Drama king
Leonardo DiCaprio is so prominent in the season's top films that his
fingerprints are even on "The Good Shepherd," in which he doesn't
appear.
Toward the end of the upcoming Matt Damon drama, a CIA agent
discovers that a woman he helped dispatch is pregnant. It's a small
turn, but it makes the scene - and the agent's actions - more
emotionally resonant.
Yet the "Good Shepherd" pregnancy line wasn't in Eric Roth's
screenplay, nor was it dreamed up by either Damon or director Robert De
Niro.
Instead, the plot twist was suggested by DiCaprio when he was
considering starring in the film. De Niro liked DiCaprio's idea so much
he kept it in the finished film, even though DiCaprio ended up passing
on the project.
Dramatic weight appears to come very naturally to the 32-year-old
DiCaprio. He doesn't make very many movies: While Damon, for instance,
has appeared in 10 films (including cameos) over the last three years,
DiCaprio has acted in just three. But those three - this year's "Blood
Diamond" and "The Departed" and 2004's "The Aviator" - are all
substantial works with serious ambitions.
Critical reaction to the actor's two new films has been so strong
("Blood Diamond" opens Friday ) that DiCaprio finds himself in the
enviable - if not awkward - position of potentially competing against
himself for awards recognition: Even though there may be more coins in
your pocket than there are Golden Globe voters, the small membership of
the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. has determined that DiCaprio's
performances in both "The Departed" and "Blood Diamond" will be
considered lead roles. Oscar voters may reach a similar conclusion.
"We're in the process right now of figuring it out," DiCaprio says.
"But you leave it to the public to decide what kind of performance
you gave. I'm really proud of both of these movies."
Even though the two films are filled with over-the-top action scenes,
it's their quietest moments that make DiCaprio the most proud. In "The
Departed," he mentions a favourite scene in which his agitated
undercover police officer, Billy Costigan, reveals his vulnerabilities
to a therapist named Madolyn (Vera Farmiga). He wants Valium; she wants
him to talk. So he threatens to take his medication into his own hands.
Further said, DiCaprio appears to have little trouble moving from one
director to another. "Their processes are obviously very different," he
says of Zwick and "Departed" director Martin Scorsese. "But it's hard to
talk about their differences."
After a few seconds reflecting, DiCaprio says, "Marty's not afraid to
sit there for days on end, just to get a scene right."
Zwick, he says, is equally focused - on the end product. "He didn't
want to pull any punches with this movie," DiCaprio says. "He wanted to
hit people over the head with the message." And just as De Niro was
willing to hear DiCaprio's script ideas, Zwick listened to what the
actor had to say. "I said, 'Look, I don't want this movie to have a
sugar-coated, happy ending," DiCaprio says."And Ed was very secure in
saying he was not going to make me sympathetic."
It takes courage to ask a filmmaker to make you unlikable. But that,
perhaps, is what separates DiCaprio from his peers. To be good, he's
willing to be bad.
-NYTIMES
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