USA TODAY US Edition

Burt Reynolds shines in ‘Last Movie Star’

Legend plays a fictional faded actor going through an existentia­l crisis

- Bryan Alexander

BEVERLY HILLS – Burt Reynolds is sitting in a room at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel on a rainy Los Angeles afternoon. But in his mind, he’s picturing the fictional Cahulawass­ee River from his famed role in the 1972 Oscar bestpictur­e nominee Deliveranc­e.

The surging river that propelled Reynolds to Hollywood superstard­om appears again by movie magic in his new film, The Last Movie Star. Reynolds, 82, was digitally added to Deliveranc­e canoe scenes for his new film, talking wistfully to his younger screen self.

The water also serves as a powerful metaphor for getting through life that rushes by.

“The river has much to with my life, my career — you just keep going on,” Reynolds says. “It’s going to try and drown you and beat the (expletive) out of you and do everything else. But you just keep going on.”

Then Reynolds gets that familiar twinkle in his eyes: “And maybe there’s a rock ahead that’s going to hit you.”

Reynolds’ legendary career and personal life have seen breathless runs and painful rocks. Many are alluded to through the fictional faded movie star Vic Edwards, who has an existentia­l crisis after being tricked into attending a comically low-rent movie festival in The Last Movie Star (on DirectTV now and video on demand Tuesday; opens Friday in theaters in New York and Los Angeles).

With his devil-may-care attitude and playful smile, Reynolds was the bankable Biggest Star of the 1970s and early ’80s with a string of box office hits like The Longest Yard (1974), Smokey and the Bandit (1977) and Hooper (1978), and unforgetta­ble appearance­s with his “dear friend,” Tonight Show host Johnny Carson. These were followed by career-damaging clunkers, high-profile lost love with his Smokey co-star Sally Field and a messy divorce from Loni Anderson, followed by well-chronicled financial problems.

But Reynolds is still standing, even if his walk has slowed and he relies heavily on a gold-handled cane, a condition he blames on the years and his work as a stuntman. More than that, Reynolds is still finding the humor even when there’s hardship.

“Yeah, I would do some things different. But you can’t,” says Reynolds thoughtful­ly, before cheekily adding, “You can only lie and say that you wouldn’t do things differentl­y.”

The impromptu line is such classic Reynolds that even he cracks up. It’s that mix of unrelentin­g humor, pathos and nostalgia that Last Movie Star writer/director Adam Rifkin was looking for when he recruited his childhood movie hero, luring Reynolds from his longtime home in Jupiter, Fla.

Rifkin, an independen­t filmmaker, wrote the film specifical­ly for the star, who has worked primarily on straight-to-video films (2014’s Hamlet & Hutch) and TV movies (2011’s Reel Love) in recent years.

“People did think I left the business,” says Reynolds, adding that major roles have been tough to come by. “I know an awful lot of people said, ‘Now that you’ve retired ...’ And I would say, ‘I didn’t retire, thank you.’ ”

Vic’s travails in The Last Movie Star mimic his own life, with emotive dialogue often provided by Reynolds.

“I really didn’t know how personal it was until I started making it,” Reynolds says. “There were moments where I thought, ‘Wait a minute — this is me.’ ”

Rifkin points out that The Last Movie Star exaggerate­s some of the indignitie­s of faded celebrity — like being put up in a hotel off the highway. But the support from die-hard fans and the star’s unfailing humor were true.

“I know Burt Reynolds looks back at his life with some regret and nostalgia. That’s all accurate. And life rushes past, no matter how famous you are,” Rifkin says. “But he truly enjoys the life of being a Hollywood legend.”

Reynolds has shown both sides of the life as he has re-emerged publicly to promote the film. There was what could be called a small rock, an awkward Today Show appearance on March 15. Reynolds pined strangely over his lost love Field (“She was 7 when I fell in love with her”) and made an Internet-viral verbal miscue about host Hoda Kotb’s lips.

But he followed that with a vintage Reynolds turn on Conan, where he and one-time Tonight Show host Conan O’Brien waxed hilariousl­y nostalgic on topics ranging from the great Carson himself to how drunk Reynolds was during his infamous 1972 nude photo shoot for Cosmopolit­an.

Just like old times on the talk show couch, Reynolds rolled with it, showing that emotional swagger hasn’t dimmed.

“If you don’t have that, you might as well hang it up,” Reynolds says. “Well, I’m not sure if I can swagger anymore, but I can limp with the best of them.”

The single Reynolds says he’s in a happy place in his life, even signified by the rose-colored eyeglasses he has worn in recent years. (“And they help me see better, too.”) He’s content being away from Hollywood. When the wheels touch down in Florida, where Reynolds has lived since he was 9, he feels his blood pressure drop, and he’ll call up his best friend since seventh grade for drinks.

“He’s lost his wife and I’ve lost my girl (Field). We’re just two old farts at the bar drinking and telling lies. It’s pathetic and it’s also very funny when you look at it like that. And that’s how we choose to look at it.”

Reynolds believes the new attention could bring an opportunit­y for more movie roles, even more collaborat­ions with Rifkin.

“I still haven’t done the best work I can do. I hope I get the chance,” he says. “But I’m at an age where it’s very difficult to be offered great roles.”

Regardless, Reynolds is sure he’s never going to lose that spark, no matter what comes his way. Flexing his gift for gab for a final good ol’ stretch of a story, he lays out how he has navigated the river and will continue to.

“I’ve been very, very lucky through ups and downs. When you crash and burn, you have to pick yourself up and go on and hope to make up for it. Along the way, I’ve met some wonderful people. And you always run into some jerks. But that would be the same if you were working for the Ford Motor Company.

“It’s a tough business. Very tough. But I always tried to leave a good impression wherever we shot, and I didn’t leave any buildings burning or anything,” he adds with a smile. “And I’ve had a good time through it all.”

“Yeah, I would do some things different. But you can’t. You can only lie and say that you wouldn’t do things differentl­y.”

 ?? DAN MACMEDAN/USA TODAY ?? “You just keep going on,” says Burt Reynolds, 82.
DAN MACMEDAN/USA TODAY “You just keep going on,” says Burt Reynolds, 82.
 ?? A24 ?? Vic’s (Burt Reynolds) best days are behind him in “The Last Movie Star.”
A24 Vic’s (Burt Reynolds) best days are behind him in “The Last Movie Star.”

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