Forest Whitaker
The
“Arrival” Interview
with
Kam Williams
Earth
to Forest!
Forest
Whitaker was born in Longview, Texas on July 15, 1961, but raised in
Carson, California from the age of 4. He earned an athletic
scholarship to Cal Poly Pomona where he switched his major to music
after a back injury prematurely ended his football career.
Forest
made his big screen debut in 1982 in Fast Times at Ridgemont High en
route to delivering memorable performances in Platoon and Good
Morning Vietnam. In 1988, he landed his breakout role as saxophonist
Charlie Parker in Bird, before subsequently starring in such
critically-acclaimed pictures as The Crying Game, Smoke and Ghost
Dog.
In
2007, Forest won an Academy Award for his chilling impersonation of
Idi Amin in The Last King of Scotland. since then, he's starred in
such box-office hits as The Great Debaters, The Butler, Southpaw and
Taken 3. And later this year, he'll play Saw Gerrera in Rogue One,
the upcoming episode in the Star Wars series.
Here,
he talks about his latest outing as Colonel Weber opposite Amy Adams
and Jeremy Renner in Arrival, an alien invasion adventure directed by
Denis Villeneuve.
Kam
Williams: Hey
Forest, thanks so much for the time. I really appreciate it. .
Forest
Whitaker:
Hey,
Kam. Sorry for the early morning call.
KW:
No
problem. What city are you in?
FW:
London,
but I'm on my way to South Africa later today after I finish this
film.
KW:
Which
movie are you working on next, Burden?
FW:
No, I
already finished Burden. That's another interesting film, actually.
We just wrapped that up about a week ago. I liked the way they did it
and I felt that the story was really powerful, so I'm hopeful.
KW:
Then
what movie are you shooting in South Africa?
FW:
One
about Archbishop Desmond Tutu called The Forgiven. It's about the
Truth and Reconciliation Trials he conducted after the fall of
Apartheid.
KW:
It was
a remarkable way to resolve a civil conflict, to let perpetrators of
war crimes off the hook, provided they confessed publicly.
FW:
Yes, I
think that was the interesting thing about what happened in South
Africa. It enabled them to change regimes peacefully, and not leave
all the pain underneath the surface. It brought a little bit of it
out, so they could address what really happened. It was a very
powerful solution.
KW:
What interested you in Arrival?
FW:
I
thought it was really an interesting story, first of all, the whole
notion of people coming to the planet and trying to find ways of
communicating with them. But I thought the understory of time, and of
how time exists in our lives.
I
also found my character, the cast and the director very interesting.
So, it all made sense to give it a try.
KW:
I loved
both Prisoners and Sicario by this director.
FW:
Yeah,
Denis is a really good filmmaker.
KW:
Here,
he's made a very sophisticated contribution to the alien invasion
genre. How would you describe your approach to playing Colonel Weber?
Did Denis suggest anything?
FW:
Wow!
[Pauses] I'm trying to remember what he might have suggested. We had
some meetings and stuff where we talked about the character and
worked on it. I think, first, I was trying to figure out where Weber
was from. That sort of involved locking in his speech patterns and
creating that back history. You know what I mean?
KW:
Yeah.
FW:
I'd
played military men before, but this felt a little different, maybe
because of my task. So, i was trying to understand that, as well as
this notion of running a team the way Denis wanted me to do it, by
splitting powers. And then it all started falling into place and
taking on a reality as I began to embrace the idea that I was trying
to save the world [Chuckles]
KW:
I know
that you worked with Jeremy Renner a decade ago in A Little Trip to
Heaven. How was it reuniting with him again?
FW:
Yeah,
Jeremy's a great guy. That was a little independent film directed by
Baltasar Kormakur. It was fun working with him then, and fun working
with him now. He's a really generous, good person who's there,
committed to having everything work out, and who you like being
around.
KW:
Was
this your first time working with Amy Adams? How was that?
FW:
It was.
I enjoyed it. The movie was so much from her mind. She was very
focused in on it. And when we tried to get the different scenes we
shared to work, there was something happening inside of them every
time. So, she's a really talented actress. Really strong!
KW:
What
would you say was the movie's message?
FW:
I think
it has several messages. One is about communication, because the film
does deal with trying to communicate with these beings. Another
message is about how communication can bring us together. And a third
is about misconceptions in terms of how we read people and how we
read circumstances. Meaning, are these people coming to create war or
not? are they our friends? How are we interpreting their actions? We
look at people differently culturally, in this case, as different
galactically, or however way you'd say it. How do we engage them? How
do we judge them? I think another issue explored in the film is time.
From a scientific point-of-view, it raises the question of whether it
exists at all. And secondly, if it doesn't exist, it asks are we
nevertheless on this plane of a loop that still holds the universe
up? [Laughs] I think it poses that question, too.
KW:
How do
you feel about aliens? Do think that life exists on other planets?
FW:
I think
it must, when they talk about how many other galaxies there are. Even
scientifically, they're acknowledging that there are places where
life could exist. And we've already discovered that there's been life
on certain planets that we've explored. That may just be algae or
whatever, but life on Earth began a certain way, too. So, yeah, I do
believe there's life other than on our planet. [Chuckles]
KW:
What do
you care to share about playing Saw Gerrera in Rogue One, the next
episode in the Star Wars series.
FW:
I'm
excited about it. I think he's a really interesting character. It was
a very exciting project to work on. He walks in the middle ground of
trying to save the universe by any means necessary. He's a freedom
fighter and a rebel. The whole piece, which deals with those kinds of
concepts, is really strong.
KW:
What's
it like to join that franchise?
FW:
I'm
still discovering it. I'm looking at the toys and other releases that
are coming out. It's a big universe that I'm still learning to walk
inside of. But I really enjoyed it when I walked out on the set for
the first time. And I've remained excited during the entire process.
just trying on my uniform was itself an exciting process.
KW:
Did you
meet George Lucas while working on the project?
FW:
No, he
came and met with the director, but I wasn't there.
KW:
Finally,
what’s in your wallet?
FW:
My
driver's license, some credit cards, a laundry card, pieces of papers
I've written things on, some notes I made to myself about things I
need to remember, and a few bucks.
KW:
Nice
speaking with you, Forest, and have a safe flight to South Africa
today.
FW:
Take it
easy, Kam. Good speaking to you, too.
To
see the trailer for Arrival, visit:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFMo3UJ4B4g
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