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![]() by Paul Fischer |
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At 54, Arnold Schwarzenegger still
looks taut and youthful. Even despite heart But it's his marriage to TV broadcaster and Kennedy relative Maria Shriver that remains the constant force in Annie's life. The marriage has endured media scrutiny and the highs and lows of Schwarzenegger's career. They've been married for some 16 years and have four children, and so Schwarzenegger admits that being emotional on screen in his new film Collateral Damage, came easier to him than in the formative part of his career, referring to a pivotal moment in the film when he witnesses the deaths of his wife and son. "I think that I do it easier today than I could have done 20 years ago because I can relate to family much more and I'm more in touch with my emotions than 20 years ago. Also I am older. I think it was just that kind of a scene is so powerful, when you sit there, feet away from where your family is lying who you have seen minutes before alive and waving, smiling, full of joy and then to see them blow up. It's this extraordinary kind of thing. It's this kind of thing where you see from this Sept. 11 tragedy where you hear people say their loved one has just called them moments before the tragedy occurs. I'd have to say, I don't know if I had been 30 years old if I could have related as much." September 11 was a turning point in the American psyche. Hollywood insisted it would be more responsible. Collateral Damage initially due out last September was put on hold, yet Arnold insists that the time is ripe for films such as his, to gain audience acceptance. "You never know 100% but I feel [September 11] would have no impact on any of the movies that we're seeing now. Several action movies being released since then have done extremely well, such as Black Hawk Down. I think that also after the terrorist attack, we've seen video sales and rentals skyrocket, especially of movies that dealt with terrorism. So I think with movies you can resolve those things much quicker, and give audiences satisfaction, at least in a fantasy way. " Collateral Damage tells the story of family man and firefighter Gordon Brewer (Schwarzenegger), who is plunged into the complex and dangerous world of international terrorism after he loses his wife and child in a bombing credited to Claudio "The Wolf" Perrini (Cliff Curtis). Frustrated with the official investigation and haunted by the thought that the man responsible for murdering his family might never be brought to justice, Brewer takes matters into his own hands and travels to Columbia to track down the terrorist. He laughingly admits to taking on his project because of his wife. "I have to blame her for that because she brought it to me. |
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She is friendly with one of the producers who gave her the script. There was a time when Harrison Ford was attached to it and when my wife hears there is someone else attached to something she is very competitive and chases the script down like a greyhound. Every day when I was reading scripts she kept bringing me this script and said I should really read it... and I said you read it, I've got all these other ones and if you think it's good then let me know.' "
It's another physically tough film for the star, but despite his heart surgery, Schwarzenegger had no qualms about getting rough and physical, surgery or otherwise. "First of all, the heart surgery was four and a half years ago. In April it's five years. Number 2, I think it was very clear that when you get your valve replaced you don't have to change your life. Especially if you have the right doctor. And he [the doctor] always said to me, "I'm gonna fix it so that you can continue doing your action movies." And I was like, "Then you are the doctor who is gonna do it." So when I heard that, you know, others would say you have to do this or you have to change tat or you can't smoke your Stogie any more I said "Thank you very much, but no thank you." So I finally found the right guy. And the fact of the matter is nothing did change. I am on no medication. I didn't have to alter my life. The only thing that he suggested was that instead of pushing heavy weights and doing 10 reps, why don't you use half the weight and do 20 reps in weight training. So that's the only thing that I changed. Everything else, all my other activities stayed exactly the same." And Arnie still loves his cigars. "I smoke not only because of the heart, but when you get older I think it is better to slow down so I smoke one cigar a day now, where I used to smoke three. But other than that, I do the action the same way, in the movies. I prepare for it the same way and the things that I feel I can't do or that might be too dangerous to do I let someone else do it. It's the same rule I always had." Schwarzenegger may have lost some of his box office luster, but that didn't
stop the producers Schwarzenegger still remains a larger-than-life influence on popular culture. Beyond movie stardom, the actor is also happy to keep his feet in politics. "I always love politics and will continue to be involved in my activities in the inner city, creating after school programs in inner city areas in 15 different cities, 400 different schools. I will continue working on that initiative because I am putting out a ballot next November in California which is an after school education and safety act to get $$550,000,000.00 for all school children in California, elementary school to after school program between 3:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. because after school is very important so we can get rid of some of the youth violence and give parents time to float around. Those things, if I were to run for office, in two or three years I would know. First, I want to do a few more movies, especially those that I have signed deals with a year or two ago, so I have to be done and I am looking forward to doing films like Terminator 3." After that, rumors persist that Arnold might run for Governor of California. | |||