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Saturday, June 29, 2002
 
 
Tom Hanks, Road to Perdition Interview by Paul Fischer.

Michael Sullivan (Tom Hanks) is a hitman for the Irish mob in the Depression-era Midwest in DreamWorks Pictures' and Twentieth Century Fox's Road To Perdition - 2002
Photo: Francois Duhamel

He’s a two-time Oscar winner and by all accounts, the nicest A-list star in Hollywood. But his likeable Everyman screen image is about to be put to the test playing a hit man protecting his son from the hands of a desperate mob, in Sam Mendes’ revisiting of thirties gangsterism in Road to Perdition. It may be a change of pace for Hanks, but the recent AFI recipient doesn’t necessarily see it that way, as he explains to PAUL FISCHER.

Michael Sullivan (Tom Hanks) makes a horrifying discovery that will have terrible repercussions in DreamWorks Pictures' and Twentieth Century Fox's Road To Perdition - 2002
Photo: Francois Duhamel Tom Hanks was in his usual jovial mood when we met at a Chicago hotel, an appropriate venue to discuss the Chicago-shot Road to Perdition. The Tom Hanks that one meets is in stark contrast to his Michael O’Sullivan, the lowbrow hit man and surrogate son to gangster patriarch John Rooney {Paul Newman}. Much has been made of Hanks’ change of image for this role. Hanks disagrees that too much has been made of this aspect of the movie, “because it takes into account a falsehood that it’s possible to change the image to begin with, which you can’t. You walk into any movie theatre with a preconceived idea of everybody who’s in the movie you’re about to see, whether it’s Liam Neeson or the Affleck Brothers, and everybody knows that, then hopefully at some point during the movie that switch goes off and you watch the movie and are involved in what’s going on. Hopefully you’ve been able to make some organic connection with the audience that’s been there on that particular day, they’re moved at that’s that.” The 45-year old actor, when asked if he had a need to go down the road travelled by Michael Sullivan, quickly responds that he “didn’t NEED to play anything; there’s no medicinal quality to doing these movies,” he laughingly jibes. “You see what the potential for the movie is, and by that I mean, it’s ability to truly examine the theme which you think is expressed in the movie. Then you see who eels who is going to be doing it.” In making his choices, Hanks adds “there’s no science to it as well as no weighing of pros and cons. It’s an instantaneous reaction: I’ve never seen this before. On the one hand it’s a genre movie but actually it’s dealing with all this father-son stuff that’s been around since the Egyptians started carving clay tablets and telling stories in them. Therefore it’s something that I get and would like to explore, so you simply say ‘Yeah’.”

 These days, Hanks has that luxury to make such instantaneous decisions, and that’s been the way for the two-time Oscar winner for over two decades. But at the beginning, he recalls making choices on the basis “of being lucky to be offered a job, ANY job. The job could have been selling yoghurt; I would have taken ANY job at that point, because you just want to be able to do it.” How times have changed, the actor muses. “I would like to thin k that I’m at this point where the only things that I have to do are truly fascinating to me. The burden of doing one of these movies is really substantial”, Hanks, explains. “Not the least of which is when you have to talk about it as much as you have to and the desire to talk it up in a genuine way. If I was to tell you that the sole reason I did Road to Perdition was for a change of image, how would you be able to brook that?”

Photo GalleryHanks loves his profession, as choosy as he is, he remains enamoured of it. Despite being consistently labelled the nicest guy in Hollywood, Hanks recalls never loving anything else. “Acting was the greatest job in high school. I never went into this for any other reason in that it’s ridiculous amounts of fun. How can this be work pretending to be other people, whether on stage or in the movies? I can’t believe they paid me $285 a week in order to do this thing. And I collected a $10 a raise ever since,” he adds laughingly. “Some people do this for power, others for fame and some do it do that they can talk to a guy at you at press junkets. I’m not in it for any of those reasons. I shouldn’t be called the NICEST guy, but rather the LUCKIEST guy.”

It was also the luckiest guy who, at a very youthful 45, received a recent American Film Institute Lifetime Achievement Award. One of the youngest ever recipients, Hanks admits that the whole affair was somewhat surreal, to say the least. “I got the phone call, went through about five months of self-loathing because of it, made my peace with it till I just hoped it was a good party, show good clips, worried who was sitting where and sat down.”

And Hanks’ career is not slowing down. Next he re-teams with Steven Spielberg in Catch me if you Can, opposite Leonardo DiCaprio. “That was a nice experience. I like working with people a second time around because you’re passed the getting-to-know-you phase and you just know how they work. Steven works very fast. He’s got the same crew as he had when we made Saving Private Ryan, and there’s the added bonus of working with Leo who added something else to the mix.”

Photo Gallery  While Road to Perdition revisits the classic world of the American gangster, at the film’s core is an often profound examination of fathers and sons, told in a complex way. For Hanks, that was clearly what attracted him to the project. He was able to respond to the material, “by looking back at the relationship that I had with my own father, as well as the relationship that I have with my own kids. When I read it, I said to myself: I know what these guys are going through.” Hanks’ relationship with his own father, who was a cook, may not have mirrored this film precisely, but the actor does concede that “it was strained and I didn’t live with him for a long time, though basically he was a good guy. He was as complex as anybody’s is going to be. We were two different personality types. My dad was a shy man. We didn’t have a lot in common but we still had a good relationship.” Hanks believes that their relationship “would have been better now, now that I’m 45.” Hanks took much from his father, he says, and brought that to his relationship with his own sons. “Of course everybody does. There’s a lot of stuff that went down not just between me but also the rest of my dad’s kids, and so I don’t want my kids to go through that. There are also some mistakes that I know I’m making, no matter how hard I try.” As for the most important lesson he hopes to instil in his children, the actor pauses slightly. “To like what you and wake up and be content in the morning.”

 

Where the Wild Things Are (2004)

Release Date TBA 2004
Max is sent to his room for prancing about dressed like a wolf. However, he sneaks out into a world that is created by his imagination which is populated by massive beasts who appoint him to be king of their world.
Starring Tom Hanks
Directed by Eric Goldberg
Written by David Reynolds
Studio Universal Pictures
Genre Animated, Comedy

The Polar Express 2003

Release Date December 2003
Based on the children's book of the same title by Chris Van Allsburg, the film's theme is: Believing in Santa Claus isn't easy when all of your friends and family insist he's just make-believe. But a young boy's faith is rewarded on Christmas Eve when he's awakened by a steam train whose conductor (Tom Hanks) pulls up in front of his house and takes him and other children to the North Pole to meet Santa.
Starring Tom Hanks
Directed by Robert Zemeckis
Written by Malia Scotch Marmo
Studio Warner Bros.
Genre Children's

Terminal 2003

Release Date TBA 2003
A Balkan immigrant in the United States is forced to live permanently at an airport when his former war-torn country's borders are erased — voiding his passport and leaving him with no political home. Tom Hanks will star as the refugee, who meets and falls in love with a Latin flight attendant, which prompts a bold escape plan.
Starring Tom Hanks
Written by Sacha Gervasi, further developed by Tom Hanks
Studio DreamWorks
Genre Drama

Catch Me if You Can 2002

Release Date November 27, 2002
The true story of Frank Abagnale (Leonardo DiCaprio), the youngest man to make the FBI's most-wanted list for forgery. Frank posed at various times as a doctor, a lawyer, a pilot, and even an FBI agent. Throughout his life, he passed millions of dollars in bad checks and later, after finally being captured, escaped from prison. Frank Abagnale eventually became a consultant for the FBI, specializing in the field of white-collar crime.
Starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Hanks, Amy Adams, Christopher Walken, Martin Sheen, Jennifer Garner
Directed by Steven Spielberg
Written by Jeff Nathanson
Studio DreamWorks SKG
Genre Biography, Crime
Filming Location(s) Los Angeles, New York, Quebec City

Video/DVD Releases

Released

Title

DVD

VHS

US Gross

WW Gross

7/12/2002

Road to Perdition, The

DVD

VHS

Coming Soon

 

12/22/2000

Cast Away

DVD

VHS

$233,630,478

$424,300,000

12/10/1999

Green Mile, The

DVD

VHS

$136,801,374

$284,600,000

11/19/1999

Toy Story 2

DVD

VHS

$245,823,397

$485,800,000

12/18/1998

You've Got Mail

DVD

VHS

$115,821,495

$250,800,000

7/24/1998

Saving Private Ryan

DVD

VHS

$216,335,085

$480,000,000

10/4/1996

That Thing You Do!

DVD

VHS

$25,809,813

$25,809,813

3/15/1996

Celluloid Closet, The

DVD

VHS

$1,310,167

$1,310,167

11/22/1995

Toy Story

DVD

VHS

$191,796,233

$356,800,000

6/30/1995

Apollo 13

DVD

VHS

$172,070,496

$334,100,000

7/6/1994

Forrest Gump

DVD

VHS

$329,693,974

$679,400,000

12/22/1993

Philadelphia

DVD

VHS

$77,324,422

$77,324,422

6/25/1993

Sleepless in Seattle

DVD

VHS

$126,680,884

$227,900,000

7/1/1992

League of Their Own, A

DVD

VHS

$107,533,925

$107,533,925

2/21/1992

Radio Flyer

DVD

VHS

$4,651,977

$4,651,977

12/21/1990

Bonfire of the Vanities

DVD

VHS

$15,432,314

$15,432,314

3/9/1990

Joe Versus the Volcano

DVD

VHS

$39,381,963

$39,381,963

2/17/1989

Burbs, The

DVD

VHS

$35,382,246

$35,382,246

1/1/1989

Turner & Hooch

DVD

VHS

$71,079,915

$71,079,915

9/1/1988

Punchline

DVD

VHS

$21,032,000

$21,032,000

6/3/1988

Big

DVD

VHS

$114,968,774

$114,968,774

6/26/1987

Dragnet

DVD

VHS

$57,387,000

$57,387,000

7/1/1986

Nothing in Common

DVD

VHS

$32,324,000

$32,324,000

3/1/1986

Money Pit, The

DVD

VHS

$37,499,000

$37,499,000

1/1/1986

Every Time We Say Goodbye

DVD

VHS

$278,623

$278,623

1/1/1985

Volunteers

DVD

VHS

$19,900,000

$19,900,000

1/1/1985

Man With One Red Shoe, The

DVD

VHS

$8,600,000

$8,600,000

6/29/1984

Bachelor Party

DVD

VHS

$38,400,000

$38,400,000

3/9/1984

Splash

DVD

VHS

$62,100,000

$62,100,000

 

Thomas J. Hanks

Born on July 9, 1956

Born in Concord, California

Release Date July 12, 2002
Based on writer Max Allan Collins and illustrator Richard Piers Rayner's serialized mystery comic strip novel for DC Comics, the film is set in Depression-era Chicago and revolves around hit man Michael O'Sullivan, known to friends and enemies as the Angel of Death. Uncompromising in his work, O'Sullivan is just as devoted to his private life as a husband and father of two young boys. But when his two worlds collide, leading to the death of his wife and youngest son, O'Sullivan and his surviving son, Michael Jr., leave their peaceful home life behind and embark on a journey of revenge.
Starring Tom Hanks, Paul Newman, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Jude Law, Albert Molina, Stanley Tucci
Directed by Sam Mendes
Written by David Self
Studio DreamWorks
Genre Crime, Drama
MPAA Rating R - for violence and language
Running Time 119 minutes
Filming Location(s) Dundee, Ill.
Web Sites: Official Site

Book: Road to Perdition: A Novel

by Max Allan Collins

Soundtrack: Road To Perdition

Thomas Newman has penned yet another blockbuster score, this time for Road To Perdition, the Dreamworks picture starring Tom Hanks and Paul Newman (no relation).

Newman has a string of successes behind him. The king of A-list assignments (The Horse Whisperer for Robert Redford, The Green Mile for Frank Darabont, Erin Brockovich for Steven Soderbergh, not to mention American Beauty and Three Kings), he has written large scores and intimate ones, and garnered Oscar noms along the way for Little Women, The Shawshank Redemption, Unstrung Heroes and American Beauty.

Harry Potter is coming on DVD and VHS!
One of the most popular movies to hit the big screen in years, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, is finally coming to DVD and VHS. This spectacular two disc set with never-before-seen footage can be preordered today, so give them what they want. Click to order the Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone DVD or VHS today!
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