Always
the tough guy, actor Ving Rhames is has made a career out of playing the
baddest of the bad. From PULP
FICTION’s Marsellus Wallace, to playing a kick ass cop in the remake of
DAWN OF THE DEAD, Rhames has always left a lasting impression on screen no
matter what the role. He’s back
again in the summer box-office hot seat, returning a third time as Tom
Cruise’s feisty and comical teammate Luther Strickell in MISSION:
IMPOSSIBLE III and he recently spoke to us about playing Luther for
the third time, working with new Director J.J. Abrams, and future sequels.
Ving Rhames
You
once said that
Mission
: Impossible was Tom Cruise’s vehicle, and you were happy to just sit in
the van. Is that still the case?
Well I
think what we did with this one I think first of all it is closer to the
television series, and I quote J.J. Abrams he said, “Look if you have Ving
Rhames, use him”. So I think
what we see this one is it is a little bit more team oriented, a little more
ensemble oriented of course Tom is the lead, but I really thing we really
take full use of the skills of the other members of the team.
So I think this one is closer to the television series, and I think
what J.J. Abrams brought to it as a “I think before this, I think he has
only done television”, but I think he just brings a freshness, and an
enthusiasm with it, and also more than ensemble feel, and I think some of
that is with his television background with the series “Lost”, and
“Alias” you know of course there is always a lead character, but the
lead character becomes… you get to know who the lead character is by the
way the other characters react to him, and I think we capture that with
Mission III.
Are
you surprised that they have kept your character through the whole series?
No, I
am quite an actor so yes I am not surprised at all.
I said that jokingly, but I will say I think Tom and I have very good
natural chemistry, and I think you even get to even see more of that in this
film. As a matter of fact some
of the conversations that we have in this one, it could be two friends at
bar having these conversations. We
have them in the middle of a dangerous situation, but I think it is truer to
how men, and friends relate to one another, and I think through that you
learn more about who Ethan is, you learn more about his past, his present
with the “Love Interest Story Line” in this one, and I think the
audience will now invest more in his character because you know more of his
personal life as opposed to the other two.
It dealt more with even as the Impossible: Mission force leader, and
you know you very rarely did you get to see him in a situation outside of
the action hero.
Since
this is your third outing with Tom do you feel that your relationship with
him has kind of developed along with your on screen character?
Yes,
and I think that of course I have known Tom now ten years, and I think
sometimes what happens is you can have two “Good Actors” and they could
not be necessarily the best chemistry between them in the relationship on
screen could not work. I think
Tom and I have very good chemistry off camera, and I think we were able to
utilize that on camera. Myself
watching it, and from other reviewers watching they have said to me that him
and I have it just seems like we go back a long ways, and that is true we do
go back like ten years.
How
did J.J. Abrams as a director get the most out of you as an actor?
Well,
I would say first of all one thing he did with the script he decided to
utilize the team more, and I think second of all J.J. being an actor he
speaks of “Act of Language” I call it.
So I think he connects with actors in a different way then many
directors who were not former actors relate to actors.
Did
you feel that the fact that J.J. added a little bit more humor to this film
that, that kind of made it more human in some ways?
Well I
think that, and I think also you know J.J. is a former actor.
J.J. is a writer, and a director, and J.J. is also younger than their
previous two directors, so I think that his hand is a little closer to the
pulse of mainstream America especially you know I think J.J. is in his
30’s like mid 30’s so I think he is a little more in touch, so I think
the elements of humor, the love story line I think this one is just a little
fresher, and honestly think he put things in it that will appeal more to
women having a whole love story, and I am stressing love story verses a sex
story. I think in the other two
it was more there might have been a woman who was a sexual interest more so
than love. So I think what J.J.
brought to any other to writers was just something extremely fresh, and
authentic that an audience will grasp.
Which
was the most challenging location to film at?
Maybe
Shanghai because what I feel with Shanghai we were filming it like… it
seemed like 5:00 a.m. in the morning, and it was cold.
Shanghai, I do not know if you ever been there, but you know there is
quite a bit of smog in Shanghai, so it was really it for me I flew in, and
lets say I got in at 10:00 a.m. at night, and then I had to be on the set at
like 4 or 5:00 a.m. in the morning so that was probably the most challenging
for me.
How
is suspense in this movie compared to the other two?
I will
sum it up by saying this; I prefer this, but I hate using the word best, but
I think this one stands out over above the other two due to it is a human
story with tons of action, and the other ones I think might be action might
have come before the story.
Since
you are definitely the comic relief in this film, do you find it more
difficult to do comedy than drama?
No, I
basically try to play the truth of the moment, the truth of the situation,
and nine times out of ten when you watch the film I am not trying to be
funny. I am trying to be as
honest, if anything I look at me more as a straight man.
I guess I have been amused with the audience response to my
character, my character’s relationship to Ethan.
I have always been taught to just play the truth of the situation,
and if comedy comes out of that or drama, whatever comes out of it at least
I am playing the truth of the moment to moment reality, and so that is what
I try to do as an actor.
How
was is working with a new team in this one in comparison with the other
films?
I
think having the new actors come along; I think they added something that we
did not have in the first two. One
is a couple of “I want to say women who could do stunts very well, and
play action well, and we did not have that in the first one”, and I also
think with Jonathan Rhys Myers we got a very talented young actor who has
won a golden globe, and I think the first day of filming we filmed on the
Tiber River, and we spent 12 hours of just Tom’s character driving us on a
speed boat up and down the river so we got a chance to bond, and for Tom and
I get to know the other two actors in this case that was Maggie and
Jonathan, so I really thing we were very fortunate in this film that the new
members that we brought on we all get along.
I have known Laurence Fishburne for like 20 years, and I just met
Philip Seymour Hoffman, but you know he is a fine actor.
I think this one sometimes during a film where all of the pieces of
the puzzle fit, and I think we must have that on this one.
What
kind of advice would you give a friend doing a dangerous job about getting
married?
I
always say I do not think men should get married before 35.
Why
is that?
One, I
think women mature “quicker”. Two,
I think a man is focused on his career sometimes even with women, so maybe I
would say with woman 32ish, but I think that a lot of times now both
partners in a relationship have to work.
Things are very expensive especially depending on if you live in the
big cities, and two, I think by the time you are… for a male 35 if your
career in whatever it is you do it is not fully firm, and financially secure
you are probably on the way. So
that is why I stress… and I think also at 35 a man has been through… and
I am generalizing, but lets just say you have been through college, you have
probably been through several relationships, and you have probably have done
enough running around where it is like, “You know what?
I would really like to settle down, and meet a quality woman and
raise a family. So that is why I
give men 35, and I probably say with women somewhere between 30 and 32.
This
particular mission went through kind of a rough development, was there any
point were you worried that it might not come together?
No,
actually the development of it I think for discussion sake lets say I do not
know if it was six months or a year apart, but there was another Director
originally, and once they brought on board the new Director, I mean even
locations changed, and sometimes you have artistic or creative differences.
I also say no I never really put much energy into things that I
cannot control. So I do not even
worry about it. I do not really
think about it heavily. No, I
was like look the first two made quite a bit of money, so just from a
business point of view I realize that most likely number three would happen,
but there was no guarantee, but I honestly felt in my heart and soul it
would happen.
With
all these exotic locales and stuff, did you have time to explore?
Oh
yes, I think I only worked maybe one or two days in Rome, and I was there
for about ten, and I think also we did the Pope, and all the historical
sites, and what have you, and a lot of nice restaurants, and in China…
Shanghai… Shanghai I think because of the Olympics it was going through a
lot of building, and what have you. Shanghai
was a little more hectic because they were construction all over the place,
but we got to see all of the historical sites there, so every place I go I
always try to get a sense of the cultural, and especially the architecture
buildings, and what have you so it was quite enjoyable.
What
your favorite scene was to shoot?
I
would probably say when Tom jumps off of that “100 Story Building”.
I think it was… I was on the roof with him so seeing him do that…
I mean, and he did it about I do not know anywhere between six to ten times.
I was pretty amazed with him, and he wanted to do it even more.
So that to me just watching J.J. shoot that was probably the one that
touched me the most, but I think really the editing of the whole sequence in
Rome the Vatican is probably my favorite.
So
were you really nervous for him when you watched that scene?
Yes,
with Tom jumping off the roof I was a little more nervous then the other so,
and since I was there just brought up feelings of… you know people do not
like to have a talk like this, but what happens if a stunt goes wrong?
Maybe not the first time, second time, third time, but the more you
do a stunt the more you increase the risk of something happening.
So the great thing was the stunt guy, Vic Armstrong, and then his
whole team was excellent, but we were very fortunate that nothing went
wrong, but people do not realize there is that possibility that something
could happen.
How
would you like to see your character expanded in the future if there are
sequels?
There
will be a sequel, but I would probably say, “I think we are on the right
path”, and I did not give them any notes on how to expand my character in
this one, but I think what the writers knew, and I really applaud J.J. for
this is that the more you see the main character interact with people around
him the more you learn about him. I
learned more about you with your mother, your father, your daughter, your
brothers, your cousin then I am learning about who you are by how you relate
to people close to you, and then how you relate to strangers.
I think J.J. knew that as a writer, so I think that is why we tapped
into some things that I think is a bit more human than the other two, but I
think we will continue to go into the path.
I was talking to Tom last night, and Tom realized that in Mission one
we had a element of that my character, and his, and they decided after
watching one and two, that in two we were lacking that element.