Denzel Washington in The Book of Eli. Photo supplied.
For a guy who's just seen the end of the world,
Denzel Washington is surprisingly upbeat, reports Steven
Zeitchik, of the Los Angeles Times.
Actor Denzel Washington projects a studied, scowling
quietness for much of his new post-Armageddon thriller
The Book of Eli, which makes it a little jarring to
meet the actor and find him in an altogether different mode:
gregarious, charismatic, Denzel-ish.
As he talks about his new role while sipping camomile tea in
the lobby bar of a Beverly Hills hotel, he stages a charm
offensive - a unique Denzel campaign designed to melt
anything in his path.
He jokes about razzing one of the film's directors, an
atheist who's making a movie with religious themes, and
indulges an overly excited stranger who stops by the table to
gush about a house she once helped Washington's mother rent.
Charisma is a funny thing for a star, at once a natural
personality trait and an acting technique.
The director Tony Scott, who has collaborated with Washington
in five films - including the coming train-set action tale
Unstoppable - notes how Washington carefully deploys
charm in front of the camera (and, one assumes, in real
life).
"He has a keen sense of pacing, when to up the level of
charisma and when to pull it back."
Indeed, even in the space of an hour, one can see the
freewheeling Denzel; on politics, he says that "you can turn
the TV on to the right or the left and we're being bombarded
with propaganda, basically.
"It's crazy out there".
But you can also see the opaque Denzel, the man who's
accommodating but deftly evasive on topics like the
proliferation of apocalypse movies ("I didn't have to concern
myself with that") and the meaning of Eli
("Depending on what you believe, you'll take that from it").
Dressed in the Friday-afternoon casual of a (blue)
long-sleeve thermal top, (blue) trackpants, (blue) retro-Nike
running shoes and a (blue) Yankees cap, Washington doesn't
look like a man out to save mankind.
But that's pretty much what he's doing in this apocalyptic,
bible-flavoured Western - think The Road Warrior
meets The Road, with a touch of Billy Graham.
Washington's titular character wanders laconically through a
war-ravaged Earth, protecting the last extant copy of the
Bible from a sadistic warlord named Carnegie (Gary Oldman).
As the cat-and-mouse game unfolds, Washington's trademark
magnetism is almost entirely absent, replaced by a sullen
misanthropy.
"You have Denzel doing something in this movie he doesn't do
much - not talking," says co-director Allen Hughes, who with
Albert is the Detroit-born team known as the Hughes brothers
(and the non-atheist).
The making of Eli, on the other hand, saw plenty of
Washington flourishes.
First came the preparation - before shooting, he spent four
hours a day for two months with the film-makers playing every
part in the script.
And production brought his usual on-set quippiness, in which
he'd make exclamations like "Here goes St.
Elsewhere" on the odd occasion he felt scenes were
by-the-numbers. (Washington served as producer and godfather
on the film.)
But even by the eclectic standards of a man who's played a
professor (The Great Debaters), a detective
(Training Day), a soldier (Courage Under
Fire), a drug kingpin (American Gangster), a
boxer (The Hurricane) and a civil rights leader
(Malcolm X), there's a decidedly different tint to
this role.
It's not just in the dialled-down charisma but the essence of
the character who, instead of fighting for secular humanist
justice (a Denzel specialty), uses religion and scripture as
a weapon.
That the actor is a self-professed Christian gives the role a
life-imitating-art feel.
While the movie's religious message is ambiguous - is the use
of the bible as a key plot object meant to show its sanctity
or simply that it can be exploited? - Eli represents
a rare chance for Washington.
It's one of the actor's first parts in which he gets the
frequent opportunity to quote and even improvise lines from
the Bible, like the one from Corinthians that "we walk by
faith, not by sight", which he added because a pastor he
likes uses it.
In fact, the movie could have felt more religious if not for
a little studio intervention, according to Washington and
Allen Hughes.
Even as Warner Bros has publicised the movie to faith-based
media and played off religious themes in its campaign, the
studio was sufficiently concerned that they asked the
film-makers to tone down the Bible references in Gary
Whitta's script.
"I'll just be straight about it.
"I think the studio was nervous about that," Washington says.
"It sometimes got ridiculous in how you were trying to hide
it," he adds.
"Sometimes by trying to clean something up so much it becomes
about nothing."
(Alcon Entertainment, the company behind the family-values
hit The Blind Side, produced the movie and did not
interfere, Washington says.)
Family values of a different sort played into Eli.
The film wouldn't have even starred Denzel Washington if not
for the prodding of one J. D. Washington, Denzel's
25-year-old, pro football-playing son, who pushed his father
to take the part when the actor was on the fence, in part
because as Denzel says, "he's a spiritual kid". (Denzel was
so impressed with J.
D.'s skills, he brought him on as a producer on Eli and now
takes him to some of his meetings.)
Washington's presence, in turn, helped get the Hugheses - who
return with their first feature in nine years - over the
religion hump.
"Denzel was the only guy who could solve the problem," Allen
Hughes says.
"There are a lot of bible quotations, and there's a certain
nobility that comes with him that mitigates that."
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