Kuwait Times

Anti-hero Matt Damon brings roughneck America to Cannes

-

Matt Damon brought a slice of redneck middle America to Cannes Friday with “Stillwater”, a film about a washed-up oil worker who seeks to save his daughter and their damaged relationsh­ip. It has been a very French affair from the start: set in Marseille on France’s southern coast, made with a mostly French crew and French co-writers, and featuring local star Camille Cottin of “Call My Agent” fame. Damon says he fell in love with Marseille during the filming: “I

just think it’s a spectacula­r place,” he told reporters in Cannes. “If I was a young guy in France, this is the city I would live in. There’s so much culture and diversity.”

The process even turned the film’s American director and cast into fans of the local football team. “Sometimes American film-makers come to Europe or into France to make a movie and they pitch their tent and keep the French film-makers on the outside,” Oscar-winning director Tom McCarthy told AFP. “But we said: ‘We can’t do that here’,” he said. “It really is a collaborat­ion, a meeting of cinema cultures.” Damon plays Bill Baker, an oil rig worker from Oklahoma who travels to Marseille to help his daughter who is in prison for a murder she says she didn’t commit. He doesn’t speak French, and his bulky frame, baseball cap, chequered shirts and unfashiona­ble jeans make him stick out in the Mediterran­ean coastal city like a caricature of an American midwestern tourist. “He’s from the heart of Trump country, he is very much part of that culture,” Matt Damon told AFP in an interview.

‘Invaluable roughnecks’

“It looks like it’s going to be that standard Hollywood setup, a father going to exonerate his daughter, help his daughter and he ends up using his skills to do it,” Damon said. “But it’s really an inversion of that because the guy has no skills. He doesn’t understand the language, he doesn’t understand the culture. He doesn’t really understand where he is.” Damon said he went to great lengths to get his

character’s look right, spending time with oil workers to get their advice on clothes, eating the same food they do, and working out to bulk up.

“We hung out with these roughnecks, who were just invaluable,” Damon said. “They’d go: No it’s this type of blue jean, because they have fire retardant on them. And it’s this shirt, not that. It’s almost like a uniform,” Damon said. He put on weight for the role “because they’re very big guys. The stuff they’re picking up is heavy. I’m in

shape, but lifting the things they lift, I’d go, Oh my god,” he said.

‘Incredible heart’

McCarthy and his team invested similar efforts to make the Marseille shoot as authentic as possible. “In many ways it’s my most complicate­d film structural­ly” said McCarthy, whose film “Spotlight” won the best picture Oscar. Shot almost entirely on location, it includes a key scene shot at

the Stade Velodrome, the home stadium of Olympique de Marseille (OM), during an actual match, which he said was unforgetta­ble. “They’re a team with incredible heart and incredible fans. The energy in that stadium and filming there, that was a special couple of nights,” McCarthy said.

The director said his film’s main character was seeking redemption without achieving it, and acknowledg­ed that the same could be said of Olympique de Marseille who, disappoint­ingly, ended the

last League 1 season only fifth. “It’s been a long struggle for redemption at OM,” McCarthy said. “And now also for the French national team, but we won’t go there,” he added, referring to France’s shock exit from Euro 2021 tournament. Although premiering in Cannes, “Stillwater” is playing out of competitio­n at the festival, which runs to July 17. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photos ?? (From left) French actor Idir Azouglli, French actor Gregory Di Meglio, Algerian-born French actor Moussa Maaskri, US actress Abigail Breslin, French actress Lilou Siauvaud, US actor Matt Damon, US director Tom McCarthy, French actress Camille Cottin, French screenwrit­er Noe Debre and French screenwrit­er Thomas Bidegain pose during a photocall for the film ‘Stillwater’ at the 74th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France.
— AFP photos (From left) French actor Idir Azouglli, French actor Gregory Di Meglio, Algerian-born French actor Moussa Maaskri, US actress Abigail Breslin, French actress Lilou Siauvaud, US actor Matt Damon, US director Tom McCarthy, French actress Camille Cottin, French screenwrit­er Noe Debre and French screenwrit­er Thomas Bidegain pose during a photocall for the film ‘Stillwater’ at the 74th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France.
 ??  ?? (From left) Screenwrit­ers Thomas Bidegain and Noe Debre, French actor Idir Azougli, US actor Matt Damon, US actress Abigail Breslin, US director Tom Mccarthy, French actress Camille Cottin, actor moussa Maaskri, actor Gregory Di Meglio, producer Lisa Chasin and French actress Lilou Siauvaud pose as they arrive for the screening of the film ‘Stillwater’ at the 74th edition of the Cannes Film Festival.
(From left) Screenwrit­ers Thomas Bidegain and Noe Debre, French actor Idir Azougli, US actor Matt Damon, US actress Abigail Breslin, US director Tom Mccarthy, French actress Camille Cottin, actor moussa Maaskri, actor Gregory Di Meglio, producer Lisa Chasin and French actress Lilou Siauvaud pose as they arrive for the screening of the film ‘Stillwater’ at the 74th edition of the Cannes Film Festival.
 ??  ?? US actor Matt Damon poses as he arrives for the screening of the film “Stillwater” at the 74th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France.
US actor Matt Damon poses as he arrives for the screening of the film “Stillwater” at the 74th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait