he enjoys the chat. Which… I don’t know, I actually believe that. I believe Tim Roth, character actor extraordinaire, goes to his local Whole Foods and does the weekly shopping, and chats with the cashiers, produce guys and shelf-stockers. As for what he says about politics… yeah, all of that. I would pay to watch Tim Roth and Michael Shannon sit on stage for two hours and talk about politics. That would be money well-spent.

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Photos courtesy of WENN.

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49 Responses to “Tim Roth ‘hates’ Donald Trump: ‘There should be no concession to him’”

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  1. t.fanty says:

    I love him. That is all.

    • Sullivan says:

      Me, too.

    • sauvage says:

      Me, three. He is one of my favourite actors. I would have watched “Lie to Me” indefinitely, had it not been cancelled!

    • Nicole says:

      Same and he gets it. Thank you.

    • Macscore says:

      Count me in. Love him too. “Lie to Me” was good, and he made it fantastic. In my opinion, his politics are spot on (speaking as an ex-pat Brit who also can’t vote). Last time I was in England, I was horrified by the preponderance of gossipy tabloids, reality-show culture, and general dumbing-down of _everything_. It’s not a place I could live any more, either. (*sigh*). I really respect his honesty.

    • antipodean says:

      He’s a crusty old bugger, but I love him too, and he has such an impressive body of work. Leo defancypants could take a page out of Tim’s book re the importance of acting dear boy. I agree with everything he says about the election, and so good to hear that he is interested and engaged with the people he comes across during an ordinary day, I am convinced that this sort of attitude is what keeps thessies feet on the ground, and their work well informed.

    • EM says:

      A refreshing interview and he is so right about Trump. “We” have thrown out all standards of decency and compassion by continuing to normalize him.

    • I Choose Me says:

      Yup. He’s another highly underrated actor that I love to watch.

      I have a list.
      Walton Goggins
      Michael Shannon
      Tim Roth
      Kevin Durand
      Ben Foster (despite his method-y nonsense)
      David Morse

      Just to name a few.

  2. Joe-Joe says:

    As a fan of Tim Roth I’m surprised you didn’t mention the biggest shocker of the article: the molestation of both he and his father by his own grandfather. I remember him saying he was sexually abused before, but the fact that he’s actually admitting it was by his grandfather chilled me to the core. And the way he talks about what it did to his father is heartbreaking.

    • Cee says:

      I was going to say the same thing. The news shocked me.

    • Ramona says:

      Yes, that was chilling. I am not going to pretend that I am not a little furious with his father and parents like him, though. You know from experience that this person is a monster and shouldnt be around children ….and then you let him around your child?! I get not pursuing prosecution against him because fear, trauma, stigma BUT to let him around your kid? It reminds me that I watched a documentary about a molester who had abused three different generations. Three. They all knew what he was and they kept sending his grandkids and great grandkids over for visits. Surely at some point thats just aiding and abetting.

    • t.fanty says:

      But I love how he spoke about it. It was clear that this has been something huge for him, but now it is just a part of his history. He’s such a smart, cool man. We should all have our sh*t together like this.

    • I Choose Me says:

      Shocking and heartbreaking. This year more than ever, I keep asking. What is wrong with people?

  3. Tanguerita says:

    he is the best. The story about him and his father having been abused by his grandfather left me feeling shattered.

  4. Sixer says:

    All of you guys with the geo-blockers should watch him in Rillington Place on the BBC at the moment. He is ridiculously creepy.

    I loved this interview. Shocking abuse revelations. That was awful to read. And he is spot on about the tabloid nature of British public discourse at the moment and the influence our appalling tabloid press has on the country. Read a thing earlier that the strongest predictor of the Brexit vote was the editorial line of the newspaper you read. So you know, we Fail boycotters aren’t wrong. Everyone should boycott the Fail.

    • SusanneToo says:

      I’ve never downloaded a geo-blocker. What’s a good one?

      • Sixer says:

        Me either, so I don’t know. I think Mr Sixer uses one to get the extra shows on Netflix US but he’s not here. Find Bonzo – she uses one for BBC access.

    • Silvia says:

      wow encouraging people to use the BBC’s facilities for free when its falling down a ditch in terms of money – not cool.

      This isn’t bloody Amazon or HBO, what next, send invite over Yanks to use the NHS?

      • Sixer says:

        It’s not falling down a ditch in terms of money and I don’t mind if people from other countries get to see some of the stuff that doesn’t sell abroad for free, or the stuff that does sell abroad earlier than they otherwise would.

        Just yuck @ “Yanks”, NHS and endless health tourism exaggerations.

      • SusanneToo says:

        I buy plenty of dvds of BBC productions, but thanks for your concern, silvia.

    • Timbuktu says:

      Well, that explains Brexit alright!

  5. Esmom says:

    I like hearing that he hates Trump, it speaks to his sanity, but I’m not sure it’s as simple as “if you neglect the working class for so long they will rebel.” A lot more factors went into the rise of Trump. And now we await the next horror he (Trump) will unleash upon us.

    • Rapunzel says:

      Esmon- agreed. It’s not that simple at all. In fact, I think his theory is completely inaccurate.

    • Tiffany :) says:

      I think the thing that is left out is that the party that neglected the working class got elected into power. The Obama administration and Dems have consistently worked for programs and policies that benefit the low and middle class, and blue collar workers. The GOP obstructed their efforts…and then get rewarded for it. It’s really sad, honestly.

  6. SusanneToo says:

    ❣️❣️❣️❣️ Tim ❣️❣️❣️❣️ Everything you said, Tim.

  7. RussianBlueCat says:

    Not to go off topic but, Trump was just named Time magazine’s person of the year

  8. Lucy says:

    He seems so great. The story about how his grandfather abused him and his father is absolutely heartbreaking.

  9. Rapunzel says:

    I hate Trump too. But I also hate this “Trump won because the working was/felt ignored” narrative. It’s BS. Trump didn’t win cause the working class was/felt abandoned by the Dems. He won because people (not just working class) stupidly decided facts didn’t matter. He won because people would rather hate and fear and look for easy answers instead of facing reality. He won because xenophobia, racism, sexism and homophobia are an easy sell, while tolerance and acceptance are hard work.

    This was,a victory for regressivism, because progressivism scares most folks. The working class didn’t feel abandoned; it chose isolation and nationalism over globalization and inclusiveness. Trump won because diversity frightens white folks (and some non whites too).

    Biden, Sanders, any other Dem would’ve met the same end as HRC.

    • K says:

      I don’t know I think it might have helped if Hillary talked about her ideas instead of just how bad trump was, and actually campaigned instead of fundraising. She wasn’t out much, she never went to the mid west and while I was a huge supporter there was a point where I became enraged by her arrogance of blowing a 9 point lead because she just didn’t think she had to be out there.

      I think Biden would have won. I agree we have to stop with this working class stuff because they voted against their wants and interest and be honest but in order for the Democrats not to throw away it’s entire base and platform they have to be honest Hillary didn’t do a lot of what she needed to do.

      • Rapunzel says:

        Biden would not have won. Trump’s anti-Obama rhetoric would have ran all over him. Trump won in part because he made the Obama administration look bad.

        As for did HRC do what she needed? Maybe not. But ultimately, Trump won because VOTERS didn’t do what they needed to, which is choose the candidate with actual experience, diplomatic temperament, and solid plans for the country.

        An election requires due diligence. It’s not HRC or the Dems’ fault voters didn’t do theirs.

      • Tiffany :) says:

        K, that’s a misrepresentation. Hillary would speak for an hour or so, and the news would run the highlights of her comments about Trump…but that doesn’t mean she didn’t talk about her policies. She had something like 35 different policy propositions on her website. She absolutely campaigned in addition to fundraising. She also went to the mid-west. My family members went to her rallies, so I know she was there!

      • K says:

        Sorry I watched her constantly and she didn’t go to the midwest hardly at all, and her ads were overwhelmingly anti Trump versus pro her vision and plan which was stupid because she had a plan and vision that the vast majority of the country wanted and agreed with. She didn’t speak to the concerns of young voters enough.

        Look a lot went into Hillary not winning she is insanely hated, the media didn’t cover her fairly but lets not act like she campaigned well. She didn’t, she thought she had this in the bag and constantly ignored big things that gave people reservations about her.

        I like and respect Hillary a lot but I also know that she was incredibly distrusted and she did a lot to help play into that narrative and so did the media. I am not blaming her but to act like she was this perfect candidate is false.

        A lot of people went for racism and hate and a lot of other crap (which is disgusting) but lets be real if Biden had been nominated over Hillary it would have been different, he might not have won I don’t know but he would have had a better shot.

        I agree that the voters failed, and didn’t stand up for their country but the vast majority have in polls said they support Obama and his policies and did during the election. What they also said was they can’t stand Trump or Hillary its why we had such low turn out so while yes that is a citizen failure you can’t say that it isn’t the person running’s job to get you to trust them it is. Even Obama said that.

    • robyn says:

      Yes, that part stuck out for me too: “Trump won because the working class was/felt ignored” is just inaccurate. Hillary WAS addressing all those issues. I am still waiting to see Trumps taxes and I want to know why Comey did what he did and the timing of it all. I also want to see a sliver at the very least of investigating done regarding Trump’s businesses regarding conflicts of interest. There is also that elephant in the room matter about Russia colluding with Trump to win the election. Why isn’t Trump being charged with treason. Also, all that sexual assaulting Trump did. So many issues, far too many to keep giving this egomaniac a pass.

  10. Eric says:

    Always liked Roth. Devilishly great in Rob Roy with Neeson. Suberb actor with a wonderful face full of emotion. Not a pretty boy but as attractive as a young Spader with real acting chops.
    Get red on orange Tim!

    • SusanneToo says:

      His portrayal of Van Gogh is one of the best.

    • I Choose Me says:

      I fricking love Rob Roy.

      “I will think of you dead until my husband makes it so. And then I will think of you no more.”

      He’s always so compelling to watch even when he’s playing an absolute bastard.

  11. Guesto says:

    He’s an all-round diamond.

  12. outoftheshadows says:

    That’s our pumpkin!!! What a man.

  13. Chef Grace says:

    Loved him in Four Rooms.
    He is a breath of sanity.

  14. Rischa says:

    Watched him in a film called Chronic a few weeks ago and can recommend it. I also agree with his comments about the working class feeling ignored. They have been for a long time and those people who say it isn’t so are perpetuating the problem.