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Sam Neill and Patrick Gibson discuss success, friendship and the great surprises in life

They both star in Stan original movie The Portable Door.
The Portable Door - Official Trailer
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Despite his global fame, Sam Neill has never been in the headlines more than he is now โ€“ and heโ€™d rather be anywhere else.

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The release of Stanโ€™s original film The Portable Door coincides with the publication of the actorโ€™s memoir, Did I Ever Tell You This?, a reflective look back on his early life and career.

In it, the New Zealand native reveals he was diagnosed with stage three angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma โ€“ a type of blood cancer โ€“ in 2022 after discovering a lump in his neck during media commitments for Jurassic World: Dominion.

The news caused a frenzy online. But Sam, who has been in remission for eight months, insists heโ€™s healthy and isnโ€™t slowing down.

Middle manager Dennish is a charasmatic villain disrupting the world of magic.

(IMAGE: Stan)
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In fact, his latest project, The Portable Door, allowed him to be โ€larger than lifeโ€ in every way.

The film follows Paul Carpenter (Patrick Gibson), an intern at the mysterious London firm JW Wells & Co, who discovers his new workplace has a hidden agenda โ€“ and a magical door โ€“ that can transform the corporate world.

CEO Humphrey Wells (Christoph Waltz) and manager Dennis Tanner (Sam) are behind the ideaโ€“ but are they as they seem?

โ€I donโ€™t get asked to play a character like this very often,โ€ Sam, 75, tells TV WEEK.

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โ€I love to play the bad guy, and Dennis switches loyalties every five minutes.โ€

Miranda Otto plays Countess Judy while Sophie Wilde is Sophie Pettingel.

(IMAGE: Stan)

Patrick jokes that Sam is the complete opposite off screen โ€“ โ€heโ€™s rather boring, which is a testament to his acting ability,โ€ he says with a laugh โ€“ but that joining a cast of stars such as Sam, Christoph, Sophie Wilde and Miranda Otto, provided an acting masterclass.

โ€I relate to Paul,โ€ the Irish star of US fantasy series Shadow And Bone says.

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โ€He goes for a job he doesnโ€™t know much about and is trying to find his place in the world, always saying the wrong thing.

A younger me can relate to that. [Laughs]

โ€œBut I like that someone like him can become a hero.โ€

Patrick, 27, also became fast friends with Sam, who he says he knows โ€almost too well nowโ€, causing them both to laugh.

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Lowly interns Sophie and Paul try to crack the mystery of a lost โ€portable door.โ€

(IMAGE: Stan)

Sam, whose career has spanned several genres and decades, says penning his memoir allowed him to reflect on his life and embrace how far heโ€™s come.

The most rewarding part of it wasnโ€™t the blockbuster films or celebrity tales, but the chance to relive his childhood.

โ€You spend a lot of your life not looking back,โ€ he says.

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โ€And I often think life is like being on a train and youโ€™re not sure where itโ€™s going to go [when the tracks diverge] until someone pulls the lever. I got an opportunity to stop the train and look back and see where Iโ€™ve been.

โ€Being with my parents [Dermot and Priscilla] again โ€“ they were adorable and eccentric. Just thinking about the mad and peculiar stuff they did in my childhood was enjoyable.โ€

Jurassic Park made Sam a Hollywood star.

(IMAGE: Stan)

When writing about his career, Sam doesnโ€™t hold back, from his breakout role in 1979โ€™s My Brilliant Career, to the 1993 box-office smash Jurassic Park, and the relationships โ€“ and fallouts โ€“ heโ€™s had in between.

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As the dinosaur franchise celebrates its 30th anniversary, Sam admits his most famous

role was a โ€big surpriseโ€.

โ€Jurassic Park has certainly touched peopleโ€™s lives,โ€ he says.

โ€I was cast four weeks before we started filming. I had no idea โ€“ apart from Steven Spielberg directing it, who has hardly ever had a dud โ€“ that it would be as big as it was. To be in that was,

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and is, still a big surprise.

โ€I never thought Iโ€™d have a career as an actor โ€“ let alone an actor on screen. So, Iโ€™m still surprised when the phone rings. Itโ€™s been incredibly rewarding.โ€

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