Arab Times

George Clooney’s Catch-22 reflects on ‘insanity’ of war

‘Roots’ looks into US leaders’ past

-

PASADENA, California, Feb 12, (Agencies): George Clooney, who returns to TV for the first time in 20 years with an adaptation of the classic novel “Catch-22”, said on Monday the Hulu series set in World War II aims to tell a timeless story about the “insanity” of war.

At a preview for reporters, Clooney said he initially resisted the idea of taking on Joseph Heller’s 1961 book about member of a US bomber squadron fighting the higher-ups in the military bureaucrac­y.

“It’s a beloved novel,” Clooney, who also served as executive producer and directed two episodes, said at a Television Critics Associatio­n event. “I didn’t want to get into the middle of that.”

He said he was drawn in because the writers “did an amazing job unspooling these characters” for the six-episode series that will be released on Hulu on May 17.

That allows the series to expand on Heller’s story, which Clooney said was meant “to make fun of all the red tape and bureaucrac­y of war and the ridiculous­ness of war.”

“I think it still plays,” he added. “All of us spend our days and nights worrying about those situations. This story is just reflecting on the insanity of it.”

“Catch-22” follows a US bombardier named Yossarian who is infuriated that the army keeps raising the number of missions he must fly to be released from duty. Yossarian’s only way to avoid the missions is to declare insanity, but the only way to prove insanity is a willingnes­s to embark on more of the highly dangerous bombing runs, thus creating the novel’s absurd ‘Catch-22’.

It was made into a 1970 movie directed by Mike Nichols with Alan Arkin as Yossarian.

“I think we all wake up every morning these days in this kind of shared global anxiety condition, and this novel is a beautiful distillati­on, or a prophetic distillati­on of that,” said co-writer Luke Davies.

Christophe­r Abbott stars as Yossarian and Kyle Chandler plays his commander, Colonel Cathcart. Clooney originally planned to play Cathcart but instead took a supporting role as training commander Scheisskop­f.

Clooney, 57, last appeared on television 20 years ago as Dr Doug Ross in hit medical drama “ER”. He then built a successful film career with movies including “Ocean’s Eleven”, “Gravity” and “Up in the Air”.

The actor said he was happy to come back to television.

“I don’t care about the medium,” Clooney said. “I just care about the quality of the work and what we’re able to do.”

Clooney says he never expected his next project to be a miniseries based on a novel he read in high school.

But against his initial inclinatio­n, he’s directing and starring in Hulu’s series “Catch-22”, drawn from Joseph Heller’s classic work about the insanity of war. The streaming service Hulu will release it this spring.

Clooney said Monday that the longer format allowed them to develop the characters beyond what could be done in Mike Nichols’ 1970 classic movie. Adopted at the time by opponents of the Vietnam War, he said the story making fun of the red tape and bureaucrac­y of war is relevant today and not tied to a particular conflict.

Series makers say the mixture of horror and hilarity becomes more pronounced as the series goes on.

Also: ALBUQUERQU­E, NM:

Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates, Jr, hopes this season of his popular PBS series “Finding Your Roots” helps a divided US see how all Americans have unique family links and how those family histories tell the story of the country.

Now in its fifth season, the series takes advantage of new advancemen­ts in genealogy and genetics to look into the history of American celebritie­s. In upcoming episodes Gates and his team investigat­e the pasts of diverse subjects like former US House Speaker Paul Ryan, Rep Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii and “Game of Thrones” author George R.R. Martin.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait