Los Angeles Times

Eye on the storm

Joaquin Phoenix, who has brought troubled souls to life on screen, has an intriguing new role in Woody Allen’s latest

- BY LORRAINE ALI

Joaquin Phoenix had just claimed his first victim of theday, or so it seemed when an angry interviewe­r emerged from the actor’s hotel room.

“How did it go?” asked the publicist coordinati­ng media coverage of Woody Allen’s new film, “Irrational Man,” in which Phoenix plays the lead role.

“How do you think it went?” snapped the interviewe­r, shoving his recorder and notepad into his satchel. “It’s Joaquin Phoenix.”

Phoenix, 40, is never easy — in person or on screen. The same reticent and enigmatic behavior that makes him look like a hostage on the red carpet renders him a natural for the messed- up, hard- to- play roles that would flatten most of his Hollywood peers.

Minutes after irritating his last interviewe­r, Phoenix welcomed me with a big, overzealou­s hug: a standard greeting in Hollywood yet unnerving coming from him. “You haven’t changed a day!” he effused, referring to our last interview more than15 years ago. Did we mention he’s unpredicta­ble? “OK, I’m kidding,” he said, breaking character, his bubbly demeanor giving way to amore familiar coolness. “I don’t remember our interview at all. She reminded me,” he said, indicating his longtime publicist. “But it was probably hard, right?”

In the aptly titled “Irrational Man,” which opened in limited release this pastweeken­d, Phoenix plays a jaded philosophy professor who’s lived through enough tragedy to know that life will yield little joy from here on out. Abe drinks and recites Kierkegaar­d by day, drinks and sleeps with his much younger student by night( the latter plot now a queasily familiar dynamic in many Allen films).

But even the adoring company of Jill ( Emma Stone) isn’t enough to make him truly feel again. He’s searching for anything that will validate his life, even if it means taking someone else’s.

“I’ve been very fortunate where I’ve only made movies recently— except for one— where I felt like I had to do it,” said Phoenix of the quirky roles he’s taken since returning from a self- imposed acting hiatus a few years ago. “It wasn’t ‘ I want to do this film.’ Itwas, ‘ I’ll do anything for this. I’ll battle anybody. Give me a shot.’ I want to experience it more, and reading it isn’t enough. I want to magnify that and see the full expanse of that feeling, howmuch of it can there be.”

It’s with that passion that the former child actor has brought countless tortured souls to life over the past two decades, such as the hapless teen murderer in “To Die For,” the dark and conflicted Johnny Cash in “Walk the Line” and the lonely writer who falls for a computer operating systemin “Her.”

“Everything you give him to do or say becomes interestin­g because of this complexity he naturally projects,” Allen has said of the actor. “There’s something going on in there all the time.”

Phoenix contends there’s no real methodolog­y to the roles he chooses — or the parts he’s chosen for. “I think a majority ofmy career has been luck. I’m available, and the other guys aren’t. It’s like, ‘ Thank God Christian Bale isn’t working, thank God Leonardo’s working on something else.’ ”

Wearing worn Converse sneakers, jeans and T- shirt, Phoenix in every way seems to say, “I’m relaxed,” though he’s cautious about making too much eye contact. The more we talk about Allen, however, themore animated he becomes.

“I’ve always admired him, but I don’t think people appreciate Woody as an actor,” said Phoenix, who reels off the names of various Allen films before referring to a particular­ly difficult scene in “Love and Death.” “Most actors would play that scene wearing so much regret on their faces, trying to show, ‘ Hey, I’m a sympatheti­c character.’ He played it sincere and straight.

“I feel I’m guilty of trying too hard to make sure you understand. That’s the thing I hate most inacting— my acting.”

Ironically, Phoenix is that rare talent who conveys so much without saying a word. At the same time, he’s able to keep audiences guessing about what’s underneath that troubled exterior. It’s a combinatio­n that has been exhausting ( that Letterman interview) yet intriguing enough to lend a unique longevity to his career.

Phoenix, of course, doesn’t see it. And why would he, since he said he barely, if ever, watches the films he’s in? “Not too long ago I was flipping through the movie channels and there was amovie [ I was in] that I’d never seen,” he said “Iwatched it, and I was garbage. It just felt like I was working. I saw so much acting. I was really embarrasse­d by it.”

The first and last movie of his that he’s deliberate­ly seen over the past decade is 2012’ s “The Master,” and only because director Paul Thomas Anderson told him to “‘ man up!,” recalls Phoenix with a laugh. “It was so crushing. I was like, ‘ OK, you’re right. I should be able to watch it and not be a ... coward and just go, ‘ Oh, that did or didn’t work.’ I manned up for a little bit,” he said with a shrug, “and then I didn’t have the courage to finish it. I turned it off.”

Phoenix was born in Puerto Rico, then moved around South America with his family, which was part of the religious group the Children of God.

His parents left the group in the late ’ 70s and moved with the kids to California to pursue acting careers for the children. There he eventually began to land small roles along with his siblings River, Rain, Summer and Liberty ( He once went by the name Leaf).

Phoenix’s childhood film roles include “Space Camp” and Ron Howard’s “Parenthood.” His older brother River paved the way, however, in films such as “Stand by Me” and “My Own Private Idaho.” A teenage Joaquin was with River when he over dosed and died in 1993. Joaquin’s 911 call was replayed by the press in the weeks that followed, marking the beginning of his tense relationsh­ip with the media and fame.

His critical break through came in 1995’ s “To Die For,” when Phoenix masterfull­y played a stoned, workingcla­ss teen seduced by the local TV weather lady ( Nicole Kidman). He went on to become an acclaimed performer in such blockbuste­rs as “Gladiator” and “Walk the Line.”

But it was Phoenix’s behavior in a 2009 interview with David Letterman that revealed yet another side of the actor. He mumbled nonsequitu­r answers from behind sunglasses and a shaggy Unabomber beard ( Phoenix later said he was acting for the mockumenta­ry “I’m Still Here,” directed by his brother- in- law, Casey Affleck).

Phoenix became the butt of several late- night jokes before going on his short hiatus from acting, though he contends it was a break through moment for him.

“That experience is definitely in the top five — or maybe the best— acting experience I ever had,” he said. “I learned to let go, partly because there was no time to make a choice. You were live in the moment and the other people didn’t know that it was [ for a film]. Itwas so liberating. It helped me stop making so many conscious decisions.”

Planning and deliberati­on, however, played a large part in how Phoenix approached his role as Abe in “Irrational Man.” He is not a stand- in for Allen, as other of the director’s leading men have clearly been.

“There were some bits of dialogue that itwas an effort for me not to sound like him,” said Phoenix. “Plus, I’m so familiar with him. There’s almost a temptation to do it. I grew up with my sisters mimicking him. There’s a certain rhythm to his dialogue that makes it very easy to fall into that Woody Allen- esque way of speaking. But I didn’t think it would serve the movie. I played it different.”

Phoenix knows audiences will likely be looking to glean insight into who he is through his role as Abe. But by now, he’s used to it.

“I don’t know why people try to analyze me through my roles ... ormaybe I do,” he said. “I’ve seen performanc­es where I’m like, ‘ Whoa! I wonder what [ that unfortunat­e actor] went through.’ However you want to think about it is up you, but I’m not sticking around to listen to it.”

 ?? GenaroMoli­na
Los Angeles Times ?? OF “IRRATIONAL MAN” star Joaquin Phoenix, above, directorWo­ody Allen says, “There’s something going on in there all the time.”
GenaroMoli­na Los Angeles Times OF “IRRATIONAL MAN” star Joaquin Phoenix, above, directorWo­ody Allen says, “There’s something going on in there all the time.”
 ?? Sabrina Lantos
Sony Pictures Classics ?? EMMA STONE appears in “Irrational Man” opposite Phoenix, who plays a jaded philosophy professor.
Sabrina Lantos Sony Pictures Classics EMMA STONE appears in “Irrational Man” opposite Phoenix, who plays a jaded philosophy professor.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States