Jul 22, 2011 14:24 GMT  ·  By
Daniel Craig refuses to answer question about wedding to Rachel Weisz, says it’s a private matter
   Daniel Craig refuses to answer question about wedding to Rachel Weisz, says it’s a private matter

He likes his personal business to remain private and being asked in the middle of a promo interview about it will not open any doors. In a recent interview with Entertainment Weekly, Daniel Craig snapped when asked about recent wedding to Rachel Weisz.

The two, friends for many years, fell in love on the set of “Dream House,” started dating, and were married in a super-secret ceremony at the end of last month.

Now, Craig is promoting the upcoming “Cowboys & Aliens,” but also talking about two other highly-anticipated releases, “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” and the aforementioned “Dream House.”

The latest issue of EW brings a double interview with Craig and “Cowboys & Aliens” co-star Harrison Ford, called “When Bond met Indy,” a clear reference to the franchises they turned into international blockbusters.

However, at one point, the interviewer asked Craig about the June wedding ceremony to Weisz, which is when the British actor felt the need to be as direct as possible to let him know that he was crossing a boundary he shouldn’t cross.

“You said we had a private wedding and now you want to ask about the wedding,” Daniel told the EW reporter.

“You are barking up the wrong tree. No disrespect, but if you think it through, that’s the reason we’ve said [expletive] all on that subject. Because it was private,” the actor added.

He’s always been known to be fiercely protective of his personal life and, judging by this, he doesn’t plan on changing anytime soon.

As for the film that should be out in theaters soon, EW says the title doesn’t quite do justice to how serious it is, because it makes it appear as if it was a parody or some crazy sci-fi flick.

Ford too insists that having two worlds collide in such an unlikely fashion should be enough to keep fans on the edge of their seat.

“I read it and frankly didn’t get it at all. But then I talked to Jon [Favreau] about the concept and the visual stuff and I sort of figured out how it might work,” the iconic actor says of “Cowboys & Aliens.”

“What I liked about it was that these people in the 1870s in New Mexico had no concept of outer space, no concept of life on other planets,” he adds.