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It has been quite the year for Oscar-winner Robin Williams, playing
a gallery of dark characters, but none quite like his Sy in One
Hour Photo, a performance that may well garner him another Oscar
nomination. From a character so shut off to his irreverent return
to stand up comedy, Robin Williams may well have proven that he
is a true actor, which is why when we spoke, he was at his most
focused. PAUL FISCHER reports.
Robin Williams is on a roll. Having more recently
played a serial killer in Insomnia, he returns to a dark and chillingly
introspective character in One Hour Photo. Its close to being
the character of which he is the proudest, admits the actor. It
might be the work is just so precise so as a whole piece, I think
it is the best I have done in a long time. This is the first
time in an interview which Ive done with the Oscar winning
actor, during which he was determined to reduce his irreverent shtick.
Perhaps that is because there is no humour in
One Hour Photo. Williams is a playing such a precise character,
and finding this intensely lonely, tragic figure was a challenge
for the actor. It helps that Mark [Romanek, director], who
is so precise, wrote it, who watches it in every detail, everything
in the store, everything in the familys house, every detail
he watches so he monitors that stuff, with like a microscopic eye,
Williams explains. In One Hour Photo, Williams is Sy Parrish,
who runs the one-hour photo center at the local SavMart. He's always
pleasant and attentive, but he may just take his job a little too
seriously. Then again, he's got nothing else going in his life.
The only thing that seems to keep him going is the fantasy
life he's allowed himself based upon the photos he develops. Unfortunately,
for over a decade Sy has come to focus on one seemingly perfect
family, the Yorkins, consisting of Nina (Connie Nielsen),
husband Will (Michael Vartan), and nine-year-old son Jake (Dylan
Smith). Sy has developed their family photos since before Jake was
born. By now he feels he knows them so well that in his dream life
he imagines himself as Jake's "Uncle Sy". He's so emotionally
invested in them that once they begin to unravel as a family, Sy
begins to unravel too. Getting into the skin of this complex, disturbing
character was made a little easier by the fact that Williams was
an only child, he recalls, so its not like I didnt know loneliness. Then, the actor
revisited his classically trained acting roots in developing the
character and the often surreal world in which he inhabits. You
start to create a world where heres this guy, who you find
out at the very end, has had this horrific incident happen to him.
So, he created in a weird way his fascination
with photography, and kind of created a whole life for himself by
other peoples photographs, where he really does have this
second life.
At the same time, his life is just so mundane,
and weve depicted it as almost hyper-mundane, like an Arbus
photograph, a picture that is so black and white, and so distinct,
that you have no choice but to focus; thats what we worked
on.
Nobody was more surprised than Williams himself
when director Romanek came to him with this script, and he surprised
the director by accepting it and for relatively little money. I
took it because its so good and such a well-written piece.
When I saw his videos, I asked to be part of it
and he was shocked when I said I was doing it.
It was like Ok, wheres the hidden
camera?
Audiences, who see Williams completely enveloping
the character, will be genuinely shocked at seeing the gifted actor
take up his irreverent stand up routine, recently televised, and
a stark contrast to his trio of screen characters that have emerged
this year. Talking briskly about his return to stand-up, he describes
his triumphant theatrical return as an immediate kind of vampirism
because I get right back, the laughter feeds it. Comparing
his return to live comedy with the darker One Hour Photo, for instance,
he defines the latter as being very disturbing, and in a weird
way thats good.
Someone came up to me after Sundance and said
That was creepy in a good way.
That meant ensuring he didnt inhabit the
character 100% of the time. I would get into it, and then
get out of it because I didnt want to inhabit it.
I didnt want to coming home, and share it
with my own children, because when you do it, you inhabit it completely
and thats the joy about doing movies, you can inhabit it;
you would do time for otherwise, Williams laughingly adds.
Selling One Hour Photo to mainstream America, however, maybe as
challenging as making this film, but Williams tries to laugh it
off. The feel bad movie of the year. The movie
that will make you doubt yourself. After a summer of Scoobie Doo
heres One Hour Photo.
This brings us to the flip side of Robin,
the master of irreverent stand-up, to which he has returned after
a decade-long absence.
On stage, he is far removed from Sy Parrish, or
the serial killer he played in Insomnia. Here he inhabits a very
different persona, which is very much a release. Some would
say Im acting out and all of the dirty stuff that I do is
such a physical reality, such as his shows frenetic
finale in which he is visually describing cunnilingus by using his
upper arm. When I do that, I look out, and I can peak under
my arm, and I am going up and down, and I can see women going go
lower.
To just see the reaction of the men laughing,
is a weird kind of catharsis and there was just this kind of thing
that is built to that. The show starts off kind of whats happening
now, and then it goes political, then religious, then all of a sudden,
it just gets as primal as you can get. On stage, Williams
is frenetic, a comically consistent bundle of energy that comes,
he says, from the laughter.
Without the laughter,
you know, stand-up tragedy doesnt work too well.
But it comes from the release, you get the laughter
back, and it feeds you and pushes you. He had not done stand
up in over a decade. Now, he says, he will continue, because, after
all, I realized that its a source of income and I dont
have to wait for movies.
I just go out and do it, and then if a movie comes
along, great so you can do both. Williams toughest critic,
he says, is none other than his 10-year old son. He said You
have to set limits, which was great; it was like having a
tiny woman living with you.
And hes very sweet, but hes very direct
and hes honest.
Williams return to stand-up began In New
York. It kind of started after September 11th,
I went into a small club in New York and performed, and it was weird
that night, Colin Quinn was there, Chris Rock went on, and everyone
was kind of going back out to see what people would tolerate.
It was interesting.
And people said, We need it.
When Williams was 20, he left San Francisco to study acting at
Julliard under John Houseman. His classmates included Christopher
Reeve, Mandy Patinkin and William Hurt. "Like everyone else,
to pay the rent, I waited tables but then I started doing stand-up.
It paid more and it was something I really enjoyed." Houseman
suggested Williams had found his niche and encouraged him to pursue
stand up rather than dramatic acting. The comedy which so enriched
him as both a child and adult, partly came from a lonely childhood.
I was very much alone as a kid, I was an
only child, so you know, and there were not a lot of people around.
Sometimes we moved to certain neighbourhoods and
there were kids around, and that was a great page in my life, but
there were other times when I was pretty much alone, and its
not like I dont know that existence and how you kind of fantasize
and make worlds up. His urgent need to express himself with
humour also came from connecting with my mother, You find
a way of relating to people with what you see, and my mother was
very funny, and my father was very dry/.
Williams moved to Los Angeles where he met Jay Leno who got him
gigs at clubs in L.A. to help the actor pay bills while he auditioned
for film and TV roles. In 1978, Williams was cast as the alien on
Mork & Mindy, quickly earning a reputation as a comic sensation,
and describing that period as one during which I was trying
to make it to the next day.
In the ensuing 23 years, Williams won Emmys, Grammys and Oscars
and has become a major humanitarian as well as a major Hollywood
player. Williamss movies have been both critically acclaimed
and others, such as such sentimental works as Patch Adams, Bicentennial
Man and Jakob the Liar. But he laughs at his critical bric-a-bracs.
You know its out there.
Once and awhile when you read a review of somebody
ELSES movie and they take another shot at you. There was this
review and she was reviewing some other movie and heres what
she wrote: The people who made this movie should be put on
the same ice flow with the people who made Patch Adams. And
I was going, Fuck, lady. Yet through it all, Robin
Williams has no regrets, and muses about what legacy he will have
left behind. Yeah, it is interesting to think about that.
I have made some good films that have had an effect I think. Even
the comedy special where its interesting that people come
up and say, I havent laughed that hard in a long time.
They needed it, its a weird thing, and we
say yeah, I found something. Williams continuing ambition,
now that he has just turned 50, is to keep doing interesting
parts, and to keep pushing the envelope.
I got to meet Rod Steiger
before he died and to hang out with him for a couple of months.
He told me these amazing stories of why he was
an actor, he was in the Navy, this amazing life growing up in Newark
and just this tough fucking life, and why he loved acting, and initially
he went into acting to get laid, but who doesnt? But then,
I got to know him, and heres this guy, this great character
actor who did these extraordinary characters, 120 movies, played
the Pope, Mussolini, all these different things and was also a hardcore
manic depressive. He lived the life.
It hit me hard when he died, but then I went,
you know he really swung hard, and had a great life.
For Williams, the great life is continuing, and
it is his family, in particular wife Marsha, who keeps him grounded.
Shes amazing.
Shes really intelligent and very honest.
And once again, the children are very honest and
wonderful in their own way, intuitively. When not performing,
he is playing the role of father, about which, he says, he is getting
better. .
The other day, I was acting out my violent tendencies
with Paint Ball.
Have you ever done that?
Its insane, because its like this
paramilitary, where they all get guns and they shoot paint balls,
and they hurt.
You get these little whelps.
And it turned out my daughter was really good.
All of a sudden I realized the lethality of girls,
because she was just sitting there picking off people, and I said,
Delta, are you all right?
My little sniper nailed twelve people with that
thing.
Williams loves to make us laugh, but then we look
at his work in Insomnia, Death to Smoochy and now One Hour Photo,
and Robin Williams, actor, comes out. No wonder, he is enjoying
this new renaissance in his career.
Release Date: 24 May 2002
Summary: An Alaskan police officer accidentally kills his
own partner and then conceals that information during the investigation
into the officer's death. When the main suspect in the investigation
discovers the truth, he blackmails the policeman into framing an
innocent person for the crime. Based on a Norwegian film.
Starring Al Pacino, Hilary Swank, Robin Williams, Maura
Tierney, Martin Donovan, Jonathan Jackson
Directed by Christopher Nolan
Written by Hillary Seitz
Studio Warner Bros
Genre Crime, Thriller
Release Date May 24, 2002
MPAA Rating R - for language, some violence and brief nudity
Filming Location(s) Vancouver, Canada
Web Sites Official
Site
Release Date March 29, 2002
Summary: Robin Williams plays Rainbow Randolph, the colorful
star of a popular children's television show, who is fired over
a bribery scandal and replaced by a Barney-esque rhinoceros named
Smoochy (Ed Norton). When Randolph discovers that Smoochy is having
an affair with his ex-lover, Nora (Catherine Keener), a top programming
executive at the network, he plots his revenge. The film also stars
Danny DeVito as Smoochy's agent and Jon Stewart as the network president..
Starring Edward Norton, Robin Williams, Danny DeVito, Hank
Azaria, Catherine Keener, Jon Stewart
Directed by Danny DeVito
Written by Adam Resnick
Studio Warner Bros.
Genre Comedy
MPAA Rating R - for language and sexual references
Web Sites Official Site
Child piano prodigy Wladziu Valentino Liberace was a concert soloist
by age 11, and by his teens, he was performing with symphony orchestras.
By the 1950s, the musician was known simply as Liberace and was
still entertaining audiences with his flamboyant style. Decked out
in rhinestones, furs, and sequins, Liberace made several television
and film appearances while earning millions of dollars performing
each year. Liberace will track his career from childhood through
1987, when he died of AIDS.
Starring Robin Williams
Directed by Phillip Kaufman
Written by Aaron Seltzer, Jason Friedberg, Scott Alexander,
Larry Karaszewski
Studio New Line Cinema
|
Year
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Title
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VHS
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DVD
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Domestic BO.
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Overseas
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|
(2001)
|
Lovers, Liars and Thieves
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
TBA
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TBA
|
|
(1999)
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Bicentennial Man
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$58,220,000
|
$23.0
|
|
(1999)
|
Jakob the Liar
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$4,956,000
|
|
|
(1998)
|
Patch Adams
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$135,014,000
|
$58.5
|
|
(1998)
|
What Dreams May Come
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$55,350,000
|
$27.4
|
|
(1997)
|
Good Will Hunting
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$133,038,103
|
$87.5
|
|
(1997)
|
Flubber
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$92,969,824
|
$85.0
|
|
(1997)
|
Fathers' Day
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$28,660,000
|
$7.0
|
|
(1997)
|
Deconstructing Harry
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$4,904,940
|
|
|
(1996)
|
Hamlet
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$4,414,000
|
|
|
(1996)
|
Jack
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$58,586,000
|
$29.4
|
|
(1996)
|
Birdcage, The
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$123,986,000
|
$61.2
|
|
(1996)
|
Secret Agent, The
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
N/A
|
|
|
(1995)
|
Jumanji
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$100,200,000
|
$164.5
|
|
(1995)
|
Nine Months
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$69,700,000
|
|
|
(1993)
|
Being Human
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$1,519,000
|
|
|
(1993)
|
Mrs. Doubtfire
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$219,200,000
|
$204.0
|
|
(1992)
|
Toys
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$21,452,000
|
|
|
(1992)
|
Aladdin
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$217,350,000
|
|
|
(1992)
|
FernGully: The Last Rainforest
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$24,650,000
|
|
|
(1991)
|
Hook
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$119,654,000
|
|
|
(1991)
|
Dead Again
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$38,020,000
|
|
|
(1991)
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Fisher King, The
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$41,895,000
|
|
|
(1991)
|
Shakes the Clown
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$115,103
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|
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(1990)
|
Awakenings
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$52,096,000
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|
|
(1990)
|
Cadillac Man
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$15,300,000
|
|
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(1989)
|
Dead Poets Society
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$95,860,000
|
|
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(1989)
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Adventures of Baron Munchausen, The
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$8,083,000
|
|
|
(1987)
|
Good Morning, Vietnam
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$ 123,922,370
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|
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(1986)
|
Best of Times, The
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$7,790,000
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|
|
(1986)
|
Club Paradise
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$12,309,000
|
|
|
(1984)
|
Moscow on the Hudson
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$25,100,000
|
|
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(1983)
|
Survivors, The
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$14,000,000
|
|
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(1982)
|
World According to Garp, The
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$30,200,000
|
|
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(1980)
|
Popeye
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
$41,500,000
|
|
|
(1977)
|
Can I Do It 'Till I Need Glasses?
|
VHS
|
DVD
|
N/A
|
|
|
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