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![]() by Paul Fischer |
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Harrison Ford makes it clear from
the outset that selling his latest film, in this case the In a career spanning over a quarter of a century, the soon-to-be-60-year
old actor, established himself as a true Hollywood icon, but refuses to
acknowledge such a status. "I don't care about it," insists
the star. "What I care about is that I have the opportunity to continue
to work and that I have choices of good material that I can have some
affect over the conditions under which I work and the quality of the material
that I choose to work." Which is why, the actor concedes, he chose
to go out on a loop choosing to play the flawed Russian commander of a
nuclear submarine during the height of the Cold War in the early sixties.
Co-starring with Ireland's Liam Neeson, Ford's Captain
Alexi Vostrikov is a stark departure from those iconoclastic heroes with
whom the actor has been long associated. The script came along at about
the same time as he decided against reprising the role of Jack Ryan in
The Sum of all Fears, and has no doubt, why he preferred to embark
on the riskier K-19, which he also took on as a producer. After
all, he insists, "the object of an actor is to continue to play different
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in Indiana Jones, rather than a stern Russian captain. "I don't really make my choices on the basis of what the audience wants, but rather on what I think is an effective way to reach an audience. What I look for is something that I have an emotional reaction to because I think that I'm equipped by an emotional reaction to something to bring that emotion to an audience. I believe that people are really reached and motivated by emotional things so that's how I choose. I do a lot of films in different genres because I want to reach different aspects of the audience and different pockets of the audience. I want to be of service to different kinds of genres, different kinds of films play different kinds of characters." The prevalent anti-nuclear theme of K-19: The Widowmaker was
also of interest to the actor, whose political activism is well known,
sadly admitting that while the Cold War is long gone, we have learnt nothing
in the past four decades. Yet trying to capture Ford the human being is, as he himself admits, tough in a 20-minute interview. After all, one suggests, audiences presumably feel that Ford the star and the man are one and the same and audiences see a conflict in both. Not Ford, however. "I don't feel the conflict. I'm just happy to have the opportunity because of the success of the films that I've been involved in to continue to do my job. It's not surprising to me that people mistake the person that I am for more experience with me which comes in this dramatic setting; it happens to everybody." Once quoted as saying that he is ‘still wrestling with the same frustrations and problems' as ever, the actor takes a simple and pragmatic perspective on his milestone birthday. "I don't look at my life at the decade mark and make any assessment. It's a day-to-day thing. I feel good this day or I don't feel good that day. I sometimes think that I'm an idiot and sometimes I think I'm the smartest guy in the room. It's constantly changing," Ford says with a slight smile. The day we spoke, he admits he was feeling more the idiot, especially
when reminded that even at age sixty, he is still voted the sexiest man
alive. "Oh that makes me so very, very happy," he adds, with
more than a tone of sarcasm. As to the future, depending on who you talk
to, there is most likely going to be a fourth Indiana Jones movie. Ford
remains noncommittal. "If there's a good script and we all agree
upon it, we'll do it, but right now there's Next up, Ford returns to the cop genre in the new Ron Shelton-directed thriller which he says will contain some comic elements. After all, as stoic and serious as he is, Ford is not without a sense of humor even though he loves to pretend otherwise. As a prime example, when reminded that even while shooting K-19, he apparently made use of someone's fart machine in between takes. Without missing a beat, Ford says: "That doesn't sound like me, does it?" No indeed, Mr Ford! | |||