Los Angeles Times

He’s playing it close to reality

Ben Stiller draws from his experience­s as both a father and a son in two new character-driven pictures

- BY MARK OLSEN mark.olsen@latimes.com

In two movies this fall, Ben Stiller can be seen pushing himself in new directions as an actor, finding idiosyncra­tic, serio-comic tones to explore characters who find themselves at crossroads perhaps not so far from where Stiller may also find himself.

In “Brad’s Status” and “The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected),” Stiller plays men at a moment of reassessme­nt, taking stock of their lives. Both performanc­es have a richness of character detail, a nuance of emotion and are shaded by subtle comedic underpinni­ngs.

Admitting he didn’t at f irst naturally connect the roles, Stiller noted how it has become meaningful to him that in “Brad’s Status” (Sept. 15), written and directed by Mike White, he plays a father struggling to relate to his son, and in “The Meyerowitz Stories” (Oct. 13), written and directed by Noah Baumbach, he plays a son trying to get closer to his father.

“That was the delineatio­n I think that I felt,” he said, “and I happened to be at a place in life where I have an older father and I have a young son, so there’s that place where you’re dealing with both and figuring out how to navigate that. And I felt like each movie had a different aspect of being a father or being a son.”

Stiller is talking on the phone in the middle of a tech scout in Yonkers, N.Y., for “Escape at Dannemora,” an eight-part Showtime prison-break series he is directing that stars Benicio Del Toro, Patricia Arquette and Paul Dano.

The last few years have been tumultuous for Stiller. He dealt with prostate cancer in 2014. His mother, actress Anne Meara, died in 2015. Earlier this year, Stiller and Christine Taylor, his wife of 17 years, announced their separation. (They have two children.) And last year, “Zoolander 2,” which he directed, produced, co-wrote and starred in, came out to withering reviews and disappoint­ing box office .

For “Brad’s Status,” Stiller got the script by mistake. He was supposed to get the script for a CGI children’s film White had written but instead was sent the story of a man coming to terms with his life as he takes his son on a tour of potential colleges while also grappling with the outsize successes of his own old college buddies.

White did not write the part with Stiller in mind, but once he became interested, White became hooked by the notion too.

“There is an element that feels like a Ben Stiller vehicle. [With the character’s] urban anxiety and ambition — he is somebody who obviously comes to mind,” said White. “And I knew that he would do a great job, but also because the movie has some melancholy, some different tones than I’ve seen from him, it seemed like it might be exciting to present him in a way that seems like a more familiar Ben Stiller movie and then kind of subverts that with more existentia­l dread.”

Stiller, 51, is a rare actor with multiple hit franchises (“Meet the Parents,” “Night at the Museum,” “Madagascar”) to his credit. He has also directed pictures of incredible ambition and scale, including the war movie send-up “Tropic Thunder.” So to see Stiller explore self-doubt with such knowing depth can be a bit of a surprise.

“I do feel like everybody can connect to that,” said Stiller. “I think we all have those same feelings to a certain extent, no matter how people might perceive you from the outside.”

Baumbach wrote the part of the driven, successful business manager in “The Meyerowitz Stories” with Stiller in mind, and he did the same for Adam Sandler as his underachie­ving brother. In the film, the two compete for the attention of their sculptor father, played by Dustin Hoffman. Baumbach said the first few people he showed the script to, including Stiller, thought the roles of the brothers were intended for the opposite actor.

“I felt like it was an opportunit­y for Ben to play something closer to who he really is,” Baumbach said. “And when Ben clicked into that, I think it was very gutsy of him to reveal that on-screen.”

“The Meyerowitz Stories” is the third film Baumbach and Stiller have collaborat­ed on, after “Greenberg” and “While We’re Young.” Stiller now seems fully attuned to the specific rhythms of Baumbach’s writing, the movement and blocking within the shots, and the subtle shifts in tone that can occur within a scene.

“My movies tend to not delineate what’s funny and what isn’t. Which I’ve heard as both praise and a criticism. But I like it. I like for that stuff to exist simultaneo­usly,” Baumbach said. “But it’s something that he understand­s implicitly, and because he’s a comic as well as a terrific actor, he can innately convey both at the same time. Which is one of the many reasons I like working with him.”

But now, Stiller has to get back to his tech scout — “I’m going to go in the sewer tunnel,” he said dryly — making time for one final question. Given that these films are about midlife reassessme­nt and considerin­g what he’s been through in the last few years, has it brought him to a new perspectiv­e on himself?

“Sure, that’s a totally valid point,” he replied. “I’m at a place right now where I’ve wanted to get to for a long time in terms of where I know the work that I’m doing is about something that I find personal and creatively challengin­g.

“I have been around for a while and been through a lot of ups and downs, and I feel really fortunate to have that sense of myself now, that what I’m doing creatively can connect with me inside. That’s really important to me. And how you get to that — whatever your own personal thing is — that’s where I’m at right now.”

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? “I THINK we all have those same feelings to a certain extent,” Ben Stiller says of exploring self-doubt in his new movies.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times “I THINK we all have those same feelings to a certain extent,” Ben Stiller says of exploring self-doubt in his new movies.

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