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by Paul Fischer
At the conclusion of the new Will
Smith movie I, Robot,
a fellow audience
member was heard to remark: 'That Will Smith is such a personable young
actor'. The next day, the casually attired movie star says that he is
more
than comfortable with that particular persona. "You know what? People
are
my energy. I am one of those kinds of guys where I just can't function
if
somebody is uncomfortable in the room, or if somebody is pissed off.
It is
oppressive to me, so it is always important for me to keep the energy
good,
keep it going and keep it happy, if only for selfish reasons. But also,
people enjoy being able to laugh and feeling comfortable, so it is important
to me to keep that energy alive." Smith has always been press-friendly.
His
loud, boisterous voice booms with a genuine and consistent energy. Always
affable, nothing seems to faze the actor, even when faced with a recent
tabloid tale of his so-called $1.8m trailer. Smith eyes the splashy story
and begins to laugh. "You are starting with that? That is terrible
and a
million dollars exaggerated," Will insists, continuing to laugh
loudly. "People couldn't
possible imagine that somebody could make something up like that as we
see
stuff all the time - especially in New York. When you are there, you
read
stuff in the paper all the time." He then cites a recent example
of
fictionalized journalism, when he was supposedly spotted at a recent
Prince
concert, "and I couldn't get in because I wanted my crew in and
the tickets
were $100 a piece, so I said 'I am not payin' to see this concert,' and
I
left. The truth was, I was in bed asleep when it supposedly happened.
People just could not possibly imagine that they made up everything." Yet, for the former TV star-turned movie megastar, it is all part and
parcel
of fame, yet Smith's attitude to the tabloid media, is "you just
gotta
ignore it."
These days, however, Smith is having a blast. At 35, he is still able
to
blow things up and shoot things down, such as a bunch of robots, both
real
and imagined, in this loose adaptation of Isaac Asimov's collection of
stories, I, Robot. No stranger to doing battle with sci-fi creatures
from
the Men in Black franchise, Smith says that on I, Robot,
the process of dealing with a lot of CGI robots was simpler than in his
MIB days. "The
process was somewhat easier because technology has grown to the point
where
now they can actually use a person. So they had the guys in green suits,
which meant being able to play the scene with a person actually gives
a real
organic texture to it versus looking at a tennis ball." Smith had
been
attached to I, Robot, ever since director Alex Proyas was
able to
get this pet project off the ground. The actor said his attraction to
the
film had less to do with feeling an affinity for his anti-technology
character, futuristic cop Del Spooner, but to the "concept that
Alex wanted
to create, a small art film filled
in the wrappings
of a summer blockbuster."
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Smith sees this I, Robot as a part
action blockbuster and part character study, referring to one pivotal
moment, a lengthy interrogation scene between Smith's Spooner and Sonny,
a robot accused of murder. "That scene is a six minute scene and
Alex just takes his time with it. You just wouldn't normally take that
kind of time in a summer blockbuster, to have a movie where your hero
cries about a little girl being killed by a robot. I loved the challenge
of being able to make a movie with that kind of texture and depth and
be able to put it out in July."
Smith says that Spooner is the antithesis
of the actor. "This was the first time I have ever played a character
that was that troubled. This is a dude that walks around every day unhappy,
which is not me at all, because I am tickled pink," he laughs. "Tickled
pink" may be the perfection description of Will Smith. After all,
he is on top of Hollywood's A-list, and has a successful marriage to
actress Jada Pinkett. Smith says that balancing family and career
has always been his priority. "First and foremost, just like in
my house when I was growing up, I knew that my mother was the centre,
in that mommy has to be taken care of first and if mommy is straight,
then everybody else will be straight. So at home, I am very clear that
Jada's physical, mental, spiritual health and comfort come first and
foremost, and then everything else comes from the garden. So for me it
is very important to keep my garden watered, and healthy," adds
Smith, trying hard to maintain a straight face. "Everything else
will come from there."
As for his nude scene in I, Robot, Smith says that Jada doesn't mind
if women [and some men], manage to gasp and cheer at the sight of his on-screen
pectorals. "Let me tell you, Jada loves that. She says all the time that
'no woman wants a man that another woman don't want.' So she is very comfortable." Even
though the couple is producing a TV sitcom, Smith confesses that they rarely
watch TV at all any more. Instead, he laughs, "we just have lots of sex."
While it is his acting that pays the bills, Will still loves making music. "I
have an album coming for Christmas, which I haven't compiled yet, but I have
about 40 songs so far. The technology of making music today is ridiculous.
I just programmed the music, laid the vocals, mixed the record and burned a
CD on my laptop in my hotel room. I am like 'Wow!' that it has come to a point
with technology that I was mixing a song with my headphones on the plane flying
back here." Smith says that he sees parallels between his up-and-coming
album and I, Robot. "It is the same type of blockbuster zone, but
slightly more mature, and more elevated intellectually. That is sort of where
my music is now, but still fun."
If the music takes off,
Smith may give up the acting -- at least, a certain type of movie. "I
feel like I have got five or six more years of action movies and blowing
stuff up. I probably want to hurry up and get those while I can still
take my shirt off in a movie," he adds smilingly. After that,
he says there is a vanity project he is yearning to do. "When
we were in Mozambique shooting Ali, I was really taken by the
similarities in the music, which was so drastically different, but
there is a real basis that connects to rhythm and movement. So for
probably about 20 years I have dreamed about doing an album maybe entitled
'The World According To Hip Hop' that would be an exploration of world
music through the eyes of hip hop producers. I just haven't has the
chance to have the 7 or 8 months free to be able to travel to different
places and record."
Meanwhile, Will has some
other movies coming out, including the new comedy The Last First
Kiss and the animated comedy Shark's Tale. But there is
no Men in Black 3 in the immediate future. "It just has
to be right. I feel like I, Robot really raises the bar for
me for that genre, so there has to be those other levels."
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