Sweetie PI: the stars of Sugar on the film noir infused in their cinephilic private-eye series

Colin Farrell stars as film-loving private investigator John Sugar in the Apple TV+ series Sugar.
Colin Farrell stars as film-loving private investigator John Sugar in the Apple TV+ series Sugar.

Colin Farrell, Kirby and Amy Ryan unlock the mystery of Sugar’s cinephile private-eye protagonist by telling Mia Lee Vicino about the film noir—from the swimming pool of Sunset Boulevard to their co-star James Cromwell of L.A. Confidential—at the heart of their new series.

It’s such a clearly defined genre—and it has such a definite mood to it, and there’s such lovely mystery always at the core of it—but there is always also this abject disgruntlement, or a sickness, that is readily available in every frame.

—⁠Colin Farrell on film noir

Colin Farrell is and isn’t John Sugar. The latter is a fictional private eye, the titular role of Apple TV+’s new series Sugar, cruising the streets of contemporary Los Angeles—alongside his dog, Wiley—to track down missing persons. The former is a very real actor, who recently earned his first Academy Award nomination for The Banshees of Inisherin. They both harbor hearts of gold and a love for the movies.

Known for transforming himself into a range of characters that span from high-budget frenzied grit (The Batman, Miami Vice) to independent understated tenderness (After Yang, The Lobster) to somewhere in between (In Bruges, The Beguiled), Farrell’s thoughtful depiction of Sugar isn’t an exception to his gravitation towards the absurd and tragicomic, towards complicated men existing in a hybrid territory simultaneously familiar and alien to our own reality.

Yes, Sugar is a series and we don’t have those on Letterboxd yet, but as Dominic Corry explained in his Journal interview with creator Mark Protosevich, John Sugar is one of us: a bona fide cinephile. Although the bulk of the story revolves around the case of a legendary Hollywood producer’s (James Cromwell) missing granddaughter, Olivia (Sydney Chandler), each episode features multiple clips from classic cinema, juxtaposing Sugar’s experiences against those previously imagined on the silver screen.

Though he has a penchant for film noir and often reminisces about favorite scenes from the likes of Double Indemnity and The Big Heat, Sugar’s interests extend to other genres. In episode two, he attends a repertory theater screening of John Cassavetes’ romantic drama Minnie and Moskowitz. In episode four, he goes to the doctor and compares the examination to John Carpenter’s seminal horror The Thing. In short, he sees the world through the lens of cinema. This is also why it was imperative that we get John Sugar’s Four Faves, with the help of Farrell’s co-stars Kirby and Amy Ryan.

Kirby plays Ruby, Sugar’s handler and closest friend, and Ryan is Olivia’s stepmother, Melanie, a former rock star who helps coax Sugar out of his solitary shell while suppressing some secrets of her own. Once we got Four Faves settled, the trio chatted with me about subverting elements of film noir, the meta-link between Cromwell and L.A. Confidential and the false dichotomy between cats and dogs—plus, Farrell presents a film history lesson on The Night of the Hunter.


Kirby and Farrell as friends and co-workers Ruby and Sugar.
Kirby and Farrell as friends and co-workers Ruby and Sugar.

Because John Sugar is a cinephile private eye who sees the world through movies—which is how the Letterboxd community also sees the world—could we start by talking about your relationship to the film-noir genre?
Colin Farrell: Oh, I knew I should have brushed up for today.

Amy Ryan: Yes, Colin, do tell.

CF: I have a rudimentary relationship with film noir, at best… In talking to [creator] Mark Protosevich, he gave me a list of his favorites—Farewell, My Lovely and Murder, My Sweet—and then I did go back into ones that I had seen as a teenager, like The Maltese Falcon, and The Big Sleep, and various things like that. So I have loved film noir in my own way. Maybe not as rudimentary as I was initially saying, but I certainly wouldn’t be, like, a noirphile, or anything.

It’s such a clearly defined genre—and it has such a definite mood to it, and there’s such lovely mystery always at the core of it—but there is always also this abject disgruntlement, or a sickness, that is readily available in every frame. I think it kind of also is why people are so obsessed with murder documentaries and stuff like that. We do have a suspicion of the darkness at the heart of man, which doesn’t just live alone, of course—it is counter to the light that also is there.

We love to be exposed to that darkness, and noir gives us the opportunity to do that, but it also has a consequentiality because the essential character is usually paying a price for being as involved in the ugliness, through the cases that he—usually he—has worked. He’s usually embittered, and he’s usually tired by being exposed to these more nefarious and ugly aspects of the human condition.

The beautiful thing about this show, when I read the pilot, was that Sugar had this almost optimism in the face of all the ugliness that he’d been exposed to. He had this belief in the fundamental decency of human beings, which is a tricky belief to hold on to when we see the world and how it is. That was the thing that I loved about it. And yeah, it was fun to swim in the waters of noir. Would you call Sunset Boulevard noir? You wouldn’t, would you?

I would.
Kirby: Yeah.

AR: Yes.

CF: The energy of it, yeah, and the voiceover and the mystery. Yeah, at the center of it, I suppose.

AR: They have a swimming pool, too.

CF: Yeah, totally. Swimming pool, voiceover, typewriter—done.

Swimming pools are definitely on the LA noir checklist.
Swimming pools are definitely on the LA noir checklist.

The first film I want to bring up is The Long Goodbye, with Elliott Gould.
CF: Gorgeous. I have a dog. He has a cat.

Yes, that’s exactly what I was going to ask about! Wiley the dog in relation to Elliott Gould’s cat. And then there’s also the cat you’re working with, Kirby. I’d really like to hear about working with Wiley—and this cat—especially because, Colin, you’ve worked with so many animals: Jenny the donkey [from The Banshees of Inisherin], Bob the dog from The Lobster, the Shih Tzu from Seven Psychopaths.
CF: Wiley made it out unscathed. The rest of them had really horrible ends. Speaking of horrible ends, [Kirby,] tell us about that cat that wouldn’t stop getting its ass all in the frame. It would back itself up to the lens, her cat, on the regular. So many shots were ruined.

K: Completely ruined. Mirembe was the cat. Well, it was his character’s name… There were two cats, actually. One was really good and showed its bumhole a lot, but was a better actor. And then the other one just gave us pure bumhole, actually.

What I really liked about the cat and the dog is… it felt more [complex] than just, ‘He, in this moment, has a dog, and she has a cat.’ It felt like that’s who they were. I think people go, “Are you a cat person, or are you a dog person?” which is a bit of a false dichotomy. You can be both, very much, but I think that in that moment you were seeing Sugar as a dog person. And, not to speak to your character, but in the way I perceived it, as in that loyalty, that endless optimism that dogs have. I guess I’m anthropomorphizing, but it seems that way. Then cats do seem a little more cunning, calculated, care a little less about what other people think.

CF: A little more wily, ironically.

K: Exactly. They’re more wily—“if it feels good to me, it’s good.” I felt like, in that moment, the animals are sort of metaphors for us.

Wiley and Sugar enjoying their favorite hobby: classic movie-watching.
Wiley and Sugar enjoying their favorite hobby: classic movie-watching.

The next film, The Big Heat, is mentioned in the first episode. John Sugar gets starstruck because he gets to have Glenn Ford’s gun from that movie. I was curious, as actors, have you ever had a moment like that, where you’ve been given this iconic prop, or you’ve been filming on the same stage as one of your favorite movies, and you got to geek out about it?
AR: Oh, that’s such a good question.

K: I feel like the Paramount lot. Whenever I’m just—

AR: Going through the gates, yeah. Agree with you there.

CF: Totally, because they have the legends outside each stage. It’s beautiful. It’s so gorgeous.

K: And it’s still quite small. Some of the newer lots, they feel newer, but the Paramount lot feels... I mean, none of us are from LA, so for me, being this little girl from London… The Hollywood sign is one thing, but… To me, the Paramount lot is so iconic.

CF: The water tower. What’s up with that?

AR: And then driving from trailers to set, and going through all the fake streets in the back.

K: It’s so windy and twisty. That, to me, always feels magical. I love that lot.

Next film: Gilda, a clip of which appears in the first episode. It’s such a film-school staple, because it’s pioneering and also subverting the femme fatale and damsel in distress archetypes. Amy, I feel like your character is also subverting all of these tropes at the same time. Could you talk about how Melanie has a similar function?
AR: Well, we all do, and yet we take a modern spin on it. The modern spin with Melanie to John [is], yes, she is this “damsel in distress”, “femme fatale”, yet they lean in more to true friendship, and recognition of each person’s flaws, and how they’re connected through that, as opposed to just pure attraction of flesh, and rumpled sheets and desire. And because of that, we get a sustained relationship throughout the series.

You get to work with and encounter and share moments of bringing stories to life with people that you have revered, or you’ve felt a familiarity with. Or people that you were watching at home when you were a kid on your television, and then all of a sudden, you’re sharing space with them, and you’re working on a text with them. I mean, it’s mad.

—⁠Colin Farrell
Melanie subverts the “femme fatale” and “damsel-in-distress” film-noir tropes.
Melanie subverts the “femme fatale” and “damsel-in-distress” film-noir tropes.

Next up, The Night of the Hunter.
CF: Charles Laughton. Oh, God. Never directed another film, because he was slammed when he directed that. It was not received well at all. People said it was a piece of shit. Apparently, he was so hurt by the vitriol that came [his way] as a first-time director that he swore to never direct and followed through. He never directed another film again.

K: Oh, that’s tragic.

CF: One of the great film actors and one of the greatest films. I think it’s one of Martin McDonagh’s favorite films, if not his favorite film.

And Robert Mitchum’s performance as that murderous preacher—
CF: Amazing.

Yes, he has those ‘love’ and ‘hate’ knuckle tattoos—could you speak about how [by depicting Sugar watching that scene in episodes five and six] that represents John Sugar’s own wrestle with morality?
CF: Sugar speaks very openly about detesting violence, and not wanting to be a part of any kind of form of violence, and yet he’s obviously very adept at it… Sugar starts off, of course, from a place of love, and comion, and heartfelt empathy for human beings and their struggle and his struggle. What he learns, and what he feels, is Melanie’s struggle.

I think rage, hatred, anger, revenge, these kinds of themes, are something that become personally experienced for him by the end of the eight episodes, and it’s something that he wasn’t really versed in. He’s always had an ability to take care of himself and use violence, and use his body as a means of protection, either of self or others. But he’s never actually had the emotional or psychological component of what so often accompanies violence: rage, disdain, hatred and a desire for retribution. By the end, he knows those things, so yeah, nice one. Yeah, thanks for that.

Unlike John Wick, John Sugar prefers puppy love over vengeance.
Unlike John Wick, John Sugar prefers puppy love over vengeance.

We only have time for one more movie; we’re going to do a more contemporary one, okay? L.A. Confidential.
CF: Love. Love. It’s so good.

K: Yeah, I love that film. My brother’s a massive cinephile just in general, and he’s watched everything. He just came to LA and was so surprised that I hadn’t seen… What is the film? It’s Michael Douglas. He’s having a terrible day in LA?

CF: Oh, LA, Falling Down, Joel Schumacher?

K: Yes, yes. My brother literally got here and was talking to the cab driver about it.

CF: About Falling Down?

K: About that film. Yes, yes, yes, but he also was horrified that no one else in my family had seen it.

CF: It’s a great film, Falling Down. It’s one of Joel’s great films. Yeah, Lord rest him… L.A. Confidential. James Cromwell, of course. James Cromwell, who was with us in this.

James Cromwell, the meta-link between Sugar and L.A. Confidential (1997).
James Cromwell, the meta-link between Sugar and L.A. Confidential (1997).

That’s exactly what I was about to bring up, is how James Cromwell is this meta-link between L.A. Confidential and Sugar. Could you talk a little bit about that?
CF: I got to work up close and personal with him, and yeah, legend. We’ve been talking about it, but you just get giddy sometimes. You get to work with and encounter and share moments of bringing stories to life with people that you have revered, or you’ve felt a familiarity with. Or people that you were watching at home when you were a kid on your television, and then all of a sudden, you’re sharing space with them, and you’re working on a text with them. I mean, it’s mad. You never get used to it.

AR: You never get used to it.

K: I hope, because it’s fantastic. Cromwell, he’s a gem. Just a huge heart, obviously ridiculous talent, and an extraordinary storyteller.


‘Sugar’ is now streaming on Apple TV+. The season finale airs May 17.

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