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Thanks to Isis: RUSSELL
CROWE - CINDERELLA MAN
FAMILY MAN
The Cinderella Man (alias Russell Crowe) wins the Venice popularity
bout in the first round and confirms the primary role of family
in his own life – and that of “99.9% of every man
on this planet” at his sole media meeting, attended by
your reporter, Helen Barlow. Plus: Turning into Cinderella Man. Russell Crowe
is in a good mood as he hits Venice to promote his
latest movie, Ron Howard's Cinderella Man, playing at the Festival
- and the reception has been fabulous. A standing ovation from
the crowd, screaming fans outside the premiere chanting "Russell, Russell",
and his beloved wife and infant son accompanying him. "It's
been a lot of fun walking down the Venetian streets holding my
wife's hand" "It's been a
lot of fun walking down the Venetian streets holding my wife's
hand. We have not been on a gondola ride but we've been on the
powerboat, going backwards and forwards. Actually the captain,
Freddie, let Jack Aubrey take the wheel as soon as we came in from
the airport. He said, 'Captain Jack [swashbuckling voice] right,
not a problem'. So I took the wheel and my son fell asleep in my
arms while I was doing it. So it was a great way to start the trip
in Venice."
Crowe likes to take control of most situations he finds himself in, and characters
like Aubrey from Peter Weir's Master and Commander : Far Side of the World
and his Maximus from Ridley Scott's Gladiator seem to come naturally to him.
Actors who can play such men of force are badly needed in Hollywood at the moment,
and while Crowe's latest character, the real-life Depression era boxer, Jim
Braddock, is very much a fighter, he is a lover too. The devoted husband
wrote his wife (played by Renee Zellweger) a letter each day when they were
apart. He in fact came back into the ring, after being washed up and humiliated,
because he had no other means of supporting his family. His determination
was so great that he ultimately staged a huge comeback, and was nicknamed
Cinderella Man by the media. His contesting the world championship provides
the film's powerful climax.
"I think Braddock is a simple, decent man who, like 99.9 per cent of every man
on this planet, wants their children and family to take precedent," says Crowe. "He
was a guy who had lost all his investments and lost his money, and through
the simple focus on the needs of his family, he survived, and prospered to
become the heavyweight champion of the world at a point in his career where
from an injury and boxing record point of view, that was no longer a possibility.
That story was real and to me that was important. You can't make the stuff
up."
There's no doubting that Howard, Crowe's friend and director on his previous
movie, A Beautiful Mind, knew the milieu well. His grandfather had been part
of an extreme rural depression in Oklahoma, while his mother's
father had been a shopkeeper who had been forced to board up his shop to protect
the goods every night. At 16 Howard even made a documentary about the Depression.
A fan of baseball and a good basketball player himself, the director was not
so keen at first to take on the Cinderella Man story, but as usual Crowe proved
very persuasive.
"I felt he was the right director for the material to elevate boxing in a feature
film to another level, so I gave the screenplay to him expecting an immediate
positive answer. He told me, 'I can see why you want to be in the movie, but
I can't see why I'd want to direct it.' Key to his accepting it was when I suggested
he think of the fights like the fires on his earlier movie, Backdraft, where
he gave each of the fires a different personality. After chewing it over for
seven months--I never said that Ronnie was quick--he was the captain aboard the
ship and all I had to do was chill out, lay back and get my head punched in," Crowe
explains in his inimitable fashion.
The only problem is, as per Howard's warm and fuzzy approach, Braddock is presented
as a little too saintly and heroic in the movie. Maybe that's the reason American
audiences stayed away, but Crowe has his own rationale.
"It's a time in the world when a tale of such simple courage seems to be hard
to get through to people without a level of cynicism being applied, particularly
in America. They're not really looking for heroes at the moment. "Crowe
is confident the film will do better overseas" Cinderella Man
was released at the height of the US summer when
blockbusters like Batman Begins ruled the box office. Now, particularly
given the positive Venice reception, Crowe
is confident the film will do better overseas.
"All the international markets have chosen dates that are specific to the quality
of the film, whereas in America there was a
touch of arrogance about trying to carve out a piece of the summer with a film
that was traditionally not a summer film. It was under the guise of counter-programming,
which I can understand, and it was a valid choice that they made, but it proved
to be a bad choice."
Crowe was born in New Zealand and moved to Australia when he was
young. He now lives in Sydney and at his country
property, where he can live a quieter life and escape the media gaze.
For the moment though he is in the south of France, re-teaming
with his Gladiator director, Ridley Scott, for of all things, a comedy. At
a special small press conference conducted for Cinderella Man in Venice, Crowe, in a
buoyant mood, lets the Australian humour fly. When I refer to Scott as "the
only celebrity" who attended Crowe's wedding, the actor takes me to task.
"The language of the magazines! The only celebrity! One of the finest auteur
filmmakers ever to walk the planet was the only celebrity at my wedding. What
about Shane Warne, the bowler? He was there."
While I reply that I meant the only famous film colleague, I figure this is
a bad moment to mention the cricket and thankfully our illustrious star proceeds
to explain his bonding with the British director without any more fuss.
"It's been the same experience I had with Ron on Cinderella Man, starting from
this deeply resonant point of friendship where we don't tiptoe around each
other. I just tell him, 'Mate, that sucks'. It's about the shorthand you achieve
because you respect each other and you tend to work really hard, do really long
days. After five days of shooting the French crew went to the producer and said
[Crowe adopts a silly Clouseau-style accent] 'This is crazy, how can they do
this? In five days they did 55 set ups and it's a f..king comedy. Nobody works
like this. By the third week the motherf..kers will kills us'."
He says that his character named Max (after Maximus) is a lot of fun to play.
"I'm portraying an English banker who is an absolute asshole and who inherits
a vineyard in Provence. His principal
mentor throughout his life was his Uncle Henry and he taught him the difference
between a good and bad red wine and the difference between a good and bad cigar
and the importance of a blue suit. Unfortunately he taught him all that around
the age of 11, and things have changed. All the things that his uncle put inside
him as a young man are still there but they've just been reconfigured by life.
By going back to Provence he becomes revitalized."
A Spanish journalist inquires after Scott's winemaking activities. "He makes
wine 55,000 cases a year," Crowe notes.
Does Crowe like wine? Is he interested in other industries besides the movies?
the journalist bravely continues.
"Well, I do. You just don't know about it, do you? Why would I tell you? You'll
just screw up the rest of my f.ing life, won't you?"
"Australian wine is very good", the journalist offers, figuring a compliment
is in order.
"Australian wine is wonderful, so is New Zealand wine," Crowe
adds. "I
never have and I don't live in Hollywood." So how does he
deal with his career while living in Australia? "I deal with
it by not camping out in the office. I never have and I don't live
in Hollywood. I never have
and I don't live in America. I have a home
in Sydney and a home 560
kilometers north of Sydney, where I run
Angus cattle and my life is centred between those two places. I think
the reason certain types of directors want to work with me is that
I'm not imbued with the business. I still think in terms of what
I do as art and that might be pretentious but it's really important
to me. The only time I do a film is when I read something that touches
my heart and that's one of the major thematics of the movie I'm working
on now--that people never die as long as you keep them in your heart.
For me that's a cool place to be telling a story from, and the fact
that Ridley and I would get together again and do a low budget comedy
instead of what people would expect-some $150million bloodfest -
I'm enjoying that part of it as well.
"I do movies that I have some kind of emotional connection to. All I'm trying
to do when I do my job is not to be elevated in your mind, but that when you
sit in a cinema to watch a movie you get goose bumps, maybe even shed a tear."
TURNING INTO CINDERELLA MAN
Crowe began the process by immersing himself in the archives
of photographs and film reels that still exist of Braddock in
his fighting heyday. He spent hours meticulously analysing the
fighter’s
every movement and facial expression in the ring, dissecting his
character’s drive and persistence from the outside in. At
the same time, Crowe began to study the art of boxing - the sport
known as “the sweet science” for its multifaceted
mix of grace, grit and strategy - with trainer Angelo Dundee,
who for 21 years trained the greatest champion of them all, Muhammad
Ali.
The next task was to whip Crowe into the highly conditioned shape
of a hungry pro boxer. But because Crowe was devoted to absolute
authenticity, he didn’t
want to use today’s far more sophisticated training methods; rather,
he wanted to use the same bare-bones methods Jim Braddock would have used.
From research, Crowe learned that boxers in the 1930s rarely trained with weights,
giving them a less cut physique than current boxers, so his program studiously
avoided pumping iron. Instead, the emphasis was put on cardio and endless days
and nights of sparring, sparring and more sparring in the ring - which eventually
transformed the actor from 228 pounds of Master and Commander’s Captain
Jack Aubrey to Braddock’s fighting weight of 178.
Taking advantage of the actor’s natural athleticism, Dundee brought in
trainer Wayne Gordon, himself a former Olympic boxer, to design a regimen that
included kayaking, swimming, running, biking, hiking mountains, skipping rope
and working a bag – all designed to build a naturally strong (but not
overly muscular) body built for power and endurance. Crowe trained with typical
intensity, dropping numerous pounds to better emulate Braddock’s physique—the
physique some said was too light and too battered to ever even hope for a
regional win, let alone a heavyweight championship.
To better capture Braddock’s unique pugilistic style, Crowe also worked
on choreography with Angelo Dundee, who was lucky enough to have witnessed
Braddock fight in person on several occasions. The trainer taught Russell
to use the left hook that Braddock developed to overcome the weakness of
his right hand and even how to carry his body as if he were several inches
taller, as Braddock was.
Crowe’s
complete transformation took Dundee aback. “I
would go so far as to say Russell is Jim Braddock,” says the
venerable trainer. “I’m amazed the way Russell picked
up his mannerisms, his smoothness, the legs, the way he slides, that
slip, slide, block, slide, jab - boom! Like Jim, he has just about
the greatest left hook I’ve ever seen. He’s got the speed,
the rhythm, the determination and especially the will. Best of all,
he has learned to think like a fighter. One thing about Braddock
is that he was a smart fighter, and Russell uses his noodle just
like Braddock did. I do think if he wasn’t an actor, Russell
could have been a great fighter.” "I’ve
simply never seen anyone dedicate themselves to a part with more
intensity than Russell Crowe" Despite having
worked with Crowe before, Ron Howard was also surprised by how
Crowe used his physical changes to demonstrate Braddock’s transformation
as a man. “What Russell has done so well is to let Braddock
evolve during the course of the movie - as both a fighter and as
a person. Russell draws from what he discerns and then reflects that
back in a very detailed way. It’s the root of his immense talent.
He has great instincts about what makes his character tick and how
to express it. The fights needed to be a reflection of Braddock’s
character and Russell was able to do that. Once again as an artist
he proved himself to be superb.”
Adds producer Brian Grazer: “I’ve simply never seen
anyone dedicate themselves to a part with more intensity than Russell
Crowe.”
Boxing also tends to reveal human frailty, and like Jim Braddock, Crowe was
not immune to injury. Just one week before shooting was to begin, Crowe dislocated
his shoulder while sparring aggressively. The shoulder would require surgery,
necessitating a seven-week delay in production.
Undeterred, Crowe used his recuperation time to devote himself to further refining
his footwork and ring craft. He was back in the gym just a week out of the
operating room, working to strengthen the injured shoulder back to fighting
level. Meanwhile, the production team also used the period to design more complex
ring choreography. Ultimately, Crowe saw the delay as a blessing in disguise,
providing him, the filmmakers, everyone involved more time to ensure an authentic
portrayal.
Published September
22, 2005
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