Interview: Gabriel Basso of “The Kings of Summer”

Posted on June 2, 2013 at 7:18 am

“The Kings of Summer” is the story of three teenage boys who run away from home and build a house in the woods, and it is one of my favorite films of the year.  One of the boys is played by Gabriel Basso, who talked to me about making the film.

I suspect that it was not nearly as comfortable to be out there in the woods as it looked in the movie. 

Yeah. I grew up in the woods so it was fairly easy for me to readjust to living there. At the same time it was my first time in the Midwest, where it’s super humid and the mosquitoes are out. It was a hard working environment. But we adjusted to the surroundings and we were able to work really hard and produce a good movie.

How long were you out there working on the film?kings of summer boys

Jordan Vogt-Roberts was out there for two months maybe two and a half and I was there for a month. We started I think July 5th and ended at the end of August.

Tell me a little bit about the audition process. How did you come to be in this film?

I saw the script and I immediately fell in love with the script immediately.   I went in and a couple days went by and I went in again and then I was called back in again and there was a mix and match and that’s when I met Nick Robinson who plays Joe and we read opposite one another.  It was a real pleasure to work with them and thank God they asked me.

You and Nick play lifelong friends and it really comes across that way on screen.  Tell me a little bit about what the two of you had done so that you would come across as having known each other all your lives.

Jordan had us in an improv class before we flew out to Ohio. It gave us a chance to really to spend time with one another. In Ohio where we were staying we were kind of forced to spend time around one another and it was a pleasure. The first couple of days we were out there we had to find ways to occupy ourselves. Just because it was so boring and then the work kicked in. It gave us so much time to catch up and be boys in the woods. That you know thank God it came across as though we knew each other for a long time on camera but we really are friends. It was a pleasure to spend time with one another.

Your character has to do everything with his foot all taped up.  Did that make it more difficult?

Yeah. I had to do everything with that boot. Sometimes it was just impossible. No kid should do what I did with a boot, sprinting, jumping.  It was pretty ridiculous. But it got to be pretty nasty. By the end I had sweat in it. Like it was muddy. It was disgusting. But it was fine. Like I’m not going to sit here and complain about it. It was tough with most of the things with the cumbersome weight on your leg.

I loved your character’s frustration with his parents.  The way that you responded to them is very real and authentic. 

My parents were played by Megan Mullally and Mark Evan Jackson and they probably are two of the funniest people I have ever had the pleasure of meeting. It was very hard to work with them just because I had to keep a straight fact the entire time. And that one dinner scene where they are just talking and talking I was dying. Like when the camera was not on me I could not keep a straight face. They are just so funny. Whenever I was about to laugh I would have to eat the burger. And not laugh. But I held my own for most of that scene. And I did the best I could at keeping it together. But it was just so difficult. They were a pleasure to work with. It was really amazing.

I think all teenagers have at one time or another the fantasy of running off and building a house for themselves. What do you think teenagers will think of this film or what do you want them to think about it?

I really hope that teenagers get outside after seeing this film. Rarely do you walk down the street doing anything that my grandparent’s generation did. And half of that comes with the technology advances. You’d have to appreciate the outdoors. And you really have to get out there and see things. I really want to experience that and like live in the woods and be able to appreciate nature just because it’s such a beautiful thing.  You just sit there and appreciate even the heat and the mosquitoes. In its own way it’s something special. And hopefully after someone sees this film they can appreciate what we went through to make this film. And where we shot it. And there were times where we were shooting the film and I was like I’m so glad to be back in the Midwest. And to be here in the woods and see stuff like this because it really is amazing. And I would strongly advise someone to get out there and see what is nature and experience that.  Yeah I think as much as we rely on technology, part of us wants to escape our dependence on them. And I think this film really captures like what we don’t need. We don’t need those things in order to be successful and have fun. And it’s important to not rely on those things.

 

Related Tags:

 

Actors Interview

Tribute: Jean Stapleton

Posted on June 1, 2013 at 7:22 pm

We mourn the loss of television great Jean Stapleton, who died today at age 90.  Best known as Edith, the sweet-natured wife of the bombastic Archie Bunker on “All in the Family,” she was often the target of his insults but occasionally showed some asperity by standing up to him.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1F9vRVyV914

She had an extensive and varied background in theater, both before and after her iconic role as Edith Bunker.  One of her best stage roles was the owner of the answering service in “Bells Are Ringing,” which she repeated on film.  She even co-starred with the Muppets.

She will be missed.

Related Tags:

 

Actors Television Tribute

Interview: Thomas Horn of “Space Warriors”

Posted on May 30, 2013 at 8:00 am

Thomas Horn, Jeopardy champion and star of “Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close,” appears in this week’s “Space Warriors.”  The movie premieres on Friday, May 31st at 8/7c on the Hallmark Channel and co-stars Ryan Simpkins, Danny Glover, Dermot Mulroney, Josh Lucas, and Oscar-winner Mira Sorvino.

Viewers can win a free trip to Space Camp by signing up now, and tuning into The Hallmark Channel on Friday 8/7c to find the secret keyword on screen.

Thomas Horn was nice enough to answer my questions:

What’s the scariest part of Space Camp?

I used a simulator called the multi-axis trainer that spins riders’ bodies in multiple axes, as the name suggests. Its a little bit nauseating and scary to watch, but it is less unpleasant than it looks.

What’s the most fun?

Conducting the space mission is definitely the most fun part of the camp, because you get to put what you have learned into practice. You get a feeling for what it is like to actually operate a spacecraft

If you were an astronaut, which job would you want?

I would want to be the mission commander, because they get to be in charge and make the final decisions on the spacecraft. It is the most difficult job, but also the most important.

What are the most important things an astronaut has to know?

As far as I know, an astronaut needs to be very familiar with physics and chemistry in general. Astronauts also have to know a large number of ordinary and emergency procedures. 

What are the most important qualities an astronaut has to have?

An astronaut has to be clever and decisive, but also patient. They have to be hardworking, physically fit, and good team players. For my character in the film, this last requirement is the hardest.

What surprised you the most in what you learned about the space program?

I was really surprised when I heard that the astronauts returning from the Apollo missions had to land in the ocean, but couldn’t aim themselves very well, so they sometimes had to wait for hours to be picked up by a ship. That’s bravery.

What did you and the other kids do to have fun while you were making the movie?

We did a lot of swimming in the hotel pool (temperatures were 90+ for all but 2 days during the shoot), and we saw a lot of movies, including two in which my co-stars acted!

What’s the best advice you ever got about acting?

Be natural. 

What makes you laugh?

Jokes are great, but the funniest moments are always accidental.

Related Tags:

 

Actors Interview Science-Fiction Television

Interview: Jesse Eisenberg of “Now You See Me”

Posted on May 29, 2013 at 3:59 pm

Jesse Eisenberg (“The Social Network,” “The Squid and the Whale,” “Rio”) stars in one of the most entertaining films of the year, “Now You See Me,” the story of a group of magicians who rob a bank.  It co-stars Morgan Freeman, Michael Caine, Isla Fisher, Mark Ruffalo, Dave Franco, Mélanie Laurant, and Woody Harrelson.  It keeps you guessing — and smiling — until the very last minute.  Eisenberg sat down with a small group of journalists in Washington, D.C.  to talk about the film.  He has an electric intellectual energy, very quick, very smart, very witty, with much of the intensity he brings to his roles, and it was fascinating to see him engage so wholeheartedly with our questions with such boundless curiosity that he came up with questions of his own for us.  He made us immediately feel like we were part of a conversation that we wished could go on all day.

“When I first read the script,” he told us, “I wanted to play my character more like David Blaine.  My character is like a street magician in the script, so I thought, very casual, dress like regular clothing.  But the director wanted to have a more flashy style.  So the whole aesthetic for the magicians is like they’re these cool magicians of the future and they do tricks that could be done in five years.  That was actually the rubric that we used — all this magic could be done in five years.  It’s actually not possible now, but it will be possible, with the governing laws of the universe, these could be done.”  nowyouseemeHe talked to us about trying to learn to perform some of the tricks himself. “I play a character who is one of the best slight of hand magicians in the world, so he would have been practicing for 25 years and I had just four weeks to practice before shooting and then four months while we were shooting to perfect the tricks that were going to be done at the end of the movie. So, I learned some basic slight of hand tricks, like a snap change.  I could so some smaller, less complicated, less impressive tricks fairly well.  There’s a scene where I’m handcuffed to the table, and there are these twin brothers named Dan and Dave Buck, and they are the best card flourishers in the world, just incredible.  They can make a cascade or waterfall and the cards look like they’re tied together.  It’s beautiful.  So they superimposed their hands over my body in that scene.  So, there are a lot of computer effects, but it’s not because the magic can’t be done; it’s because we couldn’t do them.  Where I’m shuffling those cards, they superimpose their hands over my body, but it’s magic that can actually be done because they’re doing it live.”  If he could do any style of magic tricks, he would do close-up magic, slight-of-hand.  “It’s the most impressive thing.  Also, I bite my nails, and probably if I did card tricks I would have better nails.”

Eisenberg talked about playing a cool, confident character, a contrast to some of his other roles, where he plays an insecure or nerdy role.  “They sent me the script when I was appearing in a play and had a lot of stage fright performing every night.  When I read the script, I thought that this character feels more comfortable on stage than anywhere else.  He’s so confident.  And I thought this would be a good way for me to challenge myself to play a certain kind of character that might be therapeutic in a way and make me feel confident on stage and in my personal life.  And it worked — while we were filming I was feeling really good about myself and had a four month break from my own dumb neuroses.  I was sleeping, I was eating — I had an avocado one day!  It was a fun experience.  It wasn’t difficult for me.  Whenever I take on a role, I find it easy to get into the role.  Once I’m there, there’s like little challenges along the way.”  He does not worry about being type-cast. “Sometimes, when you’re an actor, you get thought of for certain things and that’s what you end up playing.  And I don’t think that’s a bad thing.  If you can play one thing well, you’re a successful actor, because most actors can’t play one thing well.”  But he says he is glad he is being sent a greater variety of roles now.  When he was not happy with what he was being sent, he wrote a play to create his own part.

He said he thought his character in this film “had an air of superiority when he was five years old and then found himself alone in his bedroom and had a deck of cards and found he was good at it and liked doing it and isolated himself and became focused on his work and became great at what he does and is now the best in the world.  And then he gets teamed up with these three other characters who also felt like they were the best.  And now they’re all kind of competing with each other but they have to work together.  I think he feels kind of annoyed by having to work with them.”  He talked about working with the cast members who play the other magicians.  The actors and their characters have very different skills and styles.  “I knew Woody Harrelson, and he likes to bring his own sensibility to roles, even dramatic roles, and I like to do the same thing.  But I didn’t realize how funny Isla and Dave were.  Most of the time, the characters are talking to each other, but we have three big performances.  We’d film them over the course of a week, sixteen hour days, very long days.  It gets repetitive after a while.  Because we all had a sense of humor and we had an audience that was a very patient group of New Orleans extras, we would really perform for them.  A lot of our off-the-cuff remarks and our personal chemistry made it into the movie.  That came just out of trying to keep each other entertained.  I suppose there’s a version where the actors try to entertain each other and it’s alienating or annoying to the audience.  But we had a good director who knows how to control the set and good actors who know when to stop trying to be funny and do the scene for real and push the plot forward and do the things you need to do for the story.  The movie is better for it.”

He was impressed with the “visually arresting” style of director Louis Leterrier, “a great visual filmmaker,” who kept a lot of energy in the performance scenes, making them feel like live shows.  He described how, in the one set in New Orleans, “in the first shot, the camera’s on a cable and it circles around us and there’s maybe a three-minute shot, which in movie terms is epic, and then goes to a close-up of Morgan Freeman.”

He said he’s getting “a little better” at feeling that he knows what he is doing.  He had just finished a play , and he said that even after the 79th performance out of 80, he still agonized before each curtain.  So did his co-star, Vanessa Redgrave.  “She’s like the greatest actress in the world.  And both of us would get there at 3 for an 8:00 show and start panicking.  I thought, ‘Maybe it does get easier,’ and then I met her and she is still worried about making sure it’s right.  I asked my father about this, and he said, ‘Maybe if you care about what you do, then it will always be hard because you set a high standard for yourself.’  I still feel very nervous.  That said, when I was playing this character, I felt really confident.  I think the personality of the character starts to infect how you feel about it.  In the play I just did, the character is a very angry guy who hates himself, so I was feeling all those feelings, and Vanessa’s character was this tortured older woman, so she was maybe feeling that, too.  I supposed if we were playing really happy, confident people who liked ourselves and each other, we might have had a better experience and gotten to the theater a little bit later.”

It is important, he said, to work with people who are “trying to take it seriously, treating it with respect and not just get trying to get something made or make money.  That’s actually kind of a rare thing.  Even a movie like this, a big-budget movie, when I first met with Louis Leterrier, I asked him what he was thinking of for the acting and he gave me all these French art films, with the most dramatic, terrifying acting I’ve ever seen, and I thought ‘This is a great opportunity, to be in a bigger movie where someone really wants to see good acting, to do your job well.'”

Related Tags:

 

Actors Interview
THE MOVIE MOM® is a registered trademark of Nell Minow. Use of the mark without express consent from Nell Minow constitutes trademark infringement and unfair competition in violation of federal and state laws. All material © Nell Minow 1995-2026, all rights reserved, and no use or republication is permitted without explicit permission. This site hosts Nell Minow’s Movie Mom® archive, with material that originally appeared on Yahoo! Movies, Beliefnet, and other sources. Much of her new material can be found at Rogerebert.com, Huffington Post, and WheretoWatch. Her books include The Movie Mom’s Guide to Family Movies and 101 Must-See Movie Moments, and she can be heard each week on radio stations across the country.

Website Designed by Max LaZebnik