Seann William Scott. Photo by Wikimedia Commons.
A decade ago the success of teen comedy film
American
Pie transformed Seann William Scott from a struggling,
chubby unknown actor from Minnesota living off rice and oatmeal
into a worldwide star beloved by adolescents and college lads.
The character he played in American Pie and two
sequels was sex-crazed Steve Stifler, a young fella with a
few screws loose in his noggin.
Scott was so great in the role the Hollywood studio system
finds it difficult to let him escape, casting him in the
post-American Pie years as variations of Stifler in
comedies Dude, Where's My Car?, Old School,
Welcome to the Jungle, Mr Woodcock,
Role Models and others.
In his new film, the buddy police comedy Cop Out
with Bruce Willis and Tracy Morgan, 33-year-old Scott again
is cast as a deviant, playing a crazed armed bandit and
burglar proficient in the rooftop-to-rooftop jumping
discipline of parkour.
Scott did not mind taking the role because he is a huge
Willis fan.
"When I first saw Bruce on set I had to stop myself from
saying `I watched you in Die Hard on TV last night.
I've seen it a million times'," Scott confides to AAP.
"I had to control myself a bit."
Scott thinks he may finally make Hollywood sit back and
realise he can do more on screen than a Stifler incarnation,
with French director Xavier Gens taking a chance and casting
him in the thriller The Fallout, set for release later this
year.
When he heard Gens, best known outside of France for the 2007
action film Hitman, was interested in casting him, Scott
demanded his agent set up a meeting.
"I met with Xavier," Scott laughs.
"I don't know how I convinced him. Maybe it was a financing
thing like 'Let's get the asshole from American Pie to get
the budget up'.
"But, The Fallout is visually stunning and I play a
very dark character.
"If it does well it will give filmmakers a chance to see me
do something different.
"I've played so many broad comedies where I play a version of
the character so often they have to see me do something that
sparks their interest."
Scott points to Eric Bana for inspiration, hoping to follow
the Australian actor's path from comedy to serious roles
including Black Hawk Down, Munich and
Troy.
"Before Eric Bana became a big star he did stand-up comedy,"
Scott says.
"I look at Eric Bana in Chopper and think 'I won't
be able to do what he did, but I could do something like
that'.
"I could never do what Christoph Waltz did in Inglourious
Basterds.
"That to me is the best performance and that's saying a lot
because I'm a cinephile. I see a lot of films."
Despite his craving for Hollywood to take him seriously,
Kevin Smith, who directed Cop Out, thinks Scott is a
comic genius. Smith knows plenty about the comedy genre,
breaking into Hollywood with the 1994 small budget comedy
Clerks and following it up with Mallrats,
Chasing Amy, Jay and Silent Bob Strikes
Back and 2008's Zack and Miri Make a Porno.
With Willis playing the straight man, NYPD detective Jimmy
Monroe, in Cop Out, Smith surrounded him with
wise-cracking guys Tracy Morgan, a former Saturday Night Live
comedian, and Scott.
In Cop Out, Monroe and his roly-poly partner Paul
Hodges (Morgan), force nutty criminal Dave (Scott) to help
them track down a stolen baseball card worth $US80,000. Dave
stole the card during an armed hold-up, but handed it over to
a New York drug lord.
Smith often abandoned the script and allowed Morgan and Scott
to riff.
"If there was ever a crack, Tracy or Seann would fill it in,"
Smith says.
"I'd tell them what to do and they'd do it, then they'd come
up with three things funnier than what I suggested."
One of the running gags in Cop Out involves Scott's
character repeating what others say, just like a parrot or
annoying younger brother.
"Seann started the repeating thing. That wasn't in the
script," Smith says.
"We were in the car and we were shooting Tracy and he said
'I'll shoot you in the face'.
"Then off camera you hear Seann say 'I'll shoot you in the
face'.
"I said 'STOP! That is hysterical. Do it again'.
"It just kept building and building and is throughout the
film."
Scott worked with Smith on Jay and Silent Bob Strike
Back so was aware how the director worked, but did not
consciously think acting like a chatty parrot would be so
funny.
"The script was already very funny for my character, but then
it just happened," Scott says.
"It started when Tracy says 'I'm going to shoot you in the
face'.
"For whatever reason I said 'I'm going to shoot you in the
face'.
"I started repeating everything they said and I became this
really annoying character.
"It's maybe not the most three dimensional character ever
played, but I think that I'm maybe one of the best actors to
play a one-dimensional character.
"I've got that nailed down."
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