Empire Magazine (September 97)
It would be a
breeze to get used to the lush aquatic beauty of L.A.'s Marina Del
Rey, where the Speed 2: Cruise Control crew are incarcerated for a
couple of days doing the press push. Small boats, too stunted in
growth to have featured in a cruise liner disaster flick, bob
skittishly in the harbor. High up in the plush Ritz Carlton Hotel,
31-year-old Sandra Bullock is standing by the balcony, wondering how
much longer she must talk about boats and her fear of water (now
overcome), and whispering conspiratorially with her publicist.
Laconic as ever, 30-year-old Jason Patric is slumped in a chair
eyeing Empire blankly, dressed in anonymous plain blue turtleneck and
jeans. He might just as well be saying: "Now don't you come
bothering us." There's a palpable sense of ennui in the air and
a visible pallor on their faces. They're tired and vaguely disinterested.
It is strange
though, because earlier this morning, while under the glare of the TV
cameras, Patric was the bon viveur, making mischeif by suggesting to
TV reporters that Bullock became a bit of a drunk on the set of Speed
2. He'd also been ribbing hacks (some of whom were buying it) that
there were actually scenes in the film with Keanu Reeves. And
"Sandy Buttocks" had been charming telling how
"insanity" has lured her back to Jan de Bont and the Speed
franchise. And as soon as Empire asks a question the rapport kicks in
once again and the suprisingly easy Sandra/Jason double act sparks
into action.....
Empire: So, I think we should start with the drink problem.
Sandra: (To Jason, laughing) "Oh, you are such a crap! I know this came from you.
Empire: This from the Jason Patric who got Heineken at 10 AM from Sandra to deal with the interviews.
Sandra:
"To loosen him up a little bit."
Jason:
"That apparently is how she loosens and relaxes."
Sandra: "A
bucket of Heineken?"
Jason:
"She thought I could use that."
Sandra:
"Well, I can pound down the alcohol, I guess."
Jason:
"I've been trying to deal with this one day at a time. Let's
leave it at that."
Sandra:
"I'm just at the beginning right now. I intend to get completely
blotto. I'm going to go downstairs and do bodyshots. You know, that
was the thing about my stand-in. I would come in the morning and do
my close-ups before I started drinking. I usually wouldn't start
drinking until about 11.
You want to
see my face every once in a while."
Jason:
"Some people do."
Sandra:
"To show that I was there."
Empire: Just to earn the money? Do you just do the poster?
Sandra: "Totally. The longest I ever showed up was for the poster." Jason: "And don't we look good on that?"
Empire: And what about drugs?
Jason: "Actually, there was very good dope supplying." Sandra: Was there? I didn't want to bring that in. The alcohol I figured would be a good, you know, liquid liquid." Jason: "Yeah, I figure since we're a PG-13 maybe we should just stay with the alcoholism."
Empire: What of the off-screen relationship?
Sandra: "No, it was onscreen. Totally blocked and rehearsed."
Empire: What about Keanu Reeves?
Sandra: "It was a threesome. It's true."
Empire: But you're Jason Patric and you are very moody and serious?
Jason: "Oh
yeah."
Sandra:
"He's very moody, serious and difficult to work with."
Empire: And what of the on-set tensions? Were you worried, Jason, about the money you were getting?
Jason: "I
was pissed. Not pissed as in drunk like you English guys. I mean
angry. And I'm not an angry guy."
Sandra:
"You do maudlin. He starts off with maudlin guy."
Jason:
"No. Happy drunk guy first."
Sandra:
"Then he goes maudlin drunk and then angry drunk."
Empire: So Sandra, you've slept with all your co-stars?
Sandra: "Linked with only two of them."
Empire: Why not with Bill Pullman?
Sandra: "Because he was married. A problem for me, I don't tread there. Uncharted territory......"
Of late, it's
been easy for Bullock to clutter up the mind. She's been in there
somewhere for most of the 90's, jockeying for attention with Julia
Roberts, Winona Ryder, Uma Thurman and Liz Hurley. But it's easy to
see why she stands out now. There is something compelling about her.
Sure, like many of the movie stars we indulge, she's a babe and she's
sexy. You've only got to see her smolder alongside top women's totty
Matthew McConaughey in A Time to Kill to recognize it. ("He is
the best thing to happen to me, a real powerful force in my life.")
It was
reconfirmed in July when the readers of Empire decided the former
star of such lackluster outings as Demolition Man and Love Potion No.
9 had now climbed to the top in Empire's 100 Sexiest Movie Stars Of
1997 poll. It's not the first time a poll has bestowed this accolade
on her. Suprisingly, she doesn't see it this way, herself.
"Aesthetically, it takes care of the battle right there. It is not how you think about me. But I would like to play something like that, where you are a babe. But that was the great thing about the first Speed, it changed the female stereotype in an action movie."
People have
always loved this suprising modesty about Sandra Bullock- especially
women (note to men: women love dissing female icons like Meg Ryan,
Madonna or Patsy Kensit). Bullock comes across as intelligent,
honest, funny, pretty and talented. If you were looking for the last
time an actor hit upon this magical formula, try Lauren Bacall. Or
maybe Audrey Hepburn.
Suprisingly,
Bullock doesn't have tantrums. Sure, she did sack her business
manager and lawyer last year. But not in a fit of pique but because
she wanted to get more directly hands-on.
She was
setting up a production company, Fortis Films, and was embarking on
her directorial debut- a short she was working on with McConaughey
called Making Sandwiches. She decided to bring her dad and sister
into the respective business roles.
Family bonds
are clearly a strong factor for Bullock. She always talks
affectionately of her voice coach father and German opera singer
mother Helga, who took young Sandy around Europe and flung her into
small roles during a peripatetic childhood.
"But I am
of the 90's version of family values. Families are not constructed in
the way we idolize them. On one scale you're dealing with divorce and
on a more difficult scale you've got same-sex marriages and
single-parenting. "So I like it when I read an alternative in
scripts to the family nucleus. If I could find a husband as an ideal
mate and raise children, that would be fabulous, that is what I hope
for. But to say that is how everyone is to live their life and show
that on film is wrong. It's limiting. You're telling people who don't
have that perfect set-up that they'll never amount to something like
that person who has that perfect set-up. That has hurt so many people."
A lot of her new film Hope Floats, an emotional drama featuring Gena Rowlands and Harry Connick Jr. (Fortis Films' first production and Bullock's first as producer) explores this in the most difficult way. "It looks at the dysfunction and pain of establishing a foundation for yourself out of fantasy rather than reality. Owning who you are rather than trying to outrun your family because they embarass you and are a horrible example for you. You will not be able to live any longer if you can't go back and start from scratch. You can run for the rest of your life but it will kill you. Anyway, family, what is that?"
Blimey, not
much blueberry pie in that analysis. But then that is what people get
wrong with Bullock. While she is quite happy to continue the myth
that she is some kind of Cinderella figure, internally she is clearly
deeply involved with the darkness of humanity. She hasn't proved this
as the multiplex yet, which is why she doesn't enjoy the same respect
of, say, Susan Sarandon, but her moment might be coming. First, she
plans to take a big break from high profile movies.
"I could
only do a film like Speed 2 once in a while. Anyway, you're not
losing me. I think I am going to make better choices by taking time
off and doing the things I want. If I kept going at the rate I was,
I'd do everyone a disservice. I wouldn't be there 100 percent. It's a
mistake a lot of people make and I was very close to doing it because
you feel you have to drive yourself. Work suffers, you suffer, life suffers."
This is all a
little contemplative for a star who is famous for not taking herself
too seriously, whose idea of discussing her formative acting
experience involves her recounting getting her "skirt stuck in
my knickers during this moving scene in Chekhov's Three Sisters and
having the whole audience laughing at my butt."
She is
unusually self-aware. In some strange, hard-to-pin-down way, she
exists just outside of her seismic iconography. Other stars often
march right in there to live (and often get lost) in their characters
and their myth. With Bullock, she's tugging us by the arm and saying:
"Do you get it? I'm laughing and you're not excluded." You
detect she's always got one eyebrow raised. For shorthand, lets just
call it irony.
"Irony is
my greatest weapon," she agrees. A weapon she deploys when
journalists chime in with the inevitable shagging questions. Why the
fascination with her love life?
"Everyone
keeps asking me about that question because there hasn't been a
relationship..." she trails off.
"Just
answer your uncomfortable question," insists Patric.
"No one's
interested in a marriage that is doing really well or a peaceful
anything. It's just part of the game. If that is what everyone
thought I did, that is unfortunate because I don't have that much
time on my hands."
"I see it
differently," adds Patric, "you are a famous attractive
woman and movies by their very essence are sexual; strangers go into
a dark room and have light washed over them. Movie stars are made
because people want to sleep with them, be it Gary Cooper or Grace
Kelly. So in real life, people have those same fantasies and attach
themselves to someone like you. Audiences want to know more than they
get in two hours, to continue that connection."
"Well,
there you have it, thank you!" cheers Bullock, clapping.
"Is that
on tape?" laughs her co-star.
"He's so
smart. But you know there is a comfort factor among human beings that
I think I have. It is not Americanized, though, which sometimes lead
people to assume something else. Which is okay. I'm not going to stop
conducting myself in this way. I know I am not doing anything wrong.
People have been doing it for hundreds of years- satirising, that is.
Who cares? If it has no validity, it lasts for two days but since I'm
not coming out and saying, 'No, that is not true', it has a lot of
legs. It sells newspapers."
Jason Patric is a rather more problematic part of the Speed 2 equation. He bit into the fame game with Joel Schumacher's The Lost Boys nearly a decade ago (about the time Bullock was heading from one smart Broadway performance into the arms of TV, with a disastrous spin-off to Working Girl.) Patric delivered a tidy performance, and his nice face and innate sexiness was not easily forgotten. This should have signalled a promising future. And yet he spurned it (read: he didn't do the projects his agent, publicist, and the media expected.) He dared to say he wanted to be a serious actor, took small theatrical assignments and the odd film such as dark thriller Rush, which everyone generously ignored.
"If
someone dangles that brass ring and you don't take it, not only do
they not understand it but they also start feeling bad about
themselves and questioning their own lusts or greed."
Patric is
quietly warming to his theme, releasing his resentment with some relish.
"So they
want to stamp you as an aberration rather than coming to terms with
themselves. But truth is, they need you. But they are not thinking
long term. That guy is going to have his job for five years. He wants
to capitalize on me if I have something to give him.
"It
suprised me because I was prepared for mediocrity and all the
difficulties of making movies but I didn't expect resentment that
came my way for simply not working. I wasn't getting on a soapbox
decrying Hollywood. I just spoke honestly and I was amazed at the
resentment in Hollywood, from business people and the media because I
shunned their help in raising my career. That made them feel useless."
"Which is
so suprising to me," interjects Bullock in his defense,
"because in this profession we are desperately looking for
people with conviction, honor, fortitude- whether you agree with
their stance or not. And you get those in such small doses, it
frightens people because they don't understand it."
The media
exacted its revenge on Patric in 1991 when they woke up one morning
and discovered Keifer Sutherland's fiancee, Julia Roberts, had run
off with the groom-to-be's best friend, Jason Patric (Roberts and
Patric no longer speak). It was open season and the press bit as hard
as they could. Patric confounded his estranged relationship with the
mudrakers by regally saying nothing.
"I can go
out there and try to prove them wrong but I won't stoop to that level
just so I can make more money. Which is what it is really about. If I
can convince people that I'm as accessible as (Adopts irrating accent
for emphasis) Tom or Brad or any of those people, then I am supposed
to be better- but I am not going to do that because it is wrong."
Sounds a
little like Patric protests too much. It can't be all bad being Tom
or Brad, can it?
"The
truth is I can get away with it and be good enough. Someone down the
line is not going to be as strong, not as smart or have the same
oppurtunity and will be devastated because they didn't conform. So if
I can be a living example without being a martyr, if that is
possible, then that makes me feel a lot better."
When Patric
turned up alongside De Niro, Pitt and Hoffman in the high profile
Sleepers in January, he caught everyone by suprise. Suddenly
journalists wanted to know what his current relationship with
supermodel Christy Turlington was like and why the British-filmed
Incognito had run into troubles when director Peter Weller walked
after just four weeks. Sulky Patric decided to let them go figure.
"Maybe
they should have closed the production then, but contractually you
can't back out," opines Patric now, "but John Badham came
in and made the best of it."
With a blank
page on their hands, and amid the news that Jan de Bont's set was
beset with problems such as sea sickness and the small business of
Hurricane Lily threatening to sink the production, they invented some
choice stories that Bullock hated her co-star and that he, in turn,
resented her.
"Somehow,"
sighs Patric, "if you're a public figure and you're rich, it is
somehow okay to invade your privacy or poke fun. But to celebrate
someone's woes is bad, not out of feeling sympathy as an actor-
because truth is we're going to be alright- but it is bad for society
for that to be okay. It's bad for humanity."
Speed 2 is the bringing together of two elements at a pivotal time. This really could be their moment. Post-Sleepers, Patric should be erasing the wilderness years with a co-star who is determined to promote him ("If I could work with Jason on every film I would.....") A faintly ironic twist given that in Speed there was the sense that Reeves had generously allowed his fame to spill over onto the nascent Bullock, and now she is using the sequel to pass the favor onto her new co-star. Whether he'll make the most of the oppurtunity remains to be seen.
© 1997 by Empire Magazine