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Chris Cooper is one of those actors
who, despite co-starring roles in dozens
of films, may trigger only a vague mental
image. From the homophobic colonel in
“American Beauty” to the villainous CIA
boss in “The Bourne Identity,” Cooper has
the ability to slip quietly and completely
into a role. This ability is prominently
showcased in independent director Ira
Sachs’ new film, “Married Life,” in which
he plays Harry Allen, a gentle and romantic
man who decides that the only way to
leave his wife without breaking her heart
is to murder her.
“Cooper can disappear into a role and
become the role, but there is also a history
of identification that people have with
him which also makes him a star, makes
him pop,” Sachs said in an interview
with The Crimson, at which Cooper was
also present. Cooper remained reserved
throughout the interview, belying his status
as one of the best character-actors in
Hollywood.
In fact, Sachs believes that Cooper’s
involvement is the primary reason for the
success of “Married Life.” “We built the
cast around Chris,” Sachs said. “He is the
heart of the film. People have empathy for
him as an actor...He brings emotions to a
really heightened place...and that combination
is something that really drives the
movie.”
Cooper himself believes that his talent
as an actor comes from focusing on the
motivations that are implicit in each defining
moment of his character. “I’m trying
to make a distinction between focused
acting and what I call casual acting, and
there is a lot of casual acting in American
films today,” he said.
Cooper has often portrayed dark
characters, and while Harry Allen is not
outwardly sinister, Cooper’s performance
illuminates the rationale behind his violent
choices. “It’s not qualities I liked in
the man,” Cooper said, “it’s qualities I understood,
where I found a parallel in his
behavior, in his reactions, in his relationship.”
“Married Life,” which is based on the
John Bingham novel “Five Roundabouts
to Heaven,” takes place in 1949, but the
story itself is remarkably relevant to the
present day. “We wanted to make a contemporary
story set in the 1940s,” Sachs
said. “The 40s are kind of today, really, in
a lot of ways. These characters could be
our parents, they could be us, they could
be anyone.”
The film also defies genre classification,
at times aspiring to noirish suspense
while also achieving a darkly comedic undertone.
It’s pleasantly surprising that the
movie’s performances are so emotionally
engaging, given the somewhat erratic tone.
“The form is artificial and comic, but the
acting is really modern,” Sachs said.
Cooper was also pleased at Sachs’ decision
to portray the character of Harry
realistically. “In the beginning we were
given the idea to give this a lighter feel
than where we could have gone, but at
the same time to lay the moments with a
sense of reality,” he said.
Also critical to Cooper’s performance
were the lengthy discussions he and the
director had before filming began. “This
was one of those rare opportunities where
Ira and I had a chance to sit down and go
line-by-line,” he said. “It’s just been instilled
in me to do my homework...I don’t
care if it’s a studio or low-budget, time
becomes money. I don’t want to waste 20
minutes talking about, ‘Well, I have this
problem with this scene here so let’s talk
about it.’”
These discussions were especially important
for the film’s moments of extended
silence, in which the actor must convey
the intended meaning without the benefit
of dialogue. “We talked a bunch about silence,”
Sachs said. “I tried to have as little
verbalized as possible in terms of what a
character or actor is deciding. Once you
come to a point where you actually define
how someone feels about something, it
becomes less complicated, or interesting,
or rich. In a way you want to keep a level
of abstraction.”
Though Cooper has bounced back
and forth between the worlds of independent
and studio filmmaking, he does not
consciously try to differentiate between
the two. “If you’ve got the right people behind
the camera and the right people in
front of the camera, that’s where my head
is, and it doesn’t make any difference,”
Cooper said.
Despite the casting of several A-list
actors, Sachs said that the making of
“Married Life” did not feel any different
from his earlier work. “What was fulfilling
about it was it felt like making my first
short film,” Sachs said.
Above all, Sachs hopes that he and
Cooper have created an entertaining film
with a deeper message. “I think of this
film more as a comedy of remarriage than
a suspense film,” he said. “That’s actually
what’s at the heart of the movie, and
hopefully that’s what the audience can
take with them...It’s not telling you a lesson,
but there is something underneath
which makes it worth your time.”
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