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OLIVER STONE, JOSH BROLIN INTERVIEW
And Elizabeth Banks, Richard Dreyfuss, Thandie Newton, Stanley Weiser, Rob
Corddry, & Scott Glenn for "W."
Emmanuel Itier
Film Editor
Senior Writer
Emmanuel Itier: What do you think George W. Bush would think about this
film, and was there ever any attempt at contact about that?
Oliver Stone: Frankly, it's very difficult to have a movie made on your
life, for you or for me. It's not something that you would perceive in the
same way. It's just the nature of our being, and so I have to look at this
with irony and I would only hope that one day he might be able to see the
film because I think that Josh (Brolin) gives a great performance, and I
think that Liz (Banks) gives a great performance as his wife, Laura. So I
think he'd enjoy it someday and be wise enough to surrender to it.
EI: Would you be nervous about his seeing it in any way?
OS: No, I think he's made his position in general clear in the last eight
years on many things. I think he would not, perhaps in this present
political state, approve of this movie, but that's not the point. The
point is, I think, that the movie tries to understand him, and I also
think that's with the good, the bad, and the ugly. We try to make him a
human being, and I've said repeatedly that I've tried to be fair and
balanced and passionate above all, about this subject matter, not to take
sides and not to be my political self, which is my private citizen side. I
feel like I am a dramatist and this is what I do professionally, and I try
to keep it as a craft.
EI: Josh (Brolin), can you talk about the transformation into this role,
and can you talk about your research for the role as well? Or was all the
information in the script for you?
Josh Brolin: The script changed a few times. That's just how it goes. When
you do an Oliver Stone film,
you
just lend yourself to everything the absurdity of life. I have all of my
peers up here, so it's kind of embarrassing to talk about research and how
you stay in character and how you immerse yourself. I just spring-boarded
off of a lot of fear that I wouldn't be able to do this. When Oliver first
approached me about this, I thought, Why would you want to do a movie
about that when we can watch this guy on CNN? I had a very cosmetic view
of Bush and of Oliver, to be frank. Once I read the script, I was amazed.
Usually, when you do a biopic, you follow about ten years of their life.
You don't get to go from 21 to 58 and then suddenly, while I'm looking
down thinking, Why would you want to do a movie about this? After reading
it and talking to Oliver at length, I'm looking up and saying, This is the
greatest challenge that an actor could ever have. Can I live up to this?
So anything that I did was based in fear in pulling it off. To answer an
earlier question, we asked W. to be a technical advisor on the film, but
he declined. I'm telling the truth.
OS: I'd like to point out that Stanley Weiser, who's here with us, is the
screenwriter of the movie. He was the first one to plunge into this vast
and raw batch of books that finally started to break on the Bush
administration in 2003 and 2004. I think that Stanley did a wonderful job
of putting this all together, because it's a vast amount of material. The
investigative reporters who did this deserve a lot of credit. There's very
few of them. There are less than a dozen, and they�re out there and we
thank them. They really made this possible. We wouldn't have been able to
look past the window of the Bush administration.
EI: Oliver, yesterday you mentioned a website that will be coming up
related to the movie
OS: It'll be coming up Friday the 17th. We're working on it. Stanley is
working hard on it. Researchers are working very hard on it, and it'll be
pretty good. A lot of the stuff you will find will shock you. You don't
know a lot about Bush, even if you think you know. Everyone, like Josh
said, has an opinion about the poor guy, but we don't know much.
EI: I felt strangely sad for the guy at the end of the movie sympathy.
OS: This means that you have a heart. You might be a journalist, but you
have a heart.
EI: No sitting president has ever been so lampooned by Hollywood. What�s
the fascination with this man for Hollywood?
Stanley Weiser: Is it Hollywood or is it the media at large? This is the
only movie that's ever been done about this president. What about Palin
and Saturday Night Live? That's what it's there for. That's what the
people are there for, in order to exaggerate those things so that we can
look at it and get perspective.
We're
constantly finding new perspective. We need to because they're our
leaders. What we haven't done what the Europeans are great at and what
we're starting to do now, I guess, maybe because for the last seven or
eight years we've been starting to get proactive again with protests and
this and that, but the thing about this president forget Hollywood but
just the media at large is that he's an exaggeration that he even admits.
When you do this whole thing, it's fun to watch. It's an exaggeration.
What we try to do is create a drama with the realities of those
exaggerations but not make it into buffoonery. They've done that
themselves, but we haven't.
EI: Was it a challenge to make him sympathetic? I think Laura Bush makes
him sympathetic in this movie.
Elizabeth Banks: I don't think it was difficult to make him sympathetic. I
think what Oliver did really well in this movie is remind us that the
office of the Presidency, no matter who is in it, is a really dramatic and
difficult place to be. He's such a great student of American politics and
realizes just what a fascinating spot the Leader of the Free World is. I
think that George Bush has provided us with a lot of fodder. I met George
Bush and he told me that he hates to watch himself on television. I think
that's totally obvious, but we have to remember that he is a man. His desk
is all incoming madness, and that's what I think Oliver reminded us of.
Regardless of who's in that office, it's a crazy job, and we elect
personalities now to run the country. I'm reminded of David Letterman who
has these bits where he does Great Moments in Presidential Speeches, and
Bush is the absolute worst at speaking. There's nothing presidential about
him. So when you think about the office of the Presidency and how
difficult that is and what any of us would be like in that spot, it's very
easy to sympathize with him.
SW: Aside from the office of the presidency, if you look at Bush up close,
which is what I did after reading many books, you'll see that he's ruled
by the same emotions that we are dread, fear, and uncertainty. He masks
that in an overwhelming way, but the need to find religion and to eclipse
or be as good as his fatherI had to park all of my politics at the door
because, in writing this, I couldn't even bear to listen to George Bush on
the television before. I'd have to turn it off. But if you really study
him and you read all these books you see that he's a person like us in
many ways, unlike us in many ways, but that he has underlying fears and
insecurities and pain I was trying to explore that pain. People only see
the comic side. Fahrenheit 9/11 dealt with the lampoonery, and it's a
brilliant movie, and so our attempt at this was that Oliver and I realized
that we wanted to tell a different story that showed what it is to be up
close and personal in his footsteps, to know what he had to endure, what
gave him such massive ambition to try and rehabilitate his image, and to
put his outlaw self in jail. The guy has tremendous willpower. He was able
to stop drinking on a dime. He was able to stop smoking on the golf
course, and he's made one colossal mistake after another, but his
intention, as most people's aremost people don't wake up in the morning
and say,
Well,
I want to kill as many as possible. He's a lot like Ahmadinejad. I�m sure
if you got to know Ahmadinejad up close and you believe in his beliefs,
you would think that he's a pretty good guy who wants to do good for his
people, but there's an absolute blind fundamentalism that develops and
congeals, and then you cannot empathize. An empathy deficit occurs.
They're convinced that they're a 100% right, and that's what hijacked our
nation down the road. I want to say one other thing, which is a paid
political announcement: That is that Sarah Palin is George Bush on
steroids with less brains and much more dangerous.
EI: I found that even with all the family issues, it was sad to see all
the bodies littered afterwards.
SW: That's how history goes.
OS: Please note that James Cromwell plays Dad. That plays a big role in
this, a huge role. I hope you noticed. Can you talk about that? Because
the family dynamic was raised?
James Cromwell: Well, it�s an easy thing to lampoon. W. does lend himself
to character. It's a much more difficult thing to create a whole human
being. You couldn't leave out those aspects that lend themselves to
caricature and lampoon, and have an accurate portrait of the man. The fact
that people are moved means that we succeeded, that Josh succeeded, and
Oliver succeeded in finding the human being. That's obviously the story,
and that's what Stanley was saying.
EI: Can you talk about working with one of the executive producers,
Oliver, Teresa Cheung?
OS: Teresa Cheung was an executive producer and also happens to be a very
beautiful Chinese actress. She combined both talents. She's a very
educated and world-traveled woman. I'm very proud of her. She plays Miss
China at the end of the movie in the press conference, and she certainly
appears in the TV commercials. She stands out and she's brilliant.
EI: This isn't the first movie you've made about a president. Did the fact
that he's still in office have a bearing on the project?
OS: Of course. You don't know what's going to happen. You're making the
movie a few months in advance and we knew that, God forbid, there could be
another terrorist attack in the United States. Mr. Bush's preemption
policy could lead to a war in Iran or perhaps even Venezuela. The way that
he thinks we have the right to go anywhere in the world Cuba we might as
well go to Georgia. This thing doesn't end. We have that policy in place,
by the way. He might be leaving in 2009, but believe me, we have an issue
with that policy whether we can afford it not.
EI: What are the challenges of playing a real person?
Thandie Newton: Well, as you'd imagine, one of them is that they're
different from you. I think it was actually better that I had nothing at
all that was comparable to Condoleezza [Rice]. At first, I thought that
Oliver was insane for wanting me to take part, but I also thanked him so
much for asking me to
rise to the challenge because I do believe that I'm a character actress at
heart, so it was very technical. I always go toward a performance looking
for what I can empathize with looking for something that I could feel, but
I couldn't do that with this. She�s such a unique, physical personality,
and so it was really very technical and it was like theater. I had a
wonderful accent coach. It was like preparing for a dance recital because
the way that she moves is very different from myself. We had an incredible
hair and makeup department. We had a wonderful costume designer, and it
was theater. YouTube.com, Wikipedia.com, Amazon.com actually, the best
stuff for me was actually delving into YouTube.com and finding those
little movies that people take with their phones, and seeing Condolezza
Rice when she really thinks she's not being watched. They were the moments
that really helped me. What I was trying to find was the person between
the person that you see in those press conferences and the person who's at
home brushing her teeth in the morning. There is someone in between that
we never see, and that�s what the movie was for me. Obviously, you do all
that technical work and then you come to set and you play. Being with an
actor like Josh being with all of these actors, where we were all
completely immersed and desperate to find truth in something that's so
audacious we went to work and played, and we were given this incredible
context and security, and a very intelligent man watching us do that and
steering us. Then the end result is what you see, but it was the most
technical work that I've ever personally done. I didn't feel. I just
behaved, because I think that's very much what she's like.
EI: Can someone talk about finding the line between impersonation and
characterization? How did you guard against simply impersonating?
JC: I don't think that I made the right choice. I couldn't find a handle
on this guy because I had a lot of judgments on him, and so I had an
analysis of where he was stuck, which was somewhere around here. I laid a
voice on top of that. Oliver didn't say anything and so I thought, Well,
it's going to work.Then we got to the fight scene and he was saying to me,
What are you doing? You're so quiet and still. Come on, get involved. I
said, Well, I can't get involved because I'm a parent and my child is
acting like a jerk. But he kept on pushing me until the voice was
absolutely gone. I mean, my voice was there and I couldn't actually bring
it back. But looking at it now, the entire picture, it would've been a bad
choice because it would've stuck out as if I were making a comment on him,
when really the important thing was the relationship between myself and my
son. So sometimes you have to let that go. People aren't going to see
George Herbert Walker Bush when they see me, but they are going to see a
father and they're going to understand the dynamic that we're trying to go
for, to establish, to explicate the relationship and the affect the
relationship had on his son.
EI: You sort of helped to define the biopic as a genre. When you do a film
like this, do you take that into consideration, or are all the films
separate?
OS: Everyone is separate. Everyone is different. Mr. Bush is as different
from Mr. Nixon as I can think. Mr. Bush has no sense of accountability, it
seems to me, or responsibility. Even when he goes to the hospital, to
Walter Reed, he's got a very good record of going back and being caring
and solicitous, and yet he seems oddly unable to empathize with the
people, the reasons why they were there, the Iraqi victims of this war,
and other people. He seems to have not read history until recently, or to
be able to step outside himself. He's truly involved. An investigative
journalist said to me that he has a tremendous sense of personalization.
He meets [Vladimir] Putin and it's about, He looked into my eyes and I saw
his soul, or whatever. The point is that he personalizes very complex
situations down to Me, and I think he's got a large ego. I think that Josh
really conveyed that I'm the decider concept with [Dick] Cheney and with
other people. He was always the dominant force in the room. People think
that Bush is a lightweight, and that's not quite so. He's a powerful man
that way, and I think that the ego dominates. He, unfortunately,
simplifies complex world issues down to Me and My reaction to things and I
am stronger than dad. I'm making this simple, but in a movie, you've got
two hours to make a point.
EI: Richard (Dreyfuss), Bush is one thing, but Dick Cheney is more
inscrutable than any of the other characters. How did you get inside of
that role?
Richard Dreyfuss: Well, first of all, I think there's some Cheney in all
of us, and that's the actor's job. The way that I usually put it is that
there's Hitler in Jesus, in all of us, and it's the actor's job to bring
them out appropriately. There's such a wealth of information on him and
video about this guy, he wasn't hard to find. I would be very curious to
see the same film in two or three years, because our experience of Bush is
neither empathic nor sympathetic. It was the reaction to terror. We lived
in terror terror unlike almost anything known in American history.
It was quite amazing to me how fast the Bush administration was at
business as usual when it was nothing but the opposite of that. We'll live
with the consequences of those eight years for many years to come.
Oliver
chose to surprise everyone. I think that everyone expected that there
would be a methamphetamine version of the story, and he surprised everyone
by making a legitimate political discussion about something universal
which was a father and a son. I think the problem with making the film now
is the inability to have the character that represents me, you, the ones
who were terrified, and we did things during those eight years which now
we're going to look back on and say were silly or that we were right and
we escaped a bullet. But I told my children to keep their passports
current, know how to get to Canada if I ever call you and tell you, Go to
Canada, because in American history, he had done it in such a way that
there was no argument. If you argued against him, a black spot was put
against your name and people forget that now, but due process was turned
into selective process. If I was running the Democratic campaign right
now, I would love to ask Senator McCain, According to the Solicitor
General under Bush, Senator McCain, were you tortured in Hanoi? because
under the Solicitor General's definition, he wasn't. I think that's what I
yearn to see that kind of public posture that we experience. No one in
this room doesn't know what I'm talking about, whether you're for Bush or
against him. What Oliver found were universals and a very good, high level
of political discussion.
EI: Why is it important to release this film before the election, and is
that intentional?
OS: Ask Scott Glenn, because he's from the Midwest. Seriously, I'm
curious.
Scott Glenn: I think it's important, obviously, in the context of the
coming election, for as much of the history of this administration to be
in front of the people to judge one way or the other. No one can really
predict the future. No one could've predicted that three weeks ago, our
economy and now it looks like the world's economy is going down the toilet
and is probably going to be the single most salient conversational point
through the end of the election. But having said that, I think it's
important to put that out in front of everyone. What I'm gratified with is
that the film, especially Josh and Oliver, managed to humanize the story
of this guy whether you like him or not. I think it's important that we
can all see ourselves in the dark and in the light. I remember one time
that someone asked Dustin Hoffman if there was part that he wanted to play
that he hadn't, and he said, Yeah. I would've always loved to have played
Hitler. They asked what he would've done with that role. He said, I
would've played a man who was a strict vegetarian, and who couldn't stand
cruelty to animals or kids.
I think it's important to remind ourselves that we all walk, to some
extent, in each other's shoes. It's going to be interesting, to me, to see
how this plays in Twin Falls, Idaho or Nampa, Idaho, or Boise or Salt Lake
City. My guess is that when people look down at their feet and see sewer
water coming up over their knees and understand that they don't really
know how to swim, it's going to be the economy that they make the decision
on, and a lot of this other stuff is going to be secondary.
EI: Rob (Corddry), we know you as the funny guy, the comedy guy, What
Happens In Vegas
Rob Corddry: Which was a very important film.
EI: How did you get cast in this film? Is this a nice departure for you to
do an Oliver Stone biopic?
RC: For one thing, there's nothing bad about doing an Oliver Stone bio
picture. Oliver Stone and Ashton Kutcher have been compared a lot to one
another. When I auditioned, Oliver looked at my resume and said, You've
only done comedies. He asked the casting director, Are people just going
to look at him on the screen and just laugh because that's what they're
used to? The casting director said, Yeah. I told Oliver, I said, Look, my
agents spend half their day saying that I am recognizable. I'm sure that
they'd be glad to convince you that I'm not. Here I am.
EI: Why is Bush, in the film, always eating and drinking?
OS: An obsessive personality. Josh should talk about what he went through.
In one scene, he actually ate 26 sandwiches.
JB: I love how it's grown 15 sandwiches.
SW: I have to say that it's documented that Bush would eat like that.
OS: The Altoids story he has them everywhere and will eat like two or
three tins of Altoids a day, constantly.
SW: But he does eat with his mouth open. His favorite meal is a bologna
sandwich on cheese.
JB: Cheetos.
SW: With Cheetos, and he doesn't care if he eats with his mouth open.
JB: To answer your question, I think it's more about the nature of having
to keep moving. It's that ADD thing. It's that and especially, even though
you see it, it's a diversion tactic. Even when he meets Laura, it's
something to do. It's like an actor who needs props until they don't need
the props. He just never got to the point where he didn't need the props.
Then he quit drinking and it was even more so. You quit smoking, you quit
drinking and then what? You run. You bike. You eat.
EB: You've got to be addicted to something.
JB: You go to war I don't know. I'm sure that everyone knows people like
that, and I think he's the extreme version of it. And again, it's not
exaggeration. We've seen it again and again.
EI: The movie is really funny.
OS: Well, tha's why we put Richard Dreyfuss in as Cheney. Elizabeth Banks
has a background in a loose and easy style. Josh was a surprise for me. He
is funny, whether he knows it or not, and is a wonderful actor.
EB: He knows it.
OS: He finds that line. It could�ve been, as he said, parody, and I'm glad
that it didn't go there. He's credible but he's completely a lunatic at
the same time. I love it.
EI: Was the PG-13 rating part of making it accessible so that more
audience could see it?
OS: There�s no need for this. It's a very heady and philosophical subject
matter. When I was 13, they allowed me to go see Dr. Strangelove, Paths of
Glory I don�t know why a young child and their father and mother can't go
to a movie with them and be able to talk about the movie. I think it's one
of the most beautiful things that can happen between a parent and a child
of that age.
RD: I think it'd be a mistake to define the movie as a comedy. I think
that most drama has moments of comedy.
TN: And we weren't trying to be funny not at all, ever. It was always
about being authentic and being truthful, and really trying to find the
texture to these relationships. A lot of what these people did and said to
each other was preposterous, and it is funny. It's the kind of funny where
two seconds later you�re crying but not because it's funny.
JB: I think also, in order to get the impact of drama, what you're saying
in two hours you need comedy to take a breath in order to ingest what is
being said in the movie. That's what was important for me. When I saw an
opening to either adlib or improvise a little bit, I took it. Bush is an
exaggerated personality. There are gestures of his that you can't deny are
hilarious, which is why there's so much cartoon-ish impersonation of him.
I remember when we had one interview, before we started the movie, with
Entertainment Weekly, and they said, Obviously, you're not going to do an
SNL version of Bush, and I said, I don't know, maybe. Maybe that's what's
appropriate. We haven't started. So when you're doing the movie, you're
searching through the tones and you don't know what it is. I think what
we've come up with, Oliver especially and me secondly
OS: And Stanley, who has a very comic sensibility.
JB: and Stanley, there are so many different versions of this movie. This
version that came out is a very dramatic version with comedic overtones
that allows you to breathe.
OS: My co-writer from Wall Street, Stanley Weiser, also happens to be a
very funny man when you get to talk to him, and he gave this thing that
wit and that oddball perception that he does bring to life, and I love him
for it.
EI: I liked the Cheney opinion of the Middle East. There is no exit. We
stay. It's somewhat analogous to Alexander the Great's ideal.
OS: Yeah, it is, but totally different in that you're exactly correct.
Alexander, We're going to stay and use the resources, but look what
Alexander did with it. Mr. Cheney is into survival and evolution. He's
talking about resource wars. We'll fight and kill for it. He's much more
ruthless than Alexander, but a great analogy. By the way, he never said
exactly that in quotes, but he did say that he had no concern about it's
about energy and geo-politics. Most recently, he's really concerned about
Eurasia, and rightly so, but it's always us versus them, that kind of
mentality. I repeat again. The pact for the new American century, it's all
there in black and white. You can read it for yourselves. These guys
believe it.
SW: By the way, that was Oliver's greed in the good scene. He wrote that.
OS: Not without you.
EI: Oliver, was there anything that you had to leave out, and will there
be anything special on the DVD?
OS: Yeah, we had a bunch of Saddam Hussein scenes, and we've got another
evangelist in there who's very good. Michael Shannon plays him. We have a
Cessna piloting scene when he's a little loaded. He goes up with Nora
Wiley in a plane. There's some fun stuff, some good stuff. Some of the
scenes are also longer. It'll be fun, but I think the good stuff is in the
movie, and we're happy with it at two hours. |
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