Full Actors Roundtable: Tom Hanks, Gary Oldman, John Boyega, James Franco | Close Up With THR

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(upbeat music) - Let's start with a simple question. What's most surprised you about the actual profession of being an actor? James? (laughter) - It's an interesting profession where, I remember it was around, it was like the year that I was actually doing Spiderman. Willem Dafoe was playing my dad. Robert DeNiro had just played my father in a different movie. It was like, this is one of the only professions, I think, where it's like, you get to work with all your heroes and in such an intimate way. I mean, even other artistic practices, like you don't work with your actual heroes in that kind of intimate relationship in quite the same way. - As an equal, as a peer. You can be the assistant to Annie Leibovitz, but-- - Yeah, yeah. - [Stephen] What surprised you, Tom? - I think that it's still just as much fun as it was from the first time I figured out that people took it seriously. I mean, when I was at whatever level you're at. When I was in high school and I found out this was a class you could take. Are you kidding me? As opposed to drafting or sociology or accounting? (laughter) You get credit for this? Well, first of all, that's the greatest racket I've ever heard of but then, the amount of fun that it was. I still feel the same excitement knowing that we're going to perform this kind of like, student one-act play, you know, next week, as I do when I get a job now. It's still this intense excitement of oh, we're gonna get to take a whack at this thing and they take us seriously as they do. - Each time you do something, it's always different, because there's so many moving parts. What you're working on, the people you're working with, in terms of film, the configuration is always different. One of the first things I find that you have to do is kind of, sort of figure out what you're doing, or at least, know where to start from because it's different every time. It's not like you can figure out a way to approach things and then use that-- - Because it changes. - [Willem] Even as a template because the target's always moving. - How do you go about figuring it out? - You know, I like that. I like that not knowing, going to that place of not knowing, going towards something and if you've done it enough times, you know, the fear that a lot of actors feel, including myself, when you start something, it's nice to get comfortable with fear. If you're really conscientious and you really tap into a certain kind of wonder and a certain kind of process of creating something rather than just interpreting something, once you get in that place of not knowing, you've been there before and it kind of gives you this kind of courage that you wouldn't normally have, that you don't normally have in life. - Has this fear ever overwhelmed you? - Yeah, sure. It was just before Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy and I'm not really sure what happened. Two or three weeks before we started, I froze and had bone-crushing stage fright. I'd never experienced it before and I really just sort of didn't know what was going on. I'm not sure what you call it. It was anxiety, or panic attack. - [Sam] You hadn't done a lead in a while. Was that part of it? - Yeah, perhaps. I'm glad to say I've worked with people in the theater who vomit, like, every night. (laughter) - I heard Pacino did that with American Buffalo. He'd eat some pea soup just so he'd have something to vomit. (laughter) - Wow. - You know, a shaking in the wings. I would sometimes look at that and I was always, of course we all, a first preview or a first night, but I was always relatively a relaxed performer. I looked forward to going out there and wasn't that sort of person who was terrified in the wings. I would look at these people and think, oh, if I had to do that every night, if I felt like that every night, I don't know how I would carry on. So, it wasn't something that I'd had, or experienced before. It was really debilitating. - Sounds like it was the pressure of the role. Like, to you, those roles were-- - I think, also, it was trying to slay the dragon. I've since spoken with other actors. Kevin Branagh, who said he was on a set in a scene, and it started to come upon him and he went through it and I realized that I was not alone, you know. It was like an AA meeting or something. You go, "Yeah, I've experienced it." (laughter) "My name's Colin Firth and I've experienced it." (laughter) - How did you get over that? - Doctor prescribed me something to just calm me down, to give me a ceiling, just to sort of take the edge off and you know what? I got to the set, walked onto the set and went, "Oh, yeah, I know. "I know. "I know where I am. "Yeah, this is okay." - [Tom] Yeah, there you go. - And it was-- - It's just a high wire. - Yeah! - 3000 feet above a hard surface. - Yeah! (laughter) - You have a bar to keep your balance. - Have you experienced anything like that? - I was competing with Jason Robards in The Post because he'd played Ben Bradlee and so was I. As Ben Bradlee, he owns that role from All The President's Men. So, here we're doing it and I was actually given permission to forget about it by Ben Bradlee himself because I was looking, I'd watched all the video that I could of him and he gave quite a number of interviews and Bradlee, he talked about, "Well, you know, and then they made that movie, you know. "Every day, someone comes up to me and says "Well, you don't look like Jason Robards!" (laughter) That's well, you know what? There's been a lot of Hamlets. There's been a lot of Richard the Thirds. I wouldn't be surprised if there are a lot of Ben Bradlees. - Oh, dear. I don't like hypothetical questions. - Well, I don't think you're gonna like the real one, either. - Do you have the papers? - Not yet. - Oh, gosh. Oh, gosh, because you know the position that would put me in. We have language in the prospectus-- - I know. I know that the bankers could change their mind and I know what is at stake. - You met him? - Oh, yeah. I had dinner with him a number of times. - What was that like? - He was exactly, he was the most confident man on the planet Earth. Loved his job. Knew that he was crackerjack at it. Ann Roth? Anybody work with Ann Roth? - I have. - Yeah, oh yeah! - Ann Roth did the costuming. She's really particular about building the character along with you and we were shooting and I'm trying on all these shirts that I would never wear in a million years and she said to me, "Do you know why Ben Bradlee walked "into a room and owned it? "Do you know why?" And I said, "Because he knew." And she said, "Because he knew!" So, you end up just building. You couldn't explain it. You couldn't write it down for a million years, but you take it from whatever source you can and you think, hey, I'm safe here. I'll be all right. - Were you ever intimidated when you work on something? Are you intimidated when you work with Meryl Streep? I don't know. (laughter) - There's an intimidating-- I don't feel like we're really making the movie until about three days in. (laughter) Because you've got to meet everybody and you probably haven't rehearsed but you are saying, "I know your movies and I know you." You know everybody. You're just some degree of fan and until you get to that place where you're just in the slog of things. Then, you're making the same movie but I'll tell you, I don't know if you've found this, but the legends, the heroes that you get to work with, they all do it the same exact way. They want to run the lines. They want to get it down. They try it a million different ways. They start, they stop. They feel confident. They don't. That also was a liberating process during this. - I felt like that with John Hurt. Having worked on Tinker. The first day of working with him, I couldn't wait to get there and there he was, smoking a cigarette, just standing there outside his trailer and I was absolute, I was fan-boy. You know, it's like, my God. He happened to be a really wonderful, wonderful human being, too, as well as a great actor, but it was just such a thrill to meet him and to play some scenes with him. You know, I always admired his work so much over the years. - You shot a scene in Star Wars with Prince William and Prince Harry. Was that intimidating? - Yeah, and Tom Hardy. It was a strange contrast of a weird family but it wasn't intimidating. It was fun to me. I thought it was like, of course, it's Star Wars. They're gonna bring the royal family. (laughter) - Were they in Stormtrooper costumes? - Yeah, they were wrapped in Stormtrooper costumes and so, that was just, for me, it's the best of both worlds for me but it was a great experience. - When you make the Star Wars movies, is it hard not to go (imitating blasters shooting) when you're firing the thing by yourself? (laughing) - I'm doing all the damn time, Tom. - All the time, yeah. (laughing) - All the time. You're a child. There's a new planet every day and a new scene to play and it just makes you feel as if you're a part of history, in a sense, a part of something that you grew up knowing and now, it's your reality and it's strange on a day-to-day basis. - Well, that's the surprising thing, again, about what we do. You know, you're watching these films as a kid and then suddenly, you're in one. - Yeah, yeah and as everyone says, like I'm literally-- - Is it different when you're in a real-life story, like Detroit? How do you go about researching that? - It's definitely different. It's the importance that this true story is gonna be seen by so many people and the world is tainted right now and this story is sensitive to the issues that we have and you're basically creatively commenting on something, it puts you in a position of some form of responsibility. So, on set, there is much more of a level of seriousness, but it's shared in unity but there's much more of a serious tone that's required on a set like Detroit, whereas in Star Wars, you know, you've got JJ Abrams popping every cashew he can find in his mouth and everyone's having much more of a lighter time because it's like, "Oh, there's Chewbacca again! "His hair's just brushed!" - What did you mean, the world is tainted now? - Detroit is a reflection, even though it's set 50 years ago, is a reflection of what's going on now in terms of race relations and it's strange. You know, you watch a movie like Detroit and expect it to be based in 2017. The lines are blurred in terms of how far we've come. - Now, listen. Sometimes, when a black guy is put in a position of authority, other black guys, they like to single you out, okay? Because I'm not suppose to tell them what to do. - We have these conversations, we do them in stages, okay? Stage One, witnesses. Stage Two, suspects. - Do you ever feel, as actors, you're not doing something meaningful enough, or do you feel that there is a purpose to it? - Oh, I think I just wanna, you know, entertain-- - Some people just want to get that check. (laughing) - I just wanna get that check. - Get that Broadway check. - You're making those big-money choices, Sam. (laughing) - You always kind of think you're doing Citizen Kane, you know, and then nobody sees the movie or sometimes people do see the movie but I think you're think you're doing Hamlet every time and then, sometimes, it turns out that way, sometimes it doesn't. I think you're trying to do the best thing ever. - The same commitment and energy goes into making a bad movie. - [Sam] Exactly! - That's the story of my movies! (laughing) - Which brings us to-- (laughing) - He thought he was making A Streetcar Named Desire! - Does he still think that? - That's one of the crazy things about Tommy Wiseau. On the original poster, he had written the copy. He wrote, "Tennessee Williams-level drama." It shows what he thought he had made. He told people they would not be able to sleep for two weeks after they watched the movie because they'd be so devastated and then, when it came out, people laughed and he didn't take "Tennessee Williams-level drama" off the poster. He just added, "an enjoyable black comedy." (laughing) So, it's like, he went into that trying to just make a movie that would move people, the best movie that he could. - Is that how you approached the role as well, being an actor playing an actor? - I tried to make the best movie I could. (laughing) No, but it was about how I treated him. I treated him with respect, as somebody, an outsider artist is trying to do what we're all trying to do. Everybody that comes to Hollywood is on the outside with a dream. He's all of us. So, if I treated it like that, it would become a much bigger story than just a spoof about a guy-- - Do you all know what this is about? This film, The Room, which may be the worst film ever made? - I mean, there are-- - What film was this that I missed? - [James] The Room. - It was the making of an actual film called The Room. Not the great Brie Larson film. - I know it, yeah, yes. That was Room, though. - A couple of years ago, when they had screenings of The Room, they said, "Not the Brie Larson film." (laughing) When it came out, he paid for everything. It was six million dollars of his own money. I looks like it was made for six dollars. He put it out for two weeks to qualify for the Academy Awards. It didn't qualify. Then, it just became a cult hit and it's been playing for 14 years, once a month, in almost every major city. - Wow. - [James] Yeah, it's a whole thing. - Oh, yeah, Tommy weird! Tommy like Frankenstein! He like Vampire Rapist! I hear everything! I have ears everywhere! I hear your whispers in your souls! You're on my planet, okay? - Wait a minute. So, you've been spying on your entire production? - Yeah, that's right. - That's fucking crazy! - That's how it is! So, now you know. Next time, you make laughter, ha ha ha ha ha, I don't care who you are, you're out on the street. - What about me? Am I still fired? - All right, I give you one more chance. - Did he ever ask you if you liked his film? - I love the film! No, I mean, I do. Like, I've watched that film almost as much as the James Dean films. I've watched that film about 50 times and so have the fans. The Room gives. It's like the gift that keeps on giving. People just keep coming back so you have to sort of admit, there's something there, you know? I don't think it's just that he made strange bizarre choices all the way through. I think it's partly the magic sauce is that there's so much passion underneath. I mean, there are thousands upon thousands of bad movies that we'll never watch again, but people watch this one over and over and I think it's partly because of the heart and soul underneath. (upbeat jazzy blues music) - He said something, he said, "We're all, at one point, we're outsiders with a dream." Were you an outsider and what was your dream? - Mine? When I started performing? Really, just to make things and be near people that excited me. I started out in the theater, in unconventional theater in New York and was with that theater for 27 years. We'd go there every day and work. We'd open things in process. Once we made things, we'd keep them in repertory and then, after a while, we were pretty much reviled for many years and then we started to get some play with international touring and started getting a reputation and then, through Europe, we kind of were accepted here. - [Sam] Why were you guys reviled in America, initially? - Oh, they just thought what we were doing was bullshit. No, they just didn't think, because the aesthetic was not a polished aesthetic. We were doing things that a lot of us, I was not well-trained as an actor. Most of them came from different disciplines but that was a time in New York, we're talking about the mid-70s, where a lot of people, you know, painters were making music, dancers were making films. It was all mixed up and there was also kind of a subculture that wasn't careerist. They were just doing things for now and that was beautiful training for me. It also, yeah, just you have to do it for your own pleasure and you have to do it to express yourself and then, hopefully, there's like-minded people out there. I think the second that you start thinking too much about what people need, it becomes something else. When I was playing Jesus, I was not cowed because somehow I understood we weren't doing Jesus for all time, we were doing our Jesus, you know? I think whenever you're working on a historic character, a character where you have a really strong reference, it's your take on it. That's all you're responsible for, which is a lot. - Did playing Jesus change any of your views of religion? - Absolutely. And for how I'm making things because it was one of the most demanding things that I've done. - But, Willem, what do you do because like, you played Jesus, or like the vampire in Nosferatu, those are based on real characters but you know, who knows how Jesus looked or behaved or whatever, so the pressure's off but like, have you ever had like a real-life character where-- - I don't know that the pressure's off. (chuckling) - Right. - Well, you know, I mean, that kind of pressure. (chuckling) It's your take. It's not like, you had a certain look and they're like, "You need to look right. "You don't look like." You know what I mean? - I made the movie about Pasolini in Italy. - Yeah, right! There you go. - And he was a beloved figure and I did feel that responsibility but I thought it's just crazy enough that so many people of, you know, he's a revered figure but it takes a couple of crazy Americans to make a movie about an Italian cultural hero but we had so much support from his family and from people around him. I was wearing his clothes. We were shooting the actual places. There were so many people that were supportive that that really helped. They were like little touchstones. They were like little relics that we had and the support of the people. Similarly, like this movie The Florida Project, that's out now. One of the most beautiful things about that is Sean Baker, the director, knows how to mix actual things with fiction. We were shooting in an operating motel and we were there, basically living with those people and what helped-- - You stayed in the thing? No! - I didn't stay there at night. I didn't stay there at night but during the day, I'd go there and I didn't have a trailer. I had my little room and I was next to Troy and I was next to so-and-so and so-and-so. - Yeah, yeah. - I'd talk to them. They'd talk to me. You know, those people became my people and I think the lesson for me there was that always has to happen. When you approach something, you know, you have to close the difference between them and us and they become you, you know, and then you have some sort of authority and some sort of stake and you're not going to be egotistical or exploitative, you know? That's what was so beautiful, really, guided by Sean in this experience because the generosity of those people, opening themselves up and letting us be at their place to mix with them and kind of tell their story was, I think, what gives the film some integrity. You come on this property again and you won't be leaving it, you understand? - I don't know what you're talking about! - You don't know what I'm talking about? You're gonna play it that way, huh? (grunting) - Hey! - All right. Charlie Coachman of Cherry Hill, New Jersey. - You can't keep that! That's my license. - I'm gonna call your name into the County Sheriff. Now, you get the fuck out of here! - Sam, is there any kind of character you would refuse to play? You play a pretty bigoted guy in Three Billboards. Did you hesitate? - I get all these rednecks. Green Mile. - Yeah. (laughing) At least you don't have to wear the hideous brown teeth that go along with it. Tom was very generous. That was my first, one of my first studio movies. Tom was very generous. I had to spit in his face. - We had this guy coming in, like oh, this genius guy's gonna come in to play this other thing. That was a great set. - That was a great set. It was like doing a play. - It was a bunch of guys who loved each other. We came out of our trailers for scenes that we were not in in order to watch what you were doing. - You went to Hollywood Boulevard to put your hands in the concrete and you could have gone home. They sent you away and you came back to do off-camera. You came back to do off-camera. - That's because Frank Darabont will shoot 16-hour days and eat every meal standing up. - Yeah, but you could have gone home and you came back. You're very generous that way. - Well, it's only three blocks away. (laughing) - So, let's talk about playing those bigots. Have you ever said no to one because you just couldn't bear the character? - I think the pedophile thing is something I can't mess with. That's something that's too-- I did that once. But, they're always trying to throw me on a horse. You know, it's weird because I'm a city kid. I, for some reason, I have an affinity for it and I've dated some Southern girls and so it's-- I watched Coal Miner's Daughter maybe too many times, you know, and Tender Mercies, you know. - Do you take those characters home with you or do they affect you in a negative way? - No, I don't. I go home and watch The Simpsons or something. You do live with it in your mind. Obviously, it stays with you. - You're working. You're working. It's work. - It's working. Gary's played some rednecks, you know. - I've played some scary people. - When's the bail hearing? - I asked the judge not to give her bail on account of her previous marijuana violations and the judge said, "Sure." - You fucking prick! - You do not call an officer of the law a fucking prick in his own station house, Mrs. Hayes, or anywhere, actually. - What's with the new attitude, Dixon? Your mama been coachin' ya? - No, my Mama doesn't do that. - That's funny, you were saying about people playing iconic, very famous people. - Yeah, yeah. - I mean, you know Churchill is arguably the greatest Briton who ever lived, you know, to many and they have an idea of who he is and they've seen these pictures but do they really know who he is? Are they remembering Churchill or are they remembering Albert Finney as Churchill? Or Robert Hardy as Churchill? I think I was somewhat contaminated by those other actors. - In England, there are much more mixed feelings about Churchill than certainly in America. - True. - When I was growing up, there were those who admired him and there was a dissenting view. Did you come away with more mixed feelings about Churchill from your research? - No, I came away with enormous admiration for him. He's incomparable to any figure. Lincoln, possibly. Lincoln is the closest, I think. Here's a man, 50 years in politics. He wrote 50 books. The Nobel Prize for literature. Painted 540 paintings. Had 16 exhibitions at The Royal Academy. Flip-flopped twice, commanded in four wars. - Flip-flopped politically. - Yeah. Certainly, his mind and ingenuity took us through, he navigated that, very cleverly, the Second World War. I mean, it's a towering achievement. Just the life. - How did you uncorrupt yourself from those other performances? - I went to the footage and I saw a man who was energized and had vitality. He looked like a baby. He had a cherubic face, a sort of naughty schoolboy grin with a sparkle in his eye. He was marching ahead of everyone. It was like moving through space with a fixity of purpose, you know, an energy. He has been played as a sort of grumpy man born in a bad mood, a grumpy curmudgeon drunk with a whiskey and a cigar. I didn't set out deliberately to be different but the man that I saw in this footage was different to some of the ways that he has been represented. - Christian Bale called you about the fat suit? Your fat suit? Didn't he call you? - He called me about the jowls because he said, "Man, that makeup's good." - [Tom] How did you handle the four hours every day? Four in, one out. That's usually about what it is. - [Gary] Yeah, four in, one out. - Was it prosthetics? A bunch of stuff? - I had two people working on me at the same time and with great patience and humor, we got through it and of course, there's that exciting moment when, three hours in, or two hours-15, you start to see in the mirror. It was a lovely way in and the interesting thing is, by the time I was ready and dressed, the crew arrived and the other actors and we would rehearse and I came to the set as Churchill. So, Joe Wright, the director, didn't see Gary for three months. - Hitler will not insist on outrageous terms. He will know his own weaknesses. He will be reasonable. - When will the lesson be learned? When will the lesson be learned? How many more dictators must be wooed? Appeased? Good God! Given immense privileges, before we learn? You cannot reason with a tiger when your head is in its mouth! - Tom, you've made documentaries about World War II. You did Saving Private Ryan. Have you thought about Churchill? Would you ever imagine playing him yourself? - Oh, dear Lord, no. That's for not-- that would be like me going and playing a Welsh coal miner or something like that. (laughing) I don't think that's good casting. Hey, how about that? - Is there anybody that you would like to play that you haven't? - No, I don't, I must say, I don't operate that way. I mean, I'm not saying something wouldn't come across the desk and I'd say, "Oh, my Lord, I never even imagined this," but no. I think that is an inorganic approach to, I think, what we do, which is very instinctive. We have to have some, what do they call it, a coup de foudre? A lightning bolt has to hit you and then suddenly, you can't get it out of your head. There are themes, though, however, that I would love to be able to examine. I made this one movie, Cast Away, because I wanted to examine the concept of four years of hopelessness in which you have none of the requirements for living, which is food, water, shelter, fire, and company. But, it took us six years in order to put together the alliance that would actually examine that the way it was and I only had a third of it and Bill Broyles only had a third of it, so we had two-thirds of this examined theme and then, nothing happened until Bob Zemeckis comes along and provided that other third. That's the stuff that ends up-- - What do you mean, you only had a third of it? - Well, I had that original idea. I said, a guy-- I was reading an article about FedEx and I realized that 747s filled with packages fly across the Pacific three times a day, filled with nothing but packages and I just thought, what happens if that goes down? What's lost? Packages? Oh, except maybe, so then, it's not-- - Whose idea was the volleyball? - Wilson! - No, that was Bill Broyles. I had the search for the five elements and I had the logic of how he ended up there. - Because you need-- I did 127 Hours, another guy isolated. - Yeah. - Until they figured out, oh, he has the video camera and he can externalize the thoughts. Danny was like, "I don't know how to do it." Simon Beaufort, who was the writer, wouldn't write it until they figured that out. And the volleyball, that's what you need. - Well, Bill had the volleyball. Bill Broyles, who wrote it, but he had me paint a face on it to give myself company and Bob said, "No, it's gotta come out of your own blood." So, he made it an accident out of a bloody hand. So, it's like my offspring is there in order to talk to. - That's how Wilson was born? - That's how Wilson was born. - You lost a lot of weight quickly for that because I remember, in Green Mile, you were talking about it. Then, you had to lose it quick. - [Tom] I had a whole year. - You had to get into all that method-- - We shot the fat half of the movie and then, we took a year off-- - Oh, one year! - Didn't he make the Harrison Ford thing? - Bob made What Lies Beneath with Harrison Ford and Michelle Pfeiffer, with the same crew in order to keep everybody together-- - And you dieted! You tortured yourself! - I went off and grew a beard, you know, as long as Interstate 10 and lost every pound I possibly could. - Wow. - I don't recommend it. It's no way to live. It's better to stay trim. Better to stay in that Jesus shape all year round. (laughing) Every now and then, you have to comment on the absurdity of what you do for a living. - Absolutely! You know, we're grown men, you know? - Like in England. It always drives me nuts in England because you think, oh, we're gonna go shoot this movie at Pinewood Studios or Shepperton Studios and it has this patina of class and distinction and Alec Guinness and David Lean and you get there and it looks like an abandoned gas-works. (laughter) It's just one of the most hideous, uncomfortable, cold, dank places on the planet. - Just corridors and old sinks. - Yet, you put on colorful clothes and come in and bounce around the set and you're like, this is silly, you know? - I want to come back to something you just said, which is, you know, you're drawn to certain themes. There's one thing that hasn't been explored in film, not for a while, which is the big issue Hollywood is dealing with: sexual harassment. Should it be and what should you, as guys, be doing about this now? - Should it be what? - [Stephen] Explored by Hollywood as a theme? - Absolutely. Yeah, yeah. - Well, you know, it's horrible stuff that's going on. It's depressing and it's sad because, obviously, some of these people are very talented and it's depressing that, if they're predators, then, of course, they have to go down but it's fucking sad and depressing. - Has it surprised you, what's come out? - No, no. Because look, there's a lot of reasons people do this for a living. Making a movie is a life experience that can create an awful lot of joy. You can meet the person you fall in love with. You can laugh your heads off. You can make the best friend you've ever had. You can work with one of your heroes. That's the good stuff that can happen on a movie. The bad stuff can happen on a movie as well. There's some people that go into this business because they got off on having power and the most times they feel the most powerful, which is why they went into the business, is when they're making, you know, I mean hitting on. I don't necessarily mean completely sexual, on somebody that's underneath them. There are predators absolutely everywhere. There are some that I must say, "Really? Wow!" But I mean, the big Magilla, the one that started it all off, it's just, well-- - Harvey, you mean. - [Tom] Yeah. - Have you seen anything like that happen and have you taken action or then, have you regretted not taking action? - We produced a project in which someone said there is an element of harassment that's going on here and as soon as we heard, you gotta jump right in. You talk to every one of the guilds and find out what happened and you go immediately there. There's stuff that happens on a set that can be really inappropriate and there can be that type of predatory aspect on a set because you think well, we're in the circus and we're on the road, so therefore, do the rules really apply? They don't really apply? There's the other aspect of it is that, it's "Come try to get this job from me. "You want me to give you a job? "Come on. "Come prove to me that you want this job." That's a sin and that's against the law and that is a degree of harassment and predatory behavior that goes against an assumed code of ethics. I think eventually, I think everybody who has an office or a production office, above the coffeemaker or the copy machine, is going to have a code of ethics in behavior. If you don't follow these, you will not work here. That's not necessarily gonna be a bad thing. Somebody said, I don't know who it was, said, "What, is it too late to change things?" No, it's never too late to change things. It's never too late to learn new behaviors. That's the responsibility of anybody who wants to obey a code of professional ethics. - Do you all agree with that? James? - Yeah! If they change it, yeah, of course! Of course! Any situation where, you know, one group of people is being taken advantage of or treated differently, then, you know, it needs to change. It's everybody's responsibility to step up. Of course! (upbeat jazzy blues music) - What's been your own toughest moment as an actor, whether you're talking about that fear or something else? Have you had a particularly tough moment? - On The Circle. - Really? What happened in The Circle? - On my second to last day, I had a big speech that basically put the whole movie and the narrative in context for the audience who weren't listening for the last two hours. It was a really important moment and I just froze up. I froze up and I forgot the whole thing and I was there on set with Emma Watson, who was amazing about it. I literally found myself in basically an 01-Acting class with Emma Watson trying to say, "Just remember, just remember the lines. "What are your intentions? "What are your motivations?" I just couldn't, I couldn't get it. It was embarrassing. - [James] How'd you get through it? How'd you get through it? - Well, they had to-- - [Sam] Cue cards? - They had to shoot it chunk by chunk but, at the same time, I had Emma Watson behind just trying to mouth the lines. I just couldn't. I couldn't, I didn't understand it and I had to re-evaluate this whole thing when I got back into my private time and understand what the issue was. - And what was the issue? - The issue was fear of schedule. I have a fear of schedule. I've only just started my career and this is the first year in which I've worked on projects back-to-back. I've never had the opportunity in my career before. So, one of the things that I picked up was that I'm now viewing my life in chunks. I'm filming Star Wars in 2017 and I've got another to do in 2020-- - It's adorable when the kids experience this, isn't it? (laughing) - It's mad! I've never experienced it before because where I grew up and how I grew up is a day-by-day situation. You know, it's class every day. You know, it's church on a particular day. But now, it's like you've got this schedule that's six, seven months down the line and you're now viewing your life in chunks. Sometimes, you forget to rest. Your mind is constantly going. - Is it a thing where you feel like you have to be responsible, you know, for an entire year, you're gonna have to be a certain amount of-- - Yeah, yeah, it's that. So, you overwork. You know that you've got time to prepare for the role but, I guess, you know, I'm a young man. I try to just do the testosterone thing and just juggle and have it all going at the same time. - Yeah, yeah. - Trying to learn for this, trying to be prepped for that, training for that and I never understood my limits. - James, you do a little juggling. - [James] Not any more! (laughing) - You said recently you hit a wall. - I did. You juggle long enough, you drop some balls. I mean, not drop balls but it's just, it's not actually like that. It's more like-- - [Willem] It's okay. You can drop some balls when you've got so many in the air. - Whatever the metaphor, it's more like I was doing that. I was holding onto work because it was where I felt the most safe and it was just like not even being aware of that. It was just like, I need more. I need to fill this up. Subconsciously, it was just like that's what I know the best and that's where I feel most comfortable and then realizing, after a while, it's sort of diminishing returns. Doing so many things, for me, was actually not comforting me anymore. I realized fewer things with more attention, with people that I really love working with and care about, that that will give me exactly what I was seeking by doing so many things. - I had just under a year to think about Churchill and we had four weeks rehearsal in a rehearsal room, with props, with furniture, saying the words out loud, with the actors that you're going to be doing the scene with. - That's awesome! - Discussing what works, what doesn't work. I have to say, you know, I go in and out. I lose my love for it. I lose my love for acting because you get there, you're supposed to have a relationship with a person that you've only met the day before, you don't really rehearse. You kind of block with camera, sometimes, out of the gate. And you go, "You wanna go? "You wanna do one?" "Yeah." You do a take. "That was good, that was good. "You want one more?" Well, I've come all this way. (laughing) We've gotta move on. It's amazing anything is any good. I just get so sad working like that and go, "Really?" - Did you ever think of quitting acting? - Many times. - So, then, where do you find the passion for it again, or do you? - When you do something that comes, as Mr. Hanks here said, it's not, you know, Dracula was never on my bucket list. It was Coppola, which made it interesting. It came across the desk, so you're at the mercy of the industry, the imagination of the people that are casting you, and they go, "Oh, yeah, Gary's played these villains. "What about Jim Gordon?" You know, and then a Tinker, Tailor comes in, or a Churchill, or an opportunity to work as I've done with, sadly, the late Tony Scott that I worked with, and I've worked with Ridley and you work with some of these people and you get re-energized and inspired and you remember why you do it. - Gary, let me ask you. A month of rehearsal sounds amazing. - It does. - It's almost unheard of. - Yeah. - I'm sure you and Joe Wright lead the charge on that, like you want to be a part of this movie, this is what we're doing, and all that, but you know, a lot of times you can't do that but I also think, like, sometimes it depends on the type of film. - [Gary] Yeah, yeah. - For example, like, I don't know, maybe you guys had a month of rehearsal for The Florida Project. I don't know. But, like, I remember doing another Florida movie, Spring Breakers, and part of the vibe of that is immersing into the environment and bringing the real people in and so, I really don't think a month of rehearsal with like, non-actors, is gonna help-- - But that was Harmony's film, in which you were superb. - I heard you watched it and you didn't know it was me. - I had no idea it was you. I said, "God, that creepy-ass guy! "Where'd you find him?" (laughing) And they were like, "It's James Franco!" - If you haven't seen it, it's really a phenomenal film. - Your scenes with the king, for example. The rehearsal for those scenes must have played huge dividends because every beat so tiny and small. You can't find that in, you know, before lunch on the set and then move onto the second half of the scene. - Yeah, we came in and the rhythm and we clicked and just really started to roll from take one. What you're talking about, and I know Harmony and we've often talked about doing something together and I would gladly throw myself into something like that. That is very specific kind of movie that you're talking about and an experience that you're talking about with a director that has a real point of view and a process with the way he likes to work. Just talking about some of those, too, where you feel like you've got to work but you don't want a job. That's that. It's that. - Is there a film that you've seen recently that has revitalized you, or has actually changed your thinking about something, a film this year? - I'm gonna say Get Out. - [Sam] Yeah, that was damn good. - Get Out was 19 things all at once. It was a creepy Twilight Zone movie. It was a stand-up comedy act. It was about two people in love regardless of their station in life. I think it's very hard to make a contemporary movie that actually does capture the zeitgeist and the place that we are in right now. At the end of the day, at the end of that movie, it accomplished something that I had never, ever, ever, ever seen in a movie. There is a dead white woman who has killed herself, right? And there's a black guy with all her blood on him and the police come and he's innocent but what is gonna happen to this guy? And they get out of it, you know, spoiler alert. - You know they reshot the ending? - They did? What was the original one? - He went to jail. - [Sam] Oh, he gets taken to jail, okay. - Have you seen anything that's really impacted you? - When We Were Kings had a big effect on me. I think that there was something about Muhammad Ali. We were talking about fear and joy and you know, Foreman made him wait 10 minutes before he came out. He was trying to psych him out. Ali psychs himself up. He starts shadowboxing, talking to the audience. "Ali, mum-ba-yay!" Ali's scared, you know? He's scared. That guy, Foreman, was the Mike Tyson of that time, and he mustered up the courage, you know. So, when I'm scared and I have stage fright and all that stuff, I think of that. - Were you scared when you went in Three Billboards? - Always! Always scared. Yeah, sure. - [Stephen] Of what? - Of sucking. (chuckling) You know, of all that stuff, you know? You're scared all the time. I mean, I was scared when I was doing the play, Fool For Love, that I would rope shitty when Ed Harris came, because he had done the original production. Thank God I roped good when he came. - You roped good when I came, too. (laughing) - Oh, good, good. - Did you talk about that with Martin McDonagh when you did it or what were those conversations? - I think that I had the luxury of a lot of time and I went down to Southern Missouri and I did some ride-alongs with cops and stuff like that. - That's interesting. (chuckling) - How did they treat you as a celebrity ride-along? - They were great. A guy named Josh McCullen, he taped my lines in a tape recorder. My dialect coach, Liz Himmelstein, found a cop and Martin didn't want much of an accent so I said, "You know, Liz, I think I'm gonna have to tape another cop. "This cop doesn't have enough of an accent." We found another cop, went down and did some ride-alongs. But, I have an acting coach, Terry Knickerbocker. You know, it takes a village. I do a lot of work ahead of time. You don't get to rehearse so you're just ready to go when you get on set. - Do you all do a lot of work ahead of time? - [Willem] It depends. - Yeah, it depends. Sometimes, you have to. - Sometimes, you don't have to. - [Stephen] When? - You know, I think, for me anyway, you just look for the triggers and you look for the thing that gives you the confidence to say, "I am this guy." You can receive what's happening. We were talking about different kinds of movies. I tend to make a lot of movies where you try to capture these moments and you don't get time to craft things, you know. And that's interesting but to start out with to overcome this fear, overcome this uncertainty, kind of direct your energies, you need to hang onto something. Sometimes, it can be something as simple as a costume. I always go back to Wild At Heart. I had these teeth. They were everything. I put those teeth in my mouth and it kept me from closing my mouth. I always had this expression and I felt like I knew who the guy was, you know? Other times, you feel totally insecure about approaching being this person until you create a history, until you make things happen, until you learn things that make you have a shift in your head to feed the imagination. You can't just imagine things from a dead stop. You've got to make something, you know, and then you turn it into something. - That's how I felt working on Detroit because it was interesting, the detachment to the project, and not enough time was a part of the creative process, especially for Kathryn. We didn't know everything that was going to happen on a day-to-day basis, so there was always a feeling of channeling that very nervous energy, that feeling of being fearful. - [James] She fosters that. - Yeah, she fosters that into the scene and so, you realize, after about two weeks of getting used to it that it's vital. It's a part of performance for this specific project whereas, I'll go on something else, I might get time and I'll use it. - With Lars Von Trier, he always says, first of all, he doesn't want you to know where the camera is. He prohibits rehearsal. His mantra is, we only need one. But, you know, then you watch something like what Gary did, it's a different kind of movie. - If you could put one movie, one performance, not your own, in a time capsule, I know you're going to say several but choose one that's particularly meaningful for you that you've seen that's impacted you. - [Sam] Deer Hunter. - [Stephen] Deer Hunter? Why? - It had a huge impact on me, I think, when I was a kid. Yeah. I saw it with my father and my father kind of looked like DeNiro in that. He had a beard and a mole and stuff. - John? - Tom Hardy in The Warrior was, to me, just a powerful performance. Personally, I found myself engrossed in a narrative that made me reflect into my own life, just because of the versatility of roles that Tom Hardy has had back-to-back is shocking to me. - Tom, what about you? - Well, I'd go to Robert Duvall on any number of characters that he's done, just because he did not look like the movie star that was supposed to be and he did some very subtle stuff with Coppola. When I go back and examine the breadth of everything he did, he is, I think-- A lot of what we have to figure out as actors is, one is particular to us and the other one is particular to the movie. Particular to us is the behavior. We have to get the behavior down and it's not our behavior. As a matter of fact, if it is your behavior, you'd better go outside yourself and find something so that you're not just being you, although sometimes it doesn't matter so much. But, you have to get the behavior down. The other part of it is the protocol, meaning like, how the people live in the world that they live in. What is required of them? What is their job? How much do they sleep and eat? Robert Duvall, I think, he always finds that behavior and protocol. I think the best of them all is Tom Hagen in The Godfather. You know, he's not the Italian. He's not even related to them. He's just a kid that they found in the street but he becomes this guy who is always explaining the legal aspect of it. - If we're taking more than one, I'll say DeNiro is Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, and Raging Bull. Just the prime, you know, collaborations with Scorsese and you know, Goodfellas, but those three, like, I've never seen DeNiro behave in the way that he did in Mean Streets. It's just like this exuberance of youth. He's just like ready to go and it's like the first collaboration with this guy that you know they'll go on to have all these incredible things together. Then, Taxi Driver? There's just never been anything like that. The kind of preparation we're talking about, you know, that's like Raging Bull, that's the role everyone talks about gaining the weight or whatever. That's the role where you're like, oh, that's what preparation looks like. - Willem, name one. - Frankenstein movies, Boris Karloff. - [All] Oh, wow, yeah! - How about you, Gary? - George C. Scott, his work in the Kubrick film. - [Tom] Yeah, yeah, yeah. - A very long question, speed round here. Just a very brief answer. If you couldn't act, you all have hobbies. What would you pursue? Tom, I know you've been writing. - Yeah, okay. I'll go with that. Some brand of daily journalism, like a column. Goings On About Town kind of thing. I'd like that. - Oh, interesting. Well, we're very happy to hire you at Hollywood Reporter. John, how about you? - Probably architecture. - James? - If I wasn't an actor? Director. (laughing) What? He's a writer! - You're probably gonna get both anyway. You know what I mean? - [Stephen] What about you? - Pumping gas. I've got no Plan B. Who knows, man? Bar-backing, busing tables. - Cook, or a farmer. - [Stephen] Oh! - What about yoga? He's good at that. - A yogi? (chuckling) That's my practice. - Last, but not least. - Well, I have, my sort of hobby is I do 19th Century wet plate photography. - Wow! - Wow! - So, I would do that. I could do that until the end of time. - I envy you that passion. - Well, this was such a great round table. Thank you very, very much. - Thank you. - It was fun! - Thank you. - You guys were so excellent. (upbeat jazzy blues music) - Ready? - [Director] Okay, quiet on set. - And I look down the lens. - Let's do it! (upbeat jazzy blues music) - Hi, I'm Margot Robbie. - Bryan Cranston. - Robert Pattinson. - John Boyega. - I'm Sam Rockwell. - Willem Dafoe. - Emma Stone. - Allison Janney. - Guillermo del Toro. Thank you for watching. - Thank you. - Thank you for watching. - Thanks for watching The Hollywood Reporter. - The Hollywood Reporter. - The Hollywood Reporter. - On YouTube! - On YouTube.
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Channel: The Hollywood Reporter
Views: 3,916,470
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: close up, thr, the hollywood reporter, hollywood reporter, entertainment, hollywood, interview, tom hanks, james franco, gary oldman, sam rockwell, john boyega, willem dafoe, the disaster artist, darkest hour, the post, the florida project, detroit, three billboards outside ebbing missouri, actors, actors roundtable, roundtable, thr roundtable, close up with thr, celebrity, thr roundtables, film, movie, oscar, 2018 roundtables, oscars, actor, the hollywood reporter roundtable, 2018
Id: egzvLWeMK_U
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 53min 46sec (3226 seconds)
Published: Tue Jan 30 2018
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