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HBO reacted to reports of backstage tensions Big little lies .
The premium cable network addressed a IndieWire According to one article, "creative control over the hit series was removed from director Andrea Arnold and returned to the first season's supervisor, Jean-Marc Vallée.
It has been reported that American honey Director Arnold has not been warned that his film would be reissued by Valley to try to imitate the mood of the first season – and was left "broken" after seeing his "thanksgiving" "Striped the show at the request of the executive. producer David E Kelly.
We will tell you what is true. You can form your own view.
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HBO said in a statement: "There would be no season two of Big little lies without Andrea Arnold. HBO and the producers are extremely proud of their work. As with any television project, the executive producers work collaboratively on the series and we believe that the final product speaks for itself. "
according to IndieWire , An additional 17 days of photography were added to which Arnold was present due to the rules of the Director Guild of America.
left
Created with Sketch.
right
Created with Sketch.
1/35 Cersei Lannister
Played by : Lena Headey
In Cersei, Game of Thrones discovered a person whose onscreen appearance makes even the most casual spectator nervous. She is that kind of terrifying villain who endangers the safety of anyone by simply being in the same scene – something that a lot of movies and TV shows turn out for their bad guys, but struggle to succeed.
HBO
2/35 Jim Fenner
Played by Jack Ellis
Even though he was on the other side of the bars of the Larkhall Women's Prison, Bad Girls' agent Jim Fenner was just as bad as his inmates. His misdeeds led to the assassination of the seventh series of the drama of ITV.
Warner Bros TV
3/35 Gaius Baltar
Played by : James Callis
The debate over whether Gaius Baltar of Battlestar Galactica is actually a villain is raging. But the fact that he sells his humanity to cybernetic creations with which they are at war throughout the four seasons of the series earns him a place on this list.
NBCUniversal Television Distribution
4/35 Gustavo Fring
Played by : Giancarlo Esposito
Breaking Bad is a show that has a lot of outlets, but Giancarlo Esposito plays Gus Fring, the friendly owner of a fast-food restaurant that, behind closed doors, is a formidable pillar of drugs not to spoil.
Sony Pictures Television
5/35 Gyp Rosetti
Played by : Bobby Cannavale
Prohibition gangster Gyp Rosetti entered Boardwalk Empire as a ball of destruction. Cannavale's performance as a self-asphyxiating maniac for destroying the world of Nucky Thompson (Steve Buscemi) earned Cannavale a well-deserved Emmy.
HBO
6/35 Doug Judy
Played by : Craig Robinson
A good villain who returns after an absence can be an exciting time on a TV show, but it is certainly rare that the main hero is as excited as the viewer. Well, not when this show is Brooklyn Nine-Nine. Craig Robinson interprets the affable "Pontiac Killer" Doug Judy whose elusive criminal skills leave Andy Samberg's cop Jake Peralta impressed every time he plays. All the wicked do not come in perverse forms.
NBCUniversal Television Distribution
7/35 Gentlemen
Played by : Doug Jones,
Camden Toy, Don W Lewis and Charlie Brumbly
The fourth season of the "Hush" episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer is considered by many to be one of the best in the series, and this is undoubtedly partly thanks to the malicious Gentlemen. Inspired by Nosferatu, Pinhead and Burns by Hellraiser, the creatures would cut people's hearts, a smile engraved on their faces all the time. Chilling.
20th television
8/35 Richard Hillman
Played by Brian Capron
The villainous of Coronation Street, Richard Hillman, had many faults (arson, murder, etc.), but it was the kidnapping of his in-laws and his driving into a canal that really made him One of the most memorable bad guys of soap.
ITV Studios
9/35 JR Ewing
Played by : Larry Hagman
For 12 years, JR Ewing, an intriguing Dallas character, lied and was so deceived in the series that he was shot down by the time he was shot – as part of the famous movie "Who JR shot? " scenario – everyone was a suspect.
Warner Bros.
10/35 Al Swearengen
Played by : Ian McShane
Al Swearengen was the beating heart of Deadwood, a character whose connections are so obscure that it is a miracle that you found yourself want to to catch up with each new episode.
HBO
11/35 The demon director
Played by : Terrence Hardiman
Although he only spent three years on the screen, the demon director – a disciplinarian who tries to use hypnosis to control the kids at his school – has made his way through the books. history as one of the most fearsome villains of all time.
BBC
12/35 Arthur Mitchell
Played by : John Lithgow
Arthur Mitchell – also known as The Trinity Killer – explains in part why the fourth season of Dexter was the most successful. Although he was a day-loving family man, Mitchell's murderous manners became apparent at night and an Emmy award-winning Lithgow balanced that tightrope to disturbing degrees. His ultimate clash with Dexter led to one of the most heartbreaking climaxes of the series.
Show time
13/35 The daleks
As one of Doctor Who's oldest villains, the Daleks – a race of helpless machines dedicated to universal conquest and domination – are loved by almost everyone thanks to their sharp cry: "Exterminate! " Whenever they come back to the BBC, that makes the headlines.
BBC
14/35 Trevor Morgan
Played by : Alex Ferns
Trevor may be an unexpected choice, but none has been so malicious. His domestic violence scenario against his wife, Little Mo (Kacey Ainsworth), was featured as one of the most faithful of the soap opera, and the country was not only celebrating the arrival of 2002 when she Beat him with an iron in a special episode of New Year's Eve in 2001. Trevor's portrayal by actor Alex Ferns was so successful that he received death threats and had to disguise in the London Underground.
BBC
15/35 VM Varga
Played by : David Thewlis
Thewlis was rightly named to the Emmy Awards for his role as VM Varga in the third season of Fargo, a cunning and manipulative brain that has the gift of leaving destruction in its wake without ever getting involved. Impressive.
20th television
16/35 Godmother
Played by Olivia Colman
This testifies to Olivia Colman's actress ability – and Phoebe Waller-Bridge's writing – that someone as friendly as anyone can play someone. enough so appalling that her role as Fleabag's devious, domineering and juggling godmother in the series is one of the most detestable creations of comedy for some time.
BBC
17/35 Mr. Bronson
Played by : Michael Sheard
Mr. Bronson was the worst nightmare of all Grange Hill viewers. It was part of the eponymous school's merger with another in 1985, eight years after the show began. Bronson became a fan favorite and, despite his departure in 1987, remained a legend of the show until its completion in 2008.
BBC
18/35 Aunt Lydia
Played by : Ann Dowd
Further proof that Ann Dowd's niche plays the villains is her role as Aunt Lydia in The Handmaid's Tale. As a God-fearing matriarch who controls the fertile "maids" who have children for the brutal theocrats of a government called Gilead, she is all the more annoying that she sometimes shows the slightest glimmer d & # 39; humanity.
Hulu
19/35 Hannibal Lecter
Played by : Mads Mikkelsen
Taking a role made famous by heavyweights such as Brian Cox and Anthony Hopkins is not an easy task, but Mads Mikkelsen took the opportunity to enjoy. As Dr. Hannibal Lecter in the ephemeral television series, he was able to clarify the role in a way that was not possible in the previous four films.
Sony Pictures Television
20/35 Skeleton
Expressed by : Alan Oppenheimer
Skeletor's willingness to support useless henchmen may have made him less scary than his face would suggest, but he caused enough problems to the heroic He-Man to warrant placement. right here.
NBCUniversal Television Distribution
21/35 Villanelle
Played by : Jodie Comer
Are the bad guys supposed to be so nice? Thanks to Comer's performance as a keen assassin in Killing Eve, she certainly bridges the gap.
IMG
22/35 Patti Levin
Played by : Ann Dowd
The Leftovers may not be a series in which his characters are clearly good or bad, but the Rapture – an event that saw two percent of the world's population disappear in the air – certainly sent some on a darker path than others. Patti Levin, the leader of a smoking cult, dresses in white and communicates only in writing.
HBO
23/35 Lindsay Denton
Played by : Keeley Hawes
Line of Duty would not have attracted half as much attention if it was the critical frenzy brought on by Keeley Hawes for his interpretation of DI Lindsay Denton in the second and third performances of the series. She was the perfect emblem of the (initial) premise of the series that left the fans guessing whether it was good or bad until the end.
BBC
24/35 Benjamin Linus
Played by : Michael Emerson
The writers of Lost were so fond of Michael Emerson's performance in Season 2 that they assured that his character, Benjamin Linus, would become the central villain of the series until his last episode. Former leader of the mysterious Others residing on the island, Ben was a manipulative master who played each other and was constantly within five steps of characters – and viewers – in the process.
Disney Domestic Television – ABC
25/35 Alice Morgan
Played by : Ruth Wilson
Alice Morgan may have started as Luther's main villain on the BBC, but over time she became the perfect film – and style advisor Hannibal Lecter – of Idris Elba's titular detective.
BBC
26/35 Alfie Solomons
Played by : Tom Hardy
Peaky Blinders is not the same without Alife Solomons. It was Tom Hardy who breathed life into this volatile yet lovable baker who, thanks to the perfect writing of the creator Steven Knight, was the television equivalent of a lion in waiting to jump on the characters of the drama of the BBC.
BBC
27/35 Montgomery Burns
Expressed by : Harry Shearer
Could Mr. Burns be the biggest animated villain of all time? Very probably. As the richest man in Springfield – loyally supported by his sidekick Smithers – he is also the most evil of the city and the source of many "excellent" moments of the long show.
28/35 Livia Soprano
Played by : Nancy Marchand
The Sopranos was a show full of villains, but none came more Machiavellian than his mother, Livia. The first seasons saw her conspiring with her brother-in-law Junior (Dominic Chianese) to overthrow her own son. Nihilism at its coldest.
HBO
29/35 Malcolm Tucker
Played by : Peter Capaldi
Make no mistake, Malcolm Tucker is perhaps one of the funniest characters of all time on TV, but he is also one of the ugliest. The kind of character you are happy to watch and catch off guard, but would tremble to meet you.
BBC
30/35 Maryann Forrester
Played by : Michelle Forbes
True Blood was a show that may have resisted his reception, but it was never as brilliantly bizarre as in Maryann's days – an ordinary woman until she turned into a Maenad at the time. head in a ball that wanted to transform Bon of the fictitious city in Louisiana Dionysus – Bacchanalian subscription fallow. As you do.
HBO
31/35 Nina Myers
Played by : Sarah Clarke
24 featured many notable villains in her 10 seasons, but Nina Myers is at the top of the list. Why? Because she was introduced for the first time as a trusted colleague of the CTU intelligence agency, Jack Bauer, before a huge season in which she saw herself unveiled as a spying spy with deep skin working for the bad guys.
32/35 BOB killer
Played by : Frank Silva
It would be difficult for Twin Peaks' scathing nightmare to not go down in history as the best TV villain, as it is an interdimensional entity that owns humans and commits heinous murder on their behalf.
33/35 Dick Dastardly
Expressed by : Paul Winchell
You must respect Dick Dastardly. The villainous Wacky Races, alongside his canine buddy Muttley, was determined to wreak havoc on his teammates, despite his tricks that still turned sour. He was as resistant as the bad guys come.
34/35 Marlo Stanfield
Played by : Jamie Hector
In The Wire, unpredictability prevailed whenever Marlo Stanfield was on the screen. The character, introduced in season three, overtook Avon Barksdale as the overseer of drug trafficking in Baltimore, and his quiet intensity made television extremely tense. Marlo was the kind of villain who had someone killed for the simple act of "answering" him.
HBO
35/35 Man who smokes a cigarette
Played by William B Davis
The success of Cigarette Smoking Man was such that he was one of the few characters in X-Files to move away from Mulder and Scully to return in the recent Fox Revival series. He is a mysterious representative of the dubious society that hides the truth about extraterrestrial existence on Earth.
1/35 Cersei Lannister
Played by : Lena Headey
In Cersei, Game of Thrones discovered a person whose onscreen appearance makes even the most casual spectator nervous. She is that kind of terrifying villain who endangers the safety of anyone by simply being in the same scene – something that a lot of movies and TV shows turn out for their bad guys, but struggle to succeed.
HBO
2/35 Jim Fenner
Played by Jack Ellis
Even though he was on the other side of the bars of the Larkhall Women's Prison, Bad Girls' agent Jim Fenner was just as bad as his inmates. His misdeeds led to the assassination of the seventh series of the drama of ITV.
Warner Bros TV
3/35 Gaius Baltar
Played by : James Callis
The debate over whether Gaius Baltar of Battlestar Galactica is actually a villain is raging. But the fact that he sells his humanity to cybernetic creations with which they are at war throughout the four seasons of the series earns him a place on this list.
NBCUniversal Television Distribution
4/35 Gustavo Fring
Played by : Giancarlo Esposito
Breaking Bad is a show that has a lot of outlets, but Giancarlo Esposito plays Gus Fring, the friendly owner of a fast-food restaurant that, behind closed doors, is a formidable pillar of drugs not to spoil.
Sony Pictures Television
5/35 Gyp Rosetti
Played by : Bobby Cannavale
Prohibition gangster Gyp Rosetti entered Boardwalk Empire as a ball of destruction. Cannavale's performance as a self-asphyxiating maniac for destroying the world of Nucky Thompson (Steve Buscemi) earned Cannavale a well-deserved Emmy.
HBO
6/35 Doug Judy
Played by : Craig Robinson
A good villain who returns after an absence can be an exciting time on a TV show, but it is certainly rare that the main hero is as excited as the viewer. Well, not when this show is Brooklyn Nine-Nine. Craig Robinson interprets the affable "Pontiac Killer" Doug Judy whose elusive criminal skills leave Andy Samberg's cop Jake Peralta impressed every time he plays. All the wicked do not come in diabolical forms.
NBCUniversal Television Distribution
7/35 Gentlemen
Played by : Doug Jones,
Camden Toy, Don W Lewis and Charlie Brumbly
The fourth season of the "Hush" episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer is considered by many to be one of the best in the series, and this is undoubtedly partly thanks to the malicious Gentlemen. Inspired by Nosferatu, Pinhead and Burns by Hellraiser, the creatures would cut people's hearts, a smile engraved on their faces all the time. Chilling.
20th television
8/35 Richard Hillman
Played by Brian Capron
The villainous of Coronation Street, Richard Hillman, had many faults (arson, murder, etc.), but it was the kidnapping of his in-laws and his driving into a canal that really made him One of the most memorable bad guys of soap.
ITV Studios
9/35 JR Ewing
Played by : Larry Hagman
For 12 years, JR Ewing, an intriguing Dallas character, lied and was so deceived in the series that he was shot down by the time he was shot – as part of the famous movie "Who JR shot? " scenario – everyone was a suspect.
Warner Bros.
10/35 Al Swearengen
Played by : Ian McShane
Al Swearengen was the beating heart of Deadwood, a character whose connections are so obscure that it is a miracle that you found yourself want to to catch up with each new episode.
HBO
11/35 The demon director
Played by : Terrence Hardiman
Although he only spent three years on the screen, the demon director – a disciplinarian who tries to use hypnosis to control the kids at his school – has made his way through the books. history as one of the most fearsome villains of all time.
BBC
12/35 Arthur Mitchell
Played by : John Lithgow
Arthur Mitchell – also known as The Trinity Killer – explains in part why the fourth season of Dexter was the most successful. Although he was a day-loving family man, Mitchell's murderous manners became apparent at night and an Emmy award-winning Lithgow balanced that tightrope to disturbing degrees. His ultimate clash with Dexter led to one of the most heartbreaking climaxes of the series.
Show time
13/35 The daleks
As one of Doctor Who's oldest villains, the Daleks – a race of helpless machines dedicated to universal conquest and domination – are loved by almost everyone thanks to their sharp cry: "Exterminate! " Whenever they come back to the BBC, that makes the headlines.
BBC
14/35 Trevor Morgan
Played by : Alex Ferns
Trevor may be an unexpected choice, but none has been so malicious. His domestic violence scenario against his wife, Little Mo (Kacey Ainsworth), was featured as one of the most faithful of the soap opera, and the country was not only celebrating the arrival of 2002 when she Beat him with an iron in a special episode of New Year's Eve in 2001. Trevor's portrayal by actor Alex Ferns was so successful that he received death threats and had to disguise in the London Underground.
BBC
15/35 VM Varga
Played by : David Thewlis
Thewlis was rightly named to the Emmy Awards for his role as VM Varga in the third season of Fargo, a cunning and manipulative brain that has the gift of leaving destruction in its wake without ever getting involved. Impressive.
20th television
16/35 Godmother
Played by Olivia Colman
This testifies to Olivia Colman's actress ability – and Phoebe Waller-Bridge's writing – that someone as friendly as anyone can play someone. enough so appalling that her role as Fleabag's devious, domineering and juggling godmother in the series is one of the most detestable creations of comedy for some time.
BBC
17/35 Mr. Bronson
Played by : Michael Sheard
Mr. Bronson was the worst nightmare of all Grange Hill viewers. It was part of the eponymous school's merger with another in 1985, eight years after the show began. Bronson became a fan favorite and, despite his departure in 1987, remained a legend of the show until its completion in 2008.
BBC
18/35 Aunt Lydia
Played by : Ann Dowd
Further proof that Ann Dowd's niche plays the villains is her role as Aunt Lydia in The Handmaid's Tale. As a God-fearing matriarch who controls the fertile "maids" who have children for the brutal theocrats of a government called Gilead, she is all the more annoying that she sometimes shows the slightest glimmer d & # 39; humanity.
Hulu
19/35 Hannibal Lecter
Played by : Mads Mikkelsen
Taking a role made famous by heavyweights such as Brian Cox and Anthony Hopkins is not an easy task, but Mads Mikkelsen took the opportunity to enjoy. As Dr. Hannibal Lecter in the ephemeral television series, he was able to clarify the role in a way that was not possible in the previous four films.
Sony Pictures Television
20/35 Skeleton
Expressed by : Alan Oppenheimer
Skeletor's willingness to support useless henchmen may have made him less scary than his face would suggest, but he caused enough problems to the heroic He-Man to warrant placement. right here.
NBCUniversal Television Distribution
21/35 Villanelle
Played by : Jodie Comer
Are the bad guys supposed to be so nice? Thanks to Comer's performance as a keen assassin in Killing Eve, she certainly bridges the gap.
IMG
22/35 Patti Levin
Played by : Ann Dowd
The Leftovers may not be a series in which his characters are clearly good or bad, but the Rapture – an event that saw two percent of the world's population disappear in the air – certainly sent some on a darker path than others. Patti Levin, the leader of a smoking cult, dresses in white and communicates only in writing.
HBO
23/35 Lindsay Denton
Played by : Keeley Hawes
Line of Duty would not have attracted half as much attention if it was the critical frenzy brought on by Keeley Hawes for his interpretation of DI Lindsay Denton in the second and third performances of the series. She was the perfect emblem of the (initial) premise of the series that left the fans guessing whether it was good or bad until the end.
BBC
24/35 Benjamin Linus
Played by : Michael Emerson
The writers of Lost were so fond of Michael Emerson's performance in Season 2 that they assured that his character, Benjamin Linus, would become the central villain of the series until his last episode. Former leader of the mysterious Others residing on the island, Ben was a manipulative master who played each other and was constantly within five steps of characters – and viewers – in the process.
Disney Domestic Television – ABC
25/35 Alice Morgan
Played by : Ruth Wilson
Alice Morgan may have started as Luther's main villain on the BBC, but over time she became the perfect film – and style advisor Hannibal Lecter – of Idris Elba's titular detective.
BBC
26/35 Alfie Solomons
Played by : Tom Hardy
Peaky Blinders is not the same without Alife Solomons. It was Tom Hardy who breathed life into this volatile yet lovable baker who, thanks to the perfect writing of the creator Steven Knight, was the television equivalent of a lion in waiting to jump on the characters of the drama of the BBC.
BBC
27/35 Montgomery Burns
Expressed by : Harry Shearer
Could Mr. Burns be the biggest animated villain of all time? Very probably. As the richest man in Springfield – loyally supported by his sidekick Smithers – he is also the most evil of the city and the source of many "excellent" moments of the long show.
28/35 Livia Soprano
Played by : Nancy Marchand
The Sopranos was a show full of villains, but none came more Machiavellian than his mother, Livia. The first seasons saw her conspiring with her brother-in-law Junior (Dominic Chianese) to overthrow her own son. Nihilism at its coldest.
HBO
29/35 Malcolm Tucker
Played by : Peter Capaldi
Make no mistake, Malcolm Tucker is perhaps one of the funniest characters of all time on TV, but he is also one of the ugliest. The kind of character you are happy to watch and catch off guard, but would tremble to meet you.
BBC
30/35 Maryann Forrester
Played by : Michelle Forbes
True Blood was a show that may have resisted his reception, but it was never as brilliantly bizarre as in Maryann's days – an ordinary woman until she turned into a Maenad at the time. head in a ball that wanted to transform Bon of the fictitious city in Louisiana Dionysus – Bacchanalian subscription fallow. As you do.
HBO
31/35 Nina Myers
Played by : Sarah Clarke
24 featured many notable villains in her 10 seasons, but Nina Myers is at the top of the list. Why? Because she was introduced for the first time as a trusted colleague of the CTU intelligence agency, Jack Bauer, before a huge season in which she saw herself unveiled as a spying spy with deep skin working for the bad guys.
32/35 BOB killer
Played by : Frank Silva
It would be difficult for Twin Peaks' scathing nightmare to not go down in history as the best TV villain, as it is an interdimensional entity that owns humans and commits heinous murder on their behalf.
33/35 Dick Dastardly
Expressed by : Paul Winchell
You must respect Dick Dastardly. The villainous Wacky Races, alongside his canine buddy Muttley, was determined to wreak havoc on his teammates, despite his tricks that still turned sour. He was as resistant as the bad guys come.
34/35 Marlo Stanfield
Played by : Jamie Hector
In The Wire, unpredictability prevailed whenever Marlo Stanfield was on the screen. The character, introduced in season three, overtook Avon Barksdale as the overseer of drug trafficking in Baltimore, and his quiet intensity made television extremely tense. Marlo was the kind of villain who had someone killed for the simple act of "answering" him.
HBO
35/35 Man who smokes a cigarette
Played by William B Davis
The success of Cigarette Smoking Man was such that he was one of the few characters in X-Files to move away from Mulder and Scully to return in the recent Fox Revival series. He is a mysterious representative of the dubious society that hides the truth about extraterrestrial existence on Earth.
However, it would be Valley that would have taken the responsibility to add flashbacks and tweak the story to try to reduce the "ephemeral" work of Arnold.
None of the stars in the series, including Nicole Kidman, Reese Witherspoon and Meryl Streep, commented on the reports.
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