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Q & A with the Thumbsucker Cast
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Keanu Reeves looks noticeably tired after a
night out on the town at the Toronto International Film
Festival. He's clearly over any questions about The Matrix and
couldn't find time to get together with his Constantine co-star
Shia LaBeouf who was staying in the same hotel.
Reeves says he's happy doing smaller indie roles, which is why
he took the smaller role of the hippie dentist in Thumbsucker,
written and directed by Mike Mills. Another of Reeves'
Constantine co-stars, Tilda Swinton, stars in the film as the
mother of a boy (Lou Taylor Pucci) who sucks his thumb. Benjamin
Bratt, Vince Vaughn and Kelli Garner also star in the Sony
Pictures release.
Keanu Reeves
As the dentist in Thumbsucker, you suggest that people find
their "power animal." Do you have one?
Reeves: "No, I don't have one."
Why not?
Reeves: "I just don't."
What was it about this script and character that appealed to
you?
Reeves: "The writing and the humanity. I really enjoyed where he
ended up and the place that he started, and the kind of journey
that this guy goes on. I play an orthodontist and am kind of
mentoring this young kid. He has some ideas about life and he
comes to a place where I guess he knows less, but he knows more
at the same time. So it's relatable."
Do you think you're spoofing your persona with this character?
Reeves: "Perhaps if you kind of isolate it like that I guess you
could say that. You think it was the history of me as an actor,
not that it was just funny?"
Do you miss doing the big studio movies?
Reeves: "In terms of scale, I'd say no. But the film itself and
the material itself wasn't liberating, and you're just doing it
kind of naturalistically. I don't know that I miss it, but I
enjoyed it very much."
Do you find roles readily available to you?
Reeves: "You just look out for them and try to decide. If I have
the ability to decide what I get. I don't. Writers have to write
something and meet the directors and the producers have to want
to do it."
Do you have a grand plan for your career or do you fly by the
seat of your pants?
Reeves: "Is there anything in between?"
Are you settled now in your career?
Reeves: "Hmm. You know what, I'll just say that I'm 41 now and I
feel things differently. That seems to have done it. It's
probably cliché, and it's good and bad."
Tilda Swinton
You're playing a troubled mom again, is that something you
wanted to do?
Swinton: "Sometimes it takes me three or four films to work
things out, and when Mike [Mills] first talked to me about this
story I thought this would be another opportunity to go back and
look at this thing about--I'm really interested in the idea of
identity and how you get to these ideas that we should have to
pick one item from any menu and to stick to it for the rest of
our lives. Whether it be gender or anything in fact, any element
of identify. I'm particularly interested in thinking about that
his with the pretense about when you become a mother there is
this idea that you are individuated singular self just vanishes.
It just isn't true and of course with in The Deep End she's kind
of happily embracing this role as mother, she's really going for
it, she knows all the lines by heart, she knows she's got the
costume and she's really doing it well. Then this other self
that she has abandoned for so long comes back. The thing with
Audrey in Thumbsucker is that she is really fighting the role of
mother. She's sort of embracing it but she's sort of, it doesn't
really fit as well. She's in denial about so much and really not
looking after herself at all. So, little Miss Fantasy World and
is so identified with her son as the mother in the The Deep End
so there are great similarities between them. Both of them have
these 17-year-old sons coming to the point of sexual activity
and leaving them."
You serve as a producer of this film, too, and you're involved
in a lot of your projects. Do you ever think of directing?
Swinton: "I am sort of always wondering. I'm always hoping that
I talk myself out of it. There is a project that I am developing
now which I am developing as a producer but there is a question
mark in my mind about whether I shouldn't direct it, so I am
trying to kind of keep a bit loose about it. I am hoping that
when I get to the wire I will have talked myself out of it and
thought of the perfect person to direct it, but I might not, so
I might. I really like working with filmmakers and I really like
being able to concentrate in the way in which I can on what I
do, but who knows? It's a kind of a bit of an open door for me
at the moment."
Do you think working with Derek Jarman (Caravaggio, Edward II)
helped with your directing bug and interest in the craft?
Swinton: "Oh, if I hadn't met Derek Jarman when I did, I don't
know, it's kind of unimaginable not having met him. He formed as
a filmmaker and he made filmmakers of all of us who worked with
him. By the way doesn't necessarily mean that he made us
directors because we are all filmmakers actually, we don't
necessarily have to be directors to be filmmakers and he taught
us all that, all of us who worked with him. I was so spoiled by
my time with him and it was great to be spoiled that early
because it means that I am that lazy about life and I am so
determined that it should be that good again and the amazing
thing is that it is. When I say he kind of formed me, he kind of
just gave me license to ask for what I asked for, it was such a
beautiful environment to work in and that's very spoiling."
Lou Taylor Pucci
What was it like having Keanu Reeves poke around in your mouth
all day?
Pucci: "I have to tell you, he didn't really know what he was
doing with those utensils all the time. It could get quite
painful!" |
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