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“The
thing that pisses
me off most about London is that there is a man in my garden
with a camera and there’s nothing I can do about it and the
remarkable thing is...they never get parking tickets."
It
was a candid and passionate Jude Law sitting before me today. It
is fair to say that he has officially broken through the glass
ceiling and made it into the Hollywood elite. He is one of the
most sought after actors in the world today and, yet, this Jude
Law was coming across as an easily identifiable North London
guy, not at all what I was expecting.
In
his latest film Breaking and Entering, Jude plays Will,
who runs a flourishing landscape architectural firm with his
friend Sandy. The film tells the story of a series of criminal
and emotional thefts, set against the backdrop of London’s
changing culture and geography. Will’s state-of-the-art studio
office repeatedly attracts the attention of a local gang of
thieves and, after another break in, he chases one of the young
gang members home to the apartment he shares with his mother
Amira, a Bosnian refugee. Despite having a long-term girlfriend
with a troubled 13-year old daughter, Will befriends Amira to
further investigate the burglary but their relationship takes an
unexpected turn. With his life in already in crisis, Will
embarks on a passionate journey into the wilder side of both
himself and the city.
Jude
Law was raised in London and the setting is a huge part of the
film and despite making the majority of his films being made
outside of the UK, he still feels very much at home. “I think
it’s hard not to in London,
any part of London,”
says Jude “funnily enough the estate that we filmed for Amira’s
home is a street over from where I live so I walked to work that
day. So, “loveyland” wasn’t so far away from reality as you may
think. I think that one of the wonders of London is that
everyone rubs shoulders with everyone else…we're rubbing up
against each other on streets where we shop, where we eat and I
think that's what makes it such an exciting place. I don’t feel
cocooned particularly though, perhaps if I’m chased I might do."
Much
more than the setting, the film’s title has been has been much
too close to home for Jude in recent days. “Funnily enough,” he
reveals “the
mother of my kids was burgled yesterday evening while they were
in the house”.
And
so we come to the topic of break-ins. In the film, Jude handles
the crime in a very unorthodox way.
How would he handle it in real-life? "I think that one of the
themes of this film that is most challenging but also the most
heartening is the idea of forgiveness,” Jude tells me “and I
would like to think that I am big enough to forgive and be part
of a positive program to help somebody who is obviously in a
situation where they feel they have to steal to provide for
something whether it is an addiction or money. However, I also
know myself as a bit of a reactionist so...” At this point Jude
pauses, collecting his thoughts “Each situation is different...”
he continues “I was particularly worried about this because my
kids were in the house and I think that's a different kind of
burglar to one who breaks into an empty office and takes
computers at night. Like Will, as you can see, I'm a sort of
wishy-washy middle-class Londoner and don’t quite know where i
stand on anything. So I’m at one with my character."
Breaking and Entering
reunites Law with director Anthony Minghella for their third
outing together after The Talented Mr. Ripley and Cold
Mountain. So what is like working with Mr. Minghella yet
again? “Well it certainly hasn’t got tougher,” says Jude “and I
think what's involved is a friendship first and foremost and
therefore a sense of trust and understanding of each other and
so if there's a shorthand then its simply because we act, as one
does with friends, one knows when someone gets it or it
certainly doesn't have to be re-iterated. Having said that, you
know, the themes of this film are very interesting and very
pertinent and relevant to everyone's life, certainly to people
living in and around London. So, there is an awful lot to talk
about just because it's very interesting, meaty stuff. Having
said that, I think we remembered afterwards that we actually
never sat down and discussed Will! I think we talked about the
situations, we talked about the architectural practice an awful
lot but we never discussed him and I think that was because,
once Anthony had decided that I would play him and once I was
asked to play him, it was sort of known…it just didn’t need to
be discussed. So, our shorthand is silence."
Now
firmly established in Hollywood and with Anthony Minghella being
a talented writer it is inevitable that one day we will see Jude
on the London stage “I hope to be able to do a play. I just
haven't read one that I wanted to do” says Law.
With
the interview approaching its end, we move onto the topic of the
media and returning to his opening statement about paparazzi in
his garden. So does this constant attention make the enjoyment
of his professional life suffer?
“Luckily, just about the only thing it doesn’t affect is my
professional life,” says Jude “and so very often work is a safe
haven and a place where it doesn’t really have any effect. To be
honest…if it did have an effect…I would probably...” Jude
pauses, taking into consideration the ramifications of what he
is about to say. “…erm...I don’t know...” he looks down and
laughs to himself then pauses for a longer period of time, “…go
live in the Isle of Wight.”
Breaking and Entering
is out now.

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