Stunner
05-04-2006, 12:35 PM
After almost three years away from the spotlight, actor Edward Norton has finally found another role he can sink his acting chops into, playing a cowboy named Harlan Carruthers in David Jacobson's Down in the Valley. Before you assume that Norton is following in the footsteps of Kevin Costner or Clint Eastwood, you should know that the movie is set in modern day San Fernando Valley, California, where Harlan sticks out like a sore thumb. He ends up meeting a teen girl named Tobe, played by Evan Rachel Wood, and her younger brother Lonnie (Rory Culkin). As he gets more involved with the two teens, their father Wade (David Morse) gets more suspicious that Harlan isn't all that he seems.
Just as you're ready to accept Down in the Valley as a modern romantic drama, it shifts gears and becomes something else, and before you know it, you're watching a honest-to-gosh Western. It's a fairly ingenious mash-up of genres, which may explain why Edward Norton signed on not only to play the main character, but also to produce the movie, something which has helped get it a lot more financing and attention than it might have otherwise.
ComingSoon.net spoke to the multi-talented actor, who is actually about as polite and eloquent as one might expect.
CS: You hadn't done anything in a while and the director mentioned you hadn't even been reading scripts, so what changed your mind to look at this one?
Norton: It's true, I was taking a little time off. I had worked on a series of things, and I felt very content and satiated, in a way. I wasn't burnt out in a bad way. I had some really good experiences, and I didn't want to just keep going until I had a bad one. So I took some time, and I was doing a lot of other things. I remember saying to my agent that something will come along that I won't be able to say "no" to, and when that happens, then I'll do it. That went on for a while, and I kept getting things that I found it very easy to say "no" to and then my agent called me and said he had read this script that wasn't ready to be a movie. It was very strange and very stream-of-consciousness, but the guy is really interesting. He said, "I know you and the things that are in this are going to interest you." I read it and I thought about it, so I met David maybe three years ago, we started talking about it, and I couldn't resist it. It was dancing in so many things that I'm interested in, and it was so strange and challenging that I started getting that tickle of a feeling that I get with the most of the ones I've done that I think are the best ones. I started thinking that it was so weird that maybe we couldn't even pull it off. I felt that about "Fight Club," "American History X" and "25th Hour." Movies like that I generally have had the feeling that it might not work, and when I've had that feeling, it's generally produced the more interesting stuff. I felt that about this, and I decided to engage in it with David, but we spent like six months together, just working on the script, tearing it apart and rewriting it. Then, we raised some money to make it.
CS: What were some of those elements that attracted you?
Norton: In the broadest sense, I felt, as I did about some of those other films I mentioned, it was a dissection of the way we're living right now on many levels. It was an examination of things I felt I recognized in my generation's spiritual issues. This may sound like a strange comparison, but not dissimilar to "Fight Club," it was about people trapped in a world that makes them feel very numb and very disconnected from each other and very inauthentic, seeking desperately a feeling of authenticity. Harlan, in a lot of ways, is not unlike my character in "Fight Club" because he's a person willing to engage in desperate fantasy to create that feeling of the real. Even though those films are very different articulations of that complaint, I felt that it was a companion piece. David's from the Valley, and he talked a lot about growing up in the Valley, feeling such an intense absence of any kind of context. He had no cultural or spiritual information and no guidance. He said that he wanted to study how fantasy is sometimes your escape valve for those feelings. I thought that was really interesting. Obviously, his story was taking place in the West, and that fantasy that he was interested in was the fantasy of the Western. I really liked the idea that we discussed for a long time, of making a Western about the West as he and I and the people our age are actually experiencing it. Looking at that fantasy and whether it's something that existed and is lost or did it only exist in movies in the first place? We don't really know, but I liked the idea of a man and a girl trying to ride on a horse across the West, but if you did that today, you'd actually run into about six freeways and seven housing developments. In that sense, it felt to me like something people would be able to recognize in their own experiences.
CS: Can you talk about working with Evan? She's quite a bit younger than you, but you have a lot of intimate scenes together.
Norton: Well, she's tremendous. I really can't say enough good about her. She's very young, but she's got a very mature talent. She's a much more naturally talented actor than many adults I've worked with. I think she's got a very mature sense of--what's the best way to say this?--of what the work can be at it's best. She's at an age when a lot of young women, having to grow up and start doing bigger movies, Evan is in her own way, really pursuing an artistic muse of her own. Even in the time I've known her, she's turned down the kinds of stuff that would turn her into a gargantuan young star, and she's pursuing things that she feels, and I just admire that enormously. I think it's an incredible level of self-possession for someone her age. The experience of working together was very easy. Evan and her mom were both very invested in what the story was about. They both live in the Valley also, and we all talked a great deal about what the movie was about and why we were doing it. How did the intimate scenes feed that, why were they necessary, and then specifically, how were we going to do them and handle it? They collaborated with us on it and they were both fantastic. They actually made it easier on me and David, not the opposite. They were very reassuring, and it was as good and solid a group collaboration that I've been involved in.
CS: Had you ever ridden a horse before making this movie?
Norton: I had ridden, but never to the extent where I trained for this. I had some great coaches and rodeo riders. It's very hard and I spent a long time working with them on it, which was a lot of fun.
CS: Were there any specific Western inspirations for the character of Harlan?
Norton: There's certain sort of Western anti-heroes that I loved. In some ways, it's very different, but I loved "Cool Hand Luke." It's not a Western, but Luke is a character that you love him, but you know that he's never going to pull it together, and it's that poignancy of someone who has a certain poetry to them and is beautiful in some ways, but is deeply dysfunctional in other ways. That's a certain category of character that we like. There's also the Kirk Douglas movie "Lonely are the Brave," that's kind of the first of the "cowboy being confined" movies. It's not my favorite movie, although I really like Walter Matthau in it, he's amazing, but that was in David's mind. I loved the John Ford movie, "My Darling Clementine." I think Henry Fonda is amazing in that film. There's so many. "The Searchers" is a great film, a dark film. "Searchers" is so much about racism, and there are so many different things going on in that one.
CS: Is there any subtext in the movie about the death of the American Western?
Norton: Maybe. The funniest thing is that all the places that we shot these things, that perimeter of the valley, is exactly like that. Guys like Bruce Dern were out there, coming out to investigate and check out what we were doing. We were filming the scene where I take [Evan] on his horse up into the hills, and we could hear all this gunfire out in one of the gulleys, in the trailer homes, and we were like "Good God! Who's out here blasting away into the hillsides?" It was Harlan and Lonnie out there shooting guns somewhere.
CS: Every time someone proclaims the death of the Western, it's revised in a new way. Do you think this is part of some trend that is reexamining the genre in a new context?
Norton: Well, it's never going to be dead, because the West is there, and also our National identity is so bound up in the West, in a sense that our President still puts on a cowboy hat. He's a rich kid from a Connecticut family who acts like a cowboy. Maybe he's as deluded as Harlan is, I don't know. There's no denying that the Western mythology is part of our national mythology, so it's constantly evolving and changing. You're right. It's gone through different levels of deconstruction. Clint Eastwood's "Unforgiven" deconstructs the romance of these Western stories, even though it's still set in those times. I think it was interesting that Tommy Lee Jones' film ["The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada"], that was an interesting examination, too, of what have we actually become? Not what were we, but is there anything left of this set of values, and in a sense, he was saying that that, too, is going away. I think people have been examining that feeling that something has slipped away for a long time, but then that's what's fun about "Unforgiven" or "Deadwood." They're looking at it and saying that maybe this thing that Hollywood ended up romanticizing was never really that way anyway. Maybe it was all sh*t and p*ss and disease and violence. Maybe it wasn't quite the new start that everyone thought it was.
CS: How did you get Bruce Dern involved in the movie?
Norton: (laughs) I don't remember! All I really remember is David coming to me and saying that Bruce Dern wants to play Charlie, and I went, "Forget it!" You can't beat that!" I mean, he's the guy who shot John Wayne on film. He'll tell you that every day, too. He's like, "I don't know if I told you, but I'm the only one who has actually ever killed John Wayne on film." "I think you told me that yesterday, Bruce." Bruce is fantastic, a total original.
CS: Can you talk about the Harlan and Lonnie relationship, and why he's interested in him besides him being Tobe's brother?
Norton: My theory about it is that Harlan sees himself in Lonnie, he sees a boy looking for guidance or that Harlan gets the chance to be the father he didn't have or something like that. More, I just think Harlan is just in tune to other people who are searching. He sees the way that these kids are needing a sense of themselves or a sense of the world. There's also that thing that when someone is in a deep level of damage themselves, the ability to share what they know is also affirming to them. It reinforces the fantasy that they're trying to create for themselves.
CS: Did you have any thoughts about Harlan's true background? It's not made very clear, even though we get hints.
Norton: Some of it's intentionally very oblique. I used to say to David when we were cutting the film, "Look, what's your standard for comprehension? How much do you want people to understand the specifics of who Harlan was and is?" And he said that it was very important that [Harlan] is a mystery and that if everybody understands that he's not all that he says is, but they all have a slightly different interpretation of what that specific history is, then that's good. I admired that and thought it was smart.
CS: Are you surprised that people are able to read so much into this movie?
Norton: People have said a lot of different things, and that is the part of the whole thing that is the most interesting to me is the idea of creating something that lets people bring their own responses and feelings into it, because then it's an actual relationship. People are engaging with the piece. Like Spike Lee or many of my other favorite people I've worked with, I think David's got a sincere commitment to the idea that a film, at its best, is going to ask you to do some of the work emotionally and intellectually. I don't think he ever set out to explain what it was all about, which I really like.
CS: Can you talk about some of the other things you've been up to, and what else you have coming up?
Norton: I produced this film, "The Painted Veil," which will come out in the fall. We're still working on an adaptation of "Motherless Brooklyn." Sometimes it happens this way. I took a good amount of time off, and then we did some stuff, but it's taken a long time to get "Down in the Valley" out and right. Now, this year, this one, then "The Illusionist" is going to come out in August, and then "The Painted Veil" will be in the fall, so they sort of stack up even though you don't really intend it to happen that way. Actually, I'm not that fond of it happening that way, because I think I worry that it undercuts people's ability to get carried away by a character, but they are very different, so maybe it will be okay.
Down in the Valley opens this Friday in New York City and probably will open in California soon.
Source: Craveonline.com
Just as you're ready to accept Down in the Valley as a modern romantic drama, it shifts gears and becomes something else, and before you know it, you're watching a honest-to-gosh Western. It's a fairly ingenious mash-up of genres, which may explain why Edward Norton signed on not only to play the main character, but also to produce the movie, something which has helped get it a lot more financing and attention than it might have otherwise.
ComingSoon.net spoke to the multi-talented actor, who is actually about as polite and eloquent as one might expect.
CS: You hadn't done anything in a while and the director mentioned you hadn't even been reading scripts, so what changed your mind to look at this one?
Norton: It's true, I was taking a little time off. I had worked on a series of things, and I felt very content and satiated, in a way. I wasn't burnt out in a bad way. I had some really good experiences, and I didn't want to just keep going until I had a bad one. So I took some time, and I was doing a lot of other things. I remember saying to my agent that something will come along that I won't be able to say "no" to, and when that happens, then I'll do it. That went on for a while, and I kept getting things that I found it very easy to say "no" to and then my agent called me and said he had read this script that wasn't ready to be a movie. It was very strange and very stream-of-consciousness, but the guy is really interesting. He said, "I know you and the things that are in this are going to interest you." I read it and I thought about it, so I met David maybe three years ago, we started talking about it, and I couldn't resist it. It was dancing in so many things that I'm interested in, and it was so strange and challenging that I started getting that tickle of a feeling that I get with the most of the ones I've done that I think are the best ones. I started thinking that it was so weird that maybe we couldn't even pull it off. I felt that about "Fight Club," "American History X" and "25th Hour." Movies like that I generally have had the feeling that it might not work, and when I've had that feeling, it's generally produced the more interesting stuff. I felt that about this, and I decided to engage in it with David, but we spent like six months together, just working on the script, tearing it apart and rewriting it. Then, we raised some money to make it.
CS: What were some of those elements that attracted you?
Norton: In the broadest sense, I felt, as I did about some of those other films I mentioned, it was a dissection of the way we're living right now on many levels. It was an examination of things I felt I recognized in my generation's spiritual issues. This may sound like a strange comparison, but not dissimilar to "Fight Club," it was about people trapped in a world that makes them feel very numb and very disconnected from each other and very inauthentic, seeking desperately a feeling of authenticity. Harlan, in a lot of ways, is not unlike my character in "Fight Club" because he's a person willing to engage in desperate fantasy to create that feeling of the real. Even though those films are very different articulations of that complaint, I felt that it was a companion piece. David's from the Valley, and he talked a lot about growing up in the Valley, feeling such an intense absence of any kind of context. He had no cultural or spiritual information and no guidance. He said that he wanted to study how fantasy is sometimes your escape valve for those feelings. I thought that was really interesting. Obviously, his story was taking place in the West, and that fantasy that he was interested in was the fantasy of the Western. I really liked the idea that we discussed for a long time, of making a Western about the West as he and I and the people our age are actually experiencing it. Looking at that fantasy and whether it's something that existed and is lost or did it only exist in movies in the first place? We don't really know, but I liked the idea of a man and a girl trying to ride on a horse across the West, but if you did that today, you'd actually run into about six freeways and seven housing developments. In that sense, it felt to me like something people would be able to recognize in their own experiences.
CS: Can you talk about working with Evan? She's quite a bit younger than you, but you have a lot of intimate scenes together.
Norton: Well, she's tremendous. I really can't say enough good about her. She's very young, but she's got a very mature talent. She's a much more naturally talented actor than many adults I've worked with. I think she's got a very mature sense of--what's the best way to say this?--of what the work can be at it's best. She's at an age when a lot of young women, having to grow up and start doing bigger movies, Evan is in her own way, really pursuing an artistic muse of her own. Even in the time I've known her, she's turned down the kinds of stuff that would turn her into a gargantuan young star, and she's pursuing things that she feels, and I just admire that enormously. I think it's an incredible level of self-possession for someone her age. The experience of working together was very easy. Evan and her mom were both very invested in what the story was about. They both live in the Valley also, and we all talked a great deal about what the movie was about and why we were doing it. How did the intimate scenes feed that, why were they necessary, and then specifically, how were we going to do them and handle it? They collaborated with us on it and they were both fantastic. They actually made it easier on me and David, not the opposite. They were very reassuring, and it was as good and solid a group collaboration that I've been involved in.
CS: Had you ever ridden a horse before making this movie?
Norton: I had ridden, but never to the extent where I trained for this. I had some great coaches and rodeo riders. It's very hard and I spent a long time working with them on it, which was a lot of fun.
CS: Were there any specific Western inspirations for the character of Harlan?
Norton: There's certain sort of Western anti-heroes that I loved. In some ways, it's very different, but I loved "Cool Hand Luke." It's not a Western, but Luke is a character that you love him, but you know that he's never going to pull it together, and it's that poignancy of someone who has a certain poetry to them and is beautiful in some ways, but is deeply dysfunctional in other ways. That's a certain category of character that we like. There's also the Kirk Douglas movie "Lonely are the Brave," that's kind of the first of the "cowboy being confined" movies. It's not my favorite movie, although I really like Walter Matthau in it, he's amazing, but that was in David's mind. I loved the John Ford movie, "My Darling Clementine." I think Henry Fonda is amazing in that film. There's so many. "The Searchers" is a great film, a dark film. "Searchers" is so much about racism, and there are so many different things going on in that one.
CS: Is there any subtext in the movie about the death of the American Western?
Norton: Maybe. The funniest thing is that all the places that we shot these things, that perimeter of the valley, is exactly like that. Guys like Bruce Dern were out there, coming out to investigate and check out what we were doing. We were filming the scene where I take [Evan] on his horse up into the hills, and we could hear all this gunfire out in one of the gulleys, in the trailer homes, and we were like "Good God! Who's out here blasting away into the hillsides?" It was Harlan and Lonnie out there shooting guns somewhere.
CS: Every time someone proclaims the death of the Western, it's revised in a new way. Do you think this is part of some trend that is reexamining the genre in a new context?
Norton: Well, it's never going to be dead, because the West is there, and also our National identity is so bound up in the West, in a sense that our President still puts on a cowboy hat. He's a rich kid from a Connecticut family who acts like a cowboy. Maybe he's as deluded as Harlan is, I don't know. There's no denying that the Western mythology is part of our national mythology, so it's constantly evolving and changing. You're right. It's gone through different levels of deconstruction. Clint Eastwood's "Unforgiven" deconstructs the romance of these Western stories, even though it's still set in those times. I think it was interesting that Tommy Lee Jones' film ["The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada"], that was an interesting examination, too, of what have we actually become? Not what were we, but is there anything left of this set of values, and in a sense, he was saying that that, too, is going away. I think people have been examining that feeling that something has slipped away for a long time, but then that's what's fun about "Unforgiven" or "Deadwood." They're looking at it and saying that maybe this thing that Hollywood ended up romanticizing was never really that way anyway. Maybe it was all sh*t and p*ss and disease and violence. Maybe it wasn't quite the new start that everyone thought it was.
CS: How did you get Bruce Dern involved in the movie?
Norton: (laughs) I don't remember! All I really remember is David coming to me and saying that Bruce Dern wants to play Charlie, and I went, "Forget it!" You can't beat that!" I mean, he's the guy who shot John Wayne on film. He'll tell you that every day, too. He's like, "I don't know if I told you, but I'm the only one who has actually ever killed John Wayne on film." "I think you told me that yesterday, Bruce." Bruce is fantastic, a total original.
CS: Can you talk about the Harlan and Lonnie relationship, and why he's interested in him besides him being Tobe's brother?
Norton: My theory about it is that Harlan sees himself in Lonnie, he sees a boy looking for guidance or that Harlan gets the chance to be the father he didn't have or something like that. More, I just think Harlan is just in tune to other people who are searching. He sees the way that these kids are needing a sense of themselves or a sense of the world. There's also that thing that when someone is in a deep level of damage themselves, the ability to share what they know is also affirming to them. It reinforces the fantasy that they're trying to create for themselves.
CS: Did you have any thoughts about Harlan's true background? It's not made very clear, even though we get hints.
Norton: Some of it's intentionally very oblique. I used to say to David when we were cutting the film, "Look, what's your standard for comprehension? How much do you want people to understand the specifics of who Harlan was and is?" And he said that it was very important that [Harlan] is a mystery and that if everybody understands that he's not all that he says is, but they all have a slightly different interpretation of what that specific history is, then that's good. I admired that and thought it was smart.
CS: Are you surprised that people are able to read so much into this movie?
Norton: People have said a lot of different things, and that is the part of the whole thing that is the most interesting to me is the idea of creating something that lets people bring their own responses and feelings into it, because then it's an actual relationship. People are engaging with the piece. Like Spike Lee or many of my other favorite people I've worked with, I think David's got a sincere commitment to the idea that a film, at its best, is going to ask you to do some of the work emotionally and intellectually. I don't think he ever set out to explain what it was all about, which I really like.
CS: Can you talk about some of the other things you've been up to, and what else you have coming up?
Norton: I produced this film, "The Painted Veil," which will come out in the fall. We're still working on an adaptation of "Motherless Brooklyn." Sometimes it happens this way. I took a good amount of time off, and then we did some stuff, but it's taken a long time to get "Down in the Valley" out and right. Now, this year, this one, then "The Illusionist" is going to come out in August, and then "The Painted Veil" will be in the fall, so they sort of stack up even though you don't really intend it to happen that way. Actually, I'm not that fond of it happening that way, because I think I worry that it undercuts people's ability to get carried away by a character, but they are very different, so maybe it will be okay.
Down in the Valley opens this Friday in New York City and probably will open in California soon.
Source: Craveonline.com