Nautilus Star Shazad Latif on Bringing Captain Nemo to Life in New TV Series

Published:Tue, 1 Jul 2025 / Source:https://www.ign.com/articles/nautilus-tv-series-captain-nameo-shazad-latif-interview

The new AMC and AMC+ series Nautilus revisits the iconic antihero Captain Nemo from Jules Vernes’ classic sci-fi adventure novels Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and The Mysterious Island, chronicling the submarine commander’s quest for revenge against the ruthless East India Mercantile Company.

Star Trek: Discovery and Penny Dreadful actor Shazad Latif plays Nemo, and IGN was recently able to chat with him about the series, the first two episodes of which have now debuted. (This interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.)

IGN: How much does this version of Captain Nemo stick with what Jules Verne eventually revealed about that character and how much of it is just a necessary reinvention for this show?

Shazad Latif: It's [in] The Mysterious Island where we learn that he might have an Indian background, because of a prince called Dakkar. So the book takes that element and we run with that. And we still run that his wife and child have been killed and his hell-bent revenge on the East India Company, which sort of plays into what Verne was still talking about.

But then we have 10 episodes of exploration, so we have a lot of free rein to follow this guy's story and eventually find out how the Nemo we meet in the books and how we get there, really. There's free rein, but we also stick quite true to it. … Xavier [Marchand], our producer, was obsessed with Jules Verne himself.

IGN: One of the inventions of the show that I liked, I thought it was really smart, is the idea of the development of the Nautilus itself. In the books Nemo just basically makes it on his own. But you would think, if you don't have any money left, that's a lot of work for one guy.

Shazad Latif: Yeah. No, exactly. It's good to see in the first episode, that that's what they're doing, I really like that touch, and how they escape with it. And then it's not his ship then, but it becomes his ship, and he sticks his daughter's shell on it later in the series. It's nice, the emotional connection he has to this ship, which seemingly is just this big piece of metal in the junkyard.

IGN: Nemo’s fellow prisoners become his crew. What do they think of him? Do they trust him?

Shazad Latif: Well, I think at first it's like, "Who the hell is this guy telling us what to do?" And suddenly he's just become captain and taken charge. And you need someone to take the lead. Yeah, it becomes a bit of a poison, because he's just ordering people about and not really explaining his reasons. So I think that we see that come to a head in the series, I think, around episode seven or eight, and it builds throughout.

But there's a moment where he realizes you can't really do that. And if he needs and wants this team to help him on his revenge mission, then he has to be truthful with them, and the truth will set you free. And then being vulnerable around the people you need is a good lesson, I think, in life in general, especially for hot-headed dudes like Nemo. It is a great thing, and it's necessary in his journey.

IGN: He seems morally dubious at times, at least in the first episode.

Shazad Latif: I think the morally dubious stuff, he's almost willing to do that because he's seen as a prisoner anyway. And also, revenge is clouding his judgment, so he's like, "I'm going to kill these guys, I'm going to kill everyone, and they killed my wife and child." So that's where we start, with the seething anger. And he slowly dissipates that by realizing that's not the only way to do it and you need other people. But yeah, that is the starting point, where he's willing to do anything, and that includes breaking the law, as it were, which he doesn't respect anyway, especially if the law has been made by the East India Company or the British Empire.

IGN: What was the actual production like? Because it looks really good and really expensive. How much of this was actually shot on the water? Or was it all green screen?

Shazad Latif: No, I think it was a great mix of everything. We were on the [water] tank and three sound stages, which had all the interiors and the submarine. But then there was the tank which had the exteriors, and we'd do water scenes there, underwater scenes there, submarine on top, and then the CGI surrounding all of that. I think they had to do layers of CGI on top of the water. It was a whole mix and blend of everything. And we did locations and everything.

IGN: What's the thing about that character that has stayed with you or maybe something surprising that you discovered about him as you were mining that material?

Shazad Latif: The 210-day shoot and playing someone who's so angry, you carry these emotions with you, whether they're small or big. But I think that thing of learning to be vulnerable was a nice lesson which I could take into my own life as well. And then on the outside of that, just getting a chance to play representation of a South Asian character on screen in this way, an action hero. I loved all the action movies and stuff I watched growing up. But it's Harrison Ford, it's Brendan Fraser, it's all those characters. So if there's even one little brown kid or kid who watches this and sees me jumping around a ship, and enjoys it, then that reminds me of when I was young and felt the same thing. So it's a nice thing to be part of.

IGN: Is there an intention to do another season or was this meant to be a one and done?

Shazad Latif: I have no idea. That's a producer question, I guess. I'm just an actor, so I don't get let into those meetings. But we'll see. We'll see.

New episodes of Nautilus premiere Sundays on AMC and AMC+, leading up to the two-episode season finale on Sunday, August 17. Read IGN's Nautilus, Season One review.

Source:https://www.ign.com/articles/nautilus-tv-series-captain-nameo-shazad-latif-interview

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