The Agency's Posts

Actor John Goodman does both silent and 'Extremely Loud': John Goodman has stolen plenty of scenes with midsize and supporting roles, including....
Read More>

Lizzy Caplan: The restless mind of a Sundance star: As life problems go, you could find yourself in worse pickles than deciding which Sundance....
Read More>

Catching up with Madonna: The Material Girl is back with her directorial effort 'W.E.,' due in theaters Friday. Then there's
Read More>

'The Grey' gets the green. 'The Help' cleans up: 'The Grey' brings in the green.Liam Neeson's "The Grey" became the actor's third....
Read More>

Madonna will welcome LMFAO to Super Bowl halftime stage: Madonna's Super Bowl halftime debut is coming together nicely, thanks to a Black Eyed Pea and....
Read More>

Makers of 'The Grey' confront inner beasts: The outdoor adventure tale is an interior journey, say Liam Neeson and Joe Carnahan. Life is full....
Read More>

Television review: 'Touch': Kiefer Sutherland's return to Fox finds him in a quasi-religious drama with mystical-numerical....
Read More>

Gary Oldman talks about nomination, George Clooney: It's somewhat astonishing that Gary Oldman has never been nominated for an Oscar, but the....
Read More>

Rihanna, Coldplay, Paul McCartney join list of Grammy performers: Coldplay, Rihanna and Paul McCartney have been added to the list of performers for the Grammy....
Read More>

Box Office: Fourth 'Underworld' film is No. 1 on strong weekend: It continues to be a strong month at the box office, with the fourth installment of Sony....
Read More>

A new hormone revs up the body's fat-burning engine: Remember this name: irisin. A newly described polypeptide hormone named after the Greek....
Read More>

Bruce Springsteen: 'We take care of our own': Bruce Springsteen released his new single, "We Take Care of Our Own," Thursday....
Read More>

Game of Thrones: Season 2: Like a graybeard king, George R.R. Martin sat near the center of the ballroom at the 69th....
Read More>
Makers of 'The Grey' confront inner beasts
Posted on: 01/27/12
Share/Save/Bookmark
 

The outdoor adventure tale is an interior journey, say Liam Neeson and Joe Carnahan. Life is full of snarling wolves.



In the opening scenes of "The Grey,"the new film opening in theaters Friday, Liam Neeson's character explains in a letter to his dead wife that the dull ache of his grief has taken him to the frigid ends of the earth and put him in the company of desperate and empty men.

It's difficult to watch Neeson trudge through snow and heartache at the start of the film and not think about the actor's own ordeals — it will be three years ago this March that his wife, actress Natasha Richardson, suffered a fatal head injury during ski lessons at the Mont Tremblant Resort in Quebec.

The general opinion in Hollywood is that Neeson has tried in recent seasons to lose himself amid the sound of action-movie explosions — he starred in"The A-Team"as well as the upcoming films "Wrath of the Titans" and "Battleship" — but "The Grey" actually challenges that view. This movie is an unblinking study of loss, not a distraction from it.

"I've seen the film twice now and what I like about my guy is that he knows that he's looking into the abyss but he keeps putting one foot in front of the other," Neeson said on a recent afternoon in Los Angeles. "He's not curling up like a fetus. There's hope or, at least, there's determination."

The movie, directed and co-written by Joe Carnahan, stars Neeson as John Ottway, a widower who takes a job as a sharpshooter for an oil company — it's his task to shoot the wolves and bears that menace Alaska pipeline workers — but the job may just be an attempt at suicide by adventure.

Ottway is an outsider among the hard-eyed and hard-drinking workers, but he finds himself leading an unexpected tribe after a calamity; a small commercial flight carrying pipeline employees and Ottway back to civilization crashes and the survivors find themselves at odds with the elements, their own fears and, worst of all, a pack of snarling wolves defending their territory.

"The script read like a 19th century epic poem, like 'The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,'" Neeson said. "That touched every button for me. Every movie I got to, there's someone on a cellphone, there's someone on a computer, there's someone texting, and that's how you're told the story. Look, there's not a car in this movie. This is real moviemaking, man versus man, man versus nature."

"The Grey," which is being released from upstart distributor OpenRoad Films, is not for the faint of heart — this is not a movie for people who fear heights, dogs or air travel — and, reading the script, Neeson said his most pressing concern was his ability to endure the 40-day shoot in Smithers, British Columbia, where temperatures would drop 30 degrees below zero.

The blizzards seen in the film are entirely real — there is no CG-created weather on screen — and the 59-year-old actor said he had his doubts that his bad knees could handle it.

"The blizzards, everything, all the snow and sleet, all of it was real, it's the nature," Neeson said. "There was no CGI, we went right through the stuff that came at us. It was one year ago today we were out there doing it, and I still can't believe we finished the film. It's the first time in my career — and I've made 55 films now — where I thought, 'We will not finish this film, this film will finish us. Something bad is going to happen.'"

The film was inspired by a short story, "The Ghost Walker," by Ian Mackenzie Jeffers, and Carnahan spent years carrying the project in the back pocket of his career. The film and its Jack London soul feels like a departure for the director of "Narc," "Smokin' Aces" and "The A-Team," but he says it's his most personal project.

"It's a survival tale, so in a way those are almost plotless exercises — you either are going to make it or you ain't," Carnahan said. "The characters are set upon by the forces of nature, and in that you can explore the things that truly vex all of us — our mortality, our purpose on this earth, God and faith, all of these things. Sometimes with material like this, if you listen to it, it will tell you what it wants to be.

"I spent a lot of years working and toiling away on it until it got to a point where I had grown up enough as a man and as a father to make a movie that might be all of those things and wouldn't just vanish," he added.

Carnahan wanted a cast of relative unknowns to heighten the feeling of vulnerability, and he found them in Frank GrilloDallas RobertsJoe Anderson and Nonso Anozie. Only Neeson and Dermot Mulroney are familiar faces, and the latter, beneath a beard and glasses, won't be easily recognized by most moviegoers.

Carnahan set up a screening of "Raging Bull"for his actors and handed each a copy of James Dickey's 1970 novel "Deliverance," which presents a similar tale of a band of men fighting to survive in cruel conditions and find their way home.

The cast members of "The Grey" say they became truly bonded during the rigors of the shoot and, despite lost fingernails and frostbite scars, they came back from the mountaintop feeling a warm connection to one another.

"Working with Liam was like getting to play baseball with Mickey Mantle," Grillo said with an admiring chuckle. "The best thing is, he showed up and insisted on being one of the guys. There was never any movie-star pretense. And he could not be more different than his characters, he's a very gentle guy … we went to a football game together after we got back and he brought a book and I said to him, 'Liam you can't read Shakespeare at a Jets game.'"

After the box-office success of Pierre Morel's 2008 thriller "Taken," Neeson has become — in the eyes of film fans — a sort of latter-day Clint Eastwood or Charles Bronson. Some of those moviegoers will be surprised when they sit down in the dark with "The Grey," but Carnahan said his leading man is on a complicated journey as an actor these days.

"The tragedies we go through in life, whatever they do to alter our being, that's just naturally brought to bear on everything that comes after," Carnahan said. "If you're in touch with that or in tune with who you are — creatively, artistically — it becomes part of your expression. For a creative person, it's there in their work and their choices, if they can be honest about it.

"Liam," he added, "is nothing if not brutally, brilliantly sincere and honest."

COMMENTS
Be the first to post a comment!


Post A Comment:




  • It's 2020! Start booking roles in commercials, fashion, films, theater and more with The Agency Online!

  • NEW WORKSHOP with Barbara Barna & Sean De Simone!

    Hi Everyone and Happy Summer! Sean at Sean De Simone casting and Barbara Barna are teaming up for a super informative and fun Hosting for Home Shopping workshop. A great opportunity for established or experienced TV Hosts and Experts interested in learning how to get noticed and how to get in....
  • MASTERCLASS W. Robin Carus & David John Madore

    A Special Offer for the Agency Community, from one of our favorite NYC Casting Directors! EMAIL FacetheMusicWithUs@gmail.com Or Eventbrite To Sign Up! Class Size is Limited.
  • Don't Fall Into The Comparison Trap

    Hi Everyone! As the second installment in an ongoing series of features by the Agency's amazing community, here's some sage advice from our own Regina Rockensies; a humble (& awesome)veteran we've had the pleasure of working with for a long time. Have an excellent week! : ) - The Agency....
  • One Model's Agreement

    Hi Everyone! As the first piece in an ongoing series of original articles by the Agency community, here's a short reflection on some of the values of professional acting & modeling that we can all keep in mind for our next casting. Good luck on your castings &shoots this week! : ) -....




 
home       castings&news       privacy policy       terms and conditions      contact us      browser tips
Official PayPal Seal