Brad Pitt poses for portraits after promoting the film 'The
Tree of Life' at the Cannes Fil Festival. (AP Photo/Joel
Ryan)
You won't catch Brad Pitt doing fatherhood in a small
way, either on screen or in his real family life with Angelina
Jolie.
In Terrence Malick's "The Tree of Life," which premiered this
week at the Cannes Film Festival, Pitt plays a father of
three in a drama that deals with the biggest of questions
about our place in the cosmos.
In his home life, Pitt and Jolie are parents of six - three
biological children, three adopted. For Pitt, who was
childless into his 40s after his marriage with Jennifer
Aniston broke up, it all happened in just a few years.
"I know it seems extreme from the outside, but I've always
kind of operated this way. When I know, I know, and why mess
around?" Pitt, 47, said in an interview.
"I had a friend who had a big family when I was a kid. I just
loved the chaos around the breakfast table and the fighting
and the ribbing, and the mom making pancakes for everyone or
the dad making pancakes. And I just decided then if I was
ever going to do it - this left some indelible mark on me -
if I was ever going to do it, that's the way I was going to
do it."
The whole Pitt-Jolie clan came to Cannes. Days before they
walked the festival's red carpet for "The Tree of Life,"
Jolie was in the French Riviera resort with Jack Black to
promote their animated sequel "Kung Fu Panda 2."
Jolie and Pitt have become Cannes regulars, he with "Babel"
and "Inglourious Basterds" and she with "Changeling" and "A
Mighty Heart," on which Pitt was a producer.
Pitt had figured on being at Cannes a year ago with "The Tree
of Life," but Malick needed more time to finish his
rumination on existence, a film so expansive its intimate
family drama plays out against the backdrop of the universe's
creation and the era of dinosaurs.
"This is a great place to air this kind of movie out,
certainly," Pitt said. "It's kind of the only place, isn't
it?"
"The Tree of Life" had Cannes crowds buzzing, some adoring
it, some hating it, and nearly everyone perplexed by it. It
follows the impressionistic, nonlinear structure typical of
Malick, who made only four previous movies over a nearly
40-year career.
The press-shy director skipped the public appearances usually
expected of filmmakers at Cannes. That left Pitt, also a
producer on the film, as Malick's ambassador.
The actor charmed a roomful of reporters for the film's press
conference and thrilled fans by shaking hands and signing
autographs before walking the red carpet with co-stars Sean
Penn and Jessica Chastain.
Malick's last Cannes film was "Days of Heaven," which earned
him the festival's directing prize in 1979. It was nearly 20
years before he released another film, "The Thin Red Line."
By then, Pitt said, Malick was ill-suited to be the sort of
filmmaker-pitchman Hollywood had come to expect.
"When he began making films, there wasn't this pressure to
sell them. ... He really is a craftsman at heart. He's almost
a carpenter, and he takes a couple decades off and then comes
back, and the business has shifted," Pitt said.
"We all have to get out and get the film some notice, so we
can keep making films like this, and it's just antithetical
to who he is. He's a very humble, humble, sweet, sweet man.
He's just not made for it."
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