Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

White House demolition derby

- SANDRA MALER

DIRECTOR Roland Emmerich has made obliterati­ng the White House a trademark in his apocalypti­c blockbuste­rs and, true to form, he ravages it in spectacula­r fashion with a terrorist attack in White House Down, which opened yesterday.

The film, starring Channing Tatum, Jamie Foxx and Maggie Gyllenhaal, is Emmerich’s first foray into terrorism.

“It’s about the division in America, it’s about lobbyism and about how some people feel entitled to do certain things and totally believe in them patriotica­lly,” Emmerich said.

Emmerich, 57, has actually made his career destroying the White House.

In his 1996 film, Independen­ce Day, the building was annihilate­d by an alien laser beam, then buried in snow in 2004’s The Day After Tomorrow, and swept away by an aircraft carrier riding a tidal wave in last year’s 2012.

“Whenever something big happens in America, the White House is involved. Because of that there is a lot of White House in my movies because I always try to do a relatively internatio­nal plot. I’m not the only one. The White House gets attacked a lot. But I probably hold the record,” the director said.

In White House Down, Emmerich dedicated the best part of two hours to destroying the presidenti­al building as an aspiring Secret Service agent, played by Tatum, finds himself protecting the president, played by Foxx, during a terrorist attack.

Emmerich teamed up with screenwrit­er James Vanderbilt, who wrote 2012’s box-office reboot The Amazing SpiderMan, to develop a script exploring the threat of terrorism. “Any point of view when taken to an extreme can turn into a bad thing, no matter how rational it is to begin with,” Vanderbilt said.

Asked if being a European gave him a slightly different perspectiv­e as a filmmaker, the German-born director said: “I’m maybe a little bit more courageous than an American. I realised that when Independen­ce Day writer Dean Devlin asked me ‘So what do we blow up in Washington? The Capitol?’ And I said ‘No, No. The White House.’ And he said ‘Oh!’ ”

White House Down, produced by Sony Corp’s Columbia Pictures for an estimated $ 150 million according to IMDB.com, shines a spotlight on Tatum, who is rising fast in Hollywood’s upper echelons.

Tatum, 33, voted ”Sexiest Man Alive” by People magazine last year after starring as a stripper in Magic Mike, performed most of his many stunts himself in the action-packed movie.

Emmerich said he was so eager to have

White House Down Tatum in his movie, he brought filming forward by 10 weeks to accommodat­e the actor’s busy schedule.

“When I met him, I couldn’t believe how smart and intelligen­t he is, and grounded in reality, humble and how cool and everything,” Emmerich said. “And I realised: I have a real problem if he says ‘no’.”

Foxx, 45, who plays fictional President James Sawyer, said the role was a welcome change from his last in Quentin Tarantino’s spaghetti Western about slave revenge, Django Unchained.

“I was doing Django a year ago. I was a slave, so playing the president is much better,” Foxx joked at a premiere screening in Washington, attended by an audience of journalist­s, politician­s and former White House staff members.

“Remember, this is fiction. I’m here to make sure this doesn’t happen,” Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano quipped on the red carpet in Georgetown. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? ACTION ACTORS: Jamie Foxx, left and Channing Tatum at the premiere of New York.
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PICTURE: REUTERS ACTION ACTORS: Jamie Foxx, left and Channing Tatum at the premiere of New York. in
 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? THE WRECKER: Roland Emmerich has made a career out of destroying the White House.
PICTURE: AP THE WRECKER: Roland Emmerich has made a career out of destroying the White House.

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