DAVID THEWLIS IN CANNES
| The Roddick Interview (1997)
In town with American Perfekt, the English actor reviews some of his
recent work with Nick Roddick.
Actors don't have much control over what the end product is. You
hand yourself over to these people. Sometimes it's wonderful.
Sometimes it's The Island of Dr Moreau." David Thewlis is back in
Cannes for the first time since he won a Best Actor award here four
years ago for Mike Leigh's Naked. He's done six films since then and
is disarmingly critical about most of them. "If I said they were all
great," he comments, "I'd look a real tosser."
Definitely no tosser, Thewlis checks the movies off, one by one.
"Well, The Island of Dr Moreau wasn't very good, was it? I remember
the day Brando turned round to me and said this was the craziest
thing he'd ever been involved in. And I thought, if this is the craziest
thing Brando has been involved in, then fuck me...
Restoration I did because I really loved the novel and I like Michael
Hoffman, who directed it, but it wasn't a really challenging part for
me. I'm not critical of the film: I just don't think I gave a very
interesting performance.
"Then I did Dragonheart because I was getting advice-stroke-pressure
from my agent to do a studio film. Actually, I enjoyed doing it. It
wasn't the greatest script in the world, but not many people can say
they've played a wicked king in a swashbuckling Arthurian
special-effects monster movie. I've only seen the finished thing on an
aeroplane, so I don't really have an opinion as to what the end
product is like."
And Total Eclipse? "I did that after Dragonheart, thinking that had been a bit Hollywood and not really where I wanted to go. It was
actually the thing that I've put my heart into the most, in terms of
research and everything, because I was a great admirer of Rimbaud's
work. Still am. But, er, the film wasn't very well received, was it?
"I suppose there was a disparity between Leonardo and me,
especially in terms of accent, which I think jars a little. We weren't
going to do 'French' accents, because Agnieszka didn't want that. At
one stage, there was talk of doing a mid - Atlantic accent, whatever
the fuck that is. Underwater, maybe. "But then I thought, if Verlaine
had been English, he would have been a contemporary of Tennyson
- an upper-middle-class, literate, educated man, living in the capital,
so I did that kind of accent. And Leonardo... Well, Leonardo did what
he did, you know? I like him and I tnk he's a very good actor, but I
don't think anyone was cast right in that film. I don't dislike it myself.
I'm actually quite fond of it."
As for Thewlis' presence in Cannes, Gilles Jacob flew him down at
the weekend - private jet from "some airfield in Middlesex",
helicopter from Nice to Cannes, into the designer gear with all the
young British stars, up the steps of the Palais. Frocks and film. It was
one of the less obvious of the 50th anniversary ideas. Jacob himself
didn't show up (a festival crisis, apparently), but Thewlis doesn't seem
to mind. And anyway, he's long out of the designer stuff, back into
baggy black pants and sturdy, seriously scuffed boots. His head was
shaved for Seven Years in Tibet - or 'Five Years on This Set', as the
crew called it - but the hair is beginning to grow back.
Thewlis has done that, plus American Perfekt, which is showing in UnCertain Regard today, and a one-day cameo - "Well, more of a very
small part, really" - in the Coen Brothers' The Big Lebowski. "I met the Coens here a few years ago and they said they liked my work. I said I
liked theirs, so we said: 'Let's work together.' Then Brad [Pitt]'s
make-up artist on Seven Years in Tibet always works with Joel and
Ethan. She left the picture early, and I said, 'Will you remind them
that I want a part in your movie?' "They said, 'Steve Buscemi's doing
a day on it and John Turturro's doing a day on it. Do you want to play
this little part?' Hopefully, they'll give me a bigger part next time
because of all the filmmakers in America, I'd like to work with those
two the most." They also taught him how to do conjuring tricks for the
part but, pressed, he bottles out with "I haven't got me props. You
need props for prestidigitation." He makes convincing movements
with his fingers. "Have you got a half dollar? No? A ten-franc piece is
too small. Can't do it."
And American Perfekt? "The director and writer, Paul Chart, is maybe
my best friend in Los Angeles - an English guy living in LA who came
to me a few years ago with this script called Headcase. I didn't read it
for a long time because I was getting all these bigger scripts and this
one looked really dog-eared, you know? "Then, when I finally read it,
it was the best thing I've read for years. All kinds of things came and
went and it didn't happen. But I became good friends with Paul. It's
sort of a dark comedy road movie shot in the Mojave desert with a
very small crew, and I'm one of the oddball characters along the way.
"I did it purely for fun. I haven't seen it, but I'm pretty sure I'm going to
like it because it wasn't like the other ones. It was like making a film
with friends. "Paul is one of the most passionate people I've ever met
in terms of the art of film. We have about six scripts ready to do in the
future, which hopefully I will do with him. Also, I wanted to work with
Fairuza [Balk] again because I think we want to exorcise the memory
of Dr Moreau and do something good together."