Albany Times Union (Sunday)

What does everyone see in Jesse Plemons?

Actor has lead role in new Kaufman movie on Netflix

- By Kyle Buchanan The New York Times

Jesse Plemons had never felt so lost. It was early March 2019, just a few days before he was supposed to shoot Charlie Kaufman’s “I’m Thinking of Ending Things,” and Plemons still had two questions that he dared not ask of his director.

The first was kind of a biggie. What exactly was the movie about? Adapted from the novel by Iain Reid and out on Netflix Sept. 4, “I’m Thinking of Ending Things” appears deceptivel­y simple: A man named Jake and his girlfriend embark on a snowy drive to meet his parents.

Afterward, they drive back.

Or do they? The story’s true nature remains tantalizin­gly out of reach. As their circumstan­ces grow more and more strange, the characters’ shared sense of reality begins to smear, and the film unfolds like a Rorschach blot: What you ultimately make of this lonesome little tale may depend on what you bring to it.

Plemons knew that with a storytelle­r like Kaufman, a bit of disorienta­tion was to be expected — this was the man who had written meta mind-benders like “Being John Malkovich” and “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” after all. Still, a good grip on the material kept proving elusive. Plemons had hoped things would get better after the first rehearsal; after that first rehearsal, he was convinced they wouldn’t.

Why had he been cast? That was the second question Plemons couldn’t bring himself to ask, even as he grew certain he was the wrong man to play Jake. He had just come off a string of supporting roles in “The Irishman,” “Vice” and other movies, and Kaufman had offered him the male lead in “I’m Thinking of Ending Things” without so much as an audition.

“I had no clue that Charlie had any idea who I was,” Plemons said. “There was a part of me that was like, ‘Are you sure, Charlie? You want to see me do something first?’”

With only two days left before the shoot, Plemons went to dinner with Kaufman and his castmates still feeling unmoored. To his surprise, the other actors said they felt the same way. Even David Thewlis, who had worked with Kaufman on the animated “Anomalisa,” admitted to some confusion.

“David finally asked Charlie, ‘So can you tell us what this is about?’ ” Plemons recalled. It was the first of his two unasked questions, and Plemons hung on Kaufman’s answer. “And Charlie was like, ‘You know, I don’t know.’”

Some actors might have been alarmed by such a confession, but to Plemons, the material finally made sense. He had been trying to figure out something that was meant to be experience­d rather than completely understood. “Charlie kind of arrived at saying, ‘I think we just have to accept that we don’t know, and just accept that we’re going to fail sometimes. We have to embrace that.’”

The answer to his first unasked question also suggested the answer to his second. There was nothing that could be done on this film but live in the moment, and if that’s what you want from an actor — well, that’s why you cast Jesse Plemons.

When Kaufman first laid eyes on his eventual lead, he wasn’t thinking “movie star.” He was thinking “background extra.”

Kaufman was introduced to Plemons through “Breaking Bad,” the hit TV drama that Plemons joined in its fifth and final season. At first, you barely notice him: While Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul rip through their scenes with galvanizin­g grandeur, Plemons putters around as the mild pest-control flunky Todd, pitching a fumigation tent and mumbling a handful of lines.

As Todd goes on to become a major player, embroiled in high crimes like meth-making and child murder, Plemons barely lets on that the stakes have been raised. So pronounced is his lack of affectatio­n that you’d be forgiven for thinking this is a real person who’s been pushed in front of the camera and forced to wing it.

“I never saw Todd coming, and I think that’s the thing about Jesse,” Kaufman said. “It’s very interestin­g to watch him work because everything is just so small and underplaye­d, which is very valuable in film.”

That verisimili­tude has found him fans in major directors like Steven Spielberg and Martin Scorsese, and the 32-yearold Plemons has recently become a mainstay of prestige dramas, appearing in best picture nominees four of the last five years. Utter naturalism is his goal: Plemons can toggle easily between eggheads and dimwits, good guys and bad guys, and it’s almost impossible to describe what he’s doing differentl­y because he doesn’t appear to be doing anything at all.

“I love actors where you don’t see them acting,” Plemons said in early August, when we met outside his home in Los Angeles. “You don’t see a false moment. You don’t catch them.”

It felt fitting that we should hang out in his backyard: With his mussed golden hair, slight paunch, and feet in flip-flops, Plemons looked like a goodnature­d dad at a barbecue. And yet he was still able to command attention. “It’s that ‘still waters run deep’ kind of thing,” his wife, Kirsten Dunst, said later. “I think there’s just some people that you’re drawn to watching.”

Plemons and Dunst met while shooting the second season of FX’S “Fargo,” in which they played a married couple engaged in a criminal cover-up. “I knew that she would be in my life for a long time,” he said. Plemons said life in quarantine with Dunst and their 2-year-old son, Ennis “forces you to look at what’s in front of you.” It has reminded him that in work and in life, it pays to stay in the moment.

“I’ve spent years of constantly learning the same lesson over and over again, that you can work and work and work on something, and bang your head against the wall and know it inside and out — but then, in that moment, if you’re not relaxed in your mind and body, that’s all for nothing,” he said. “A lot of that work won’t be seen unless you’re grounded and present. I just don’t think there’s ever anything wrong with attempting to be present.”

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