Wales On Sunday

This felt bigger than the world of wrestling...

The Iron Claw’s star Zac Efron and director Sean Durkin talk brotherhoo­d and toxic masculinit­y. By

- RACHAEL DAVIS The Iron Claw is in cinemas now

EARLY in the movie The Iron Claw wrestler Fritz Von Erich and three of his sons – Kevin, David and Mike – are eating breakfast when Fritz lists his sons in order of his preference.

Instead of being shocked or offended, the young men silently continue eating as their father tells them that “the rankings can always change: everyone can work their way up or down”.

Such is life with Fritz, born Jack Barton Adkisson, and whose German-inspired ring name was devised for the Nazi persona he adopted in his pro-wrestling days in the 1960s and 1970s.

Portrayed on screen by Holt McCallany, he’s shown to be a domineerin­g father who pushed his sons to, and beyond, the limit in his quest for Von Erich wrestling supremacy, leaving behind a family legacy known as the “Von Erich curse”.

The Iron Claw – named after the Von Erichs’ signature move – tells the tragic story of the wrestling family through the 1970s and 1980s.

Zac Efron stars as Kevin, the eldest surviving Von Erich son at the start of the story – older brother, Jack, died at the age of six by accidental drowning – while his brothers David, Kerry, and Mike are played by Triangle Of Sadness’s Harris Dickinson, The Bear’s Jeremy Allen White, and Angelfish’s Stanley Simons.

“I was not aware of the story before,” says Zac, 36, known for hit movies like High School Musical and Hairspray, and for playing serial killer Ted Bundy in Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil And Vile.

“I learned about it all almost exclusivel­y from Sean (Durkin, director) – from footage that he put me on to and some documentar­ies.”

“One of the fascinatin­g things about the story is the world that it’s set in, the wrestling world...” he continues.

“It felt bigger than the world of wrestling, even though it is a love letter to the world of wrestling. There’s so much more in it.”

As Zac notes, while The Iron Claw is a wrestling story, it’s fundamenta­lly more than that: it’s a story of toxic masculinit­y, of how oppressive, controllin­g male influence combines with a lack of emotional release to create a deadly cocktail of vaulting ambition and repression, and of the power of brotherhoo­d.

“Sean’s really, with this story, and with these characters, found a way into exploring [toxic masculinit­y] that’s not typical,” says Zac.

“And it’s much more layered, and not so easy to kind of just throw a name on it, you know – it really is a story about this guy’s survival through this real world. So it’s just beautiful work from Sean and it’s one of the things that really made me excited to tell the story.”

“Very much at the core of it was this exploring this mould of masculinit­y,” agrees Sean, 42.

“You have these guys who are in the ring, performing these huge emotions of elation, and being distraught when they lose, or being in great pain when they’re in a headlock or whatever... everything is really extreme in the ring.

“But then they go backstage, and they can’t show any real emotions in life. They have to keep it all inside and fall into this world of being a tough man, and all that nonsense.

“It was really rich territory to explore both sides of that, and how harmful that is.”

Zac’s Kevin trains hard, obviously keen to win his father’s approval and to work his way up his familial ranking system, but is often outstrippe­d by his brothers who he remains close to through it all.

We follow Kevin throughout the highly emotional affair: seeing him fight in the ring, support his beloved brothers’ endeavours, get married, have his first baby, and suffer unimaginab­le tragedy, a feat which required Zac to be both physically capable, and also be able to embody a wide spectrum of emotion.

Zac, like his co-stars, went through a tough training regimen to build the body of a wrestling superstar, and to learn how to fight convincing­ly in the ring scenes.

“Looking like a pro was a lot of hard work, by a lot of people that cared a lot,” says the star. “We had tremendous help from the guys who we were wrestling opposite in the ring, and also from our stunt coordinato­rs, and Chavo Guerrero, our wrestling guru on set, really helped us fine tune that.

“It was a lot of hard work, but very, very fun.”

Sean – who also directed the Channel 4 series Southcliff­e and 2020 film The Nest starring Jude Law – adds that emotional complexity and convincing performanc­es were absolutely key to the fight scenes. I wanted to be able to shoot them in a way that felt very real, and was a really high level of wrestling,” he says.

“The guys worked really hard to learn how to wrestle, and to learn how to wrestle full matches, not just focus on the stunts and things.

“They were doing their own stunts, and learning how to do it, and that allowed us to shoot it the way we’d shoot any scene, which is to focus on the character and the emotion and to make decisions based on what’s the best way to tell the emotion of that point in the story...

“The goal there was to go on that journey with them, and be with Kevin in whatever way helped tell what he was going through.”

Very much at the core of [the film] was this exploring this mould of masculinit­y Director Sean Durkin

 ?? ?? L-R: Zac Efron and Sean Durkin discuss a scene
TOUGH GUY TO PIN DOWN: Zac has to embody the complexity of Kevin’s hard upbringing
L-R: Zac Efron and Sean Durkin discuss a scene TOUGH GUY TO PIN DOWN: Zac has to embody the complexity of Kevin’s hard upbringing
 ?? ?? HIGH KICKS: Zac Efron, below, and far right, learned difficult wrestling moves
HIGH KICKS: Zac Efron, below, and far right, learned difficult wrestling moves

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