The Scotsman

‘I’m just getting mushy in my old age’

◆ Director George Clooney and stars Callum Turner and Joel Edgerton talk to Rachael Davis about 1930s-set Olympic rowing drama The Boys in the Boat

- The Boys in the Boat is in UK cinemas now.

Quite rightly, the United States’ participat­ion in Berlin’s 1936 Olympic Games is often remembered through feats of Jesse Owens, the black American sprinter and long jumper who won four gold medals, quashing Adolf Hitler’s myth of Aryan supremacy which he pedalled through the Games.

Lesser known, however, is the story of the men’s rowing crew, a ragtag bunch of University of Washington students who overcame the odds stacked against them to take the gold.

The Boys in the Boat, George Clooney’s latest directoria­l venture, tells the story of the young men, many rowing novices, who prevailed over the lingering effects of the Great Depression to represent their country at the Olympics.

“I like the idea of people coming together against odds and actually accomplish­ing something,” says Clooney, 62, of the true story behind his new film.

“And I’m of an age that we used to watch a lot of films like this. This is a little bit oldfashion­ed. And I like to see it.

“You know, I’ve done a lot of cynical films in my life. I like them, I think they’re fun. Maybe I’m just getting mushy in my old age, but I kind of wanted to see something where everybody was working towards one goal and succeeding, you know?”

Clooney’s film follows Joe Rantz, played by British actor Callum Turner, who was abandoned by his father and stepmother and raised himself from the age of 15.

He’s earned himself a spot at the University of Washington, but his big dreams and hardworkin­g attitude will not pay the bills. When word circulates about try-outs for the university rowing team, with a place coming with food, lodging, and enough money to pay for his education, Joe decides to give it a go, despite his inexperien­ce in the sport.

After making it through the gruelling selection process, going up against hundreds of others in the same situation, Joe lands one of nine spots on the rowing team under the tuition of coach Al Ulbrickson, played by Star Wars and Loving’s Joel Edgerton. But that is just the beginning of a long journey for Joe and the team, one which takes them all the way to Berlin through grit and determinat­ion to succeed.

Like his character Joe, Turner, 33, was a novice rower when he took the role. He and his co-stars had to complete rigorous training: the actors had sessions twice a day involving weights, cardio, and all the other training requiremen­ts of a college rowing team.

“We had two months of training, bootcamp, before we even went to the set,” says Turner. “The most beautiful thing about rowing is that you’re doing it with eight other people. So there’s a synergy and you’re all in sync, and you’re together, and

you’re all aiming for the same thing. You create these bonds; these guys are some of my best friends now. And I love them.”

Overseeing the crew’s progress in the true story is tough-to-please coach Ulbrickson. Joel Edgerton, who portrays the coach, says that he’s “always fascinated by coaches”, particular­ly the ones that “look like they’re not enjoying themselves, at all – they look like they’ve got really high blood pressure, and the whole thing is painful for them”.

With cinematogr­apher Martin Ruhe, Clooney creates a visually stunning film with gripping boat races and gorgeous landscape shots, but it was not all plain sailing, so to speak.

“There is not one thing about shooting on the water that’s fun,” says Clooney. “You can’t just say, ‘let’s line up eight boats across with nine guys in each of ’em, and start the race’. There is a current, so the boats all start moving around, and they’re not in straight lines … if the wind blows, everything’s moving around you. Everything is constantly moving.”

Creating an engrossing, entertaini­ng portrayal of the true story was all the more important since, for many heading to the cinema to watch The Boys in the Boat, Clooney’s portrayal of The Revenant writer Mark L Smith’s screenplay – which is based on Daniel James Brown’s 2013 non-fiction novel of the same name –

will be the first they hear of Joe Rantz and his team’s incredible story.

“I didn’t know anything about the story, and I knew very little about rowing, in fact,” says Edgerton, who adds that when he read Brown’s book he discovered how the story represents “those times in history where just a story is perfectly built to become a movie.

“All the aspects of it … all the ups and downs, the characters and what they’re up against, and where it all ended up, the fact that Hitler’s involved – it’s a pretty great, perfect, true story.”

While the rise of Adolf Hitler in Germany is far from being a key plot point, scenes of the Olympic Games do include the Nazi leader, as

well as other key figures like Jesse Owens.

Inclusion of Hitler, albeit in a minor capacity, was important to Clooney because, he says, “he was there, and it was part of his story” – the 1936 Olympics was used to push his racial supremacis­t and antisemiti­c ideas.

“It’s a tricky thing to do,” Clooney says of including Hitler. “First of all, we don’t have to convince the world that the Nazis and Hitler were bad. So we didn’t have to get too much into it. But it was also 1936, so it was before most of – certainly the United States – had understood how bad it was going to be.”

 ?? ?? From l-r: Bruce Herbelin-earle as Shorty Hunt, Callum Turner as Joe Rantz, and Wil Coban as Jim Mcmillan in The Boys in the Boat
From l-r: Bruce Herbelin-earle as Shorty Hunt, Callum Turner as Joe Rantz, and Wil Coban as Jim Mcmillan in The Boys in the Boat

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