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WARNING: This article contains major spoilers for “Give Me One Reason,” the latest episode of Roswell, New Mexico.
Max Evans has had one hell of a year. The Roswell, New Mexico Season 3 premiere, which picked up a year after the events of the Season 2 finale, saw the alien-turned-cop living large with his pseudo siblings Isobel and Michael. However, his easygoing demeanor was nothing more than a facade. As it turns out, he is dying, principally because his body is rejecting the heart transplant he received last season. Now, he is on a mission to wrap up his unfinished business — not the least of which involves Liz Ortecho, the estranged love of his life, and Jones, the alien from whom he was cloned.
Speaking to CBR, Roswell, New Mexico star Nathan Dean offered some insight into Max’s end-of-life plans. He shared why it was so fun to play two separate characters in Season 3, as well as how that effect was accomplished behind the scenes. He explained the key difference between Max and Jones, which may very well show Max his own potential. He teased Anatsa’s key role this season and warned fans to be worried about the results of Maria’s ominous visions. He also previewed Max’s reunion with Liz, the real-world issues that Season 3 will tackle and more.
CBR: This season, you’re playing two separate characters. How do you alter your approach to differentiate between Max and Jones?
Nathan Dean: You know, Max has spent his whole life suppressing who he is, suppressing his abilities and trying to hide and trying to be human. Jones has never tried to do that. He has never suppressed anything. He’s never tried to stop himself from finding his full potential. So really, it was just the opportunity.
I thank our showrunner Chris Hollier and our writers for allowing me to do this, to really step into the potential of what Max could have been under different circumstances, if he hadn’t grown up on Earth around humans. If he never tried to suppress these abilities, if he never tried to suppress who you are or your potential, what is that? What is the limit there? For Jones, there is none.
So it was really fun to then step into this fully evolved version of the character that I’ve been playing and then switch between the two, go back to understanding the circumstances of, “Alright, you’re human, you’re trying to be human,” but then switch back into, “Oh, no, you’re not. You’re so much more than human. You’re something far beyond that.” Yeah, juxtaposing the two was a lot of fun.
What is it like for you to act opposite yourself? What does that look like for you behind the scenes?
It’s very weird! It’s very weird. You know, there were days where there would be myself and there would be a photo double — one for Max, one for Jones — and there would be stunt doubles — one for Max, one for Jones — and we just kept multiplying on set. But it was very bizarre. It was a lot of fun.
You sort of do one side of the scene a certain way and then switch over. You know, you take the beard off, you change the outfit and change the mannerisms, change the demeanor, and then try to have a conversation with the self that you just were. It was very fun! [laughs] It was very bizarre, but it was great.
Thanks to Jones, Max is finally getting some of the answers he’s longed for. How will that impact the way he sees himself, particularly in relation to Isobel and Guerin?
It impacts him a lot. I mean, we spent this past year… we weren’t working. You know, a lot of people weren’t working and you just kind of sit at home and have to look yourself in the mirror and really figure out who you want to be and how you want the world to remember you and how you want the world to see you.
Max is confronted with this thing in a very real person of Jones, literally looking yourself in the mirror. It sort of forces Max, I think, to take stock and appreciate Guerin and appreciate Isobel and Liz, too. I mean, just be grateful for having them in his life and finding out his place in the universe. You get to see, I think, that growth from him all season of just that gratitude and approaching people with respect, and respecting his situation so much more seeing it from someone else’s eyes.
As we found out in the premiere, Max is dying. How does he envision his last days? What does his bucket list look like?
Well, I think largely it comes down to him wanting to respect and honor the people around him that have loved him in his life, and he hasn’t necessarily always been good on that. So he just really wants to just be there for the people he cares about. I think for him, dying quietly and disappearing is the best option. He’s always wanted to disappear into the shadows, but this season and Jones in particular kind of forced him to step out of those shadows and step into himself more.
I hope that, by the end of the season, that we see a much more mature, a much more fully formed Max than we have in the past. He’s no longer allowed to hide because now there’s two of him! So yeah, he’s kind of forced to step into the spotlight when he doesn’t necessarily want to.
It looks like Roswell has a new sheriff in town. How will that affect Max’s job and his role in the community?
It doesn’t really affect him. I mean, Max thankfully is not — he doesn’t have his job by election, but it definitely hurts him because Valenti was tough, but she was always kind of on his side and had his back. So yeah, he has to definitely adjust and learn a new place and learn if you he trust the new sheriff, who is coming into town in very crazy times, because now there’s not one, but there’s two of me.
He’s got to learn how to adjust with that and hopefully, the new sheriff will be able to — maybe not be as understanding as Valenti was, but yeah, she’ll have a whole new set of problems to deal with. I hope we can trust her and hope that he’ll be able to keep his job and try to keep her out of it as much as possible. But yeah, it’s definitely a new rule.
In this week’s episode, we learn a little more about Anatsa and her reason for coming to Roswell. How will we see that dynamic evolve as the season progresses?
Well, that’s gonna be fun. I mean, she has her own agenda, definitely, and Max is a little bit reckless off the top and kind of steps a little bit out of line. But yeah, I mean, she’s coming here, she’s gonna learn a whole lot of things that she wasn’t quite ready to learn when she first came to Roswell. Yeah, as the season goes on, we’ll see her become integrated into not only Max’s life, but then obviously, Michael and Isobel’s life as well. She is really striving to uncover what turn out to be some uncomfortable truths.
Roswell has never shied away from dipping its toes into controversial topics, so how does that set the stage for the show to tackle some real-world current events?
Well, we’ve all been through a lot of these last couple years. Having jumped forward a year, we definitely touch on — I mean, it’s unavoidable. There was a pandemic! There was a lot of people going through some pretty difficult times. Yeah, we definitely jump into it. I mean, we’ll talk about it. We always try to stay as current as possible.
I mean, the fact that Max is a cop, that’s controversial in and of itself, and we definitely talk about that. Yeah, like you said, we don’t shy away from situations that are going on in the real world, and I think this year, we were given a good platform to be able to have these conversations with level heads and not shy away from it. Stuff will come up about being a cop; stuff will come up about the pandemic. Kyle, one of our main characters, is a doctor. This stuff that doctors have had to go through these past couple years, it’s all very, very much at the forefront of this show.
We try to tackle everything with a level head and with respect. We just were given a lot of ammunition this past year, and we’ll dive into it and we’ll talk about it. But central to our show, obviously, is going to be these aliens and the relationship between Liz and Max and all that. So we try to play it all on an even playing field.
Just how trustworthy is Jones?
[laughs] I think you’ve got to figure out his agenda first! I mean, you’ve got to figure out what he wants. Ultimately, Jones sort of operates as a window into the past. Michael and Isobel primarily, but also Max, always had these questions boiling around in their minds about, “Who are we? Why are we here? Where did we come from? What’s our place in the stars? What are we doing? What’s happening?” And Jones is a window into that.
He obviously has his own plans and his own thing, but at the end of the day, yeah, he’s sort of what Max could have been, had Max not grown up on Earth. We get to see that unfold and unfold throughout the season. So yeah, I mean, do you trust Max? Do you just Isobel? Do you trust Michael? Do you trust any of these aliens? Do you trust Jones? I don’t know! That’s all yet to be seen.
Maria keeps having visions of a funeral and she isn’t quite sure who’s in the coffin. How worried should fans be?
Definitely be worried. You know, we’re just learning now what Maria’s abilities are and what her role in this cosmic game is. As we move forward, trying to figure out what her ability is, and are these are these, in fact, real? Are these set in stone? Is this something that can be changed? What are these visions? Are these the future that’s going to happen or a future that could happen?
Yeah, we learn a lot about Maria this year, and obviously Liz is off in LA trying to figure out how to deal with that as well. It’s fun to sort of — you know, she’s one of the new aliens in the group and we get to figure out what that’s about.
What can you tease about Max’s reunion with Liz?
I mean, Max and Liz have this relationship that is constantly push and pull. They’re in this orbit around each other they just can’t break. It is very appropriate that she literally runs into him, because no matter how hard they try to be apart and try to be separated, the world, the universe, whatever it is, they just keep literally crashing into each other.
Obviously, it’s been a year. Max is not doing well, in a lot of ways. There’s also another Max out there somewhere. So yeah, they crash into each other in quite a spectacular way.
Roswell, New Mexico airs Mondays at 8/7c on the CW.
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