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INTERVIEW: Matthias Schoenaerts Says Falling For Marion Cotillard In ‘Rust And Bone’ Was Not Exactly A Challenge

If you haven’t yet heard of Matthias Schoenaerts , a.k.a. the Belgian Brando, you’re going to start running out of excuses. The son of actor Julien Schoenaerts, Matthias is already a sex-symbol in his native Belgium. He made his on-screen debut alongside his father in the Oscar-nominated Daens and broke Flemish box-office records in Erik Van Looy’s Loft . But he really burst forth onto the world cinema stage last year with his gripping turn as the lead in Michael Roskam’s Academy Award nominated cow-hormone crime-epic Bullhead . Injecting testosterone into his thigh with all the flair of a young Robert De Niro , Schoenaerts tempered his young thug’s animalistic rage with an innate vulnerability that’s earned him comparisons to Ryan Gosling and Tom Hardy. His reward: getting to star opposite perennial candidate for Most Beautiful Woman Alive Marion Cotillard in Rust and Bone , renowned director Jacques Audiard’s follow up to A Prophet . Audiard’s films — from the smoldering romance in Read My Lips to the frustrated aspirations of The Beat That My Heart Skipped — paint the underworld as an intrinsically human place where criminals can’t help but dream in the face of the harsh world in which they live. So, who better to play Audiard’s latest brute with a heart of gold than Schoenaerts? And as the end result proves, the two are a match made in heaven. Rust and Bone , which is generating awards buzz, including Golden Globe nominations for Cotillard and the film in the Foreign Language category and populating 2012 best-film lists , charts the unlikely romance between an impoverished beachside bouncer moonlighting as an underground fighter and an orca trainer whose life is thrown into disarray after a tragic tango with the aforementioned killer whales. What could otherwise come across as improbable melodrama feels palpably real and poignant in the hands of Audiard, Cotillard and Schoenaerts. Which is to say, break out the handkerchiefs and don’t look back. Movieline caught up with Schoenaerts by phone as he packed for a trip to Antwerp. He talked about the joys of working with Audiard and Cotillard, beefing up on junk food, and why his dream role could just as easily be a character who works at McDonalds. Movieline: I became a fan of yours after Bullhead, and I love Jacques Audiard’s films, so I was elated to find you two working together. What brought you to this role? Schoenaerts: What attracted me was that it was a hard character to tackle because he’s very ambiguous. There’s a lot about this guy and it was a challenge to portray him in the richest way possible and not make him this one-dimensional thug. The screenplay to me was raw, it was gritty, it was very poetic, it was touching. It was human. At the same time, it was set against the backdrop of the economic crisis, which is the reality for a lot of people nowadays. That’s what I like about Jacques. His screenplays have a very naturalistic feel to them but at the same time, they’re really genre films. You prepare really intensely for your roles. For instance, you ate over 3,000 cans of tuna to beef up for Bullhead . What did you do for this one? Of course, there was the physical preparation, which required me to start boxing. I had to gain weight again, and I had to grow a belly. So, for a couple of months, I was boxing everyday, doing MMA training and doing some weightlifting. I was also eating a lot of junk food to get this body that looked strong but not really fit and a bit unhealthy because the guy is poor so he doesn’t have the means to feed himself properly. After that, I worked a lot with Jacques.  We explored scenes, improvised and got to know each other. I’m curious how he works because his movies are so naturalistic.  Did you guys talk a lot about the characters, or did he just give you the broad strokes and let you run with it? [Talking] is something that we do upfront, but once we’re on set, it’s all about being instinctive and intuitive and not to have too many preconceived ideas on a scene. It’s just, “We’re here in the moment, let’s bring the scene to life. Let’s make it real and vivid.” He’s all about that. He’s really an actor’s director. He’s with you all the time and he’s really generous because he respects actors a lot. I think it’s because he worked in theater for many years. He’s really working with you, he’s challenging you and he wants you to challenge him. It’s fabulous. Was there a lot of improvisation on set? No. There’s room for improvisation but, how shall I say, it’s not a way of working. Everything was scripted and of course once in a while things happen, so you just go with it. But improvisation is certainly not a method on set. You probably can’t improvise fights like that without suffering serious head trauma. Oh, yeah. There’s also a lot of rehearsing. It takes a lot of preparation to do it. There’s a stunt team that really choreographed everything and lined everything up and we rehearsed over and over again. Well, those fights looked brutal. But what I really love about your work–in this and Bullhead –is how you bring an inherent gentleness to such tough characters. Is that the key to approaching tough guys — going against the grain? It’s not going against the grain! It’s being human. Being human is being a lot of things at the same time. Your appearance shouldn’t define who you are, and that’s what I like, the contrast between people looking like the opposite of what they truly are deep inside. How was it working with the actor who plays your son. They say it can be hard to work with children, but you guys had great chemistry. It was intense. He was a very particular kid and pretty young, so we rehearsed a lot with the kid. We worked quite a lot up front. All of sudden, this kid really opened up and somehow got attached to me, and I got attached to him. From there on, it became a very natural thing. And Marion Cotillard? That looked pretty natural, too. It was that same natural connection that happened on set. We had something very genuine going on. She’s obviously extremely talented and very generous. We really had a ball. It was intense. It was not an easy film to make for many reasons, but we enjoyed every second. So, what was the hardest part of making the film? I think it’s always a matter of finding the right balance between all the elements of the story, and the characters and the relationship being portrayed. Especially for this relationship between these two people, it’s a very thin line to fall back into a sentimental portrayal or something that becomes vulgar. That’s probably the biggest challenge. It’s a very much a melodrama, but it doesn’t feel sentimental at all. For example, I love that line where she’s giving you that intense talk about how to have a proper relationship, you take it all in and then respond, pardon my rough French translation, “let’s get it on.” ( Laughs ) Well, actually that was NOT scripted, that was something I made up on set. Really? I knew it! I feel like I’ve told several girls that in my life. ( Laughs ) Yeah. Do you do that at all—go back to a catalog of past loves and use it for a role? Somehow on a subconscious level or sometimes on a conscious level, of course you go back to experiences you have had and sometimes they might help you a little or not. So, do you ever go back to past bar fights and use those for inspiration? No, no! Not at all. That’s not me. Of course, of course. But I love that line when you put her first boyfriend down. Was that improvised? That was scripted. At the same time, it had to be very menacing without being a menace. It had to be a very genuine question, which was kind of menacing but we didn’t want it to be played as menace. Well, I congratulate you for making me feel empathy for a bouncer. I like underdogs, I like anti-heroes — people that have a hard time overcoming things in life. What attracted me to those two characters, they have everything against them and they have to come from really far to get somewhere. I’m just looking for touching characters. When I read [a script], I want it to speak to me. I want it to touch me on a human and profound level. That could be a car mechanic, it could be someone who works at McDonalds, it could be a pianist, it could be so many things. To me, it’s not about a certain type of character. To me, all people are to some extent the same. So, it’s all about the screenplay and the specifics of the character within that screenplay. It seems to be working for you. I hope we get to see you in more movies in the States. Do you have any dream directors you’d like to work with? I don’t know. I could say, P.T. Anderson , David Lynch , Michael Mann , Gus Van Sant . There’s so many, and I’m forgetting a lot. The guy who directed Blue Valentine ! [ Derek Cianfrance ] There are so many. Michael Mann would be lucky to have you– I’ll send a letter to his agent right now. Yeah, thanks! Okay, my last question, I have to ask… the love scenes with Marion — and without her legs. How did you guys pull that off? They just do it with green socks on her legs and paint it over digitally. There must be a lot of choreography to get it right then—keep your leg here, move your arm there. Probably a lot less sensuous than it looks. Yeah, of course, because then it makes shadow. There are a lot of technicalities, but once you’re doing it, you just go with it. I assume falling in love with Marion Cotillard is not one of the more challenging tasks you’ve faced. Exactly. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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INTERVIEW: Matthias Schoenaerts Says Falling For Marion Cotillard In ‘Rust And Bone’ Was Not Exactly A Challenge

WATCH: Daring, Dark ‘ParaNorman’ Channels ‘Goonies’ In Exclusive Clip

If you missed the excellent ParaNorman in theaters (or saw the similarly macabre and quirky Frankenweenie instead), catch an exclusive clip from the dark, funny, moving, and visually impressive stop-motion animation about a loner kid named Norman whose ability to see dead people first makes him an outcast, then an unlikely hero, when his small town is overrun by zombies. Movieline’s exclusive clip finds Norman (Kodi Smit-McPhee) and his Goonies-esque band of misfits — including school bully Alvin (Christopher Mintz-Plasse), sister Courtney (Anna Kendrick), reluctant BFF Neil (Tucker Albrizzi), and Neil’s jock brother Mitch (Casey Affleck, who gets one of the film’s biggest adults-only laugh) — searching the town library for a key piece of information as zombies, and more terrifyingly, parents, run amok outside. Much of what makes ParaNorman one of the best children’s films of 2012 is the writing, which doesn’t condescend to its young audience; this is a movie that knows that being a kid can really suck — especially for victims of bullying, or even just oddballs who stand out from the crowd a little too much. It embraces death as a real tangible fact of life and goes to some terrifying places while moving at a dynamic pace, lightened by a savvy sense of humor, which is what makes ParaNorman the quintessential Tim Burton film that Frankenweenie just quite wasn’t. ParaNorman hits DVD and Blu-ray November 27. Did you catch it in theaters? Let the ParaNorman lovefest unfold in the comments below. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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WATCH: Daring, Dark ‘ParaNorman’ Channels ‘Goonies’ In Exclusive Clip

REVIEW: Marion Cotillard Bares Everything In Exceptional, Bittersweet ‘Rust and Bone’

Director  Jacques Audiard’s nifty 2009 prison epic  A Prophet   took a classic arc — the rise of a young man through a criminal world — and found in it something bracing and transformative: an anti-hero for a diverse and changing France. His deeply enjoyable new feature  Rust and Bone also feels like a fresh reworking of an older mode of filmmaking; the swooning romantic melodrama shaped by tragedy. The film has a beautiful heroine brought low by a terrible accident and a brutish hero who’s more eloquent with his fists than with words. It’s a pleasing film with old bones, though its surfaces are all brightly contemporary, including the unexpectedly emotional appearance of a Katy Perry  song. Adapted by Audiard and Thomas Bidegain from a short story collection by Canadian author Craig Davidson,  Rust and Bone is set in sunny Antibes in the south of France. It’s where Stéphanie ( Marion Cotillard ) works as an orca trainer at the local marine theme park and where Ali ( Matthias Schoenaerts ) washes up with the five-year-old son Sam (Armand Verdure) he inherited from a neglectful mother. Ali and Sam have come to stay with Ali’s sister Anna (Corinne Masiero), a supermarket cashier who, alongside her truck-driver husband, gets by with a combination of side gigs and expired food snuck home from work. Ali and Stéphanie first cross paths at a nightclub. He’s working as a bouncer, and she’s there to dance and to spite the lover she left at home. He comes to her rescue when a guy gets rough with her (while noting without censure that she’s dressed “like a whore”), but she shoos him away after he drops her off at home. Stéphanie is aloof and untouchable until an accident at the water park leaves her permanently changed: She wakes up in the hospital with both legs gone below the knee and a whole new life to learn. The next time our two leads meet, it’s because Stéphanie seeks Ali out, needing a semi-stranger and drawn to his bluff lack of pretense. Stéphanie is tentative and ashamed in her reshaped body, while Ali is all physicality. He’s a happy animal who takes up bare-knuckle brawling for cash on the side and who falls into sexual encounters with the comfortable ease of someone sitting down to a meal. There’s an evident class difference between the two, but it doesn’t bother Ali, who’s blithely indifferent to social niceties. And while Stéphanie might have cared once, her new reality has left her appreciative of Ali’s acceptance and lack of pity. Rust and Bone rests on its twin lead performances, and Cotillard daringly bares everything to play Stéphanie — her body, sure (this film rivals  The Sessions  for its frank, unruffled depictions of disabled sex), but also her unadorned face and the cool, distanced dignity she gives to her character who’s lost everything, including an aspect of the standard physical beauty that was part of her identity. “I liked being watched,” she tells Ali, as she struggles to deal with attracting stares for other reasons, and one of the film’s great satisfactions is watching her rebuild herself as a new and stronger person with the help of her companion and eventual lover. Schoenaerts, who played the lead in recent foreign language Oscar nominee  Bullhead , is a real find. His hulking build houses a disarmingly sweet nature (as well as the ferocious temperament of a brawler) but no gift for forethought. The scenes between him and his son are beautiful when they aren’t terrifying. Ali lives in the moment, and as a simple guy himself, he can get along well with the boy. But he’s got no paternal instincts and this leads to a visceral parenting nightmare that’s unforgettably staged on screen. The chemistry between his character and Cotillard’s is unusual, meanwhile. The attraction, while there, is less important than the ways they end up inserting themselves into each others lives, and how each begins to recognize the other’s importance. Rust and Bone is very aware of our flesh and how we inhabit it. It’s there in the unreserved way it depicts Stéphanie’s path back to mobility, from her ecstatic first dip in the ocean after the accident to her careful navigating of the stadium steps at her old place of work. And it’s there in Ali’s dangerous, bloody and exhilarating fights, as he batters someone in slow motion and afterward, too wired up to sit and talk, has to go for a run. The film has its soapy moments — as will any movie in which a character drags herself across a hospital floor crying “What did you do to my legs?” But its generous awareness of how our bodies relate to our sense of ourselves makes Rust and Bone both one of the year’s most exceptional (and bittersweet) romances and a remarkable portrayal of how two people change and grow after traumatic experiences. RELATED: Movieline’s Toronto International Film Festival Review of Rust and Bone. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter.  Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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REVIEW: Marion Cotillard Bares Everything In Exceptional, Bittersweet ‘Rust and Bone’