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September 2004
Spotlight on Matthew Broderick:
Matthew Broderick? . . . Broderick? . . . Broderick?
Join us as we chat with Matthew Broderick about his new film, The Last Shot, his early stage career, and how New York has changed since 9/11.
By Jeff Wilser, The Cinema Source
In the year 2030, if Matthew Broderick decides to make a sequel to Ferris Bueller,
he’ll still have the boyish looks to pull it off. The man doesn’t age.
And the camera doesn’t lie: he looks is as young in person as he does
on screen. In his interview with TheCinemaSource, he wears a very adult-like tweed suit, (tweed!),
but even with the grandpa-looking getup, he could still be mistaken for
an NYU student (okay, maybe a grad student), all dressed up for a job
interview.
When asked to reveal the secrets to his youngish looks,
he seems modestly—and genuinely—surprised by the question: “I don’t
know. I don’t do anything. I don’t have any creams or stuff like that.
I don’t sleep in one of those tanks,” he smiles, shrugging, “but I
would, if I had one. Genetics, I guess.”
In The Last Shot, Broderick plays Steven
Schats, a naïve, wide-eyed, wannabee screenwriter who’s still stuck
collecting tickets at a movie theater. After a lifetime of pitching his
script and scooping popcorn, he finally gets his big chance to make his
movie—an awful-sounding tearjerker about a dying woman’s lonely trip
through the Grand Canyon. Little does Steven know that his generous
producer (Alec Baldwin) is actually an undercover FBI agent, pretending to make a movie so that he can entrap the mob.
The dry comedy is often dark and certainly satirical,
but credit Broderick—and his disarming optimism—for lending it
surprising warmth. Broderick says of his character, “He’s too hopeful.
Obstacles that should stop him don’t. He just watches his movie get
butchered by what he thinks is the studio, but is actually the FBI.”
On why he signed up for the role: “I read the script and
it sort of stuck with me. I thought it was funny and I thought it
seemed sort of true, in a very heightened way, and then I met the
director [Jeff Nathanson] and I liked him. Then Alec came on
board and it just got more and more real. Tony Shalhoub, Calista
Flockhart, the cast helped a lot. I laughed when I read the script and
that was how it happened.”
In the film, his character wears a very
un-Broderick-like beard. When ribbed about the scruffiness, he tells us
that, “Everyone thought it looked good for the character. It looked
film-studentish. We based the look on early Spielberg—this takes place
in the middle 80’s—and we thought that’s what a director wannabee would
want to look like.”
Given his long trail of success, which spans 39 films
and counting, it’s hard to believe that Broderick can identify with the
struggles of a character like Steven Schats. “When I was struggling, I
was just very worried I would never get any work. I’m reading for a
SummerStock production for House of Blue Leaves and I’m not even allowed to finish the audition. I remember that day as a low. It’s funny now. It just wasn’t funny then.”
Broderick lives in downtown New York with wife Sarah Jessica Parker.
Like all New Yorkers, he thinks about how the city has changed since
9/11: “I don’t think the city will ever be the same, but it’s amazing
how resilient people are. The park along the river is almost finished
now and it’s really beautiful. I use the bike path that goes through
the park; I take my son there. I love it. I always have. But every now
and then it occurs to me that we’re all happily biking past a huge pit
where 3,000 people died—I mean, it’s absolutely horrible. But still
people roller-blade along. That’s the world, in New York or anywhere.
And thank God.”
He pauses, then waits patiently as someone asks if he was in the city
on 9/11. Not put off by the question, he says, “Yeah. I was home. I
lived on Prince Street, so that was fairly close. I woke up and after
that first one hit, I stepped outside my door and we watched. It was
horrible. It was a terrible day.”
Broderick can take at least a smidgeon of credit for the city’s recovery, as his triumphant The Producers
has led to a resurgent Broadway. His performance earned him a Tony
nomination, and he’s visibly excited about the movie adaptation he’s
currently filming. He says that, “Nathan Lane and I are pleased and
excited we’re in it.”
Excited that he’s in it? We all look at him in confusion.
He flashes that teenage smile and says, “Because we always used
to make jokes that it would be played by Chris Rock and Amanda
Plummer.”
For once, at least, Hollywood got something right.
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