Advertisement
Brad Pitt is having technical difficulties.
"I normally need my kids to do this," he mutters, as he attempts to connect my iPod into his stereo. "They're so beyond me in technology, it's hard to keep up. Our seven-year-old was searching the word 'weapons' on Google the other day and ended up on some white-supremacist site. I'm sure now we're on all kinds of watch lists."
Eventually, Pitt gives up and summons an assistant, and soon enough we're listening to Townes Van Zandt. Pitt has never heard the late, great singer-songwriter before, but he says he digs it. He's been feeling out of the loop when it comes to music these days. "Last new thing I got into was the Black Keys," he says. We're at the legendary Studio Babelsberg in Potsdam, just outside Berlin, sitting in Pitt's large, heavily guarded trailer. Metropolis, Nosferatu and The Blue Angel were all shot here, along with, more recently, Tom Cruise's World War II drama, Valkyrie. Pitt has been here since September to film Inglourious Basterds, Quentin Tarantino's own WWII epic, years in the making and loosely based on a Seventies grindhouse knockoff of The Dirty Dozen. In it, Pitt plays a lieutenant from Tennessee who, according to a leaked version of the script, leads a black-ops unit assigned to terrorize the enemy by scalping Nazis. Gleefully, Pitt snatches a prop from the coffee table and shows it to me. It's an ornate invitation to a movie screening from "Der Minister Propaganda — Dr. Joseph Goebbels." "All the big guys show up in this movie," he says with a grin.
Pitt, who is 44, has grown a thin mustache for his role, and his hair has been styled in a period frontal swoop. He's wearing a wide gray scarf over a gray zip-up sweater and rough-looking khaki Army pants. For the duration of the shoot, set to wrap sometime in January, Pitt and his family — Angelina Jolie, his partner of three years, and their six children — have rented a massive compound in nearby Wannsee. (It's in the same upscale neighborhood where, in a villa in 1942, senior Nazi officials came up with the plan for the Final Solution.) The property is surrounded by a wall and has three large houses, its own helicopter-landing pad and, when I visit, at least six guards. Pitt also owns a 6,500-square-foot apartment in central Berlin; a longtime architecture enthusiast (and apprentice), he's been visiting the city for years, primarily to work with the avant-garde architecture firm Graft. Their current project together, in which Pitt will be a design consultant, is a planned green, sustainable hotel in Dubai.
Despite the rarefied level of celebrity he's achieved, Pitt, as an actor, has starred in surprisingly few massive hits. There's the Ocean's Eleven series, and Mr. & Mrs. Smith, and then you probably have to go all the way back to Se7en, his first film with director David Fincher, in 1995. In the late Nineties, beginning with The Devil's Own and ending with the abysmally reviewed Meet Joe Black, Pitt admits this had to do with poor choices. "I got lost in the wilderness of fame a bit," he says. "There are all of these opportunities you're supposed to be taking. And I got really discombobulated." More often, though, his instinct has very deliberately pulled him in the direction of eccentric, less commercial roles, from small, scene-stealing turns in 12 Monkeys and Snatch to his quieter work in more recent films like Babel and last year's brooding, wildly underrated Western The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford. His latest film, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, is his third collaboration with Fincher, after Se7en and Fight Club. Based on a deeply weird short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Benjamin Button is a fable about mortality in which the title character, played by Pitt, is born old and ages backward. The script, by Eric Roth (Forrest Gump), has little of the original story's black humor, and fans of the earlier Pitt-Fincher collaborations will likely find the film sentimental. But Oscar voters will almost certainly disagree. There's already talk of a Best Actor nomination for Pitt, who turns in a subtle, impressive performance, and the visual effects are something to behold.
Advertisement
In person, Pitt is warm and funny, but is also, at least while he's being interviewed, an extremely fidgety guy. He paces. He musses his hair. He tears little pieces of dried apricot into smaller pieces before popping them into his mouth. He rubs his knee so intensely it brings to mind Lennie from Of Mice and Men petting a rabbit. All of this might have to do with the fact that, despite his repeatedly proven talents as an actor, Pitt remains, for a large number of people, a creature primarily of tabloid fascination. Did he cheat on his ex-wife with his current partner? Will they have another biological child? What war-ravaged destination might they visit next? Does the mustache make him look hot or porn-y? (I can only speak to the final question, and the answer is clearly porn-y.) The day before my first interview with Pitt, even The New York Times had figured out a way to put Jolie's picture on the front page: by running a story about how masterfully she manipulates the press.
Our interview takes place over two days, first on the set and then at Pitt's compound in Wannsee, in a nondescript house where some of his security guys live. Pitt says he's been enjoying Berlin. Tarantino stages a weekly movie night, and the other night, Pitt took his oldest son, Maddox, to see The Good, the Bad and the Ugly. Maddox loved it. "I have this fantasy of my older days, painting or sculpting or making things," Pitt says. "I have this fantasy of a bike trip to Chile. I have this fantasy of flying into Morocco. But right now, more and more, it's about getting the work done and getting home to family. I have an adventure every morning, getting up."
Benjamin Button is your third film with
Fincher. Going back to Fight Club, though, I found a quote
where he talks about how you're actually sort of similar to your
character, Tyler Durden.
In that I don't bathe?
He didn't mention that specifically. He said, "It's
probably a character closer to Brad in real life than most people
would be comfortable knowing."
[Pitt laughs]
"There is a childlike sense of anarchy....He is kind of
a shit-stirrer and one of those people who is 'Huh? Is that the
current thinking? I don't really buy that.'"
Well, that probably comes from growing up in a religious community.
I just found it so stifling, my religion. I know it's very
comforting for other people.
Did you go to church every Sunday?
Yeah. And it was too much of what you shouldn't be doing instead of
what you could be doing. I get enraged when people start telling
other people how to live their lives. It drives me mental. This
Prop. 8 thing just drives me mental.
Where were you on election night?
Chicago. I went down to Grant Park, because I was doing
Oprah the next day. I walked home from the park to the
hotel, which was a half-hour walk. And I could walk freely —
no one was interested in me at that point. People were weeping and
hugging. The sense of elation in the streets — it was great.
That was such a turnaround for us. We captured the original
definition of America again.
Do you think Fight Club could have been made
after September 11th?
No. Certainly not that ending. We debated it then. There's a line
we stuck in, about the buildings being evacuated.
Some critics just didn't get that film.
Did you see the DVD that Fincher put out? He put all the negative
reviews in the booklet. Some London critic said, "Not only is it
anti-capitalistic, but it's anti-society and anti-God." We were
like, "We didn't realize it was that good!"
Benjamin Button and Fight Club
actually deal with similar themes: having a finite amount of time
in life, and what we should do with it. But they come to such
radically different conclusions. In Fight Club, the
response to mortality is nihilism, anarchy —
[Laughs] That was a Nineties conclusion. Now we have an
Aughts conclusion. I actually never thought of what you just said.
But it's probably true.
It's just, Benjamin Button feels very positive,
but you could easily come away from that story feeling very
bleak.
Yeah, I think it's open to . . . it's your choice. I find
Benjamin is about those universal things we all share
— that 95 percent that makes us all the same, wherever we are
in the world. Our loves, our hopes, but also the loss that we all
walk around with and hide very well, and the ultimate notion that
we're all expendable. To me, it's a counterstatement to this
divisive period we've been in, where we focused on the two, three,
four, five percent of ways in which we're different.
Advertisement
Had you read Fitzgerald's short story?
No, I still haven't read it. I was told it had nothing to do with
the movie, really. I was moving full-steam on Eric's version, which
he based on that saying "Youth is wasted on the young."
Were you concerned at all about the technical side of
things? Other than Interview With the Vampire, I can't
think of many movies where you even had to wear serious
makeup.
Man, I swore I would never do prosthetics. I've done some glue-on
beards, and they're not fun. Then Fincher came with this one and I
said, "I'm in." One of his other great talents is subverting and
perverting whatever existing technology there is to his own evil
devices. So there was never a question, for me, about whether it
would work. He did something very smart. He said, "We're not going
to develop new technology. We're going to take the technology
that's there for gaming and for special-effects, blow-up-the-world
movies, and use that technology for small details — pupils
dilating, aging." And the makeup guys were so good; wearing this
stuff all day was surprisingly comfortable. [Pause] But,
no, I won't do it again.
Did making this movie make you think about your own
mortality?
Well, yeah. And I'm scared to death of it. But, you know, it made
me think of things like... [Pause] Angie and I do not
fight anymore. What occurred to me on this film, and also with the
passing of her mother, is that there's going to come a time when
I'm not going to get to be with this person anymore. I'm not going
to get to be with my children anymore. Or friends, people I love
and respect. And so, if we have a flare-up, it evaporates now.
Would that have been different two years
ago?
Well, I think it must have been heading this way. But something
crystallized for me. I don't want to waste time being angry at
someone I love much more than, than... not. And again, there's
going to be a time. This thing is fragile, and there's a ticking
clock on it, and whether it be death or what, there's just going to
come that time. So this movie changed that for me.
Aside from Tyler Durden, the other character everyone
said was basically you, at least when the film came out, was your
character in Thelma & Louise, your first big role,
where you played this sort of lovable rogue.
I don't know what a lovable rogue is. [Laughs, then long
pause] I don't know how to answer that. I'll just say that,
when I first read the part, I knew I could whip it. So I understood
the character, whatever that means. And that film was certainly the
break you're always looking for.
You'd been out in Hollywood for a while at that point.
Did you have moments of losing hope as an actor?
I'm sure I did. I got this agent, where they agreed to try me out
in this thing called a side pocket. That means they're not signing
you to anything. They're going to try it out for a month or two and
see if it pays off. It was a fairly reputable agency, but they
wanted me to do sitcoms. But I kept pushing: "Please send me out on
some movies." They sent me out for two. One was The
Accused. Then I called up. The agent wouldn't get on the phone
with me, but the assistant did. I said, "How did it go?" She said,
"Have you ever thought about acting classes?"
Oh, man.
It was the best thing I heard, though, because it put me in a
tailspin for about a half hour. Then it made me more determined to
figure out what I had to learn.
Do you know what's become of that
assistant?
[Laughs] Yes! Doing quite well, actually.
Did you see Pineapple Express?
Yeah. Laughed my ass off.
James Franco said he was inspired by your small role as
Floyd the stoner in True Romance.
For that one, I did a lot of studying. Everyone's met a Floyd. Or
been a Floyd. It's either the roommate you were trying to get rid
of, or you were that roommate.
But originally, Floyd wasn't going to be a
stoner.
No. I called up [director] Tony Scott a couple of days before,
because I couldn't figure out why the character talked so much and
gave everyone up. I said, "Can he never get off the couch?" "OK."
"Can he be a stoner?" "Yeah." And that was it.
Did the idea come to you when you were
high?
[Laughs] Of course not! It was in acting class, doing a
character breakdown. Tony's the one who came up with the honey-bear
bong. That was a great touch — not mine. They are creative,
though, stoners. But only when it comes to smoking — one
purpose. [Assuming hoarse stoner voice, looks around
trailer] "We could turn this Winnebago into a bong."
One of your next big films was Interview With the
Vampire, which, like Benjamin Button, was shot in
part in New Orleans.
Yeah, that was my first time in New Orleans. Vampire was a
tough shoot. I finished Legends of the Fall and went
straight into that. First of all, the whole thing was in the dark.
In New Orleans, we shot for three months in the dark — we
shot all nights. There's an opening scene in the movie that's
daylight, and that's it. The whole movie is in the dark. And it
really started to mess with my psyche.
Advertisement
Did you start feeling like a vampire?
No, but it just got to me, man. And that movie, I was disappointed
with it. At least for my character. Because in the book, it was a
guy trying to figure out who he was — if he's a god or if
he's of the devil. The film focused more on the sensational antics
of Lestat, which were done really well, but my character ended up
getting dragged place to place and set up for the sensational
moments. And it just became a little bit more whiny than a real
search. That frustrated me.
I read an interview, written around that time, where you
talk about working with Tom Cruise and the strangeness of this
person who has a whole machine around him. I wonder if, where your
career has taken you now, you feel like you've
shifted—
Into the machine? Well, I certainly have a bit of a machine. I
don't know how to compare it. He's really good at the business,
man. One of the best I've ever seen.
Back then, did you envision yourself ever reaching that
level of fame?
There's no way to prepare for fame, or think about it. It's a
strange beast, and it takes a lot of negotiation. I learned some
things, watching Tom, about what you need to protect yourself from.
But he issues control over the whole process. And that's not my
way. Again, for better or for worse. [Pause] I hope
— I think my method's less machine. But I don't know.
[Pause] Tom and I are friends, by the way, and we have a
good laugh when our paths cross.
I wanted to ask you about the story in The New York
Times recently about Angelina.
What was it about?
Oh, you didn't see it? Really?
Dude... we are... anyway. Go ahead.
The gist of the story is how good she is at controlling
the press, and the coverage of your family. And it covers,
specifically, a deal she supposedly struck with People
magazine, to sell them exclusive photos of you guys and the twins
in exchange for positive coverage.
That reporter was trying to do this story three months ago. It
sounded to me like the story made Angie out to be manipulative in
some way. And he's totally missing the point. She is savvy. But one
of the things I'm most proud of is that not only did these guys who
follow us and make our lives miserable and get in my kids' faces
and follow my parents in their hometown, not only did they not get
the money, but it went to people who really need it.
[People and Hello! paid $14 million for the
photographs, which Pitt and Jolie donated to charity.] It doesn't
sound like this guy understands that when it came to the birth of
our children, a huge bounty was placed on their heads. And people
were going to go to incredible lengths to get it.
So you know it's inevitable.
It's gonna happen. One guy bought out a hospital room above us, in
France, and was trying to poke through the ceiling. That's illegal,
of course, but he paid. There was so much money to be made,
life-changing money, that people were doing terrible things.
Another guy got on the roof because he thought we were going to do
a helicopter landing. Instead, we did such a low-fi exit. A van
pulled up, we walked outside in the middle of the night, at three
in the morning, and that was it.
We were gone.
Did it give you any pause, though, to cooperate with the
magazines who are funding these guys?
When I say we've cut ourselves off from all of that, we've really
cut ourselves off. We don't have that stuff in the house. We don't
read it. I just find it toxic and unhealthy. But we can ask around
and find out which magazines have been really trashy with us. So we
still have our self-respect, and we're not going to support this
entity that's been sensationalistic and nasty. In our mind,
People magazine does more things about the positive spirit
of people, so that's how we came to our decision.
Honestly, I didn't feel like the Times story
was a slam. It talked about how Angelina doesn't use a publicist,
just a manager, and handles everything herself.
She's completely original in that decision, that's true. But it
wasn't an accurate report. I get defensive. [They're] talking about
not only the woman I love, but one of the people on this planet who
I have the greatest respect for. I think she's as honorable as
anyone I've ever met.
For you, as someone who is deeply interested in
photography and takes photos yourself, does staging a cover like
that, just on an aesthetic level, bother you?
It wasn't "staged." We got a Getty war photographer who does
serious exposés, no fashion. He came in our room and we just
ripped off the shots in 20, 30 minutes. We had no setup, no
nothing. And that was really important to us. So, yeah, it's a
gross feeling in the sense of "Dear God, we're dealing pictures of
our family." But the harsh reality is that it's inevitable, that
those pictures are going to get out there. And not only that, but
these people are going to be chasing us. So we can kill that bounty
and kill all the nonsense that's going on. I can't begin to make
someone understand, unless they've been in the car with us, and can
see the 12 cars and seven motorbikes we're being chased by. You're
never going to understand. There's no way to fully explain it. I
ran into a lady in L.A., when we were trick-or-treating. I had my
daughter, and she said, "Every time I see her picture, you're
always carrying her — you need to put her down!" I said,
"Every time you see me is in the magazines, and I'm being chased by
20 people, so you really don't know what you're talking about!"
Advertisement
So you guys spend most of your time in the South of
France these days?
We're very nomadic. But we certainly have made a base there.
Is that where you like to be the best?
Well, we get run out of every major city. It's what I've been
bitching about. These photographers are chasing the kids and
calling their names. And the kids don't know what to make of that
stuff. In France, they're much cooler. Also, we found a spot that's
big enough. So if they get to you, it's illegal.
And I presume you like the French
lifestyle?
They do it well. So do the Italians and the Spanish. I mean, we're
still waiting on satellite television.
You can't rush these things in that part of
Europe.
I look out our window in France and I see the gardener, and he's
literally doing this. [Pitt stands up, walks over to a vase of
flowers and, excruciatingly slowly, plucks one flower at a time,
using one of his hands to mime gardening shears] And these are
grounds the size of Beverly Hills in my mind! But it's nice, and
exciting for us, because we both fly, and we like being able to fly
over to Italy or Spain or Morocco.
She flies too?
She got me into it. She's definitely more experienced. Yeah, she's
badass.
Who's the more cautious pilot?
We just have different styles.
How would you classify hers?
Well, I like the details. [Pause] And she likes getting
there.
When you're working, do you guys give each other
feedback on performances?
I guess at times, we'll talk about set climates — more about
funny things that happen than anything.
So not technical actor-y things?
I think we're both pretty sure of what we're after. We'll run lines
occasionally. I'm going to have to have her help me with lines
tonight, because I want to make sure I'm crisp. Quentin's lines are
like the Coens'. There's no fat, and there's a rhythm to it. You
don't want to wander. Whereas with other ones, you're more free to
drift a bit.
Back to your earlier films... after Vampire,
you were nominated for a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for your role
as a mental patient in 12 Monkeys.
We shot that film in Philadelphia. I went out there two weeks early
and just stayed in my apartment, until I was bouncing off the
walls, just to get that manic energy.
So you barely left the apartment that whole
time?
I didn't leave. I was a shut-in.
No human contact?
No. Windows drawn. Just shut in. I couldn't do that now. I have
shortcuts now, where I can find characters much easier. But that
role, especially, was territory I'd never been close to.
Snatch was another great small role for
you.
I love Snatch. One of my all-time favorites.
How did you prepare for that role? Did you meet any
actual Irish pikeys?
No, but I met some English gypsies. They all went by Billy Joel,
because they didn't want you to know their real names. But the day
before we started shooting, I still didn't have the accent. It
sounded too technical. So I called [director] Guy [Ritchie] and
said, "You should play this part yourself. You're a fighter, you
know the accent. I'm going to fuck up your movie." He just laughed.
But I was really sweating it. And it was about 10:00 that night,
and I was in a bit of a panic. I'm supposed to be on set at seven
in the morning. I was staying in this flat in North London, and I
just started walking the streets. The thing that kept sticking in
my head was, people kept telling me, "You can never understand what
the fuck they're saying." So I took a cue from Benicio [Del Toro],
from Usual Suspects, and started blabbing to myself. I
must have looked like a crazy person. And it just rolled out. I got
back and called Guy and said, "Do you care if your dialogue is
intelligible?" He didn't care at all. It was a half-court toss-up
with three seconds on the clock.
How about Ocean's Eleven, and the two sequels?
Did you know George Clooney before making those
films?
No, we'd never met before.
You guys have such an easy rapport.
I think at our first meeting, I said, "I should play Danny." He
said, "OK, you play Danny." I said, "Shut up, you dick."
Advertisement
It seems to be playing with the idea of how actors, or
people in show business, period, are con artists, in a way —
always getting away with something.
I'm not going to argue that. Fair enough. And we certainly were
getting away with something on that one.
You and Clooney both became famous when you were
slightly older.
He's got some smelly-ass Eighties shit. That's a lexicon you need
to peruse. That is some funny-ass shit. But, yeah, now it's instant
stardom. Some young guys are doing some great stuff. But they're
calling their career shots themselves, and they see the dead
ends.
You and Clooney also co-starred in the most recent Coen
brothers movie, Burn After Reading, where you play Chad
Feldheimer, a dopey personal trainer who's always wearing gym
shorts.
Angie was really intrigued by Chad. She hasn't seen it yet. But she
saw me in the gym gear and said, "This is the first time I can
honestly say I'm not attracted to you whatsoever." She brings him
up a lot. She doesn't see a lot of movies, and she keeps bringing
this one up. She's really curious about Chad Feldheimer.
Have you been keeping it from her?
No, just scheduling and logistics and six kids. We just got the DVD
screener, so I'm sure she'll be seeing it soon.
Do you have a favorite film of hers?
Yeah, Mr. & Mrs. Smith.
Can you watch that and have happy
memories?
No, we've never seen it. I just mean because, you know... six kids.
Because I fell in love.
OK, one last film: Babel.
That, to me, was all about the very last moment, when he's on the
phone with his kids. You know, [Sean] Penn passed on this role, and
he's given me shit about it since. We shot probably six weeks on
that one, and five weeks of that shoot is literally that 24-hour
period of total anxiety. "Is she going to make it? Is she not? Will
she get help?" Panic. That's not fun to maintain for five weeks. So
Penn stuck me with that. But it was all about that ending for
me.
Did you have kids at that point?
Angie and I were together. It was forming.... But, yeah. When my
character hears his kid's voice, it's the realization that he
almost lost everything. That was the whole movie for my
character.
Were you nervous about fatherhood?
You'd be surprised at how automatic things are, how things are
already intuitive, things that you have in yourself. At times, you
hear yourself sounding like an idiot, and you know you're not
helping them whatsoever. But there are other times when you really
surprise yourself.
Going from no kids to six kids in a relatively short
amount of time seems so daunting.
It seems extreme. But it felt like a long time coming, and it's
felt completely organic. Any time a new child comes in, it's
discombobulating for a brief period, and then it settles in.
Do you feel like you've shifted into a new phase of
life?
Of course. I wouldn't say more "adult." You still get to be as
silly as you want — you're probably more silly. Man, they
just zap your coolness. There's a saying our friend from Liverpool
uses: "Dad's pants." It means all things dorky. You just become
Dad's pants.
And you're OK with that?
There's actually a joy in it.
[From Issue 1068-69 — December 25, 2008 - January 8, 2009]
Related Stories:
- More from Issue 1068-69
- Photo Gallery: A History of Heartthrobs in Rolling Stone
- Cover Story: Slippin' around on the road with Brad Pitt
- Cover Story: The Unbearable Bradness of Being
- Top Dog Brad Pitt
- Hot Actor: Brad Pitt