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by
Paul Fischer
Matt Damon may be one of Hollywood's
leading men, but he remains equally selective about
the work he chooses. Currently treading the boards in London Damon delivers a
complex performance in the cerebral thriller The Bourne Identity, as a
man trying to figure out his identity while being hunted by the CIA. Damon needed
to take that last puff of his cigarette before settling in for our interview in
his Beverly Hills hotel. Generally health-conscious, smoking remains one of Damons
rare vices, he confesses, despite trying to give up two years ago. "I cant
do it." The actor wont even try therapy. "I think it takes almost
all of your attention and energy to do it when you smoke as much as I do, so if
I were to focus my attention and energy to it, I could quit smoking, but my attentions
and energies are now more concerned with trying to lose 40 pounds or this or that.
I want to quit smoking so I know I will at some point, its just a question
of when I can marshal my internal forces to kind of fight that battle."
Damon still looks in great shape, the smoking notwithstanding,
and on screen in his first foray into the cinematic world of action hero as an
amnesiac CIA operative in The Bourne Identity. Preparing for the physicality
of the film, Damon trained in a form of martial arts called Caulie for five months.
"Doug [Liman, director] said that he wanted a character that could walk as
a boxer and kind of look at other people, the same way boxers look at people.
I guess he meant trying to do acting without too much weight put on
box
for the same amount of time for a couple hours a day." Damon also gets to
do some mean shooting in the film, so the conscientious star "got all this
expensive firearms training."
The Bourne Identity takes the spy genre and gives it an added depth, refuting
the notion that this some James Bond caper movie. "I think its very
different from that style of movie. Doug wanted to make it feel more like a European
movie stylistically and a little more real than the Bond movies. Those are fun
because theyre so outrageous and hes constantly topping himself whereas
in this, Doug really wanted the action to drive the story and never be gratuitous,."
Asked if, like Bond, Damon would reprise the Bourne character for a sequel or
two, the actor doesnt rule it out. "Im not contractually obligated
to, but if Tony wrote another great script then yeah, sure. I really liked everybody
who worked on the movie. We worked really hard on it, we were in all these interesting
places and had all these adventures together. Id do it again."
As exhausting as it might have been shooting The Bourne Identity, it doesnt
compare to treading the boards, which he is currently completing in London with
Casey Affleck. "Doing it has been great. The routine of it is very different
than doing a film because we know exactly what we need to do every day. We show
up for work for four hours a night, or a longer day if were doing a matinee,
and the routine of it is something that I wasnt used to at all. You go to
a movie set and you might have a gut-wrenching scene or you might be sitting doing
a crossword puzzle all day. But that fear, that element of danger in doing live
theatre is great because different things happen every night. Its a nice
feeling." Hed love to see his friend Gwyneth Paltrow on stage, but
"our schedules are about the same so its tough." As for how the
British media has been treating this Hollywood import, Damon neither knows or
cares. "Ill read the reviews after were done and then I might
consider slashing my wrists", he says laughingly.
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