Last Saturday, I was lucky enough to attend a screening of
the new film, Out of the Furnace,
which was followed by a Q&A with co-star Casey Affleck and the film’s
writer/director Scott Cooper. With The Hollywood Reporter’s extremely competent
Scott Feinberg moderating, the discussion ranged from the power of performance, to the bafflement of personal attacks in reviews, to what it means to hear “Thank
You” from a fan.
Scott, can you talk
about the root of the idea for the film?
Scott Cooper: A script
was sent to me by the producers and it was very well written, but not something
I wanted to film. I politely declined, but they said, ‘Well, why don’t you
write a script about a man who gets out of prison and avenges the loss of a
loved one?’ I know people who’ve been in prison and having lost a sibling
myself, I felt I could tell a very personal story about that narrative. So I
told them if I could personalize it in some way then I certainly would. And the
result was what you saw this evening.
I had been reading a great deal about Braddock
[Pennsylvania, where the film is set] and it reminded me of small towns in
western Virginia where I grew up. I thought I could set a story there that
would really drip with atmosphere. The town, like so many small towns, had
fallen on great economic distress, and the courage of the people who stayed in
the town was emblematic of the best of the human spirit. I just felt connected
to them. It came to a point where I said, ‘If we don’t shoot in Braddock, I
won’t make the film.’
Casey, how did this
come across your radar, and was it immediately something you connected with?
Casey Affleck: I read
the script and got all the way through it, and if that happens, it’s usually
pretty good. [Crowd laughs.] I usually get a quick gut feeling one way or the
other, and I take the next six weeks questioning myself. But I knew right away
from talking to Scott that I was on board.
People may not know
that Scott started out as an actor, so Casey, do you think that enhances his
ability to get great performances out of actors? [Cooper’s first film, Crazy Heart, garnered an Oscar for Jeff
Bridges and an Oscar nomination for Maggie Gyllenhaal.]
Affleck: I had
not seen Scott’s work on The X-Files
[crowd explodes with laughter], before I agreed to do the film, but more than
anything, it was the way Scott talked about the characters. The way he inspired
me and made me think of things I hadn’t thought about. For myself and other
people I know, the decision to take on a role is largely based on a
conversation you have with the director and whether or not they say the right
things. Needless to say, Scott said the right things and had a great understanding of the material.
Actors don’t like to say it, but any performance in a movie can be made great
or terrible by the director. Any praise an actor gets, any awards… half should
be given to the director, truly.
Cooper with Christian Bale |
Scott, Christian is
obviously a very big part of the movie, I’m wondering what led you to work
with him.
Cooper: I wrote Crazy Heart for Jeff Bridges, without
even knowing him. I wrote this part for Christian without knowing him. I write
with people in mind, and someday I’m not going to get the person I want [crowd
laughs], but it’s worked so far. Christian has a great deal of versatility, but
I had never seen him play the type of vulnerability and gentle nature I needed
with this part. So I thought that’d be interesting. Christian is also a really
wonderful non-verbal actor. He can say much more with a look than I can as a
writer. Most actors really want to show you Watch
me act, and too many times, in my opinion, those performances are awarded.
But I was interested in the restraint Christian and Casey could bring. The
whole film is about America over these past five years, with a crumbling
economy, soldiers who return with PTSD, and the fact that we live in a very
violent nation. I thought Casey and Christian could portray that well on
screen.
Casey, you were the
subject of a recent New York Times Magazine profile that was very interesting.
You said you were sort of demoralized about acting, until you did a scene with
Christian in this film. For people who missed the article, could you talk about
that moment?
Affleck: Meh. The
New York Times makes stuff up. [Crowd laughs.] I mean I guess it’s true. I was
talking about the first scene we shot, which was when I go to meet Christian in
the prison. I hadn’t spent much time with him, and we didn’t rehearse, and I
remember doing the scene with him and I was just blown away. He has an enormous
amount of presence and he’s very believable. He doesn’t seem like he’s doing a
whole lot but… you often work with actors who don’t even look at you, they’re
just acting for the camera. Christian is very present. He listens. And it
sucked me into the reality of the moment. After a few takes, he said. ‘So what
do you think?’ and I said, ‘I feel terrible, really lost,’ and he looked at me
and said, ‘Yeah, that’s good, yeah.’
Cooper: Meanwhile
I’m saying, ‘My God, this is genius.’ Casey thinks he’s the worst actor on
Earth. He’s very self-effacing.
Affleck: Well, it
was a nice moment. He was very supportive. After that day, I knew I could
completely trust Scott and Christian.
The fighting is very
convincing in the film. Is that like a side hobby of yours? [Crowd laughs.]
Affleck:
[Laughing] It’s not, I’m not a big fighter. I’ve probably been in two fights in
my life, and they didn’t go as well as they did for my character. Scott wanted
the fighting to look sloppy and realistic, not rehearsed. A real, brutal street
fight. So yeah, it took a little time to get in that shape.
Cooper: He’s very
self-deprecating. He worked very hard
to look that way. The fights were choreographed heavily… it’s all a testament
to Casey’s skill.
Cooper with Willem Dafoe and Casey Affleck |
There are a lot of
moments in the movie that really stay with you. And Scott, I’m wondering if
there was ever a moment when you thought, ‘Okay, wow, I think we got something
here.’
Cooper: When
you’re sitting in the kitchen of this small house in Braddock, Pennsylvania and
Christian Bale says to Casey Affleck ‘Come on man, why don’t you work for a
living,’ and you see Casey’s reaction… those aren’t things you can do in your
trailer. Those aren’t things you did in your hotel room the night before. It’s
two actors at the height of the craft. So committed and connected to the world
of the script. I say this sincerely, but I would go home everyday from this
movie and think, ‘Wow, these actors… this is as good as it gets.’
I want to talk about
the feedback you both have received from your peers concerning this movie. A
lot of very respected people in the community have championed this film. If you
can set aside humility for a moment, I’d love to hear which ones meant the most
to you.
Cooper: Wow. William
Friedkin, who’s a cinematic hero of mine, hosted a screening for the Directors
Guild, and after, he grilled me about personal responsibility and what it means
to show this kind of violence on screen. And after the discussion he turned to
the DGA and said the film had restored his faith in American cinema. When one
of your heroes tells you that, or Michael Mann tells you that, or Robert
Duvall, or a soldier who has suffered PTSD and thanks you after a screening… no
matter what happens to the film, I’ll take those words to my grave.
Affleck: I say
this with no false modesty, but I try not to pay too much attention to what
people are saying about a movie. If you’re getting horrible reviews and someone
makes fun of you personally in print, you’re mad and thinking, ‘Well, fuck
them, they don’t know what they’re talking about’ but when you get a nice
review from the same person, you better be prepared to say, ‘Well, fuck them,
they don’t know what they’re talking about,’ because it’s the same person.
[Crowd laughs.] I’ve had A LOT of the former, so I decide to just not read
them. And then someone sends you an email and says, ‘Hey man, don’t worry about
these bad reviews,’ and you’re like, ‘Motherfucker!’ So you go on Rotten
Tomatoes for two seconds and –
Cooper: Oh you
can’t do that. You’ve got some critic with 12 cats, writing shit full of false
assumptions, with no idea of what it means to make a film. Fuck them. The
personal attacks, I just don’t get them. Dislike the movie, okay. But to make
it personal… it’s beyond me. [Crowd cheers.]
Affleck: It cuts
both ways. But we had a screening in Santa Barbara and after the Q&A an
older woman came down and introduced herself, and she was really crying and just thanking us over and over. She went on and
on and… it does seem preposterously proud to tell that story, but it really did
have an affect on me. I know there will be a slew of other, negative things
said about me and this movie but it’s nice to know there’s one 75-year-old
woman in Santa Barbara who says, ‘Thank you for making this movie.’
That is totally awesome. I've only been to a few Q&As. I'm not sure if I told you about it. I don't remember. Still, that makes a screening more enjoyable.
ReplyDeleteOh I agree, a solid Q&A can definitely raise my appreciation for a film. Thankfully, I already loved Out of the Furnace before they started taking. But I enjoy it much more now.
DeleteInteresting Q&A--thanks for capturing it for us! I'll probably see the film this weekend.
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading! I'd be interested to hear your take on the film.
DeleteAwesome post! It's interesting to read Affleck's comments on that prison scene with Bale. I thought they both nailed it, so it's kind of shocking to learn that Affleck felt lost in that moment.
ReplyDeleteThanks man! I thought that was crazy too. They both seemed so in it. Just goes to prove that acting is all about REacting.
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