USA TODAY International Edition

Crazy times fuel Clooney’s ‘Catch-22’

- Gary Levin

PASADENA, Calif. – Twenty-five years after he began his breakout role on NBC’s “ER,” George Clooney is back in a new TV series.

Not just any series, but Hulu’s sixepisode adaptation of Joseph Heller’s acclaimed novel “Catch-22,” published in 1961 and made into a 1970 Mike Nichols film.

Clooney, who directs some of the episodes and co-stars as military boss Scheisskop­f, told the Television Critics Associatio­n on Monday that “Catch-22” is “one of the great American novels of all time; it was required reading when I was in high school.” The 57-year-old actor then jokes, “I hadn’t read it in a long time; high school was 15 years ago!”

The book was sometimes interprete­d as a Vietnam War protest, Clooney said, even though it predated that conflict. Instead, it reflected the “bureaucrac­y of war and the ridiculous­ness of it.”

This version focuses heavily on Capt. John Yossarian (Christophe­r Abbott), played by Alan Arkin in the film, as he struggles to come to terms with his missions that cause death and destructio­n (put him in peril) as a World War II bombardier. His main dilemma, spawning the use of the book’s title: The conundrum of trying to win discharge from the war by claiming he’s crazy, even though that very act is proof of his sanity.

“When you do a movie, you don’t really get enough time to get to know the characters,” Clooney said. Writers “figured out a way to interpret it that we didn’t think was possible.”

Luke Davies, an executive producer and co-writer, says the book traffics in “war and insanity and capitalism and democracy,” but has new resonance in politics today. “In a specific sense, we all wake up every morning these days in kind of a shared anxiety situation, and this is a prophetic distillati­on of that anxiety; this is like an origin story.”

And while the film “just re-creates the wild kaleidosco­ping madness of the novel,” the new series’ length allows it to portray “actual emotional journeys (of the characters) from beginning to end.”

Especially Yossarian’s. Abbott’s “likable” performanc­e, Clooney said, helped “engage the audience to like and trust a character who does some pretty despicable things.”

As for what’s perhaps his first appearance at TCA since “ER,” Clooney quipped to critics: “You look exactly the same.” But he reflected on that megahit, which jump-started his career and lasted 331 episodes (though he left the series in 2000). “‘ER’ was a nutty moment in my career,” he said. “The six of us were suddenly thrust into the stratosphe­re. It was life-changing.”

 ??  ?? George Clooney, with Christophe­r Abbott and Pico Alexander, stars in, and directs some episodes of, the six-episode Hulu series based on the book and movie. HULU
George Clooney, with Christophe­r Abbott and Pico Alexander, stars in, and directs some episodes of, the six-episode Hulu series based on the book and movie. HULU

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