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Ryan Reynolds has come a long way
from Two Guys, A Girl and A Pizza Place. Unlike the many young
actors who start in television comedies and go on to make teen
movie after teen movie, Reynolds took a different route. As well
as those so-called teen movies (in this case Van Wilder and Just
Friends), he has also appeared in Blade: Trinity, The Amityville
Horror and, now, Smokin' Aces where he plays FBI agent Richard
Messner...
Q: When
you watch Smokin' Aces it is non-stop action. Did that
come across in the script when you first read it?
Ryan
Reynolds:
Yes, it did. It really felt like an animal to me. What I loved
about the script when I first read it was it was different. Joe
Carnahan paid a lot of attention to the character. Every
character was distinct and had a personality and for a writer to
get into the minds of so many characters was impressive to me.
Q: And
what about your character, Richard Messner, an FBI agent
who we see go through a lot of different emotions during the
course of the film?
RR:
He has a lot of humanity. He is like the moral centre of the
film.
Q:
What was it like going head-to-head in intense scenes with two
great actors, Ray Liotta and Andy Garcia? It might scare some
young actors.
RR:
Yeah, you always have a moment of that, but you get over it. Ray
was easy because we established a dynamic early on. I've learned
you can't force a dynamic. When you try to force it, that's when
people say 'They had no chemistry.’ I just loved working
with Ray. He's the meanest man you'll ever love. [Laughs.] Andy
brings such a weight to everything he does because he's such a
fine actor. We tried to rehearse one key scene, I won't give it
away, but it was awful. We decided we just needed to do it. You
just have to unleash a couple of dogs and let them go out and
fight and that's what we did.
Q: How
about the director/writer Joe Carnahan? He's one of Hollywood's
young, exciting directors.
RR:
Joe is so unorthodox in the way he works. Some days he would say
'I don't feel like doing the script today. Here's your
objective, throw in a bit of this
and do
that.' It's exciting, but terrifying at the same time.
Q: And
how were you with handling a gun? You looked like you knew what
you were doing.
RR:
Well, being Canadian, we are born allergic to guns, so I had to
get pretty good. I spent two months with a gentleman who works
with the British Special
Forces. The
back story for my character is he was also a weapons expert, so
I had to get to a skill level where I more or less had to
perform magic tricks with
the gun. We
were shooting blanks obviously, but Joe would have dummy rounds
put in my gun that would jam. So, he wanted to see me clear my
gun and never miss a beat. That is what an FBI agent would have
to do if he was in a real life situation. You would have to
clear it and keep going, but it adds a depth and reality to the
scene. I had to operate the gun when my heart rate was at 145
beats a minute and be smooth and calm with my hands. That's the
talent the experts have.
Q: The
film is intense and there are some serious scenes, but what was
it like on set when the cameras weren't rolling? I could imagine
there would have been some fun with guys like Jeremy Piven and
Ben Affleck on set.
RR:
Oh yeah. It was such an eclectic cast with big personalities.
They were insane. Every day was an adventure. You never knew
what you were getting when you walked on set each day. What was
interesting, which I had never experienced before with an
ensemble this big, was other actors would turn up on set to
watch scenes even when they weren't shooting that day. I did
too. I showed up to see some of Common's scenes and checked out
Jeremy. It felt like a real motley family.
Q: Were
you able to relax up at Lake Tahoe when you weren't working?
RR:
For the most part it was a lot of work, but with a movie like
this with such a big cast you do get some time off because
there's other storylines going. I explored the mountains and did
a little gambling.
Q: Did
you win?
RR:
I
broke even. I played a little blackjack with Ben Affleck.
Q: Ben,
he's pretty good at it isn't he?
RR:
He is an expert. That guy knows his cards. He got me out of a
hole. I just hung with him. He came along and sat down and I
said, 'You just tell me what
to play'
and he helped me out of the hole.
Q: There
are so many great roles in Smokin' Aces, did you only
have your eye on the lead role of Agent Messner, or were you
interested in playing one of the other characters?
RR:
When I first met Joe I said 'I'll play anything.' Messner
was the last person I thought he'd want me to play. I would have
been happy to knock my teeth out and play one of those crazy
Tremor brothers. Joe mulled it over and said 'I really see
you as Messner.' I knew Ray Liotta was going to be in the
film so I thought he would take the Messner role, but Joe wanted
Ray to play the Carruthers role.
Q: You
said you did the weapons training, but did you go and meet with
FBI agents as well to add some depth to your character?
RR:
Yeah, I did. I spent a couple of weeks with some FBI guys and
hung with them. I read all of their handbooks and what was
interesting was that everything we did in the film violated the
FBI's top 10 protocols. That really helped me with my character
because it reinforced the dilemma he faces in the film. What is
the right or wrong thing for an FBI agent to do? Blind
bureaucracy over human life? It was exciting for me because
roles like this don't come often.
Q: There
are some pretty violent scenes in the film. Were you were OK
with it?
RR:
Look, the movie is about seven hitmen on their way to kill
Jeremy Piven. I had a good idea going in there was going to
blood shed. But, I think if the movie was just violent without
strong characters, I'd definitely take a position against it.
But, the characters are so well thought out and it's so exciting
and entertaining, it's what you're expecting. You're expecting
gunfights.
Q: The
bullets aren't real, but what was it like acting in gunfights
like some of the scenes you were in?
RR:
The blanks can still be dangerous. You are shooting fully loaded
blanks. My gun was one of the smallest on the set - it was a HK
.45. It's a heavy handgun. It shattered windows.
Q: What
do you mean? The sound of the blanks could shatter windows?
RR:
Yeah, it's enormous. We had to wear ear plugs. At the end of a
day my nervous system would just be taxed because of the sound
of the guns. You need to go home and lie down and close your
eyes before you go to sleep. It could have been worse. There was
a large machine gun that Taraji Henson had to fire that was just
enormous. I was two blocks away in my hotel room in Lake Tahoe
and I could hear it being fired. When she shot it the muzzle
flare was so big it lit the curtains on fire. It almost burnt
the hotel down.
Q:
What's next for you?
RR:
I have three movies coming out. A movie at Sundance called
The Nines that John August wrote and directed. He did
Go and Big Fish. I also just
finished a movie called Definitely, Maybe and
another film, a comedy, called Chaos Theory.
So 2007 will be an exciting year.
(Interview courtesy of
NBC Universal)
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