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    Dai che questa almeno una domanda diversa ce l'ha di sicuro (credo)

    CITAZIONE
    The Team: Clint Eastwood, Leonardo DiCaprio and Armie Hammer
    The director and actors talk about making 'J. Edgar' and the future of dramas in Hollywood.

    For nearly five decades, J. Edgar Hoover was the face of law enforcement in the U.S., but to most Americans, the longtime Federal Bureau of Investigations director remains an enigma. "J. Edgar," directed by Clint Eastwood and starring Leonardo DiCaprio as Hoover, chronicles the FBI founder's controversial tenure as a hunter of gangsters and a collector of secrets and explores his mystery-shrouded private life, defined by a devoted relationship to his colleague Clyde Tolson (Armie Hammer).

    Last week at Warner Bros. studio — on the stage where they shot much of the film — Eastwood, DiCaprio and Hammer spoke with The Times about Hoover's public legacy, his secrets and the future of adult dramas in contemporary Hollywood. The following is an edited excerpt of their conversation. "J. Edgar," which was written by Dustin Lance Black and also stars Naomi Watts as Hoover's trusted secretary, Helen Gandy, and Judi Dench as his imperious mother, opens Nov. 9.

    Why J. Edgar Hoover?

    Eastwood: I started hearing about him in the '30s. I don't want to grab seniority on you all — he was always the top cop. And so I was fascinated by what he was about. When I read Lance's material, I became somewhat infatuated with the subject.

    Your two actors sitting at this table were born after Hoover died, and many movie-goers are as well. What would you say to them to make them curious about this man?

    Eastwood: It's hard to tell what will stimulate curiosity nowadays because looking at some of the things that do excite people, you kind of go, "Ohh, OK. So this hasn't a chance." But we made it anyway. I think if people see the picture, they'll find a lot of parallels to today, ever since 9/11 and everything, that kind of fear that's going on in disturbance of the country.And Lance was smart enough to put it in. Leo, Armie, everybody went along with that thing "if you don't pay attention to history, you're destined to repeat it." That's kind of the message of the picture, or one of them.

    No one really knows the true nature of Hoover and Tolson's relationship. We only know that they were close. As an actor, do you have to make a decision for yourself about what did or didn't happen between them?

    DiCaprio: There are all kinds of rumors in both directions. You talk to the FBI, they'll tell you "Absolutely not. These men, they were of service to their country. They do their jobs." And you talk to a whole other crew of people, and they say, "Absolutely, without question. These men vacationed together. They lived together. Hoover left Mr. Tolson everything he had when he passed away." Y'know. Come on. The way I looked at it was, they're obviously inseparable. They obviously have a great amount of respect for each other. And there is a love there, something that in this film was never culminated, but there is a huge connection between these two men that you cannot question, that no one can question. These two men spent almost every minute together for decades.

    Hammer: It was also at such a different time that, at 25 years old I would never understand what it's like to not be able to be myself. And these guys, if they did just go "I love you," not "we're having sex," not anything like that but just "I love you, who you are as a person, I have great respect and a tremendous amount of love for you," it would cost them their job. It would cost them their friends, their social standing, all that. It's a very difficult thing to understand in this day and age how repressed that can be.

    What kind of direction did Clint give you about this relationship?

    DiCaprio: His philosophy is no rehearsal. And that causes you as an actor to make these decisions for yourself.... When we did certain scenes, whether it was hand-holding or not, we did one that was a little more, [one] a little less. And we kept that sort of ambiguous. Clint kind of instilled in us, "Let's keep this up to interpretation, however people want to perceive this."

    Hammer: It was also interesting that we didn't explicitly have these conversations because these guys might not have explicitly had these conversations. So there was a little bit of not really knowing how far we're taking this, not really knowing what's going on. It added a little bit of an unrest to it and an uncomfortability that I think read on the screen when you see these two guys meet. They don't know what's going on. How do we know what's going on?

    Why do you think Tolson was so loyal to Hoover?

    Hammer: This is a conversation I had with myself a lot before we started this project. It seems like it's "I need you to be with me," "Now you walk home," "Now I need you." That kind of thing. It seemed a little like an abusive relationship. So I had dinner with a buddy of mine who's gay, and I just sort of walked through everything that happened in the script, and he goes, "You break my heart." And I go, "Why?" He goes, "Well, now I'm convinced you're 100% heterosexual… That's just the deal if you see even a spark of something in someone where they look at you and they go, 'I care about you. I could be there for you.'" And that's really all Clyde wanted out of Hoover was for him to make those little gestures. That's what kept him around.

    There's a very small group of people in Hollywood able to get this kind of film made right now. Was it hard to get a studio to green light this movie?

    Eastwood: It's getting smaller all the time. Everybody wants to make something they think is a surefire winner, though nobody knows what a surefire winner is, in my opinion. If you can make a good picture that actually has some substance, that's doubly good nowadays 'cause most everybody else is trying to address how many CGI plates we're gonna do, what little being is gonna come in from another asteroid…

    DiCaprio: … little being from another asteroid? You've got me laughing on that one.

    Eastwood: Well, that's the thing I can think of that I'd hate to do the most. Whatever the formula of the moment is, I'm glad I'm not making it.

    DiCaprio: There has been a complete dropoff of rated-R dramas anywhere above $30 million. They just don't exist. I did "Blood Diamond," "The Aviator" and "The Departed," I don't think any of those movies would be made right now. Anything that has any sort of edge to it, those movies aren't being made.

    What is the budget for J. Edgar?

    Eastwood: $35 million.

    Is the industry aversion to R-rated dramas a cyclical thing?

    Eastwood: Everything is cyclical. It's all about that first-weekend box office. I don't know if "Double Indemnity" or "Sunset Boulevard" or "On the Waterfront" would get made today. Everybody would go, "Oh, who wants to see a picture about dock workers?" I've been through it with two pictures in a row, with "Mystic River" and "Million Dollar Baby." I approached Warner Bros. and another studio simultaneously, and the other studio said, "We don't do dramas." I said, "You don't do dramas? What are we doing here?"

    DiCaprio: It does feel like the middle ground has fallen out. I'm only saying that from personal experience, saying, "I'd like to make that movie" and hearing, "Oh, they're not making those types of movies anymore."

    Eastwood: You have to go with your instincts. I remember when I was about to make "Fistful of Dollars" a big article came out that said, "Italian westerns are finished." I said, "Swell." Then, of course, [the film] came out, and it did something. I'm so glad for the dozens of times I haven't listened along the way.

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  2. *Clarice*
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    Ma questa non l'avevo già messa? O_o

    Sì mi sa che l'avevo inserita nel topic del film perchè erano tutti intervistati.
     
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    ah boh Pally, lo sai che non le leggo :lol3:
    la foto l'hai messa di sicuro :asd:
     
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  4. leonardina<3
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    :D
     
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  5. *Clarice*
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    Questa è un'altra bella intervista sulla stessa rivista

    CITAZIONE
    Leonardo DiCaprio investigates J. Edgar Hoover in 'J. Edgar'

    For Leonardo DiCaprio, any story worth telling starts with a question.

    "Why?" the actor said, banging his fist on a table. "His personal life, his tactics, what drove him, what were his motives? What the hell did he really want?"

    The man instigating this particular "why" is J. Edgar Hoover, whom DiCaprio plays in the new biopic of the controversial FBI chief directed by Clint Eastwood. But the star of "J. Edgar" could as easily be asking about the other complex characters he has brought to the screen in the last decade — obsessive magnate Howard Hughes in "The Aviator," mysterious U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels in "Shutter Island," grieving dream hijacker Dom Cobb in "Inception."

    "Do I have to feel empathy [for the character]? No, I don't," DiCaprio said. "Not really. We can all understand the need and desire to be loved. Public adoration and stature was his outlet for that. But he was dogged, bullheaded and completely unsympathetic to a very important time in our country where we were going through some major transformation. He stayed in power way too long and took his tactics way too far. I don't like the man, no."

    But a dislike doesn't discount a desire to portray a character, he said. "I really just gravitate towards roles that I want to learn more about. Whenever I get a screenplay, if it leads to more questions and intrigue … if there's a mystery to the person, that's when I get more involved. Unanswered questions force you as an actor to say, 'OK, this is what I'm choosing.'"

    At 37, DiCaprio still carries himself with a boyishness that makes it easy to forget that he has been a steadily working actor for more than 20 years. No one seems surprised by the constancy of his employment in Hollywood except perhaps the star himself.

    "Every career is fleeting," DiCaprio said, in a late October interview on a Warner Bros. soundstage, having just flown to L.A. from the Australian set of Baz Luhrmann's "The Great Gatsby," in which he also plays the title role. "There are times when your career is hot and people want to see your work, and there's other times when people lose interest. But while I'm in the very fortunate position of being able to choose what I want to do, I'm gonna do that. I don't second-guess what I'm attracted to."

    In "J. Edgar," from a script by "Milk" screenwriter Dustin Lance Black, DiCaprio ages some five decades, playing Hoover from his early days as a bookish young lawman to the height of his influence as an FBI director with the power to intimidate presidents. The movie explores Hoover's close ties and possible lifelong affair with his colleague Clyde Tolson (Armie Hammer) and his solicitous relationship with his fearsome mother (Judi Dench).

    "Hoover's whole life was basically trying to extract secrets from other people and repress secrets about his own life," DiCaprio said. "He was so incredibly concerned with his image and the image of the bureau. He would fervently attack people who questioned his sexuality."

    When DiCaprio was cast, he traveled to Washington, D.C., to research Hoover's life and meet with those who knew him.

    "For me, it was about finding out what his sense of humor was like, how he held his hands, what he would eat," DiCaprio said. "The way people would conduct themselves around him, how he spoke to others. Within his voice I had to attempt to carry with me 50 years of experience when I'm talking to a young Kennedy, like, 'You young whippersnapper, back in my day … !' To understand the command Hoover had with everyone around him, that they all called him 'boss,' that they looked up to him, this fear that he instilled in everyone. That's what I tried to capture and understand."

    Capturing the character for the "old Hoover" scenes meant spending six hours in a makeup chair having wrinkles and liver spots applied.

    "There were moments where I was wanting to rip my face off," DiCaprio said. "You just have so much more weight on you. There was an incredible amount of claustrophobia. And you have to keep the nuances of what you did before with the younger Hoover."

    While describing the "J. Edgar" set, DiCaprio launches into a spot-on impression of Eastwood, gravel-voiced and leaning on the director's chair.

    "It's kind of like a ring man," DiCaprio said, comparing Eastwood as a director to a boxing trainer. "He builds up your confidence. He starts saying things to you about 'that bastard' and 'what he did to you.' It was about stoking my fire, getting me angrier as a character. It's never, 'Say this line this way' or 'turn your face this way.' He never likes to manipulate actors. He likes you to trust your instincts, be on your toes. He thinks if things are manipulated too much, it becomes phony."

    A minute later, in a riff on Eastwood's style versus director Stanley Kubrick's, DiCaprio is impersonating Jack Nicholson playfully bouncing from character to character.

    But he is also able to focus on demand, said costar Dench.

    "If somebody says to you, 'You weren't at all like yourself,' that's the greatest compliment you can pay an actor," said Dench of DiCaprio. "If you get to play a monster or a really unpleasant person, ooooh, lovely. [DiCaprio's] concentration is paramount. You kind of feel that he's got the whole thing in the palm of his hand that he knows exactly how the scene should be played and that he's totally committed to it.... But then suddenly there's a wonderful outbreak of relaxation and a laugh and a joke."

    When DiCaprio expressed interest in the role, a typically succinct Eastwood said his reaction was, "That's a good idea. That'd be great for him. He's a smart guy. He saw that it was going to be an interesting character, and then we went about it."

    "J. Edgar" is the kind of movie — a $35-million adult drama — that doesn't get made by a studio today without the help of a bona fide star. DiCaprio, a three-time Oscar nominee, dramatically cut his fee for the part and is the keystone of the studio's awards season push.

    DiCaprio's first major film role was as a rebellious teen in 1993's "This Boy's Life." "My first movie was with De Niro," he said. "I was 15 and I said, 'Oh, my God, he's not just saying the lines, he's improvising and he must have thought about this a lot. To see the preparation and the specificity, but also the ability to react to other people, the ability to discover stuff in the moment…"

    He went on to make a creative mark in offbeat independent parts — a mentally disabled boy in "What's Eating Gilbert Grape," for which he received his first Oscar nod, an athlete addicted to drugs in "The Basketball Diaries." Since 1997, when he broke hearts and box-office records around the world in "Titanic," DiCaprio has been in the enviable position of being able to work with top-tier directors like Eastwood, Martin Scorsese, Ridley Scott, Christopher Nolan and Danny Boyle.

    With roles in "Gatsby" and Quentin Tarantino's "Django Unchained" on the way, his career is showing no sign of slowing. And with director James Cameron planning to re-release "Titanic" in 3-D next year, many moviegoers will be reminded of why they fell for him in the first place

    Reflecting on how he has grown since making "Titanic" with costar Kate Winslet, DiCaprio said, "Kate and I never expected in a million years that it would be that kind of a success, didn't know what we were getting ourselves into… It empowered us in a lot of ways; we got to make films and finance them based on our name. Being able to do that with almost any type of movie you want to do is a huge privilege. It's been a huge gift."

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4 replies since 6/11/2011, 23:05   106 views
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