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On his growing career "It’s completely chaotic and exciting and I’m enjoying every minute of it. It’s certainly something I could only have wanted but never expected to have." "Actually, I feel like that every time I come out of the cinema. If that film's about being a hippy, then I'm like, "that's it, I'm gonna grow my own vegetables."" "I was a big fan of the Beatles before I did the film. And I guess it's the same for everybody but certainly coming form England everyone is very aware of the Beatles or at least I was and my friends were. Also a lot of the bands I would listen to were very vocally inspired by the Beatles so it was just a process of finding the foundation of the music so I would listen to albums like Sargent Pepper's as early as maybe six years old. My parents certainly had the records lying around the house." "I was just like a kind of jobbing actor like a lot of actors back in London. I was just trying to get work anywhere. I'd done some short films and some independent films and some TV stuff." "I was unemployed, living in London with really not much to do and now I'm here, it's kind of a pretty mad roller coaster" On Acting "Many different things attract me to a role." "There was an acting class that was a small part of that, And I worked with a group of people who would make short films: I’d act in theirs; they would act in mine. It was an exciting, creative time where we were just enjoying the process." "I was into performing and writing poetry, mostly just to enjoy myself, So I put on this show, mainly a collection of poems I had written. It was sort of a day in the life of a more extreme version of myself, just ranting about the world. It was a pure fluke, but an actor came up to me and said he wanted to recommend me to his agent. I was like, What’s an agent? Why do I need one of those?" "I've always done both and music for me is so, self gratifying and you can sit in a room on your own and play music and I enjoy writing music, and performing music even if its to myself and I'm really, really enjoying acting." "The overall story, definitely. That's the film. That's what makes it. You can have a lot of great actors and a bad story and it's not going to be a good film. If you have a good story with unknown actors, it can still be beautiful and sometimes even more so." "When you sit over lunch and discuss the project, how does that work? Do you want me to turn up to lunch as the character? I feel much more comfortable performing and being the character than I do being myself." "I never expected that I would be a professional actor, but I always did it, I always enjoyed being creative at anything, drawing and music and acting and films and theater and all kinds of stuff. No, doctor, I don’t have the ability." "I don’t really think about it in genre form, so if the story is not good then that’s kind of enough. I supposed I’ve done the “musical” and the “period” and the “Vegas” movies now."
On his last band "There are so many actors. I went to see an amazing thing in Austin when I was at SXSW. It was a film called Explicit Ills. A young actor named Marc Webber had directed it. I think he's my age. Paul Dano is in it, Rosario Dawson, and a lot of first-time actors. It was so great watching them and seeing them see the film for the first time and then they did a big Q&A at the end. It was so great to see this actor tell this story that was so real to him and so heartfelt. You could see it when you watched the film. It's those little moments that are what it's all about." On "celebrity" "It was kind of a low point, I guess, where I was sort of washing dishes in a restaurant and just doing the bare minimum. I remember one day the manager of the place sort of slapped me around the face with a wet, bleeding steak, and I was like, 'I've got to get out of this" On Acting vs. Music "I don’t have a preference, really. I’ve always done both. I’ve been sort of writing music, and playing music, and being in bands and stuff like that since I was about 15. And kind of acting — it’s always just kind of been both. I’ve never had to separate the two. I’ve never felt I had to separate the two. I still kind of feel like that."
On River Phoenix
On River Phoenix "That was the film I did straight after and its finished and its set in Tudor England and Henry the VIII and life inside his court and it's about the rivalry between two sisters and their love for the king and it's a beautiful story and a beautiful script." "I had just done The Other Boleyn Girl beforehand, so I worked with Natalie [Portman] and Scarlett [Johansson] and Eric [Bana]. They were big time for me." "I remember when I met Natalie Portman, it was in a field in the middle of Milton Keynes, surrounded by cowshit, It was probably the most unglamorous setting I could have met a Hollywood star. We instantly got on and became friends very quickly." "I took Natalie and Scarlett out all the time, when we were in London. They were up for it." On Natalie Portman "We were learning how to ride horses and getting ourselves into tights and wearing giant codpieces."
Relating to 21 "It was just so high-energy. It was a page-turner. It was just enjoyable. I had such a good time reading it that I really believed it would be a fun, great film." "I didn't read the book until I had been offered the part. It all happened very quickly for me. I wasn't even aware of the book. I was just working off the script at that point. I didn't even know it was a true story. When I found out that [it was true] the intrigue and the interest just kind of doubles. This is crazy. Then I read the book, after I had been cast. I saw the changes they had made and the choices they had made and accepted them for what they were. I really then just kept with the script. And then Jeff and I hooked up and spoke a lot. I had a million questions and he had a million stories. That became its own journey." "I was one of the lucky ones, I have to say. I lost a shitload of money and then had the rush of winning it all back again. That was my first time going, ‘Okay, I understood this place now. I understand how you get addicted to it. I understand why people obsess about it - the absolute horror of losing that amount of money combined with the joy of winning it all back.’ It's pretty amazing. There's also the superstition. I lost a sh*tload of money and I was just going back to the hotel we were staying at and I found a chip in my pocket. I was down nearly $2,000, which is A LOT for me. I just threw this chip down at a table in another casino as I was on my way back to going to bed and I won it all back again. It was a $100 chip. Then I understood - I was on an unlucky table and I found a lucky one. I could understand why people would want to switch tables or switch dealers or go to another casino." "I almost didn't want people to notice the gradual change until it's like, ‘Yeah, he really has turned into a bit of an asshole.’ I wanted that to feel pretty seamless, I guess. I don't know if it worked but I wanted to keep everything pretty simple. There's something about him that you can feel has changed but I wanted to keep it as real as possible. My fear of the film was that it was going to be like Revenge of the Nerds 3. Speaking to [Director] Rob [Luketic], I realized he was on the same page and didn't want to create that. I think it would have been an easy story to do that with."
On Kate Bosworth
On Kevin Spacey
On Kevin Spacey
On Kevin Spacey
On Kevin Spacey "By the end of it, we were a month and a half in Vegas, which, if you've been there, is way too long in that city. So I think by the end of it we were all pretty desperate to get out of there, taste a bit of normality. And you know, Boston was just the perfect kind of answer to that -- it's such a down-to-earth sort of city, you know: great bars, get a normal pint." "It was a good deal. It was such a young cast, which you know sometimes you can find yourself in a film where you are the only young person there, so it was… and everyone was such a character… Josh Gad, the guy who plays Miles… Aaron Yoo plays Choi… Jacob (Pitts)… Everyone was just such extreme… you don’t get people like that in England, so it was just a blast. We literally hung out and very quickly got on as a group of friends, just because there are so many ridiculous things to do in Vegas. You know, we went out and got drunk and hung out and got up to mischief and then the next day, we were just talking hysterically about all of the shit that had happened the night before and that just instantly created a bond." "when you come from England, the only real kind of gambling that you do is, you know, you bet on the horses or you put some money on the dogs or there’s a machine in a pub or something like that, but that is honestly as far into gambling as I kind of got. We just don’t have a place like Vegas anywhere near England, so yeah it was just a whole new world for me in every way possible." "That was the deal with the film that our “research” was just to indulge in Vegas life as much as humanly possible. Unfortunately, they didn’t give us any sort of money to play with. We had to use our own money." "We got to learn a kind of basic strategy to blackjack, so we kind of know when you hit, when you double down, when you split and all of the kinds of things like that, but yeah as far as the card counting goes… there’s just no way." "I think Rob did a great job. As far as that, blackjack isn’t a very interesting game, but the way he filmed it was just amazing." "When we were filming, there would be extreme close ups of doing that (he pushes his pointer and middle finger across the table like he’s pushing cards away) and they would be like “do it again” and it’d be like “what are we doing?” Rob was always saying “Just trust me. It’ll make sense when you see the film” and it totally did. It really gets you inside the head of a player, I think, and you feel the tension when a card goes over."
On infamous Vegas stories
"I really thought there was a point when we were filming that I was slowly going insane. I remember looking at Kate [Bosworth] and I was like “I have to get out of here.” My eyes were literally buzzing it was so bad and the audio of the room is like [makes weird noises of dloy machines going off] all fucking day, six days a week… no, seven days a week.
On seeing the film completed
On card counting Math concepts "I was kind of approached. I was shooting another film called The Other Boleyn Girl at the time, and I just got a call saying that Robert Luketic, the director, wanted to meet me about this film that he’s making … I guess the idea of these kind of everyday people just going against the system like that and coming out on top, which is always a nice take on life. It was just a feel good movie that was exciting to read as a script and I think exciting to watch as a film. And I got to go to Vegas. And I got to wear designer suits which I had never worn before." "I can play basic strategy blackjack as good as the next man really." "We all learn when to split, when to double down, you know the basic rules on how to play the game. But taking it to the level that these guys took it, they were counting the cards and they were able to work out when a deck has a lot of face cards and 10 cards, when it’s clean of those cards and when it is heavy and when it’s light and all that kind of stuff." "They had the best job in college. Anyone else is working in McDonald’s. There was a benefactor giving them the money, they were paid a wage and they would just gamble all day just playing out the system of a structured routine and earning millions of dollars."
On card counting
On having to have an America Accent
On gambling with his own money "Coming from England, it’s not really — I mean we play poker for maybe matchsticks or spare change, or something like that … We don’t have a casino kind of culture as much as you guys do over here. And we certainly don’t have an equivalent to Las Vegas. So that was part of the appeal really, to sort of learn this whole new world that I didn’t know anything about." "It was the only time ever a film set seemed inconspicuous. I remember I went to the toilet in the casino and I remember I came back and I couldn’t find the film set. It’s like, it’s in here somewhere. That’s how crazy it is … We were kind of sectioned off in areas of the casino. We couldn’t shut down the whole place. So of course the everyday life and the machines and all that were all going on whilst we were kind of playing, which helped the atmosphere of the film, I think. Somebody would be doing a scene when somebody would be like, “Wheel of Fortune,” and we’d have to cut and wait for that to finish." "A lot of times we shot 6 day weeks and we only got one day off. I remember we did a scene where on the weekend we’d all been out and partied and did all this crazy stuff that you do in Vegas, and then we woke up and pretty much the next of filming was acting what we had just done the night before. The line between reality and work was slowly blurring. Vegas it’s easy to kind of get into trouble over there. Not trouble, but fun, which we definitely did." "I needed to feel how Ben would have felt, so, I just put myself in harm’s way. You just start doing all the obvious stuff, like tipping your ear a lot, scratching your nose, in the hope that one of these places would hand you over to the police. I think the problem was, we were only playing with $5 chips..." "I was told that [director] Robert Luketic was interested in meeting me for this project called “21.” It was explained to me that it was inspired by this true story about these college students who went to Las Vegas. Normally, any time someone says, “This is based on a true story,” your ears kind of slightly prick up a bit — there’s an extra sprinkle of interest when it’s based on things that happened in real life. I read it, and it was an exciting roller coaster journey that just keeps going right till the end, and I thought it was a project I wanted to get involved with." "Watching a game of cards is not the most exciting thing cinematically. We would spend hours just lifting cards and moving chips, and Robert was saying, “Trust me, guys, just keep going.” He would shout, “Jim, would you just blink for me.” It was hard with all of this mad stuff going on around us, but he created something where you feel like you’re inside the game or insides the players’ heads, with the tension of turning the card over, or the sound effect that goes with that."
On the 'smackdown' scene with Laurence Fishburne "I’ve never been to Vegas before. I only knew about it from films and most of them, like Leaving Las Vegas and The Cooler, are fairly depressing. “It was as crazy as I imagined it to be. People told me that you should only go to Vegas only go for three or four days. I was there for a month and a half,” he said. “At one point during filming I realized I had not even been outside - I mean outdoors — for five days straight. We filmed in the casino, we stayed in the casino, and we just never left. It was manic." "We were all desperate to get out of there and get to Boston, It’s nice at the end of the day to go finding a good Irish bar - which is not hard to do in Boston - and settle in for a while."
Relating to Heartless "'It's hoodie culture and very much about the streets of London" Relating to Mouth to Mouth On Ellen Page"I actually did a film, Mouth To Mouth, with Ellen Page years and years ago, when she was about 15, so I knew her a long time ago. It was a no budget, indie flick and I don’t think I’ve even seen the film!" I’m very proud of her. She was just incredible. You could tell that even then when she was 15, You knew she had this ridiculous head on her shoulders, an enormous amount of talent and passion for what she was doing. The film we made was a tough film to make, and she was the main part in that. It was tough. I remember she had to shave her head bald, which she did willingly.I keep thinking our paths might cross, but they haven’t. I’ve seen our photos next to each other, but our paths haven’t crossed yet. I hope so, as it’ll be great to see her"
Relating to Crossing Over "One part of your brain wants to be utterly professional – you know, get on with your job, impress these giants – and another part of your brain just wants to ask them loads of questions about the great movies they’ve made. I tried to find a happy balance between those two approaches..."
On the song his character has to sing
Relating to Fifty Dead Men Walking |