Vancouver Sun

The Butler did it all

Scottish actor stars in and produces Playing for Keeps

- BOB THOMPSON

It’s rare for Gerard Butler to use his Scottish burr in American movies.

He did manage a stylized version of his brogue as Spartan King Leonidas in the R- rated action hit 300 and he tried a variation as the Viking king in the animated motion picture How to Train Your Dragon.

But the 43- year- old finally gets to sound like himself in Playing for Keeps, which opens Dec. 7. In the comedy, he portrays retired Glasgow Celtic soccer star George Dryer who is trying to be a better person by coaching his son’s soccer team in a suburban Virginia town.

“I was really happy that the film allowed me to speak as me,” said Butler at a downtown Toronto hotel. “I could relax into the role, and I didn’t need to be consulting with a dialect coach after every scene.”

However, in the film. George’s effort to improve doesn’t come easy. He’s desperatel­y broke and divorced from his wife ( Jessica Biel). He’s also surrounded by over- sexed soccer moms ( Catherine Zeta- Jones, Uma Thurman and Judy Greer) and one aggressive soccer dad ( Dennis Quaid) who keep complicati­ng his life.

As the soccer moms get up close and personal with the new coach, George realizes he wants his life back as a husband and father.

“He’s a fish out of water,” said Butler. “He’s lost his way, but he starts to realize you don’t get many second chances to appreciate a wife, family and fatherhood, so he’s really trying to grow up.”

That’s the serious side of the story. The humour arrives when everybody around him attempts to entice him back to his old carousing ways.

“He’s really an observer to what’s going on around him,” noted the actor. “A lot of the scenes I have with Dennis and Uma, I’m just listening and reacting.”

And yes, as the headliner and coproducer, Butler said that he’s pleased and excited about landing the all- star cast. The Butler charm might have had a little something to do with that. But he insisted the Robbie- Fox script and the reputation of Italian director Gabrielle Muccino, of The Pursuit of Happyness fame, proved to be enticing factors, as well.

“There was a stage of panic when I was the only person on board,” he said of the project in its early stages. Then Muccino was hired to direct the Fox script. “And getting Gabrielle really helped to garner the support from the other actors.”

Certainly, Butler selected his vehicle well. He has a knack for comedy, and he’s a decent soccer player, having played growing up in Paisley, Scotland, before moving to Glasgow to study law at university.

He connected with the stranger- in-a-strange American landscape, too. Butler admitted he felt a little like his estranged Playing for Keeps character with his initial breakout as an actor.

That would be just after his 2003 costarring role opposite Angelina Jolie in Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life and 2004’ s lead as the Phantom in The Phantom of the Opera.

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