WTF with Marc Maron Podcast - Episode 1606 - Adrien Brody
Episode Date: January 6, 2025Adrien Brody does a lot of research for his roles, but his performance in the new movie The Brutalist was shaped largely by his family’s immigrant experience and it aligned with his desire to play c...haracters who are outsiders. Adrien also talks with Marc about becoming the youngest winner of the Best Actor Oscar for The Pianist and how it was a little too much to take. But on the flip side, he explains why he revels in the joy and camaraderie of making Wes Anderson’s films. Sign up here for WTF+ to get the full show archives and weekly bonus material! https://plus.acast.com/s/wtf-with-marc-maron-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
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all right let's do this how are are you? What the fuckers?
What the fuck buddies?
What the fuck, Nick?
What's happening?
I'm Mark Maron.
This is my podcast.
WTF.
One of the originals.
Audio only.
All interviews done in person, one on one.
No one else in the studio.
We're analog, baby.
This is old school.
Yeah, that's the way we do it.
And we always have done it.
I don't know, man.
I guess the trend is to build a TV studio
and have several people in there operating things,
making sure that people are situated properly
and they have to make sure that they look all right.
And I think it's kind of a deterrent to a type of intimate conversation, but you know, what
do I know other than this is what we do?
This is the organic, audio only.
Picture it, feel it, just take it in like that.
You can kind of do other things and just sort of
focus on the voice. There is something about it. There is something about the
nature of audio that is very intimate and it's one of the reasons why we still
do it this way. And for those of you who don't know, I am in my home, in my sort of converted garage, the new one, not the original one, riding
my own faders here, no one else in the studio with me, surrounded by these sound panels
that some kid made me, a few pictures, a few guitars, some leftover bits and pieces from
the original garage which was
cluttered with all kinds of shit and it's just one-on-one here I don't know
for me it's very engaging and sort of honest for me in terms of how we go
about doing things with this show and today I talked to Adrian Brody he came
over it's a very it's a very odd thing the the way people come over here and with this show. And today I talked to Adrian Brody. He came over.
It's a very odd thing the way people come over here
and it always has been.
I mean, now everyone's very adept to the podcast landscape
and everybody kind of has a podcast,
but there is still something interesting and disarming
and I think genuine about coming over to a guy's house, seeing
where he lives, using the bathroom over here, in the garage, maybe having me make
you a cup of tea or something. It's still a very kind of personal environment but
Adrian came over. He's actually the youngest person to win the Oscar for
Best Actor back in 2003 for his performance in The Pianist. He's actually the youngest person to win the Oscar for best actor back in 2003 for his performance in the pianist
he's been in movies like King Kong Midnight in Paris and
five Wes Anderson films as well as a
Television series like succession Peaky Blinders and winning time. He's now in the new epic the Brutalist
Which is out now
pretty stunning movie.
A pretty kind of confounding premise and scope of a movie.
I mean, the thing I had no idea came out of nowhere.
Hopefully I'm gonna get to talk to that director.
I like talking to directors.
I had Mike Lee in here a few days ago.
You'll hear that on Thursday.
Mike Lee, truly one of the greatest directors, totally unique in his process and what he's
able to capture and what he's able to get out of actors and in the collaborations that
he makes. There's a real honesty to it and a real pathos and a real comedy to it. Yeah, I guess I'll talk more about him on Thursday, but geez, what an amazing honor it
is to speak to actual true artists.
There is still a world for that.
There is still a significance to doing fearless art. And it's a shame that the work of true artists
is largely underappreciated,
and it really packs the biggest sort of wallop
in terms of connecting to your humanity,
and in terms of being challenged
in a way that's provocative
and accepting that challenge. I think we're entering a time,
and we're kind of living in a time where
that the thrust of culture is about ridding the culture
of people that the dominant culture feels
make them uncomfortable or are challenged by their presence or their life
or their being or their personal expression because it interrupts the mediocrity of what
is ascendant.
It's not a great time, difficult time for artists in terms of finding the courage and also delivering their art
in a pure way that they want it to be taken in
and then to have it confronted or wrestled with.
And on that note, someone I knew not well,
a kind of singular guy and I believe a real artist.
He'd been on the show and we had had lunch a couple times.
Jeff Bana has passed away.
He died by suicide.
He was a film director and a thinker.
He's married to Aubrey Plaza and it's a devastating
sad
event I
Didn't know him well, but I was very
Impressed with him and I had a couple of nice
conversations with him. I enjoyed his movies and
We had lunch
I can't remember when it was and he knew movies, and we had lunch.
I can't remember when it was.
And he knew my partner who passed away, Lynn Shelton, and he brought me a book.
I didn't get to it, but he brought me a book called The Work of Mourning by Jacques Derrida.
And it seems to be essays about friends and acquaintances and people that had impact on
Derrida and his process of grieving them.
And I just, it was a little dense for me at the time, but I've sort of been re-engaging
with dense material in light of the tragedy that's happened in relation to Jeff, I'm going to take a look
at this book.
But you know, my heart goes out to the people in his life.
It's very difficult.
It's very difficult.
Confounding, in some ways, to people about that.
And I don't know You know as somebody who is overly sensitive
You know built a bit self-centered who?
lives his life
in a creative pursuit and a pursuit for something
New and you know original and trying to generate things and reflect on life and culture in my chosen forms.
The weight can get pretty hard.
The weight can get pretty heavy.
I really don't know his situation
other than it is now tragic and sad.
But there's a lot of people out there
that the weight of this stuff, it's very
hard to compartmentalize.
If you have some kind of inability to control your empathy, or even if you're empathetic
a bit, or even if you're sensitive and nervous and scared and you have a hard time compartmentalizing
everything that's coming at you, it can get pretty bleak.
And as somebody who has, you know, been through periods of suicidal ideation, you
know, I used to do a joke about it, which is, you know, what I do. You know, it's
important to know that there is help out there.
And there are people to talk to, because many times,
the feelings that you're having will pass.
And a bad day is a bad day.
A bad hour is a bad hour.
And sometimes, depending on how isolated you are,
or in your feelings, or in your life, you know,
the inability to let those things pass and take tragic actions is fairly common.
But know that there are people that care about you
and there are people that are willing to help you
and there are places you can go to help you and there are places
you can go.
I mean you can just call 988.
That is the suicide and crisis lifeline.
I don't know, you know, I just find it's important to be honest with this stuff.
I mean you can be cynical about it, you can frame it however you want, but it's nothing
trivial whether it's depression or just you've had enough.
I don't know.
But I know it's common and as things become more frightening and people become more isolated
that this is, it's going to increase.
And I know that a lot of times I get emails from people who you know who get some comfort from me talking about this stuff
publicly
But know this
You are not alone
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That's betterhelp, H-E-Lhelp.com slash WTF. Yeah, I do believe I am in some sort of
burnout. I do believe that, you know, I've hit a wall. I have a lot of work to do. I have many jobs
of my own choosing, which is good. But I'm not one of these people that ever really acknowledges
or acknowledged or even understood what burnout is.
But apparently it's a real thing and you know you can't just snap out of it.
You know I've been going pretty hard for a lot of years in a lot of different ways and
on top of the way my brain works anyways it's a little difficult and in the face of
what we're heading into culturally and politically it's a little difficult and in the face of what we're heading into culturally and politically, it's a little difficult.
And I'm old. I'm an old man.
So on top of just the regular kind of challenges of doing what I do in the many areas that I do it in,
there's this feeling of like not being able to keep up.
And then there's the feeling of like, why would I want to. And then there's the feeling of like, why would I want to?
And then there's a feeling of what would I do?
And then there's a feeling of like,
well, maybe I should just exercise more.
Maybe I should eat something.
Maybe I should do more nicotine.
Like at some point something's got to give,
but that's a choice one has to make.
I mean, Jesus Christ.
I'll be honest with you,
you know, my brain is overloaded for a lot of different reasons.
I hit, I hit two parked cars the other day. I'm not proud. And it wasn't like I wasn't texting, I wasn't driving, I was parking my fucking car.
And I had two parked cars.
I mean, gee.
And there was this moment where it's this parking lot
that's always a problem, it's at my gym,
and the spaces, they're like an illusion,
they're not quite big enough for regular sized cars,
and it's always a hassle.
The lines aren't set right.
The spaces in between the cars aren't set right.
And I want to park as close to the door of the gym
in the enclosed lot as possible.
It's just the nature of my brain.
So I'm trying to get into this space.
And I kind of swing into it.
And I bump the car to my right in this space to the
right of the space I'm trying to take but it wasn't just a bump it was a crunch and I'm like oh
fuck and I have this car I mean I've had it a long time but I would say that I hit the curb you know
turning into my driveway 80 percent of the time I just don't, I don't quite navigate this car properly. I don't know why.
It's just a 2019 Avalon. It's not difficult, but it's just the nature of it. And it's always
been that way. I've scraped up cars before like this, but I bonked this car and it's
hard and I know it's not nothing. So I back up and I try to, you know, reangle and drive
into the space again. And as I'm driving in, you know, I'm looking to the right
to make that spot, and then to the left, you know,
there's a car right there who someone has just parked,
and I just see my rear-view mirror kind of drag,
you know, gently across a bit of the surface
of that car next to me, leaving a mark.
And so that's two.'s two down and then I
back out and then the woman who's in that car who was just parked it gets out
and for a minute there I think she's the parking lot attendant coming to you
monitor the situation and I'm like yeah yeah I know I'm gonna I got to leave a
note or whatever and then I realized oh it's a woman in that car who's my my rear view is just scuffed her
paint job a bit and
Then I tried to pull into that space again. I'm like a fucking idiot
The stubbornness involved that I'm like and what is wrong with my brain?
and
I back out and she's like well you can just turn your hazards on and give me your insurance
I'm like for you know for that There's barely anything there, but fine.
I said, oh, I'm just gonna park over there.
She goes, I don't think you're gonna get into this spot.
I'm like, yeah, that's clear, thank you.
And I drove it around, I parked across from where we were
and she wanted my insurance, so I gave it to her.
And then I looked at the other car that I hit
and it was, it wasn't dented, but it was scuffed pretty bad.
And I thought, well, the right thing to do here
is leave a note.
So I left a note.
And that guy got back to me in a couple hours.
It was his wife's car.
And I told him, look, you know, I,
I could just pay for the damages
if you figure out what they are.
If you want to go through insurance, we can do that.
Whatever you want to do.
And then I went to my guy to see the damage on my car.
My fucking bumper just cracked right off, just about.
And what that says about my car, I don't know.
But the whole undertaking of having my head up my ass
is gonna cost me like two, three grand.
Point being, where the fuck was my brain?
Granted, I didn't sweep all that night.
I was going to the gym, but this thing about burnout
or about kind of losing control of your sense of
sort of space and time and self
because you've got so much overloaded in your brain
is a real thing.
And now I'm gonna, you know, it's gonna cost me a bumper.
And apparently I've got pretty good bumpers in place in terms of plowing through life
But man, I just it was one of those moments where like this is a relative
bottom in terms of hitting one
In relation to
Being a little bit detached from being overwhelmed or just having your
brain on fire.
So I got to deal with that and I got to get my bumper fixed.
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Did I mention my tour dates? Yeah, I got a lot of dates coming up. You can go to WTF pod.com slash tour
I'm gonna be in Fort Collins, Colorado on the 17th of January in Boulder on the 18th of January
I'll be in Santa Barbara
on
January 30th San Luis Obispo on the 31st of January, Monterey,
California on the February 1st.
Then I've got gigs in Iowa, Missouri, North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, Oklahoma, Texas,
South Carolina, Illinois, Michigan.
Go to WTFPod.com slash tour for all of my dates
and links to tickets.
So this movie that Adrian Brody is in,
that we talk about among other things,
and his wife, The Brutalist, is definitely worth seeing.
It's a special movie, it's a big movie.
It's a, it has an epic feel.
It was shot in a big format on film,
and it's a very surprising and powerful film.
And yeah, I'm a fan of Adrian's.
I'm happy he came by.
The Brutalist is now playing in theaters,
and this is Adrian and I talking one-on-one,
alone, in this space that was once a garage
that was built in 1957.
The house is older.
But anyways, this is me talking to Adrian Brody.
This looks like, I don't know if you've seen my movie Clean,
but this looks like, this looks like, I don't know if you've seen my movie Clean, but this looks like, this
looks like my spot, but it's inspired by me, but it looks like Clean's little like workshop
thing.
Oh really?
Yeah, because these look like shotgun shells almost, and it's always got, I always got
red and some earplugs and the knife and the-
WD-40?
Yeah, I mean, but like he was like, he was like, he could make improvised weaponry.
Ah.
And this looks like a little bit of a setup,
like you could turn this into a.
Yeah, I'm not quite doing that.
I know, I appreciate that you're not, but.
Well, when you do something like that, do you.
You do a ton of research on it.
Is that what you do?
Yeah.
So like.
Oh yeah, I made up all kinds of wonderful,
I'm not wonderful, but pretty intense weaponry
Did you did you actually make some weapons before you did the thing?
Did you any any functional weapons that you did that you made? I don't want to criminalize
Have them and have them any longer, but I've made things
Yeah, when I was a kid, I learned how to, I taught myself how to make them.
A lot of this stuff is just remnants from the old studio,
which was a very sort of deeply cluttered garage
that was basically the history of my life.
So there was stuff everywhere.
Yeah, it's my life.
Do you have a place?
I relate to this.
Yeah.
My house is very much like that.
Well, now it's upstairs in the office room,
what was in the old garage, but I can't let go.
What do you keep most with books?
No, I have an art studio, and so I paint a lot
and do a lot of quite layered textural work.
So I accumulate a lot of materials,
found materials and inspiration
that sometimes never even gets used
and lots of paper
bags and sure when you say it looks it looks pretty intense when you say
layered are we talking like snobbling some a bit more yeah I mean very lived
in not quite like no plates no not plates they're amazing I love the plates
but not layered they are amazing not I love the plates, but not layered. They are amazing.
Layered in the sense that,
although they're quite strategically layered,
they're not evident as such.
They feel like they're very lived in.
So while I'll be working on canvas,
I don't want it to really look like it's a canvas work.
I want it to look like it's something right off the street.
Right, so do you kind of like paint the bags and stuff into the surface?
Paint bags, draw on them,
do separate works on them sometimes,
do add materials to the surface.
Like some early Jasper Jansi kind of shit?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And some of the...
And Russianberg kind of layering on. Right.. Yeah, yeah. And some of that, you might. And, uh, Rauschenberg kind of layering.
Right, right.
They're very, and, and, you know.
More Rauschenberg.
More Rauschenberg.
And, you know, Basquiat's a big influence as well.
Oh, yeah.
You know, just his written text.
I didn't, my mother photographed him.
Yeah.
And she has this wonderful photograph
of him in his studio.
My studio, I shared, uh, I was roommates
with an artist friend of mine for years on Great Jones,
which was the block that Basquiat's studio was.
So right by the old.
We were just down the street.
At the Bowery.
Oh yeah, by Bowery and Great Jones.
Yeah, Bowery and Great Jones, that's where it was.
Those are good buildings.
Oh, it was so great.
I had a studio there on the Bowery as well,
which I ended up becoming really good friends
with a wonderful artist, Alfredo Martinez,
who's a New York artist who actually, ironically,
forged Basquiat's and sold them as Basquiat's
and ended up being incarcerated
and served quite a bit of time in Rikersford
and suffered immensely.
I mean, he went on a hunger strike.
Did he make it through?
He did.
He's not around now, unfortunately.
He had a bunch of complications.
But he, by the way, is another inspiration.
This all comes full circle because he was a master at weaponry and obsessed with weaponry
guns, machine guns.
He used to have, way back in the day, a studio in SoHo.
And in the basement, it was some wealthy,
I don't remember the whole story, but I think it was some wealthy patrons set up.
But he had converted this lower level in the basement to a shooting range.
Everybody would go down there,
I'm sure they were all pretty lit.
Yeah, and then just go shooting machine guns.
But Alfredo is an amazing guy and a wonderful artist.
I have a bunch of his work.
I wonder what made him, I guess it was just money
to decide to get into the forgery racket.
I think he was broke.
Yeah.
I mean, everything comes down to that, ultimately.
Especially for artists.
I mean, he wasn't selling his works
for nearly that kind of money.
He's got desperate.
Yeah, he's desperate.
And he was very talented.
Yeah, well, guns on the worry side.
I think that Burroughs was down there
with the shotguns and handguns.
Yeah, he was.
Exactly.
I remember, yeah, I remember being very inspired by him when I was younger. I think that Burroughs was down there with the shotguns and handguns. Yeah, he was, exactly.
I remember, yeah, I remember being very inspired by him
when I was younger.
Oh yeah, which, like, what in particular?
You know what it is?
Because it kind of resurfaced,
but I had this, an LP, I had a record.
Was it Laurie Anderson and John Giorno?
Is that it, maybe?
I don't remember, I was very young,
I was early days in LA.
Of him reading. Of him reading. You know that one? Sure, there's only a couple. I love it maybe? I don't remember. I was very young. I was early days in LA. Of him reading.
Of him reading.
Yeah.
You know that one?
Sure, there's only a couple.
I love it.
I don't know where it is, but yeah.
And I loved, I would listen to it again and again.
I loved the sound, the way he talked and whatever.
And they were like comedy bits.
They were, I don't remember him being that humorous.
I remember finding him, you know,
I did a beat in a beat era movie. Which one? I played a,, you know, I did a beat Nick, a beat era movie.
I played a, it was called, the last time I committed
suicide, it was actually with Keanu Reeves.
Yeah.
And Tom Jane.
Yeah.
And Claire Fellani.
And it was a very interesting movie.
And I played a character that was kind of loosely based
on. On Burroughs?
No, on Ginsburg.
Yeah. Keanu was based on Kerouac,
and I guess Tom played a Neil Cassidy as a character.
They were all kind of fictional characters.
The romantic hero of all of them.
Well, yeah, but those Burroughs,
I think it's either they call me Burroughs is one record,
and then there's a triple record with him,
Laurie Anderson, and John Giorno.
And they each have a record of their own
in this three album set.
But yeah, it was his voice that blew me away too.
But I grew to realize that they were kind of bits
that like that whole Dr. Benway business
would get me a new scalpel nurse.
Yeah, for sure.
He was aware of what he was doing, but he...
Menacing. Yeah.
But like, let's talk about this new movie first,
which I don't usually do,
because I think it could probably get us other places,
in that I don't know that I've seen a movie like it
in a long time, if ever,
but when I talk about it,
I seem to only be able to compare it to There Will Be Blood.
That's, I mean, that in and of itself
is such an epic compliment.
But it's an epic movie.
And it's an epic movie, but I do see those parallels
as well, absolutely.
About, you know, sort of power.
Yep, yep, and the greed and corruption of that
and how, yeah, the dream of overcoming this
and then ownership and dominating.
And it's very similar in a way.
Turns into Van Buren in a lot of ways.
Yeah, I thought that-
Cinematically too, and the music feels very,
kind of very emotionally evocative and then jarring
and very much a character in life.
And just the space, there's something,
like it takes some kind, like I don't know
where this guy came from, this director,
but yeah, and I know he hasn't done a ton,
but to have the confidence to create
that kind of cinematic space is just this rare thing, man.
And when you were, and going into that, I mean, did you know that he was capable of doing
that?
I had a lot of faith in Brady.
Yeah, Brady Corbet is a filmmaker and he had done two films prior.
One was Vox Lux, which is a very cool movie.
And Childhood of a Leader, which is also a very, very interesting film.
And you can tell in his earlier work, which, you know,
as an actor, you can definitely tell that you're in the hands
of someone who's going to give you space to do interesting
choices and that has a style and an understanding of film.
Yeah.
So, I felt very confident that,
and he'd also co-written the brutalist,
the screenplay with his wife.
Where does that even come from?
I mean, he wanted, they found the idea of writing a film,
making a film about an architect
and architecture, very interesting.
And in particular, because there aren't many films of that.
Because like you don't think like, man,
this is gonna be riveting.
You don't think an architect.
But he's, I think there's something, yeah.
No, this is that.
The film is completely epic.
I'm blown away by it.
But I do think he knows how to delve into, I think he understands the psychology of all
of this very well.
Also being an artist, being striving and the hardships of being a filmmaker in this business
and being an auteur filmmaker and the obstacles and the complexities of having a benefactor,
having to be, you know, raise money to do the work and then everything you want to do
and desire to do cannot be compromised if you have a vision,
but ultimately-
Oh, so that's how it's personal.
I think that's very personal to him.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, but it's very interesting what it speaks to in terms of class, in terms of-
The immigrant experience.
The immigrant experience, and the arts in general, but also anti-Semitism.
That's right. You know, how the WASP-y aristocracy saw the bohemian sort of, and the envy there.
Yeah.
I mean, like, it unfolds very slowly.
Yeah, the cache and kind of bartering on the artistic contributions of immigrants, yet
never really including them or making them,
even if they do assimilate,
they're never treated as equals.
Never.
I mean, like I read a biography of Rothko once
and it was crazy what those guys would do to pass.
But you know, when he was at wherever it was, Yale, I think,
they weren't even letting Jews in really.
Oh yeah.
But I think there's some sort of parallel between like his life, I mean Rothko's like
the best, right?
Yeah, absolutely.
But when you're preparing for this role, I mean, what are you doing?
Because you were a research guy and I thought the guy was a real guy, but it must be based
somewhat on the idea because modernism in and of itself.
And then at the very end, when you kind of,
there's an award presented to you or a tribute,
the interpretation of why your character
created those spaces given.
And the way he, you see him as an immigrant,
not necessarily as a survivor,
but it seems that in his family, the Holocaust looms large, right?
Yeah, it is not just physical surviving,
but his tenacity to just pursue this goal
and life's work to leave behind something of great meaning
and that the influence, and this was a theme that, and Brady speaks
about this quite a bit, about how post-war psychology has deeply influenced post-war
architecture.
It's been brutalism in particular is quite an antithesis of the eras prior and resulted, many of them were of Jewish descent
and also came as the result of cities
having been bombed out through World War II.
London, parts of London were massively rebuilt
with government sanctioned,
capitalist works and Czech Republic and et cetera.
I mean, it just unfolds, you know,
so there's a slowness to it, which just builds the intensity. know, so there's a slowness to it,
which just builds the intensity.
There was a difference between a slowness where you're like,
oh, fuck, when's this gonna end, and a slowness that somehow resolves itself
and maintains the tension.
And then it all builds, you know, to, you know, I don't want to,
there's no way to spoil the movie, but there are parts of the movie
that are profoundly surprising in, you know,
in a violent way that I found that to be insanely jarring.
Yeah.
I think it's intentional.
I mean, I did too.
But you don't see it coming, but you know, because usually you don't.
But metaphorically, that serves to illustrate the dynamic between classes and wealth and
judgment and that guy's own repression.
Of course.
Oh man.
And I didn't feel the time go by.
And it was about right for the intermission.
You got to pee.
Yeah.
It worked out.
Pee or think or do both, but it's nice to have a home.
It's nice to have a chapter close.
Sure.
Give you a little bit of time to read through
and then comes a new phase.
It's really, I think it's a wonderful,
I hope people take advantage of that
and like try and see it on 70 millimeter in a theater.
I did, I saw it at the Vista.
Oh, that's great. Yeah, that's great.
I regret not watching that screening. and try and see it on 70 millimeter in a theater. I did, I saw it at the Vista. Oh, that's great. Yeah.
Yeah, that's great.
I regret not watching that screening.
Oh.
I, yeah, I didn't realize how,
first of all, that theater is beautiful,
but I just should have, you know.
I've become a big fan of the IMAX.
I hope they give people an opportunity to go to IMAX.
I believe they will.
Because like, that's really, you know, IMAX as a device,
I don't, whatever the technology, it doesn't matter to me. But that, to me, I max as a device I don't I don't
whatever the technology it doesn't matter to me but that to me when you go
to an IMAX it feels like the movies we saw when we were kids when when movie
when it was one screen yeah at one theater yeah and you go in and you remember
those days also you were a kid so everything was I knew that yeah yeah
just that I remember those days too it did feel like I'm actually right watch
an action film in...
Like did your folks ever take you to Radio City?
I don't know, I think yes, I have been, but I don't...
That's what I felt.
They're pretty epic, yeah.
Yeah, I felt the first time when my grandmothers took me,
like we're going to Radio City,
and to see a movie that large, it was crazy.
Yeah, I would just go sit in the front row
with my little homeboy friends, and then we'd cut school and sit literally in the front row with my little homeboy friends and then we'd
cut school and sit literally in the front row, which gave you that poor man's IMAX perspective.
Because you'd just be right there in the front where it's just, your whole peripheral vision
is screen.
It's wonderful.
But this is like the second way.
How many roles have you done that were kind of Holocaust adjacent?
Well, one was not adjacent.
One was the pianist.
One was, I mean, that is a very different film.
I do, in retrospect, feel that that,
the work that I had done to prepare for that character,
all the research, all the actual shifts
and body weight and learning
and the sacrifice to understand that time in history
and the sense of loss of so many individuals
of that time in history definitely gave me great insight
into what Laszlo is leaving behind
and having the character has, you know,
he lives it.
He lives it.
And it's all the past.
Now this movie is this coming to America,
immigrant struggle, the clash between the American dream
and what the reality is of that and...
And drug addiction?
And drug addiction. So it's a very, it's much more contemporary film.
But you had that, you had that.
But I had all of that to draw from.
I found that invaluable, honestly.
It was so helpful.
When you did that movie though,
like, cause I've been trying to talk about,
well, I do jokes, but the capacity to even widen
your sense
of empathy to a place where it's big enough
to really take in what fucking went on during that time,
it's almost disabling.
I was pretty much clinically depressed
for a year after making that.
Yeah, I had an eating disorder.
I was, I mean.
Once you lost the weight, you're like. Well, I was starving all the time. I was, I mean. Once you lost the weight, you're like.
Well, I was starving all the time.
I was insatiable.
I really, you know, I.
Oh, so you wanted to eat constantly.
Yeah, I was eating even on the shoot,
which they wanted me to gain the weight back rapidly
because we shot in reverse chronology.
So I lose it all before we started.
And then kind of at one period gained quite a bit back.
So, but I was starving.
I was eating all the time.
Yeah.
It's interesting that the range of Jews you've played.
Because I forgot, like I was going through this stuff
and I remember watching...
Played a lot of other characters too.
No, but like very specific, like Leonard Chess.
That's right, yeah.
Because I watched that movie, I remember that movie because I'm a big fan of that period.
And you know that's...
I forgot he is Jewish, to be honest.
Well, I'm not trying to pitch it, Coby.
No, no, no, I know, I got you, but it's interesting.
And Houdini too.
That's right.
But both of these characters come from a sort of similar Jewish experience. That's right, that's right. You know, but both of these characters come from a sort of similar Jewish experience.
That's right.
That's right.
Well, many Jews have come from similar Jewish experience.
But you had the opportunity to time travel.
We don't all get to do that.
I mean, generationally speaking, you were like either immigrant or just post-immigrant.
But you're not fully Jewish.
You know, the other connection that's wonderful on The Brutalist is that my mother is a Hungarian artist
immigrant and my mother and my grandparents, her parents,
they fled through Vienna under a bed of corn
on the back of a cart or a truck.
And at that time it was already a bit late.
A lot of people had fled already and they were
keyed into it and they were shooting.
They had to wait till there wasn't a full moon,
I believe, so there was too much light.
And they were the, they were shooting flares
at the border to illuminate the sky,
to shoot people crossing the border.
And then she didn't get passage to the US
for another two years.
So she was 13.
She had to leave her friends.
Does she have, what's the trauma impact?
I mean, I think it's quite substantial.
I mean, I think it's shaped her very much
in some ways, very moving ways.
In some ways it's shaped me and my
yearning to represent characters who are outsiders
and whose circumstances are much harder
than not only my own, but most of our own.
And my mother has become a very beloved photographer.
She, you know, the Museum of Modern Arts
acquired her work.
She's, you know, studied by photographers and she used to
work for the Village Voice for many years, but she's, she, she has numerous books and really, um, she's a,
a beacon of inspiration for me, honestly.
And, uh, has directly led me down a path to
discovering acting and being comfortable in
front of a camera, being the subject of my
mother's lens, the whole life.
And it was a very safe place.
I'm really so grateful for it.
And I think it shaped her, you know, if you look at her imagery,
it's quite haunting and quite sensitive.
Does she do the full spectrum of stuff?
Yeah, I mean, it's very hard to describe.
It's largely black and white, but wonderful portraiture.
But really, she's captured New York
and the New York of my youth.
The New York that inspired filmmakers like Scorsese
and Coppola. Broken New York. Yeah, broken, gritty. that, yeah, that inspired filmmakers like Scorsese and Coppola.
Broken New York.
Broken, gritty. Well, yeah.
Yeah, like where was, anything was possible.
Nostalgic. It was very rough and dangerous. I'm very happy to be out of that time and
the trains were really dangerous.
And all those like, but down where you had your studio,
that was like up for grabs.
I mean, all those people that bought those buildings
back then.
Oh man.
Who still live in them.
Oh yeah.
The artists.
Yeah, well, we didn't have the resources for it,
but they, I wish my mom had gotten an amazing studio.
Did you live in New York?
We lived in Queens, yeah, we lived in Queens.
What part of Queens?
In Woodhaven.
Oh yeah?
I was in Astoria for a few years.
Yeah, I like Queens.
Yeah, it's nice, yeah.
Yeah, you're a little out of it,
but you're close enough.
Yeah, it's a little, yeah,
but it's a real melting pot, Queens.
Totally.
Queens still retains that New York feel.
Does it?
Yeah, it hasn't shifted.
It's changed, but it hasn't shifted like areas of Brooklyn
have become unrecognizable.
No, no, I never thought Queens would do that.
Like even- I know, it's the final frontier. Iognizable. I never thought Queens would do that.
Like even-
It's the final frontier.
I hope that.
I mean, it's weird that-
Maybe Staten Island, but I mean-
That's going to be-
Yeah.
Well, but yeah.
It's going to gentrify Staten Island.
They wouldn't let them.
Well, but Queens hasn't quite-
When I was in the story, I was amazed.
I mean, block to block, it was like, where am I?
And I would get off the train at two in the morning, there'd be whole families shopping
for vegetables.
I'm like, are there no rules about putting kids to bed
in other countries?
No, there aren't.
Yeah, well, they probably worked nights and came home.
I don't know.
I don't know, yeah.
But it was always like, it was always sort of
kind of electric with a lot of international energy,
which I found to be pretty great.
Yeah.
And it's not.
And real people, really. Yeah. And it's not-
And real people, really.
Like real in the sense that they're good working people that contribute to the city,
contribute to the-
The real immigrant experience.
Yeah, that's right.
And that's, I relate to it.
There were all these Italian kids I grew up around.
Like everybody was trying to be, some were affiliated, but they were all acting like they were.
It's like everybody's seen every Scorsese movie I grew up in.
It's like they all put-
Mocked themselves up.
Yeah, and you know.
It was like I watched that documentary on David Chase
and the Sopranos when they were trying to do,
they did an open casting call for one of the parts,
I can't remember which one,
and every Italian guy in the fucking New York area
Oh, yeah came in and they were all real guys. Yeah. No, they are. Yeah, they are
So how did you voice your father artist to my dad is actually an incredible artist
He's he taught public school like we didn't have any
We didn't have the means for anyone to indulge in just being an artist my mom my mom
the means for anyone to indulge in just being an artist. My mom, fortunately built a career as a photographer, but she too went, yeah, a photographer.
Right, but I mean, she was-
Not just journalism, but she was able to work for-
She's an artist, yes, exactly, but she was able to have a staff position and work, but
she received a Guggenheim Fellowship very young. That was the only way they could even afford
the down payment on a house.
Like they had nothing.
And what does her work tell you in terms of,
you know, what you were talking of earlier
in the tone of it,
that there was something haunting or something?
Well, it's, she has this
enormous capacity for,
um, enormous capacity for, um, she has tremendous empathy and she has, um, this wonderful sense of humor and eye for these incongruous things that are, that speak to
the complexity of life or something incredibly dangerous
is happening, there'll be another element in the frame
that shows something that's the antithesis of that,
that's wonderful or she has just very dream-like images.
Yeah, yeah. you know, wonderful or she, you know, she has just very dreamlike images. Yeah.
But they are very much her language
and they are her vision.
And I grew up steeped in those imagery,
literally, you know, negatives hanging in the shower,
film canisters in the tub, rinsing the chemicals,
the smell of the fixative and all those chemicals
in the darkroom and old record racks filled with sheet after sheet of 8x10 test prints.
And I'd be crawling around looking at all these images my whole life and going on assignment
with her.
And it was really wonderful, really, really special. It also teaches you that there is a way to have an understanding of photography as an
art form in that not unlike an auteur director that there is so much more to it if you have
the eye and you have the depth and you have the impulses to generate a point of view.
Because anybody, it was always sort of this,
the argument of photography once they introduced
the Brownie camera, it's like, well, if everyone can do it,
how do we establish it as an art form?
Yeah, that's what's happened now with the phone
and technology to improve upon and just the data
that's on an image that you can just infinitely fix.
Sure, but when a real photographer shoots a shot.
Oh yeah, absolutely.
I mean, there's a singleness to it.
Yeah, what was that wonderful war photographer who?
Oh, who made movies?
Spielberg actually, I can't believe I can't think of it.
Yeah, that's all right.
It happens, it's gonna happen more.
I know.
I just finished doing a play,
doing eight shows a week in London.
And I didn't know if I would be able to retain.
And I can do a 14 page scene.
I didn't know I'd do an hour and 45 minutes every night
without going up on my lines.
And you did it all right?
I did.
I didn't fall once more.
I mean, I spun a couple around here and there,
but they were all good saves.
And it was really quite a lot of pressure.
Had you done a lot of theater?
When I was young, I did quite a bit early on.
And then I hadn't been on the stage since I was a teenager.
Wow.
It was really something.
I play a man who was incarcerated for 22 years
on death row for a crime he didn't commit.
Yeah.
It's a true story.
Right.
And in, as he meets this abolitionist,
this woman who was working with an abolitionist group,
she comes in and he's asking her if she's a lawyer
and she, she says that she's a poet
and he found that amusing
and disheartening because they're not gonna get you exonerated.
And he said a line about, yeah, I like Charles Bukowski
as much as the next guy.
And I couldn't remember it for a second.
And the fact that I hadn't remembered it just before,
that six seconds before I had to go on,
it locked it in that I didn't know it.
And I went on there and I flipped the line around that one day.
I was like, yeah, well, I like poets as much as the next guy.
But yeah, I managed to do it, but I couldn't get in.
And it didn't come back until I got out of the, off the stage.
I was like, oh, man.
Wild.
How you just locked it in that you weren't gonna get it.
Yeah, because I panicked, I felt it shut the door.
It was awful.
So you said your mom got you into acting?
Yeah, she had an assignment to photograph
the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York.
And while she was there, they had a youth program.
And she saw all these kids doing what I do every day.
And, you know, I was always, I'd come home,
I'd come home from the train
and then encounter something I'd reenacted,
tell some story or had some problem with this guy.
And I was always like, every guy I had beef with.
You know, it was like, it was something,
I tell the story pretty animatedly.
And I think most kids do,
but there was something that she keyed into that.
And thank goodness, honestly,
cause I just loved it.
And-
When'd you really started?
Well, this was, this was around 11 or 12
that I started taking some classes.
And then a friend of hers is a photographer,
uh, and his wife was an actress.
And that's the only actor I think we knew.
And she was kind enough to get me an audition
for the children's department at her agency.
And I went with a monologue audition.
And then I, they wanted to represent me.
And I went out and I booked some work.
I did a, I booked some work.
I did a, I got a, my dad took me, I waited around the, around the block on this long open call,
literally around this factory building block, I remember it, standing on the street,
for a day player role with Coppola on New York Stories.
I saw that, yeah.
I mean, yeah, it was a long time ago. And I booked it.
And so I worked with Francis for it.
So that was your first gig?
That was, I think, my first gig.
I thought I'd turn this off.
It's on silent.
It's got a problem, my phone.
I have no idea who that is, but they keep calling.
It's an unknown, but...
But it's not spam?
You don't know?
I don't know who it is, but I've seen that number enough
that I don't pick it up.
I don't know who it is.
I don't pick up those usually unless they're local
because then I'm like, what's going on near me?
Yeah, no.
But if it's a private number, then it's like,
I don't pick it up.
Yeah, I got this, there's a reggae song I like
and the guy's like, gangster, no answer, no unknown number.
And I'm always like, every time I see it, I'm like,
yup, you never know.
I don't pick it up.
You never know.
So you work with Coppola, you were 12?
Yeah, yeah, it was amazing.
Wait, do you remember him?
Oh, I do, yeah, I do.
And you know, I'm friends with Roman Coppola, his son.
And also with his nephew.
And with his nephew, and yeah,
and I've been friendly with Nick Cage,
but I loved that it was memorable.
He poured a bottle of cheap cologne all over me
because the girls in the scene had to react to my character
coming into this kind of party scene.
And I joke because it was like, he forced me to do some method
acting for them.
So the girls weren't having to act.
They could just literally smell me waft across.
So they didn't know it was coming?
They knew it.
But he was that he had the understanding
that that can only help.
And he didn't give a shit of it, it humiliated me
as a 12 year old boy walking into a bunch of girls
smelling like a, you know,
symbolic perfume broke on me.
Do you find that the impact of the directors
you've worked with has changed the way you approach things?
I mean, like every time?
My whole understanding of film and acting.
And hopefully if I ever direct, I have so much,
so much that I've learned from masters.
Yeah, well, I mean, what you got Polanski, Malik, Spike.
Barry Levinson, Ken Loach.
Oh, yeah.
Many, many, many really amazing films.
What was it like to be on that set of that Malick movie?
That was crazy.
Yeah, it was crazy.
It was, it was, um, I learned a lot.
I learned a lot.
Yeah, it was, uh, it was a 22-week war movie
with just the boot camp alone.
We did, uh, you know, seven, eight nights
in the jungle, eating nothing but MREs.
Oh, yeah.
And...
Was that too much, though?
I... No, that wasn't. I mean, it was... It didn't have a wonderful end to it all, but
I did have an amazingly enrich, enriching life experience.
And I loved the guys and I got to make friends
with all these wonderful movie stars
and they were good to me.
And, you know, I had thought Sean Penn, you know,
had a real pivotal role in the movie and I, I thought,
oh, he's gonna really be a hard ass with me.
You know, I'm, I'm, I gonna really be a hard ass with me. You know, I'm a new guy.
And the military advisors that they had for the bootcamp,
they did do a number on me just because they thought
it would be helpful, I think.
And so they ostracized me and played all these mind games.
And I did it.
I ate all of it.
I knew it was coming.
I knew it.
And all these like Australian extras,
they put me in, they took me out from the group
of the core actors that I was with,
and they put me in with these Australian extras.
And then they ostracized me, and I slept in a tent
alone with poisonous fucking funnel webs
and just did it, did it all.
Did it, did it.
And it helped your performance?
You put your weapon out, yeah.
I mean, you wouldn't know it,
cause I'm not in the movie at the end of the day,
but yeah, it did help my performance.
You didn't get any screen time?
Not, not much, not compared to what it was.
I mean, I was playing the,
I was playing James Jones's persona,
the author of the novel.
Yeah.
And then they just made a different movie in the end.
Oh. Yeah.
That see that, like I don't-
That doesn't happen too often.
It does happen. It does happen if you work with him't- That doesn't happen too often. It does happen.
It does happen if you work with him, but it doesn't happen too often.
Well, he doesn't work that much, so-
But I think it did happen with other, I think it happened with Mickey Rourke came down to
Guadalcanal and shot for three weeks in the Solomon Islands.
He doesn't even appear.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't know how you guys handle that, because I'm doing some acting and like, I have no
idea. You have no idea.
You have no idea.
I mean, I know I just did a lead in an indie,
but I know I'll be in that one,
but you don't know how.
You don't know.
I was the lead of a major movie for Fox,
and I wasn't in it.
Come on.
Yeah, it was based on James Jones.
The novel, the second epic novel after From Here to Eternity
that won Montgomery Clifton Academy Award and Sinatra.
I don't know if they won, but they were,
these were epic, epic.
And you just.
Yeah, it's all right, it's old news.
It's old news, but like going forward, I mean.
It's valuable, it's good.
Sure, but. It made me understand the, it made me understand a It's valuable, it's good. Sure, but.
It made me understand the,
it made me understand a lot of things, first of all.
Yeah.
And don't believe, don't believe anything you read.
Yeah, yeah.
Because that was already in print as the lead of this.
But it made me understand,
I felt, I really related with,
as I played a soldier in the movie who's struggling with
his own sense of inadequacy or witnessing other young men
having more courage.
And the trauma of war, again, in a very
different context, but, um, the psychological
impact of all of that, of witnessing, you know,
your friend getting blown up and feeling guilty
from being discharged and all these wonderful
things, kind of survivor's guilt, even for a
soldier to get out and really feel like he's
leaving his men behind and desperate to get out earlier and the whole shift and none of survivor's guilt even for a soldier to get out and really feeling like he's leaving his men behind
and desperate to get out earlier and the whole shift
and none of that's, you know, in the final product,
but it is very much a big part of Jones's novel
and what I portrayed.
And I, in the fact that I was cut out of this movie
and it wasn't something anyone could really understand
or know the circumstances
or know what I'd given for six months of dedication.
And the biggest coup I've ever had in my life
for the most meaningful thing
that I've devoted my time to,
it was pretty harrowing and publicly humiliating.
And I felt, wow, this gives me just a little bit of insight
into what it must be like for these
poor guys who come home giving everything, you
know, for our country or for what they handling
the responsibility they've been given.
Sure.
And then they come back and, you know, they have
to act like everything is normal.
They have to reacclimate, go to a, go to their
work, get another job.
Yeah.
Deal with the kids, find, you know, and, and, and
no one could quite understand that sense of
loss or struggle or, or PTSD.
Sure.
And, and that's a very real thing for so many people.
Yeah.
And so I was 23 at the time, and it gave me that.
It gave me that.
And I cherished that quality about being an actor.
And over most other things.
Of course, we all want a career,
and we all want to be respected for our work
and be able to earn a living doing what we do.
And, but that's the, that's the crux of the
journey.
That's the contact that we're all trying to
make to walk away from it with a sense of
understanding, to open others' hearts and minds
to perhaps being more understanding or more aware of their
own complexity and maybe a bit more.
That's what this movie's about.
I mean, really, for me, to think of how disadvantaged so many people are just by being foreign,
English being their second language. I remember my grandfather, he was so smart and cool
and handsome and charismatic, and he could hardly get work
because he sounded so, his English was poor,
and he sounded like Laszlo.
I built that character around the sounds I remember
of him from my youth.
Yeah.
And I remember how hard it was on him
to pick up again and try and support
my grandmother and my mother.
Yeah.
How hard that was.
Financially, they were so strapped
because of these obstacles.
But also that's like the way you're describing
the actor's job, that there are people that,
you know, approach it as a job and are okay at it
and good enough to work.
But the difference between a guy who's doing a job
and an artist is relative towards
to your personal pursuit of the truth of a character.
So it seems like your experience,
that's the essential part of your approach to acting
is to put this thing into a context of a real person
and feel the feelings that are that guy's personal truth.
And then you come out of that,
exhausted or changed forever. that are that guy's personal truth. And then you come out of that, you know,
exhausted or changed forever.
But I do think it's a choice to approach
the job of acting like that.
It's a joy, it's a privilege, first of all,
if you can, that's, it's taken, you know,
I have lots of, I've done so many very meaningful
and interesting projects, but it's, it's even that,
even when we talk about thin red line, but you
know, those, those are epic things to experience,
especially as a very young man, like, you know.
Yeah.
All of those were big lessons in, in, and by
the way, I often refer to that
understanding of loss from my own personal loss
from, in, in, in my career at that time and the
potential risks and the pressures I was under.
That gave me also insight into, into not taking
things for granted and, and an understanding of
loss that paved the way for the groundwork
I began doing in the research for The Pianist because I wouldn't have been the same person
had you know that getting that movie was like getting Titanic.
It was a big, big come up and then it wasn't.
Anyhow, we don't need to harp on how long ago, it's half my life ago.
It's over half, it's half my life ago.
No, but it had a hell of an impact.
And then you go on to work with Spike in the next movie.
Yeah.
And that was a whole different experience.
Which partially, I think I got because
I was gonna be the lead of The Thin Red Line.
And there was a lot of hype.
Yeah, but then you're in New York, you're with Spike.
Oh yeah, it was great.
You're doing like, it must have been like home turf.
It was very exciting.
Yeah, it was very exciting.
Yeah, it was very exciting.
Although it was a character I knew nothing about punk culture,
which was amazing to research.
My character was a punk rocker.
And you had to dig into that?
Yeah.
It was great fun, New York at that time.
We did a show at CBGB.
Oh, you did?
Yeah, I had a blast. That was so fun. That's exciting. It did a show at CBGB. And I was, yeah, I had a blast.
I mean, it was so fun.
That's exciting.
It was really very exciting, yeah.
But it all kind of like, but over the,
cause you know, I have to assume like,
was there a point, cause like,
I feel like I don't see you, like,
this movie is first time I've seen it since Succession.
But before that, I mean, like,
was there a point where you had enough of it? Oh, yeah, definitely.
I think a lot of people have, I mean, we can all relate.
If we're going to be honest, we've, we, sure.
I also have been doing this my entire life.
And I have my own expectations and criteria. Yeah.
And that can't, well, you have to give everything
you can give to any role, I think, as an actor.
I mean, you have to be willing to put all that you have.
You know, it was wonderful doing this play.
And right before we'd go on,
one of the, they were wonderful actors,
my, the whole group of guys and my fellow performers
on the play were really wonderful, wonderful people
and very talented.
And Michael Fox, one of the actors would always say,
leave it all on the stage.
Yeah.
And I do that in every movie I do.
And in some movies, it's less apparent or less,
it's not held up in the same way that Brady
presented the opportunity for me. Yeah. held up in the same way that Brady presented
uh, the opportunity for me.
And the breadth of the character and the, um,
the humanity, um, is, is apparent.
We chronicle 30 years of his life.
Um, and I have a lot to offer and, and it is
to offer. It's not just for me to, you know, I
don't, I don't choose work for any other reason
than I think I have something to give.
Yeah.
And I have something on that journey would be
very, um, enlightening in some respect or has
some social relevance or has, uh, you know, it
could be just comedic and fun and whatever, but
I have something to give.
I won't take it just cause, Hey, that's a great
job.
I, you know, I'm, I'm very fortunate and I'm,
I'm fortunate.
I've been working long enough that I don't have to do that. But I, anyhow, so I had not found something like this
in just so long.
What, since like the pianist?
I would say on this level, yes.
Yeah, for sure.
And that's not a lack of interest on my part.
And it's not a lack of interest on other people's parts.
It's just the nature of things.
And even this movie had several iterations.
It was possibly going to be with another cast.
It took Brady seven years from its inception.
I read this five and a half years ago.
It's just not easy to get there.
And then when you get there, it is very meaningful.
Yeah, and it's not like these movies are made that often.
Right.
Right?
Right, no, they're not.
And that's part of Brady's struggle
and part of the storytelling of the film
about the quest of an artist and this relationship.
But you do choose to do, like, you like to work with Wes.
Oh, well, Wes is, first of all, he's a genius,
and he's very fun to work with.
And yeah, and those sets are fantastic.
And, you know, especially that,
in reflecting upon Darjeeling Limited,
which is the first film that I had done with Wes and talking with Jason about it.
You know, we traveled all through India together.
We worked on a moving train.
We shot four or five hours each way on a train,
on an active train track.
If you didn't get to the track by whatever,
5.30, 6 in the morning, you missed the set.
I mean, it was a very exciting life experience.
And all of his movies are quite unique.
And I'm grateful for him to have given me so much love
and the ability to do all these comedic roles
that are quite fun, even if they're villainous
or even emotional.
I think Darjeeling Limited is quite an emotional film. comedic roles that are quite fun even if they're villainous or even emotional.
I think Dodgeling Limited is quite an emotional film, it's hilarious.
There's a lot of broad comedy in it.
Yeah. But he's just in terms of what makes a difference on a set to be working with him
versus somebody where there's more pressure or more ego to you.
There is a lot of pressure with Wes. There is pressure, and everybody knows their responsibilities because just the precision,
they're quite elaborate, choreographed,
moving master shots.
It's a big responsibility.
Yeah.
It is.
And there is a certain style and tone
which everyone knows they have to live within
the same universe that he's created. to live within the same universe. Yeah.
He's created.
Yeah.
And there's the specificity.
And there's pressure to remain honest and find things
and do something extremely precise at pace.
Yeah.
Um, but it's a fun challenge.
Yeah.
And, um, and he does it very, very well and beautiful.
Yeah. And, and beautiful and unique.
And so unique to him.
But he's also surrounds himself
with wonderfully creative people
like Francis for Coppola showing up.
You come home from set and Francis is there
at the dinner table and-
With Wes?
Yeah, we're waiting.
And we're about to have dinner, but we're there
because Roman Coppola is a frequent co-writer
and collaborator with Wes and he'd be on set.
And you know, Bryan Cranston and Scarlett Johansson on the other side.
Oh, and this was on the Meteor movie?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, and just on any of them, on Asteroid City.
Meteor movie, yeah.
And yeah, just...
That was a really funny movie.
Yeah, it was cool.
Yeah. Really fun.
Yeah.
I played a play director.
Yeah.
Yeah, it was interesting
because it seemed like the movie was originally
about the actor's theater in a way.
And then it kind of gets,
it's an interesting movie for him, I thought.
Yeah.
So when you, like, how did the winning an Oscar
affect your whole sense of self?
Did it make a big difference?
Cause that's like the pianist.
My sense of self?
Yeah.
It's a big question.
I mean, I think growing up in Queens,
it was very important to me not to change in the wrong ways.
Uh-huh.
And, um...
You were aware of that?
I rigidly adhered to that.
Yeah.
Partially because all of a sudden,
all this attention and praise and access to things
felt very incongruous, and I didn't recognize it.
Yeah.
And so it didn't feel, I don't know,
didn't feel accessible or deserved or authentic.
I think it was something that I didn't trust about it.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah.
Whether people newly discovered me and loved me or were moved by know. Yeah. Whether people newly discovered me and loved me
or were moved by me, it was a bit too much to take
because I had spent 17 years kicking around
as a working actor and I was still pretty young.
Yeah.
And it was vastly different.
And, but it's given me great joy and perspective
and access to a lot of wonderful opportunities
and roles, and I've worked with, I've met so many
amazing, creative people as a result of that
that I never, ever would have met.
Sure.
So I'm very grateful.
My goodness. Do you consider yourself a character actor?
I don't know what that means. Me neither.
Right, you know what that means?
I feel like there's a...
I'm an actor.
And my responsibility is to
I'm an actor and my responsibility is to bring
a unique sensibility to all the roles that I play. And I feel that to call someone a character actor
somehow diminishes their value or potential
as a movie star, as the protagonist,
because the character actor is not the protagonist.
And I feel the protagonist should be very much a character
and definitely as interesting
and as much of a character as the nemesis.
So it...
I've always been, I feel like I have,
like they hold equal spaces for me.
Well, that's good.
Sure, but you don't get hired, you know.
So tell me a name of some people or an actor or two
that you think are great character actors.
Like what comes to mind?
Ned Beatty.
Okay, wonderful.
Harry Dean.
Yeah, okay.
Like I can picture many in my head. Is Gary Oldman a character actor?
Now it becomes a little different.
You know, it's an interesting thing because some people get more interesting as they get
older because the roles are different.
I mean, I saw De Niro do a little part in that movie Ezra and De Niro in a supporting role is the best fucking thing in the world
but because that's really what you're talking about, I think generally when you talk about characters
But is is is I'm not taking no. No, I know I know I'm saying but is De Niro in
Godfather part two not a character. No, no, no, I like a character
I guess what there is something about you say Ned Beatty, you know, how often has Ned Beatty
had had his opportunity to really shine?
Like in every movie?
I'm not saying in, I know I didn't quite complete the thought.
No, it's no problem.
I'm just saying he does shine, but to shine with the level of the space
to be honored as a protagonist.
And it's less so.
So you're saying that the-
And I don't like to-
The classification.
Nobody should be relegated to a position
because they're interesting looking, feeling, giving.
The lead should not be homogenous, homogenized, right? looking, feeling, giving.
The lead should not be homogenous, homogenized, right? And that's all I'm saying.
So you're saying that the classification of you have
a movie star. I'm saying don't you pigeonhole me.
You got a movie star and then you got the funny looking guy.
Or, well, you went pretty far with it.
The movie star cannot, he has to carry the movie.
Yes.
That's the definition.
Right.
Does that individual man or woman carry the film?
Yeah.
And are you committed and invested
in that individual's journey?
Yeah.
Then that person is the movie star.
Right.
And the business will come up with a lot of terminology other than that, but that's the movie star for sure
Yeah, I mean I get I think it is sort of a now that we've talked about a dated classification
Right, but I but I always say it with reverence. I never it's never I know you do
I just when you asked me a question. Yeah, and I thought hmm, but something you thought of the answer Oh, yeah, you do. I just went, you asked me a question and I thought, hmm.
But something you thought about.
What's the answer?
Oh yeah, of course.
Well, because I get offered many interesting parts
because I can come in and bring that.
But I, and I'm very experimental in my work
and I'm very openhearted in my work.
I don't need to be the movie star.
And I never have acted that way.
But I sure would not relinquish my yearnings
as an actor and an artist to have access to the roles
that should not be precluded because of an idea
should not be precluded because of an idea of what a style of or a kind of work that I am capable of doing.
Right, right.
I get it.
And that's the way, the definition of that or the way I would quantify why that's a...
Is this a source of frustration?
Is it a, I mean, is it in your career?
Is it, I mean, is it something that.
It's a part of the, it's a part of the journey.
Look, we, there's in excess of a hundred thousand talented people in the union
alone that are desperate to have opportunity.
So big number.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And there's a lot of hardship, a lot of sacrifice.
Right.
So for me to sit here and talk about my
frustrations isn't important and, and, and, or
relevant, um, I've been kicking around a long time.
I paid a lot of dues and, um, I don't really
have to prove much to myself.
Yeah.
And I'm so grateful that I've earned that.
Yeah.
And so whether others see me clearly or not
isn't as frustrating
as it used to be.
Yeah.
But it is a source, it was a source of frustration
because look how long it's taken even to get this role.
And this role is remarkable.
Totally.
But, you know, it's not like the role that might be written for what you might think is a blonde-haired,
blue-eyed superhero might come my way as easily either.
Yeah, right.
And I'm not frustrated by that, but it is something to consider.
Yeah, yeah.
That's all. That's the nature of the business.
Exactly.
Right.
Exactly.
So do you find that when you paint,
which seems to be something you put a lot of time into,
as a-
It quenches the thirst.
It quenches the-
Creative thirst.
The creative yearningsnings and it gives me
um, creative autonomy.
Yeah.
In a, in a, which is very um, nurturing because
the only way an actor gets opportunity is through
collaborative work.
Yeah.
You know, and unless you're creating that,
you're really reliant upon the material and others
to employ you and also bring something incredibly
special to get out of the sea of content that we're
inundated with.
Yeah.
And so it's a different path, but it is, it is a access from the same well.
And I feel very content, immersing myself in any
real creative endeavor and whether it's solitary
or in a team sport, like making a movie or a play.
By that I have to assume that like with the painting,
like just the groove of it is completely dictated by you
and your impulses and your vision as it evolves.
And it, you know, you could do a little today.
Exactly, I was gonna say,
what you're prepared to give is, yeah, you open that tap when you're prepared for it
or when it calls.
You don't have that luxury as an actor.
You can be dealing with some pretty heavy shit
and you've gotta be really funny at 6.45 a.m.
Not so much with a canvas.
No, my humor might not be a very funny painting that day.
It may not even be a painting that day.
Well I thought, I like all your work, but this movie was great and it's fresh in my
head.
Thank you.
This is special.
I'm in awe of the movie and the response.
Yeah I got to see it again.
Oh man, me man. Me too.
Because I...
I love it that much. And I don't say that too often.
Not that I...
I am self-critical, but I don't go,
oh, I really would love to see my movies,
the movies I'm in often.
But do you see all your movies?
I've seen everything that I've done, yeah.
Pretty much.
I've never seen my work in Thin Red Line.
It was never offered to me to see.
I actually was thinking about it yesterday
because unfortunately someone asked me about it as well.
But I thought how interesting it would be to see
footage from that because we shot a whole movie.
And I was so-
What are the possibilities of that happening?
Oh no, nil.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Wow, that's kind of a weird mystery.
Cause you wouldn't believe how many actors I talked to
that don't watch their stuff.
I've spoken to actors who say that.
I find it really interesting.
And what do you recall?
What are they, why wouldn't they want to
at least see it to understand or learn from?
Yeah, I mean, it's a good question.
It's like, I don don't wanna look at the monitor
unless I really distrust something.
I don't wanna see the monitor
because I have a vision of how I feel
and how I feel I look as the character.
I don't wanna go see something that...
Will take away from you.
Yeah, it looks like me or,
oh, I didn't think I carried that quality in this moment.
Yeah.
And I don't wanna become self-conscious.
But after the fact, you owe it to yourself
to process the good and the bad.
Yeah, I would think so.
Somewhat objectively.
I just think maybe because of the notion
that you don't really know how it's gonna cut together or you don't really,
but to me it's like, the question is,
is the work enough to where whatever it becomes
doesn't necessarily matter?
No, it's not.
No, I mean, sorry, for me, I mean,
I can only speak from my own personal taste and experience.
I mean, the, for me, I mean, I can only speak for my own personal taste and experience. I mean, the work, the experience is enough for a personal growth.
For sure.
But it's not enough to navigate without perspective, I feel.
Oh, I see.
Right?
It's not to go and, sure, it's lovely if people really respond to your movie.
Yeah.
But I am actually very introverted after seeing a movie.
I don't really like to get up and I wouldn't, like I have a Q&A to go to later,
but I don't like getting up and speaking or even seeing the movie at a premiere
and then speaking to everybody in an after party.
Yeah. Even seeing the movie at a premiere and then speaking to everybody in an after party, I'm much too sensitive because each finite moment
of that film, each scene, each certain things,
they all stem from a ton of personal discomfort, usually.
So you're reliving the trauma. You're reliving, usually. Yeah. And, and, and, um... So you're reliving the trauma.
Reliving, yeah.
You are reliving the, the, the pain it took...
Yeah.
...to, to expose that vulnerability.
Or expose the horrors that you had to feel.
Yeah.
So you're not just objectively witnessing a scene.
Yeah.
You're, you know what you went through and you know what you studied and you know
what you tapped into in the recesses of your heart and soul and mind to get there.
And that comes flooding back.
And then the lights come up and you have to like go to dinner with your agents or you
gotta chat with the producer and some lovely person.
And you're there shell shocked and they don't think you're very grateful.
That's interesting.
So maybe that's why some people like to show up for the Q&A.
Oh yeah. I don't really enjoy,
Venice was remarkable.
We had the film premiered in Venice,
the brutalist premiered in Venice
and we had a wonderful ovation and...
It seemed to shock everybody.
Yeah, sure, sure.
Like no one knew what was coming.
They didn't know what was coming.
They ushered us out, you know, it's so funny
because someone just brought up, oh, you got a 12
minutes standing ovation.
I think whatever, it may have been a little longer,
whatever, but they made us leave because it was
such a long movie and that they had some other
bigger movie stars in with another movie right
after us.
And the typical thing at those, especially Venice
is they count the minutes as some kind of bragging, right,
for the director and the film.
They actually had us leave as they were applauding.
Like, it wasn't like people stopped and moved on.
They just asked us to get out.
I thought, I was laughing.
So they lowballed it with 12.
They lowballed us.
It was funny.
It was really funny.
Well, great work, man. Good talking to you. Thank you, yeah, appreciate it. It was really funny. Well great work man, good talking to you.
Thank you, yeah, appreciate it.
This was fun.
There you go.
It's quite a career that guy has had.
Seems a little, still a little miffed about the Thin Red Line situation in Terrence Malick,
but that guy works and he's good.
So go see The Brutalist, it's now playing in theaters.
Hang out for a minute, folks.
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A year ago this week, we had our 1500th episode of WTF
and I had one of the best conversations
of the year with Paul Giamatti.
The thing about those books is like,
oh, look at these books.
Oh.
And I'll underline, dude.
Oh.
I'll underline. Sure.
But like, I retain nothing.
Nothing.
But, and it's almost like just having the thing itself
I'm somehow gonna absorb something from it. Well, that's what I realized is that when you're reading it
It feels like you're thinking it. Yes, that's true
And then it's over not you know, totally but it's gone it's gone
It's gone and I have that I have a ton of science books Oh physics and all this quantum shit, but I understand and I try and talk about a book market about 10 pages in
And I'm done with physics. I try with all kinds of science
I remember when I was younger when chaos theory was yes, exactly. Exactly
Exactly all of that kind of shit. I gotta get that. Love it. Oh, this is fascinating.
And I get the gist of it, and that's sort of good enough.
I have the gist of a lot of things.
Yeah, and just so you can, when people bring it up, you can at least nod in agreement without
lying, knowing that you read it, but you can't really engage in the whole conversation.
Yeah, yeah.
That's really interesting.
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