Despite his global fame, Sam Neill has never been in the headlines more than he is now โ and heโd rather be anywhere else.
The release of Stanโs original film The Portable Door coincides with the publication of the actorโs 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 heโs healthy and isnโt slowing down.

Middle manager Dennish is a charasmatic villain disrupting the world of magic.
(IMAGE: Stan)In fact, his latest project, The Portable Door, allowed him to be โlarger 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?
โI donโt get asked to play a character like this very often,โ Sam, 75, tells TV WEEK.
โI 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 โheโs 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.
โI relate to Paul,โ the Irish star of US fantasy series Shadow And Bone says.
โHe goes for a job he doesnโt 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]
โBut I like that someone like him can become a hero.โ
Patrick, 27, also became fast friends with Sam, who he says he knows โalmost too well nowโ, causing them both to laugh.

Lowly interns Sophie and Paul try to crack the mystery of a lost โportable 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 heโs come.
The most rewarding part of it wasnโt the blockbuster films or celebrity tales, but the chance to relive his childhood.
โYou spend a lot of your life not looking back,โ he says.
โAnd I often think life is like being on a train and youโre not sure where itโs 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 Iโve been.
โBeing 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 doesnโt hold back, from his breakout role in 1979โs My Brilliant Career, to the 1993 box-office smash Jurassic Park, and the relationships โ and fallouts โ heโs had in between.
As the dinosaur franchise celebrates its 30th anniversary, Sam admits his most famous
role was a โbig surpriseโ.
โJurassic Park has certainly touched peopleโs lives,โ he says.
โI 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,
and is, still a big surprise.
โI never thought Iโd have a career as an actor โ let alone an actor on screen. So, Iโm still surprised when the phone rings. Itโs been incredibly rewarding.โ