Mawle’s latest, action thriller The Cold Light Of Day, sees him play a maverick agent has to beat up bad guys in a Madrid bar. “On the page things looked fairly thin, as they sometimes do with action films, but [director] Mabrouk El Mechri was really open to ideas. My character ended up as a Johnny Cash listening, Southern boy, having started out life as a straight-down-the-line CIA assassin. I do something fairly unpleasant to one character while listening to [Cash’s] The Man Comes Around,” recalls Mawle.
Later this year comes the unlikely sounding supernatural action film Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter, in which Mawle plays the father of the future US president who spends his spare time hammering stakes into the hearts of vampires.
But Mawle is not lost to Britain. He’s soon to appear in Shell, the first feature of writer/director Scott Graham, about the claustrophobic relationship between a father and daughter (Scottish newcomer Chloe Pirrie) living in a remote region of Scotland.
“I approach everything the same, whether it’s an indie or a big budget film,” says Mawle, which, in his case, means meticulous research. For Shell he learned how to hunt and strip deer, spending time with local stalker Duncan MacKenzie in the Scottish highlands.
For Birdsong, Mawle visited the battlefields of northern France. “I was hoping I’d be horrified but in a funny kind of way it was incredibly peaceful. I lay down in the trenches for a day; I wanted to close my eyes and imagine what went on,” he recalls.
He adds: “The terrifying thought for me about the war was imagining how you were going to die. We know the majority of people were killed from shrapnel, rather than by machine gun. So you were looking at a missing part of yourself and then baking in the sun – an excruciating death. It’s unbearable to think about.”