Ottawa Citizen

Affleck fired up by return to screen

Inspired by script, all-star team behind Out of the Furnace

- VICTORIA AHEARN

TORONTO This year marked Casey Affleck’s return to the big screen after the Oscar-nominated star took a break from acting.

In recent months, his Sundance Film Festival hit Ain’t Them Bodies Saints had a slow rollout in select theatres internatio­nally, and Friday he can be seen in North American cinemas as a struggling Iraq war vet in Out of the Furnace.

The projects come three years after Affleck released his directoria­l effort, the controvers­ial mockumenta­ry I’m Still Here, in which a dishevelle­d Joaquin Phoenix pretended he was quitting his Oscar-nominated acting career to become a hiphop artist. The film was maligned for duping audiences into thinking it was real, and Affleck admits “it was risky in its style” and also a risk for his own acting career as it “sucked up a good deal” of time and kept him from doing onscreen projects.

“You take a break in Hollywood, you don’t act in something for a couple of years, people just forget about you. That’s a lifetime in Hollywood, almost, so it’s hard to bounce back from that,” said the 38-yearold, who received an Oscar nomination for his supporting role in 2007’s The Assassinat­ion of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford.

“I had just done The Assassinat­ion of Jesse James … and then after that I did Gone Baby Gone. So I had completely turned a corner in my career, I guess, and then I stopped to go make (I’m Still Here) for two years, and I just took a lot of time off, a lot of time away.”

That’s not to say he regrets making I’m Still Here. “Regret seems pointless,” Affleck said in an interview. “It’s not a useful emotion, really, although it’s always there sort of lingering around. If you’re willing to go sit on the stoop with regret, it’ll hang out with you, but it’s a waste of time.

“So it didn’t perform that well, but neither did Jesse James, and I love that movie. So often movies don’t perform well,” he added. “Life goes on, you know. I feel pretty blessed to just be doing this.

“And look at me now … I get to work with Christian Bale, Scott Cooper, Forest Whitaker, Woody Harrelson and on and on and on. What could be better?”

Affleck was referring to the all-star team behind the gritty drama Out of the Furnace, which is directed by Cooper, who helmed and co-wrote the 2009 Oscar-winning film Crazy Heart. Cooper also co-wrote the Out of the Furnace script with Brad Ingelsby. Producers include Leonardo DiCaprio and Ridley Scott.

Bale stars as Russell Baze, a hardworkin­g steel-mill employee in poverty-stricken Braddock, Penn., during the 2008 economic downturn.

Affleck deftly plays his troubled younger brother Rodney, an Iraq war vet who can’t find work. Indebted to shady characters, he turns to gambling and undergroun­d fighting to make a quick buck, forcing his brother to look out for his well-being.

Harrelson brings chills as Harlan DeGroat, vicious leader of a backwoods crime ring in the New Jersey Ramapo Mountains. Whitaker plays a cop. Other cast members include Willem Dafoe as a bookie, Zoe Saldana as Russell’s girlfriend, and Sam Shepard as the brothers’ uncle.

Affleck said that, after he made I’m Still Here, he wasn’t reading scripts that caught his interest, but he found Out of the Furnace many-layered and “got really excited.” Three months later, he was on the set in Braddock.

“Oh, God. It was invigorati­ng and scary and exciting,” said Affleck, when asked how it felt to return to acting. “Being able to work with such a group of people was a blessing. I felt very supported. With Christian and Scott and Woody and Forest and Willem Dafoe and Sam Shepard and Zoe, it feels like there’s no way that the movie and myself would dip below a certain level.

“I kind of felt like there was a bit of a safety net.”

Affleck said he researched posttrauma­tic stress disorder. He also watched documentar­ies, spoke with war vets and trained to get in shape for his fight scenes.

Affleck wants to put on his filmmaking hat again for Aardvark Art’s Ark, an animated family film he wrote and plans to executive produce. The story features animals who didn’t make it onto Noah’s Ark.

“I want to do some things that my kids can watch before they’re 18,” said Affleck, a father of two.

 ?? RELATIVITY MEDIA ?? Casey Affleck plays an Iraq war vet who turns to undergroun­d fighting to make some cash in Out of the Furnace.
RELATIVITY MEDIA Casey Affleck plays an Iraq war vet who turns to undergroun­d fighting to make some cash in Out of the Furnace.

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