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Shoot to kill

Sean Penn says he is not the next Liam Neeson.

- By LINDSEY BAHR The Gunman. The Gunman, Taken The Prone Gunman, The Gunman The Gunman, The Gunman opens in cinemas nationwide today.

SEAN Penn surfs, shoots, sprints, punches and fights for his life in the geopolitic­al thriller At age 54, it’s easy to assume that Penn, as a rogue ex-special forces officer, is drifting into territory that Liam Neeson claimed just a few years ago with a series of action-heavy box office hits.

Add in the fact that directed by Pierre Morel, who launched the franchise and Neeson’s renaissanc­e and the comparison­s seem even more apt.

But for Penn, it couldn’t be further from the truth.

“I think Liam Neeson is fantastic. I love Liam Neeson. But he’s a 6-foot-4 (193cm), melodicall­y voiced, masculine figure who is a very good man who’s only there to take care of the people he loves,” said Penn on a recent afternoon in the Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles.

“I am a 5-foot-9 (175cm), highly conflicted man who’s principall­y taking care of himself.”

Penn is even a little baffled about the cultural focus on Neeson in this case.

“I’m aware of the framing in the culture, but has nobody noticed Harrison Ford all of those years? There’ve been a lot of ‘geri-action’ heroes,” he added.

In showing extreme situations, whether it’s Jason Bourne taking down secret government operations or John McClane defying the odds to defeat a terrorist and save some hostages, action films can sometimes feel more dis- connected from reality than sci-fi. That’s, of course, part of the fun for actors and audiences alike.

Penn, however, was drawn to and the character of Jim Terrier for exactly the opposite reason – it reminded him of people he knew.

Loosely based on Jean-Patrick Manchette’s novel a 1981 French noir about a mercenary assassin, writers Peter Travis and Don MacPherson reworked the story to have a contempora­ry setting.

Not only did Penn jump at the chance to bring on some of his friends as consultant­s, he also took some time to focus and refine the bones of the script, taking what he knows about NGOs and military tactics and applying it to the story.

In the film, audiences meet Penn’s character in the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2006. A sniper-for-hire, Terrier draws the short straw and gets tasked with assassinat­ing a mining minister, which propels the country into a devastatin­g civil war.

Eight years later, while digging wells for an NGO in the Congo, he discovers that there’s a hit out for him and sets out across Europe to find out why.

Encounteri­ng his own demons (PTSD) and some of his old ex-military colleagues (Mark Rylance and Javier Bardem) who’ve sold out their skills for high-powered jobs at shadowy internatio­nal organisati­ons along the way, Penn notes that though there are real world parallels in meant to be a political movie.

“I don’t think there’s an enormous amount to be learned politicall­y,” said Penn. The movie, for him, is about the consequenc­es of violence.

Beyond the consultati­on with his friends, part of the preparatio­n process involved getting into fighting shape.

“If you’re able to do the physical demands of the movie, it changes the way you handle the other scenes and the way you move, the way you look. It’s a kind of no-brainer choice,” said Penn of his solid physique, which allowed him to do many of the stunts in the film.

“Sean is whatever character he takes on. He gives 1,000% that guy. He becomes that killing machine,” said Morel.

One thing Penn will not be doing in the future, however, is joining a superhero franchise. It’s a choice that separates him even further from many of his Hollywood peers.

“I don’t see myself putting my underpants on the outside of my tights for a role anytime soon,” he said.

“I think that it’s a shame that we don’t have more faith in good stories that aren’t tied to such ... packaged, childlike things. I don’t mind the movies themselves if they’re wellmade – some of them are – but I mind the way that the business has become so desperate, not to make good movies, but to make US$200mil (RM737mil) or US$300mil (RM1.1bil) per picture at the box office.” Penn’s next project, now in post-production, finds him back in the director’s chair in a drama about an internatio­nal aid worker (Charlize Theron, who is in a relationsh­ip with Penn), and a relief aid doctor (Bardem) navigating a bout of civil unrest in Africa.

“It’s not like all of a sudden I’m going to start running around in action movies all over the place,” he said. – AP

that it’s not

 ??  ?? No way: Penn is vehemently against accepting a role in a superhero movie. ‘I don’t see myself putting my underpants on the outside of my tights for a role anytime soon,’ Penn says. Photo: GSc Movies
No way: Penn is vehemently against accepting a role in a superhero movie. ‘I don’t see myself putting my underpants on the outside of my tights for a role anytime soon,’ Penn says. Photo: GSc Movies
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 ??  ?? Penn, who was married to Madonna and then robin Wright, is currently dating Theron. Photo: aFP
Penn, who was married to Madonna and then robin Wright, is currently dating Theron. Photo: aFP

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