Sean Bean talks about playing Douglas Bennett in a British war drama World On Fire written by Peter Bowker.

In a candid chat, the Lord Of The Rings and Game of Thrones star Sean Bean talks about playing Douglas Bennett in World on Fire, which is set to premiere on SonyLIV on August 14. The British war drama is written by Peter Bowker and stars Sean Bean, Julia Brown, Yrsa Daley-Ward, Ewan Mitchell, among others. Here are the excerpts:
Describe the character of Douglas and what it was about him that drew you to the script?
Douglas was involved in the First World War and was so mentally damaged by shell shock that it has an influence on how he viewed everything to do with the Second World War. He doesn't believe in war as a means of achieving objectives. He thinks there should be negotiation and people should be trying to communicate. At this point, no one is aware of the impact that this second war is going to make on the world but from his experience of the First World War he always wondered what it was all for. The people who fought were cannon fodder with no real understanding of why they were fighting. For Douglas it was a futile war leaving him mentally scarred and suffering from flashbacks, anxiety, insecurity and a slight leaning towards madness.
Where does Douglas fit into the Bennett family set-up?
The Bennett family consists of Douglas, son Tom and daughter Lois. Lois is the backbone of the family and is a strong-willed woman. She runs the everyday life of the family leaving Tom and
Douglas to just sit about the kitchen and wait for her to make cups of tea and feed them. They're
working class men and are very down-to-earth. Douglas' wife died years ago so he's brought the
children up somewhat on his own. He's been trying to keep it together but he's weak and he's
depressed from the First World War and he's nervous and unsure about the future. It's difficult
for him to relate to his children at times and it's difficult for them to know how to treat him
without robbing him of his dignity or his independence.
Describe the relationship that develops between Douglas and Robina
Douglas and Robina meet purely because of Harry and Lois' relationship. It's a very unlikely
relationship, a working-class bus driver and a very gentrified lady of the manor as it were. They're
thrown together because of their children's relationship. I think that's quite an interesting
friendship that emerges between them. Some people are thrown together who would never
otherwise meet but Robina recognises that Douglas is an intelligent man and has a warmth of
personality that she finds both alien and interesting to her.
Explain how Douglas and Jan are thrown together and how that friendship develops?
A big element in the relationship between the Chase family members and the Bennett family is
the young Polish refugee Jan, whom Harry brings home from war. Jan is being brought up by
Robina and Douglas gets to know Jan well and becomes really fond of him. He befriends Jan and
plays football with him; he shows him some fatherly love. Douglas sees him as another son and I
think Jan sees Douglas as a surrogate father figure. They form a really interesting and quite
touching relationship.
How does he feel when his son and daughter both head off to service the war in their different ways?
As a pacifist, Douglas has to watch his daughter Lois go off to join the entertainment corps ENSA
and then sees Tom join the navy and go to war on the HMS Exeter. This terrifies Douglas yet
when Tom returns on leave he wants Douglas to sanction him becoming an objector and
essentially going AWOL but no matter what he is, Douglas is not a coward and doesn't give his
blessing to Tom. He's a man of morals and he knows what this would mean for the pacifist
organization that he belongs to but more importantly what it could mean for his son if he is
caught. He could be court marshalled and disgraced and he doesn't want that for Tom. Tom is
many things and headstrong but to live his life as a cowardly criminal or be executed is not what
Douglas' wants for Tom so the only way out of that situation is to encourage him to go back to
war and possibly certain death. It weighs heavy on Douglas.
Do you have any personal memories of family members who were alive during the war?
My mother and father were born just before the war started in the 1930s. They used to tell me
stories about how they used to wear the gas masks. My auntie and uncle had an Anderson
shelter in their shed (that's still there today) that we used to play in it when we were little. It was
very flimsy as bomb shelters go and I'll always remember those moments. They were storytellers
and there was a lot of humour and funny stories to be told of those times.
Is this a period in history that you are particularly interested, and did you conduct any research to prepare you for the part?
I did a fair bit of research for the part but it's something I've always been quite interested in as an
area of history. The Second World War fascinates me but it was the reparations that were set in
place following the end of the First World War that heralded the introduction of Hitler. I've
always been interested in how people like Douglas Bennett were shunned within that
community. They were ostracised which must have been very, very difficult. You're going totally
against the propaganda and the general feeling of the country by actually standing up and saying, "I'm a pacifist. That's an incredibly hard and brave thing to do and you suffer for it."
How do we see Douglas being affected by his beliefs?
Imagine being in a closed-knit community and people turn their back on you. Shopkeepers don't
want to serve you in shops and shout at you in the street and call you this and that. I would
imagine you have to be pretty determined and principled to stick to your beliefs in the face of
popular opinion. So that was interesting and just the fact that Douglas is physically and mentally
not very well wasn't really understood, certainly not in the wake of the First World War;
shellshock was just frowned upon. Today's soldiers have a diagnosis now in PTSD and we can see how it works on the brain and how these people suffered in silence. It's a difficult one. It's a
difficult illness to talk about especially during the Second World War so for Douglas to actually
stand up and say, 'I don't believe in it', was a really, big and brave statement.
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