Larry Crowne – TOM HANKS Interview

Legendary two-time Oscar winner Tom Hanks returns behind the camera for the only the second time in his distinguished feature film career. Arriving fifteen years after his directorial debut, That Thing You Do!, Larry Crowne sees Hanks take the title role โ a blue-collar divorcee who finds himself laid off from his store job in the midst of the global economic recession. To cope, he decides to go back to college as a mature student and gain a degree. Enrolling in two classes โ economics and public speaking โ he not only becomes a favourite of fellow pupil Talia (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) but even takes a shine to his tutor, the frosty Mercedes Tainoit (Julia Roberts).
Reuniting Hanks with Roberts โ last seen together in Charlie Wilsonโs War โ Larry Crowne emerges as a charming romantic comedy that deals with contemporary issues in a deft way. Below Hanks talks about why it took so long to direct again, why he cast his Larry Crowne co-writer Nia Vardalos as the voice of the Sat-Nav and reveals all about his mouth-watering collaboration with the Wachowskis, Cloud Atlas.
Q: Itโs been fifteen years since you last directed. How did it take so long to make a second film?
A: Well, itโs not my regular job. Thatโs one thing. Directing a feature, you have to be infected with a certain kind of Ecoli or something like that. It has to take over and you have to be like โThe only thing I can do now is direct this film. Iโve got to see it all the way through!โ Because itโs about two years of your life. And quite frankly being a movie star is a much better gig. Payโs better. Less is expected of you. You donโt have to work as hard. They let you go home earlyโฆsometimes. So it requires that personal investment of telling a story. It took about six years for Larry Crowne to come to pass, and I didnโt start really taking it seriously as something that I would want to spend this much time with, until I had finished my own draft and even that was close to three years ago.
Q: The film speaks to Baby Boomer generation. Do you think theyโve been well served by films these days or have they been left behind?
A: Well, television has never been as good as it has been right now. Iโve been lucky to be involved with a number of things, like Big Love. And I love stuff like Mad Men and Breaking Bad. There are so many truly great television series on there, that itโs actually taking the onus off motion pictures. Movies are very expensive to make. The studio only wants to make a certain type of movie. Anything else that comes out almost comes out by luck. And you also have to say the audiences are not quite there anymore. Only because we have so many other distractions that are available to us.
Take a decade like the Seventies, where youโre seeing the great Marty Scorsese films and Sidney Lumet was making movies, Paul Mazursky was making movies, Woody Allen was cranking them out like crazy. Those were adult films that adults went to see. Well, adults can be quite frankly dazzled by stuff that they can see at home right now. And the market place has been left open to the people who actually choose to go to movies. As opposed to just the folks who go to the movies just because itโs part of the social contract of being young or wanting to meet chicks. That make sense? I donโt know if it did or not.
Q: Will this film find an audience with people who have been laid off? Do you know many this has happened to?
A: I donโt know anybody personally. But as an actor/artist, if I can make that claim, I canโt help but know, point blank, that the turn-down in the economy affects people personally. You donโt have to be a real-estate developer whose condo unit went belly-up. Or somebody who is trying to buy and sell 19 houses at the same time and flipping for a profit. To understand that if you lose your job and you canโt make your mortgage, itโs a personal crisis that youโre going through โ not just something you read about on the business pages. Now the trick is how can you possibly make a movie about that, that doesnโt turn out to be the most depressing film you have ever seen? We still wanted to make a movie that was going to be funny. That, if not upbeat, is at least an example of how to fight cynicism, how to combat the depression that could go along with losing oneโs job. And how to still have faith in oneโs self, that as long as you make some pro-active motions to improve your life, things might get better.
Q: So do you think Larry learns this?
A: The end result of our movie is that Larry Crowne can maybe look back and say โThe best thing that ever happened to me was losing my job. Otherwise, I wouldnโt have gone to college, I wouldnโt have got a scooter, I wouldnโt have met this magnificent woman.โ Now thatโs the fantasy of a movie about it, as opposed to the reality of it. But you cannot deny, if somebody out there has lost it all, and says โIโve got nothing to do. Iโm going to go back to collegeโ and ends up falling in love with being a welder or something, it can happen. I think thatโs theโฆrather than adhering to the fake version of how if you pursue things your dreams will come true, maybe itโs just that if you hang on long enough things might work out for you. In reality, Larry lives in a worse apartment, in a worse neighbourhood, and he has a worse job than he had. But heโs actually a little bit better off than he was at the beginning, but thatโs the magic of the movies.
Q: How was it directing yourself, as thereโs no-one on set to help you fine-tune your performance?
A: Oh, youโd be surprised at how many people on this movie said, โWhy donโt you do that again? Why donโt you give that another shot?โ So much of making a movie is about the communication that goes on. Naturally as an actor, all I have to do is do it. I donโt have to talk about it. I just have to put on the costume and show people what Iโm thinking. I got to be able to take that conversation between an actor and a director and a writer out of the time frame. Because I wrote it, I knew what I would be willing to live with. As the director, I knew what the tenor and the colour of the scenes would be. And as an actor, I had the ability in order to control the take, even just as we were doing it right nowโฆso actually, I think we saved a little bit of time, because the director and the writer and the actor were the same person. That being said, about 4 oโclock in the afternoon, those three people got very tired, they got very cranky, and they needed to have a few moments to themselves and have a nice cup of tea and just enough scone in order to get through the day.
Q: Who are your inspirations as a director then?
A: Oh! Outside of everybody Iโve ever worked with, who got something good out of me, there is a type of ensemble atmosphere that Iโve actually heard that actors haveโฆlike Robert Altman. I understand that sometimes, when he was shooting, you wouldnโt even know that the camera was operating in this way. I grew up worshipping the movies of Stanley Kubrick. Iโve since worked with people who worked with Kubrick. And he said, the crew was so small and the atmosphere was so relaxed, that even though the movies would take 280 days to shoot, it wasnโt expensive. And there was no pressure. And thatโs the antithesis of what you would expect of somebody like that. I had some pretty decent primers from people who directed โ hard-charging, get the shots, letโs bang it out. As well as some people that said, โLetโs see whatโs going to happen here. We got it once. Letโs move on.โ So I took a little bit from everybody, and just tried to always force myself not to leave until I heard it and saw it the way I imagined. And still had faith in the serendipity of whoever would bring along something different.
Q: Are there any directors youโd still like to work with?
A: Oh, tonnes of them. Eight million people that are now working! Scorsese โ come close a few times. You see something like Carlosโฆjeez, Iโd love to work with that guy. Mark Romanekโฆwho did Never Let Me Go. Stuff like that. You just see so many people and you say โHow come I canโt make a movie like that? How come I canโt be in that? Whatโs that about?โ
Q: Well, you are about to work with the Wachowskis on Cloud Atlasโฆ
A: Yeah, and Tom Tykwer.
Q: Have you had any conversations with them about it yet?
A: Many, yes. Tonnes. Boy, thatโs going to be a beast. Itโs going to be wild. Those guys are geniuses! I admire those guysโ films because they throw deep and long. Those are uncompromising movies that are forcing the audience to go on a very deep and different track. Very adult kind of journey. Quite frankly, I want to be tested like that. Then you match it up with the material of Cloud Atlas, which is pretty spectacular. And the screenplay is off the scale! I just want to be part of something that is much, much bigger than showing up and hitting the marks. Iโve had good experiences of being the guy in a movie, and in huge pieces of commerce, like the Robert Langton movies, and itโs part burden and part challenge. Itโs part โLetโs just get the frigginโ thing doneโ, as well as how as artists do we make sure this beat is about something. And that is a little bit about what the Wachowskis are going to demand from Cloud Atlas, of me, and plenty of other people. Itโs a big ensemble โ so itโs not a vehicle for any one of us that are in it.
Q: Youโre a big Twitter user. And you also drive electric cars. Whatโs the attraction?
A: Oh, that! Well, I think tweeting is like sending out cool telegrams to your friends, once a week. If you send out tweets, and you read the tweets that people tweet back to youโฆtheyโre kinda gibberish. You canโt make sense of them. Iโm not the kind of guy who says [stoner voice] โJust chillinโ at the house today!โ I donโt do that kind of stuff. I just try to compose a little hi-tech haiku that goes out to people. Itโs a bit of a creative bash thatโs fun. And Iโve always been a fan of electric cars because I admire the technology, and living in Los Angeles, youโd be surprised at how long you can drive an electric car that only has a range of sixty miles. You can drive the thing almost all weekend, and not have to fill it up with gas. And not filling it up with gas means Iโve saved thousands of dollars!
Q: Like Larry, did you change around middle age?
A: No. I donโt think so. I had first kids when I was in my early 20s. I had my second kids when I was in my mid 30s. So I always seemed to be in my child-rearing years, no matter what. The biggest thing that happened was my 15 year-old decided to go to boarding school. So all of a sudden, Rita and I were empty nesters โ yahoo! Thatโs not a crisis. Thatโs a celebration! The standard version of a mid-life crisis is that people wake up one morning and realise that theyโre unhappy, even though they have everything. I donโt know what that is. I might wake up tired in the morning but I donโt wake up unhappy.
Q: Have you ever wanted to explore the dark side in your characters?
A: I donโt need to explore the dark side just for the sake of it because that ends up meaning you play a role where you have lines like โBefore I kill you Mr Bond, perhaps youโd like a tour of our installation!โ But this is who I am, and I think I get to explore an awful lot of really great themes that I think are recognisable to everybody. Even so, I made Road to Perdition or Green Mile, which were pretty dark movies in a lot of ways, all the press said, โAh, but youโre still such a nice guy!โ How can you say that? I shot guys in the head! โYeah, but you did it in a nice way!โ
Q: Has anybody tried to tempt you down the superhero way?
A: Normally, I would say โAh, that would be boring. How much fun would that be?โ But then you get to see Anthony Hopkins in Thor. Heโs like a 70 year-old guy, with one eye, killing people. And Iโm thinking โMaybe itโs a good gig.โ Well, Cloud Atlas is going to be a completely different sort of thing. So, Iโm not interested in an inorganic choice. People offer me all the time โ would you like to play the bad guy in this thing? And I read it and I say, โThis is not about anything! It doesnโt really explore anything.โ So Iโve got no reason to do it.
Q: Robert Langton had a super-brain of courseโฆ
A: Yeah, exactly.
Q: Will you play him again?
A: I think there is desire, to try and figure out a way to do that. But I must say even the studio is willing to say โWe have to grow the character in the circumstances farther than it is.โ Look, those movies, by and large, are just huge pieces of moviemaking commerce. And if they donโt do well, the studios shoot themselves in the head and commit suicide, because they might lose their jobs, because they didnโt market the movie right. But they still end up being about this thing that you get to explore. Like the first one was about history versus fact, and what really happened to Christ and did he have a grandma? And the second one was all about science versus faith, which is something that you can hang onto, that will warrant the running through the streets and the scavenger hunt. And we donโt know if the next one can honestly be about that, and if itโs not, then whatโs the point in doing it? Itโll be three times as expensive and only make half as much money, and after that, even the studio doesnโt want to work that hard.
Q: You wrote Larry Crowne with Nia Vardalos. But you get the starring role, and she got the voice of the Sat-Nav. How come?
A: Ah, well โ sheโs done plenty of other things! We started working on this about six years ago. Nia did the first three drafts. We all knew that this wasnโt the movie it was going to be. And very quickly we realised the strength was going to beโฆmy male version of it was going to be accurate, her female version of it was going to be accurate too. How many times have you seen movies written by men in which the women say โWhen are you coming home?โ They donโt really have a role. Theyโre just the chick of the piece. And she was always able to make sure that the script wasnโt full of scenes that make you go โThatโs not how women think.โ And I got to do the other side of it too. Thatโs not going to happen because thatโs not how guys think. But after a while, she went off, and I took it under my wing. But she was at every read-thru, and on the set almost every day. And she was always coming by with a tweak or an idea that would keep as grounded in an authenticity that we were going for. And there werenโt any roles for her. The best she could do was the voice of the Map Genie โ but I think she did a really good job!
Larry Crowne is now available on DVD, Blu-Ray Now
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