Leader
Crowe's feat
Despite his clashes with the Press,Oscar-winning
actor Russell Crowe says he's a kind and generous
person, just like his favourite director, North-East
film-maker Ridley Scott. He talks to Steve Pratt
RUSSELL Crowe remembers the last time
we met. Or nearly met, to be strictly accurate.
He was sitting in a London hotel
room, I was sitting with other regional
journalists in a cinema somewhere in
the Midlands. We were watching him on a satellite
link, but he couldn't hear us.
The technological mishap obviously made an impression
on the New Zealand born actor. On this occasion,
he bounds into the room occupied by a small
group of journalists several hours late, although it's
difficult to tell how late as the starting time keeps
moving.
He's surprised by what he finds. "We're up on a
platform, how about that. I thought it was going to
be one of those TV adventures when they gathered
40 or 50 of you blokes out in the bush somewhere
and you could hear me but I couldn't hear you."
In his fleece jacket, he looks like he'd be more at
home on his ranch in Australia than in a posh hotel
doing publicity for American Gangster, which reunites
him with North-East film-maker Ridley Scott
after Gladiator and A Good Year. He plays a police
officer in 1970s New York City who takes on a drugs
lord, played by Denzel Washington.
The Oscar-winner's relationship with the media
has been difficult, especially following an angry incident
in a New York hotel involving a worker and
a phone.
He may be playing the game by promoting his
movie but you get the feeling he's tolerating rather
than liking the situation. One person he does like a
lot is Ridley Scott. "It just gets easier really. We
knew when we worked together on Gladiator that
we communicated really well," he
says.
"It probably took longer for us to
realise that in any given roomful of
film people we were the ones we
could rely on. That's the thing that
gets stronger every time we work
together.
"He had no problem throwing
responsibility my way and I really
enjoy that. My bottom line is that
I think Ridley is one of our greatest
visual artists of our time, and I
feel very privileged that he wants
to work with me, so I go with that
flow."
He's never met a director who
doesn't need some help and he's
there as their lieutenant. "Ridley's
the governor, mate. He's a very organised filmmaker,
he's got everything sorted out. He creates
time for the actors and some other directors forget
that's what they should be doing.
"I just love the way Ridley works. You don't finish
a day on a Ridley Scott film thinking oh gosh, I
wish I'd had one more opportunity to run up those
12 flights of stairs'. You get done what you want to
get done, and you get the time to focus on all of the
details."
They don't clash any more, he continues, although
they do have differences of opinion. "We're
perfecting the art of the wordless argument. I know
that some of you will assassinate me for saying this,
but what Ridley and I know about each other is that
we're both very kind and generous people, that's
why we get on."
The pair are likely to be collaborating on at least
two more projects, including a new look at the
Robin Hood story with Crowe playing the Sheriff of
Nottingham. The script is by Brian Helgeland, who
won an Academy Award for LA Confidential, the
film with which Crowe broke through in the US.
The actor has been a big Robin Hood fan since he
was young, although the film's take promises something
different. "If you go back in the history of
the mythology, you get back to the ballads of Robin
the Beheader, who would chop off your head and
your hands, take all your money and not give any
of it to anybody," he says.
"We'll have a look at how the mythology morphed
over time, who was in power and what was the current
church we should all attend, and in this country
that changed quite regularly. And we'll look at
the Hollywood mythology and how much of that is
embedded in the psyche of people when they think
of Robin Hood."
Whether the movie will be suitable for his sons,
three-year-old Charles and oneyear-
old Tennyson, remains to be
seen. At the moment all his oldest
knows is that "my daddy makes
DVDs but they're not good enough
for Charlie to watch".
Crowe realises this is a big, ongoing
question. "It's not something
I can solve today. That's something
I'm dealing with and have to adjust
to for the rest of my life. That's the
gig, being a dad," he says.
"I didn't grow up in the situation
I'm in now, so I don't know what to
tell him about this and how people
will be affected by how they treat
him because of what they think of
me. They're both in for a good deal
of stick when they're at school, one
way or another.
"We'll just deal with it as it comes along, like
every other parent. Both my wife and I are very
aware that we need to work against privilege. My
son is nearly four and thinks a box of sultanas is
the greatest gift god ever sent to earth.
"If I can keep him in that place where simple
things bring great pleasure, where going for an
ATV ride around the farm and spending an afternoon
talking to the cows is something he'll discuss
with his friends for a week, then that will be a great
advantage to both of us.
"There'll be a point where the world impacts on
him, and the only thing I can guarantee is that I'll
be as close to him as I possibly can and be around
to answer his questions and guide him along as
required."
Crowe gets spikier when asked about the pressure
of choosing roles since winning his Oscar for
Gladiator. "I don't think about it in the least. I do
the things that interest me and I go to work every
day. All the other stuff is other people. It's got nothing
to do with me. You can't engage in that conversation
without being a complete f***ing w***er,"
he says.
But, he says, if anyone deserves an Oscar it's
Scott, who merits any honour that comes his way.
"But I don't want to engage in conversations like
that because it just puts the film into a situation
that all the other people who've got films coming
out want you to be in - discussing it so that it burns
out.
"The thing is that Ridley's work, whether he's
awarded or not, is work that will stand the test of
time. He's one of the hugely influential film
directors."
Crowe's not in it for the money or the awards.
"The reality is you're not in this business for the
bucks anyway," he says. "And that's going to come
across archly pretentious, and some of you will assassinate
me for it. But this gig is a calling, especially
for people who do it in a public way for more
than four or five years.
"You put up with all the s*** that comes with this
job. You gotta love it at its core - and I dig it, man.
It's a privilege making films and I give it my best.
"I don't have any problems whatsoever in standing
up in front of a group of people and saying I take
making movies seriously. And if you don't, then you
obviously won't like my movies."
* American Gangster (18) is now showing in
cinemas.
9:47am Saturday 17th November 2007
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CommentPosted by: Lorraine Shaw, Pomona, CA on 7:44pm Sun 18 Nov 07
Can anyone name an actor who speaks the truth as Russell Crowe does. An actor who gives an interesting interview and not that happy bulls*it that most feel they have to conform to..to enhance their image. Off hand no one comes to mind.
Can anyone name an actor who speaks the truth as Russell Crowe does. An actor who gives an interesting interview and not that happy bulls*it that most feel they have to conform to..to enhance their image. Off hand no one comes to mind.
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