Today is the start of the Berlin Film Festival, and the Clive Owen-Naomi Watts film The International is the premiere film of the festival. This is Clive’s first film since Elizabeth: The Golden Age, and hopefully Clive will be doing a lot of interviews and photo-ops. Hurray!
Clive gave an interview to AFP about the film, which is based on the true story of the collapse of Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI) in the 1990s. The story, according to Clive, has special resonance today with the current financial screw-ups. He also talks about another film he has coming out, Duplicity, with Julia Roberts. Julia has a well-documented crush on Clive, but all Naomi Watts says about him is that he’s “brilliant”. The complete AFP interview is here:
Timing may be everything in Hollywood, but when Clive Owen agreed his latest film role a few years ago even he had no idea how closely the fictional thriller would play like present-day news. In a case of art imitating life, “The International” is set in the murky world of international banking and was inspired by the early 1990s collapse of the scandal-plagued Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI).
In an interview with AFP, Owen acknowledged the film could well resonate with audiences reeling from the global financial meltdown that has exposed mismanagement in the upper echelons of Wall Street.
“It’s become unbelievably relevant,” the English actor said. In the sophisticated thriller, Owen stars with Naomi Watts as law enforcement officials investigating a corrupt bank with sinister lending practices.
“The whole film is about this huge, faceless multi-billion-dollar bank who I believe to be corrupt and try to convince people, and try to bring them down. The big questions in the movie are: do banks use our money appropriately?” Owen added. “Can you trust them? Are they corrupt? Now the questions have been hugely to the fore in the last six months with what’s been going on.”
In “The International,” Owen plays Louis Salinger, an Interpol agent whose rabid conviction to expose the bank’s mendacity threatens to derail his career. The film, directed by Germany’s Tom Tykwer (“Run Lola Run”), and written by Eric Warren Singer, is loosely based on the BCCI scandal.
The bank’s collapse was one of the biggest corporate scandals of the 90s when it was revealed the bank laundered money for terrorists, trafficked arms and abetted nuclear proliferation. Watts, who chases the bankers across Europe and New York with Owens, said she took the role — after initially demurring following the birth of her first child — because of her co-star as well as the subject matter.
“Clive is just brilliant,” she said. “But what I really love about this film is that it feels very current and reflective of our times.”
Owen meanwhile said he was attracted to the film’s script, which harked back to thrillers from the 1970s.
“With all the research that this script was based on, what I liked was that it was like the 70s paranoid political thrillers that were based on fact and were sort of very intelligent and well-written, but were thrillers,” he said.
In fact, next month he?ll be taking on institutions of moral complexity yet again in the drama “Duplicity” by the director of “Michael Clayton,” Tony Gilroy, and starring opposite Julia Roberts again.
“I got on so well with her during ‘Closer’ and I was so excited by this script and there was nobody better for it than Julia,” Owen said.
And Owen, who became known to Americans as much as through smaller independent films as well as through the iconic BMW ads shot by filmmakers such as Ang Lee and Wong Kar-Wai, has emerged as a player in a pack of Brits currently beguiling Hollywood as Oscar season approaches, including actress Kate Winslet and “Slumdog Millionaire” director Danny Boyle.
Owen’s CV reflects his willingness to take on varied roles that are rarely one dimensional.
“I’ve got to try and make you understand whatever I’m doing at any given point,” he said. “Shooting someone, cheating on my wife, I’m going to try very hard to make you understand that. I think of that as my job. It’s never black-and-white. And that’s why I’m always drawn to characters that have conflicts, because when you can do that you can play more than one thing.”
Did anyone else get a little warmer when Clive said “shooting someone, cheating on my wife, I’m going to try very hard to make you understand that”? I understand it, Clive! The International looks really, really good, like Michael Clayton with a financial twist. I hope it’s well-received in Berlin.
Here’s the trailer for the film:
Photos are stills from The International, via WENN
I love Clive Owen. Love him. He picks very unique film roles, especially Inside Man, and holy fudge I just IMDB’d him – he’s in the works for a second one!
I just re-watched Inside Man last weekend. Looooove Clive, that is a great movie with a fantastic cast all around.