Los Angeles Times

Sharlto Copley just lets it rip

The actor has built a career by holding nothing back. ‘Free Fire’ follows form.

- By Chris Lee

In the Martin Scorsesepr­oduced shoot ’em up “Free Fire,” South African actor Sharlto Copley plays Vern, a narcissist­ic gunrunner in a polyester suit who’s prone to a certain behavioral grandiloqu­ence.

He describes himself as a “rare and mysterious pearl” but can’t shoot a gun to save his life; he’s revealed to be a “misdiagnos­ed child genius” but never recovered from discoverin­g his brilliance lacks any basis in truth.

It’s a baroque characteri­zation — all antic energy and adenoidal line readings — that allows Copley to steal just about every scene he’s in. That’s no small feat considerin­g “Free Fire’s” ensemble cast is rounded out by Oscar winner Brie Larson and Armie Hammer (as a studly stoner) and offers determined­ly demented performanc­es by British actors Sam Riley and Babou Ceesay — all amid a cartoonish crime tableau where the sense of suspense comes from just how many bullets the characters can pump into one another before finally bleeding out.

Copley explains that his objective in “Free Fire,” which opened Friday, wasn’t to keep it real so much as surreal.

“With the Vern character, I thought, ‘Can I pitch the voice that way? Is the voice going to annoy the … out of people?’ ” the actor says, seated on the patio of a Beverly Hills hotel restaurant. “Is the audience going to go, ‘That was funny for the first minute. Now please shoot him and shut him up!’ ”

Copley, though, isn’t the sort of actor who plays things safe.

“It’s not for everyone,” he says. “When you take a strong position as an actor, it’s risky. It is what you might call scene stealing or chewing the scenery. But that’s my instinct: to do the thing I’d like to watch on screen.”

Eight years into what can fairly be called an accidental movie star career, the 43year-old has built a bizarre yet fascinatin­g filmograph­y by gnawing off sizable chunks of Hollywood scenery and chewing them to smithereen­s. With his natural talent for accents, implacable joie de vivre, gonzo skill at improvisin­g dialogue and bottomless capacity to change his appearance from role to role, Copley is becoming known for his self-styled, sui generis screen presence. One that can bring to mind Crispin Glover or John Malkovich or Jeff Goldblum in the performanc­es’ proud eccentrici­ty.

That makes it all the more surprising to discover, then, that Copley had barely contemplat­ed acting when he was cast in his debut movie, 2009’s documentar­y style sci-fi thriller “District 9.” At the time, the Pretoria native had his sights set on becoming a media maverick, operating a film and TV production company while trying to set up ETV, what Copley describes as South Africa’s “first national, freeto-air terrestria­l TV channel.”

He fluked into the role when writer-director Neill Blomkamp — a Johannesbu­rg school friend and filmmaking collaborat­or — asked Copley to appear as a bumbling Afrikaner bureaucrat in a 10-minute test film that he intended to show “Hobbit” and “Lord of the Rings” director Peter Jackson. In the short, Blomkamp was pursuing the kind of lo-fi “found footage” aesthetic that eventually found its way into “District 9,” which Jackson ended up producing.

Despite that lack of acting bona fides, the test footage persuaded Blomkamp and Jackson that Copley could carry the $30-million Sony film. And “D9,” of course, went on to become a surprise smash, grossing $210 million worldwide and earning four Academy Award nomination­s, including best picture.

“You could imagine the conversati­ons Neill must have had when he said, ‘I want to cast my buddy from South Africa,’ ” Copley says, growing wide-eyed at the memory. “‘What has he done?’ ‘Well, he’s not really an actor. And he’s going to make up the dialogue.’ It’s impossible! I didn’t even know I could do it!”

Since then, the actor has gone on to rack up memorable performanc­es in a dozenodd films. Appearing alongside Bradley Cooper and Liam Neeson as the mentally unstable Capt. James “Howling Mad” Murdock in Fox’s 2010 “A-Team” movie adaptation, Copley adopts a drawling Southern accent and attempts to use a defibrilla­tor to jump-start a car engine.

“That’s one of my favorite all-time characters, an absolute essential part of being able to work in Hollywood,” he says. “After ‘District 9,’ my agents were very quick to set up that meeting saying, ‘Look, he isn’t the bureaucrat guy.’ But people thought, ‘He’s not an actor. This is him.’ I got that a lot.”

Playing a psychotic baddie in Spike Lee’s 2013 “Oldboy,” the actor grew out his nails, donned prosthetic scars and assumed an upper-crust English accent (as well as what Copley calls a “bisexual edge”). He plants “love’s true kiss” on Angelina Jolie as the unrequited subject of her storybook sorceress character’s affections in “Maleficent.” And as a samurai sword-wielding mercenary pursuing Matt Damon’s character in the 2014 sci-fi thriller “Elysium” (also directed by Blomkamp), Copley displays a convincing homicidal streak and outre physicalit­y that had remained, until then, an unproven commodity.

The actor also provides a motion-capture performanc­e and weirdly childish voice-over as a Pinocchiol­ike A.I. battle bot in Blomkamp’s action-dramedy “Chappie.” And by this point, Copley serves as something like a spirit animal for the writer-director.

“Off camera, as a friend, he really has a heart of gold,” says Blomkamp. “Onscreen, working with him, there’s a level of intensity he has that 99.9% of actors don’t have: a specificit­y and intensity about what he’s doing with the role and wanting to know every single possible thing he can know about it. It’s probably what makes him so magnetic to watch.”

But none of those roles offered such a pu pu platter of dramatic personae as last year’s first-person-shooter action flick “Hardcore Henry.” Portraying a character named Jimmy, Copley appears in 11 incarnatio­ns — as a homeless alcoholic, hippie biker, ghillie suit-wearing sniper and quadripleg­ic scientist among them — getting his head blown off, going up in flames and dying repeatedly, only to come back and chew the scenery again.

The actor called it his most challengin­g profession­al experience (and not just because at one point he thought he had accidental­ly run over and killed a stunt man during production).

To hear it from Ben Wheatley, director and cowriter of “Free Fire,” Copley’s background behind the camera gives him certain advantages inhabiting different characters.

“On set, he’s offering up loads and loads of stuff all the time,” Wheatley says. “He’s come up through postproduc­tion, through sales and all sorts of stuff. He can look at how everything’s made with a much more understand­ing eye.”

Of Copley’sbody of work, the director adds: “A lot of why those performanc­es are so rounded is because they come from that position of understand­ing — what the world of the work is like.”

But toward the end of the year, Copley plans to cross the filmmaker-performer divide once more, having written, with the intention of directing and starring in, a film project he describes as “satirical science fiction with a lot of comedy.”

Currently casting the movie, the South African admits difficulty in finding actors who can conjure the heartfelt yet buck-wild je ne sais quoi that imbues his own performanc­es.

“I’m thinking, ‘Who do I put with me?’ What I’ll often find is they’re great in serious but not that funny. Or they’re so funny, but am I going to feel them? It’s that line of: How much heart and how much humor?” Copley says. “Like Woody Allen has his thing. Will Ferrell has his thing. The tone, if I get it right, becomes my thing.”

And what, precisely, is that tone?

“It’s the instinct I have as an actor. It’s for the purpose of entertaini­ng, not the purpose of, ‘That’s so real!’ Those performanc­es never interested me.”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? SHARLTO COPLEY got his first big acting role, in “District 9,” only after helping out friend Neill Blomkamp on a 10-minute test film. Copley costars in “Free Fire.”
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times SHARLTO COPLEY got his first big acting role, in “District 9,” only after helping out friend Neill Blomkamp on a 10-minute test film. Copley costars in “Free Fire.”

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