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Reading: For Eric Bana, ‘Untamed’ and its wilderness was exhausting to go away behind
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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > For Eric Bana, ‘Untamed’ and its wilderness was exhausting to go away behind
For Eric Bana, ‘Untamed’ and its wilderness was exhausting to go away behind
Entertainment

For Eric Bana, ‘Untamed’ and its wilderness was exhausting to go away behind

Last updated: July 17, 2025 3:10 pm
Editorial Board Published July 17, 2025
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When Eric Bana is just not filming, he’s greater than seemingly driving a motorbike in a distant a part of Australia. He’s been doing it since he was a child, having grown up in a semi-industrial a part of the suburbs of Melbourne on the verge of farmland. Now, it’s his solace on days off.

“It’s a vulnerable feeling, it’s an exciting feeling,” he says on a video name. “You have to be self-sufficient. You have to think worst-case scenario. What happens if I get a flat tire when it’s 120 degrees and there’s no water around? It keeps you awake.”

So when, again in 2019, Bana was given the pilot script for the Netflix restricted sequence “Untamed,” he was instantly attracted. He would play the function of Kyle Turner, an agent within the Investigative Providers Department of the Nationwide Park Service in Yosemite — primarily a park detective. It’s a homicide thriller but set in opposition to the type of wilderness that Bana loves.

“I just felt a kinship for Kyle immediately,” he remembers. “I don’t know if it was just like the shared love for the outdoors and how that affects our psyche and our well-being, our sense of self, our emotional journey in life — I just immediately felt very strongly for Kyle.”

In “Untamed,” Eric Bana performs Kyle Turner, an agent within the Investigative Providers Department of the Nationwide Park Service. The present is ready in Yosemite Nationwide Park, although it was filmed British Columbia.

(Ricardo Hubbs / Netflix)

Bana caught with the challenge via the COVID pandemic and the Hollywood strikes, permitting the sequence created by Mark L. Smith of “American Primeval” and daughter Elle Smith to lastly hit the streaming service on Thursday. The present finds Bana’s character investigating the dying of a younger lady who plummets off El Capitan and into two rock climbers. The case unexpectedly connects two different traumatic incidents which have occurred within the mountainous wilds — at the least certainly one of which instantly includes the taciturn Kyle, grieving the dying of his younger son.

“He exudes that kind of sensitivity and strength at the same time,” Elle Smith says. “It allowed him to just really embody Turner. Because he’s been living in this show for so long, so many years and kept it alive and has remained passionate about it, once we got into production, he was Turner.”

“Untamed” additionally marks the newest in Bana’s unconventional profession that has seen him contact practically each nook of the Hollywood machine, although he has all the time chosen to dwell in Australia when he’s not working. It by no means made sense for him to maneuver to Los Angeles when lots of his shoots had been abroad anyway. Once we chat, he’s briefly on the town for “Untamed” press.

Although he began his profession as a comic in his residence nation, he was a part of the superhero craze earlier than it was a craze, enjoying the title function in Ang Lee’s “Hulk,” a film that’s now undergone a vital reassessment. He’s been a “Star Trek” villain and a Steven Spielberg protagonist within the historic drama “Munich.” (Over the previous 12 months, an increasing number of individuals have been citing the function of the Mossad agent tasked to reply to the homicide of Israeli athletes on the 1972 Summer season Olympics: “With the passing of time, you realize how incredible some of the observations were,” he says.)

A man whose face is partially obscured by a shadow.

Although his profession has touched practically each nook of the Hollywood machine, Eric Bana has continued to dwell in Australia.

(Christina Home / Los Angeles Instances)

Extra not too long ago, he ventured into the world of tv, enjoying the sociopathic John Meehan within the first season of the anthology sequence “Dirty John.” Bana says he tends not to consider particularly enjoying characters that contradict his earlier work, however he understands that coming off that function most likely was one of many causes he gravitated towards Kyle in “Untamed.”

“There was no doubt that the character of John had a level of toxicity to him that was just so high,” he says, including, “I realized that Kyle was a warmer character for the audience to follow than John.”

Earlier than he really acquired to play Kyle, he began a mini-franchise in Australia with producing associate and director Rob Connolly due to “The Dry” and its sequel, through which he performs one other investigator reeling from a traumatic previous.

For creator Mark Smith, Bana was the best individual to embody Kyle due to his capacity to convey loads with little or no dialogue.

“We felt like he was just so expressive in his eyes and his face,” Mark says. “He can do so much without saying anything, and that was crucial to this guy who really doesn’t want to speak — he doesn’t want to talk to people. He just wants to be kind of off on his own, doing his thing in the wilderness.”

As a result of Bana acquired on board early, the Smiths may begin writing the remainder of the scripts with him in thoughts. Certainly one of Bana’s requests: The extra he might be on a horse, the higher. Within the present, Kyle eschews motor autos for a trusty steed, which supplies him extra entry to the much less traversed areas of the park. Bana ended up loving his horse.

“I desperately wanted to smuggle him on the plane and take him home,” he says.

Two people riding on horseback above a lake with mountains surrounding it.

Eric Bana and Lily Santiago are sometimes seen on horseback in “Untamed.”

(Netflix)

Mark and Elle Smith conceived of the sequence after being despatched articles in regards to the Nationwide Park Service’s Investigative Providers Department. They weren’t aware of that world however had been nonetheless fascinated by this unusual occupation that’s half FBI agent and half park ranger. Bana had visited Yosemite years in the past as a solo vacationer however didn’t have the prospect to go once more earlier than the shoot, which befell in British Columbia.

Nonetheless, he spoke to rangers and ISB staff to get a way of “just how crazy” a few of their work could be.

“When you mix drugs, when you mix people coming from all kinds of different backgrounds and having different entitlements to the places that they’re in, it’s really interesting,” he says.

Bana understands from private expertise that the attraction to the outside is partially based mostly on the truth that hazard is sort of all the time lurking across the nook. In Australia, he provides, “there’s always something trying to get you, whether it be two-legged, four-legged, eight-legged or whatever.”

On the set of “Untamed,” he was extremely wanting to see a bear — and was dissatisfied when it by no means occurred.

“We had a bear guy on set who was responsible for our and the bears’ safety,” he says. “We had very strict rules around food and all that sort of stuff. I was desperate, desperate to have an encounter with a bear of the positive kind, and I never saw one.”

Elle Smith confirms that the majority everybody else acquired to see a bear. “He had really bad bear luck,” she provides.

A man with greying hair smiles slightly.

“We felt like he was just so expressive in his eyes and his face,” says “Untamed” creator Mark L. Smith.

(Christina Home / Los Angeles Instances)

However even along with his lack of bear sightings, Bana’s love of being exterior was essential for all the manufacturing. Mark explains he’s not the type of star who returns to his trailer, as an alternative pulling up a chair to hang around.

“This was a tough landscape that we were shooting in,” Elle Smith provides. “I think it really helps in terms of tone setting if your movie star is willing to get out on the rock and do the climb. It really helps the crew also feel like they’re able to do the climb.”

Bana was intoxicated by his setting — a lot in order that he wouldn’t wish to return to the sterility of a soundstage.

“Going to work in a studio after doing something like this — the thought of it is just debilitating creatively,” he says. “There’s something about a camera coming out of a box when the sun rises and going back when the sun goes down. There’s an energy, there’s a cadence to that.”

For his follow-up, he went again into the weather for “Apex,” an upcoming movie reverse Charlize Theron, the place they play a pair of rock climbers. He says he did intense coaching within the talent or else he would have seemed like a “fool.”

And identical to how Bana is keen to let the climate dictate his capturing days, he’s additionally affected person along with his profession. It’s one of many causes he was keen to attend for “Untamed.”

“I’ve been in this business for a period of time now where I realize you really do have to go with the ebbs and flows and you really do have to pace yourself, but at the same time when you find something that you love you just have to try and protect it,” he says.

It’s one thing you would additionally say in regards to the pure world, and Bana hopes that “Untamed,” even with all its darkish deeds and buried secrets and techniques, encourages audiences to go see for themselves.

“I hope people enjoy the feeling of being in that space, and in a perfect world, feel motivated to go and seek them out,” he says.

He definitely might be.

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