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John Cusack, Serendipity Interview by Paul
Fischer in Los Angeles.
What
a year for John Cusack: In two of the years big Hollywood releases,
he gets to romance Kate Beckinsale in Serendipity and dump Catherine Zeta-Jones
in Americas Sweethearts. But if it was up this reluctant of stars,
hed be off doing what he enjoys the most: Starring in one of those
quirky films he does so well, as he recently confessed to Paul Fischer.
John Cusack is every bit the anti-star: Shy,
introspective, rather quiet and at odds at dealing with the press courting
him.
An ironic dilemma, given the fact that in
the hit comedy Americas Sweethearts, Cusacks character
an ego-inflated star has to attend the proverbial press junket
for the fictitious film his character and sparring ex-wife are promoting.
Shooting that film, Cusack, muses, did not
alter his perception of that peculiar facet of the movie business. I
always had a perception of press junkets before doing that movie,
Cusack abruptly responds.
Enough
said. In Americas Sweethearts, directed by new studio chief Joe
Roth. Cusack and Zeta-Jones play a movie-star husband and wife forced
to promote a film they shot together, even though theyve since bitterly
parted.
A broad romantic farce that pokes fun at the
marketing of Hollywood cinema, it was one of two biggies ready for release,
the other being the old-fashioned romantic comedy Serendipity, which will
be feted at this months Toronto Film Festival, prior to its October
launch. But ask Cusack to discuss these projects, and he seems remarkably
ill at ease, and strangely monosyllabic.
After all, it seems that 2001 was a big year
for Cusack, maybe his biggest to date, yes? I dont know, no
I dont think so. I mean, Americas Sweethearts did well, here
in the States, and if Serendipity does very well, itll be my biggest
year for movies that make money.
Thats
the point, of course. Cusack is uncomfortable talking about the commercialism
of his work; and concedes that this is certainly his most mainstream year
to date. Thats probably a good estimate.
Cusacks career has been defined by an
off-centeredness to his work, playing characters on the fringe of mainstream
America, from his earliest work in Say Anything, through to the likes
of Being John Malkovich, Grosse Pointe Blank and High Fidelity [the latter
two co-written by the actor].
So it seems at odds with Cusacks previous
work that he ends up starring not in one, but two, very mainstream Hollywood
films. Contemplating the dilemma in which he finds himself, Cusacks
honest defense is that doing these bigger movies merely help you
to do movies that are more sort of, off center, he quietly explains.
Born into an Irish Catholic family in the
Chicago suburb of Evanston in 1966, Cusack's father, Dick, was an actor
and documentary maker and his mother, Nancy, a teacher. His sisters, Joan
and Susie are actors and Joan - or ''Joanie'' as he calls her - has appeared
in a few of brother Johns films, including High Fidelity.
Cusack describes his childhood as being unconventional
and free-thinking, which may explain why he turned to acting via
Chicago's Piven Theatre Workshop, run by the parents of one of his friends,
Jeremy, who has appeared in many of Cusacks movies, Serendipity
amongst them. Bit parts in commercials lead to bigger and bigger film
roles in the likes of Rob Reiner's The Sure Thing, and John Sayles' Eight
Men Out until Cusack hit the 1990s big with Steven Frears The Grifters.
Cusack became passionate about lending a unique
voice to film, and thus founded his own production company New Crime Productions,
which produced Grosse Pointe Blank and High Fidelity. I just wanted
to make my own movies, and that was the perfect way to go about doing
that.
Over a decade on, in searching for the perfect
role, Cusack says its easier to find a good character, because
you tend to make so mistakes that it becomes a process of elimination,
and you end up mistrusting what interests you. Referring to, he
adds, particular moments in a script, a scene or a point of view.
After youve done this for a while, you are less likely to be swayed
by someone elses opinion. If your gut tells you, its better
to do it THIS way, you just listen to yourself.
This is what he did before tackling Serendipity,
another conventional Hollywood romance, but one that appealed to Cusack.
It had a fairy tale quality about it that I loved. Cusack
and Beckinsale meet by chance in a New York department store one Christmas
Eve, spend a magical evening together in a sea of idyllic anonymity then
inadvertently part. She believes in Fate. If they are destined to be together
then so be it. A few years later, even as their lives have changed, that
Xmas Eve comes back to haunt them and maybe Fate will bring them together.
This was a script that needed a lot of work, and the writer and
director agreed. There were a number of scenes in particular that we knew
could be really special and that Im very proud of. Cusack says that
in terms of why this project, I hadnt done a big, commercial
date movie, and it gave me a chance to be in a more popular
movie, unlike what the actor sees as the more subversive movie
I tend to be drawn to. Serendipity, he adds, is a straight
fairytale that your girlfriends would want to see. Americas
Sweethearts, he says, Was the same kind of movie in a way, in that
its a much more mainstream, commercial movie, and Cusack enjoyed
the way the film held up a mirror to what is supercilious about
Hollywood which was fun. I also couldnt resist working with Catherine
[Zeta-Jones] again and Julia Roberts, whos the biggest star in the
world after all.
Now that Cusack has turned mainstream, at
least for a short while, he says that hell be back more subversive
than ever, and thats the way he likes it. The actor is currently
co-writing a new screenplay, Et Tu Babe, which is based on a book which
I thought was really funny.
There's this author called Mark Leyner, who
wrote a sort of incendiary, post- post-modern, stream-of-consciousness,
megalomania, kind of, delusional autobiography. Sounds pure Cusack.
And as subversive actor, hes soon off
to London to star in the Indie film, Hoffman, which is about a painter
who loses an arm in WWI, and becomes an art dealer because he can't paint
anymore, as well as this kind of bohemian. Then an ex-WWI soldier comes
in to sell his watercolors, and he turns out to be Adolf Hitler. Its
about the relationship between these two men. For the record, Hitler
will be played by Aussie Noah Taylor. Hes an exciting young
actor whom Im dying to work with.
Neither of the above sounds all too mainstream.
He smiles faintly and knowingly at the prospect of turning his back on
commercial Hollywood at least for now.
SERENDIPITY WILL HAVE ITS WORLD PREMIERE AT
THE TORONTO FILM FESTIVAL ON SEPTEMBER 13 PRIOR TO ITS US RELEASE ON OCTOBER
5
Real Name: John Cusack
Date of Birth: June 28, 1966
Place of Birth: Evanston, Ill., USA
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Released
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Movie Name
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Role
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1st weekend
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Total Gross
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7/20/01
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America's Sweethearts
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Eddie Thomas
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$30,181,877
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$89,897,911
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3/31/00
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High Fidelity
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Rob Gordon
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$6,429,107
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$27,277,055
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12/8/99
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Cradle Will Rock
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Nelson Rockefeller
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$168,295
|
$2,899,970
|
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10/29/99
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Being John Malkovich
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Craig Schwartz
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$1,866,210
|
$22,858,926
|
|
4/23/99
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Pushing Tin
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Nick Falzone
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$3,555,032
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$8,406,264
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12/23/98
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Thin Red Line, The
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Gaff, John B, Capt, 1st Bn Exec
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$11,362,226
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$36,385,763
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11/21/97
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Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
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John Kelso
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$5,233,658
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$25,078,937
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11/14/97
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Anastasia
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Dimitri (voice)
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$14,104,933
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$58,406,347
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6/6/97
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Con Air
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US Marshal Vince Larkin
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$24,131,738
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$101,117,573
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4/11/97
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Grosse Point Blank
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Martin Q. Blank
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$6,870,397
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$28,029,208
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2/16/96
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City Hall
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Kevin Calhoun
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$6,950,794
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$20,278,055
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10/28/94
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Road to Welville, The
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Charles Ossining
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$2,580,108
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$6,487,257
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10/21/94
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Bullets Over Broadway
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David Shayne
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$13,329,311
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John is set to star with Julia Roberts in
Steven Spielberg's new romantic comedy, though the official word
is that they are 'looking at their schedules'!
The movie focuses on a cardiologist and a
doorman who both have non-existent love lives because she is too busy
with her career and he is useless with women. The two meet at a wedding
and fall head over heels for each other. To avoid being dumped, she tells
him she's a kindergarten teacher and he tells her he's a stockbroker.
In pre-production, 'Interlight' is set to
begin shooting on White Jazz in Spring 2001. This is the film adaptation
of the book by James Ellroy Starring alongside John is Nick
Nolte, and the director is Bob Richardson. This is a tense
thriller, set in L.A. in 1958, dealing with the LAPDs run-ins with
the mob. The official website is www.whitejazzmovie.com - it is
not 'live' at present, but you can sign up to be notified of the launch.
Written by Alan Arkin and Barbara
Dane, the IMDB lists this movie for completion during 2000. This drama
centres around a journalist (John) who is sent to Brazil to cover the
trial of Arigo, a man being tried for witchcraft, which is based on a
true story. Alan Arkin, who co-starred in Grosse Pointe Blank will
take a supporting role and will also direct.
John is in talks to star in and become executive
producer of the drama Sweet Smell of Success, based on an original version
starring Tony Curtis and Burt Lancaster. He is to play the
role of Sidney Falco, who was in awe of J. J. Hunsecker, an omnipotent
New York gossip columnist. Hunsecker hires Falco to break up his sister's
relationship with a jazz musician before she marries him. The movie will
be based in Manhattan, and the characters will have different occupations
than Curtis and Lancaster in the original.
This movie reunites John with Woody Allen
for an adaptation of Ira Berkow's The Man Who Robbed the Pierre.
John has reportedly signed to write the screenplay with writing partners
D.V. DeVincentis and Steve Pink. The movie will tell the
story of the 1972 daylight robbery carried out at Manhattan's Pierre Hotel
by ex-cons and former cellmates Bobby Comfort and Sammy Nalo. Working
with three other accomplices, they entered the hotel dressed in suits
and ties and handcuffed 19 employees and patrons before making off with
more than $10 million in jewels and cash.
After plea-bargaining their way to freedom,
they separated, and Comfort went straight until his death 11 years later.
John is said to be in talks to star in this
comedy drama about a group of friends who are so concerned about their
writer alcoholic friend (played by John), who sends a worrying letter
to his best friend from his Antibes hideaway, that they travel to France
to carry out an intervention
the only problem is, the
friends have just as many problems of their own, and interventions are
a'plenty! The film is set to be filmed on location in New York and France.
John is considering a new project from Ben
Trebilcook. It follows events after a terrorist attack destroys part
of the Great Wall of China. According to sources, Cusack would play a
CIA agent who discovers that his agency is responsible for the bombing,
and that the agency is trying to bring about another major war. He reportedly
claims responsibility and turns terrorist himself, targeting other wonders
of the world in an effort to expose the conspiracy.
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Being John Malkovich (1999)
Starring: John Cusack, Cameron Diaz
Director: Spike Jones
John As: Craig Schwartz
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Cradle Will Rock (1999)
Starring: John Cusack, Tim Robbins
Director: Tim Robbins
John As: Nelson Rockefeller
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Pushing Tin (1999)
Starring: John Cusack, Billy Bob Thornton
Director: Mike Newell
John As: Nick Falzone
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The Jack Bull (1999)
Starring: John Cusack, John Goodman
Director: John Badham
John As: Myrl Redding
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The Thin Red Line (1998)
Starring: Nick Nolte, Jim Caviezel
Director: Terrence Malick
John As: Captain John Gaff
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This Is My Father (1998)
Starring: Aidan Quinn, James Caan
Director: Paul Quinn
John As: Eddie Sharp
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Chicago Cab - aka "Hellcab" (1998)
Starring: Gillian Anderson, John Cusack
Director: Mary Cybulski
John As: Scary Man
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Anastasia (Voice-Over) (1997)
Starring: Meg Ryan, John Cusack
Director: Don Bluth, Gary Goldman
John As: Dimitri
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Midnight In The Garden of Good & Evil (1997)
Starring: Kevin Spacey, John Cusack
Director: Clint Eastwood
John As: John Keslo
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Eastwood on Eastwood (TV ) (1992)
Starring: Clint Eastwood
Director: Richard Schickel
John As: Narrator
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Con Air (1997)
Starring: Nicholas Cage, John Malkovich
Director: Simon West
John As: Vince Larkin
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Grosse Point Blank (1997)
Starring: John Cusack, Minnie Driver
Director: George Armitage
John As: Martin Q. Blank
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City Hall (1996)
Starring: Al Pacino, John Cusack
Director: Harold Becker
John As: Kevin Calhoun
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"Baseball"
(mini TV series - Voice-Over) (1994)
Starring: Adam Arkin, John Cusack
Director: Ken Burns I
John As: Himself
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Bullets Over Broadway (1994)
Starring: John Cusack, Chazz Palminteri
Director: Woody Allen
John As: David Shayne
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Floundering (1994)
Starring: James Le Gros, John Cusack
Director: Peter McCarthy
John As: J.C.
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The Road to Wellville (1994)
Starring: Matthew Broderick, John Cusack
Director: Alan Parker
John As: Charles Ossinging
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Money For Nothing (1993)
Starring: John Cusack
Director: Ramon Menendez
John As: Joey Coyle
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Roadside Prophets (1992)
Starring: John Doe, John Cusack
Director: Abbe Wool
John As: Serial Eater
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