What is Looper? On Rian
Johnson's Tumblr page it says, simply and modestly, “the next movie
from the people who made Brick and The Brothers Bloom”. While this
is certainly true, there is still a lot more to be said about it.
We'll start with what we officially know, that it's a sci-fi action
drama starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Joe, a smalltime hitman who
bumps off hooded victims sent back by a crime cartel from the future.
We also know that the film co-stars Bruce Willis as another
hitman named Joe, this one sent back in time to be killed, only to
find that his assassin is himself.
There is more to this story than that,
of course. Some of it we know, but can't tell you yet, having been
the only publication allowed on the sci-fi film's ultra-secretive
Louisiana shoot during its especially spoilerish final week of
shooting. But there's plenty more that Johnson is keeping up his
sleeve for now. The metaphor is apt, since as well as music and
movies Johnson is a major fan of the magic arts, and here there is
certainly a lot for him to conjure with. On Brick the trick was
turning a teen movie into a credible film noir. With The Brothers
Bloom, two conmen played an elaborate game of Find The Lady. But
here, Johnson is aiming for the big time with his most ambitious
illusion yet: turning such a rarefied arthouse conceit into
mainstream box-office gold.
“I first wrote Looper as a short,”
he recalls, when we reconvene in an LA hotel bar in the first week of
January 2012, three days before the film's second public test
screening. “This was a long time ago – before I made Brick,
actually. I was really frustrated because Brick had come together and
fallen apart so many times. Finally I said, 'Let's just do some short
films to get our heads back into it.' So I wrote, and we made, a
short film called The Psychology Of Dream Analysis, and in that same
mode I wrote a script called Looper. It's essentially the basic
premise of the movie, but done as a two-page script that I never
ended up shooting. It sat in a drawer for ten years, and after Bloom
I had an idea for how to expand it. So it just kinda became obvious
it should be the next thing.”
It seems, at first sight, that Johnson
plus sci-fi seems a strange fit, especially considering his previous
two movies. Johnson, however, seems surprised by at that suggestion.
“God, well, I'm from the growing-up-on-Star-Wars generation,” he
says. “I've always loved sci-fi so much, and I'd always wanted to
do it, but...” He stops himself. “I was about to say I would have
needed to get to a certain point budget-wise before I could attempt
sci-fi, but that's obviously not true, if you look at what Shane
Carruth did with Primer, even Duncan Jones with Moon. But, yeah, I've
always wanted to make a sci-fi, and, it's weird, because it almost
seems that sci-fi grew up with my generation. We had Star Wars as
kids, then Blade Runner and Alien came along – the 'adult' sci-fi
movies that you have to start wrapping your heads around. It's a
strange genre, though. I don't know what a pure sci-fi movie would
actually be. It's almost like a genre that fits on top of other
movies, like you can have a sci-fi detective movie, like Blade
Runner, or a sci-fi haunted-house movie, which is what Alien
effectively was.” He smiles. “And then the time-travel genre is a whole other thing...”
So what does sci-fi sit on top of here?
“Several different things,” he decides, “and that's what was
exciting to me. There's a time-travel movie, there's a hitman movie
and… well, I'm still figuring out how much of the rest to give
away, because part of the pleasure of it is not knowing where the
movie's gonna go. But at its heart, it's a movie with a time
travel-type premise that is actually an action-drama, I think. There
are elements from a lot of genres in it, because even though it has
this sci-fi theme to link the whole thing together, the underlying
genre shifts during course of the movie, and part of the fun is
trying to figure out what kind of movie it actually is.”
For most people, though, the movie will
be a Bruce Willis movie, and Johnson is happy for that to be the
case, even with all those expectations. “Honest to God, he was
awesome to work with,” he enthuses. “You hear all kinds of things
about all kinds of people, but I just had such a fantastic experience
with him. He was exactly the way you would hope Bruce Willis would be
like to work with, he was cool and funny but really intense. He
worked his ass off – he was just so into it.”
“He brought so much of his
personality to it,” he continues, “but it didn't change what the
story was, or the script. And that was part of the pleasure of
working with him. I think what it is that he does well really
complimented the script. Without getting too much into spoiler
territory, things happen with the character that are much more
intense because it's Bruce Willis onscreen doing it. It's the first
time I've really engaged with someone who's an action movie icon, and
a fascinating part of the process – when you're cutting the movie
and showing it to audiences – is realising what that buys you. And
what you have to fight, also, because audiences just love Bruce
Willis. If you want them to feel negatively about something he's
doing, you have to make it ten times as negative as you usually would
– because they're SO programmed to believe he's doing the right
thing!”
At this point you're probably wondering
what kind of alchemy can turn the whippet-like Gordon-Levitt into the
bullish Willis. And you wouldn't be the first to be suspicious. “When
we first cast Bruce,” Johnson reveals, “it was kind of a big
problem, because the make-up guy looked at Bruce and Joe's faces and
said, 'There's no way you can do this, their faces are way too
different. Anybody but Bruce!'” He laughs. “So it took a lot of
convincing to get him to adjust a couple of things and just get it as
close as possible. But it's a testament to Joe's performance that
he's able to sell it. I can't wait for you to see the film, see the
whole performance.”
Here we jump back in time to Looper's
plantation setting, in May of 2011, where Gordon-Levitt is taking a
break between set-ups. Only, it doesn't quite look like Joseph
Gordon-Levitt. Thanks to some contact lenses, a prosthetic nose, an
upper lip and perhaps even a bit of chin, the actor looks uncannily
like the younger Willis, especially in scenes being played back on
the monitor. Maybe as a result of working with Christopher Nolan,
Gordon-Levitt won't be drawn on plot or character. But the Brick star
does wax lyrical about Johnson, who wrote the long-form Looper with
him in mind.
“I love working with a director that
has such a clear vision of what they want,” he says, “and I think
that's why Rian's movies are so particular and have such a unique
voice. He really knows what he wants it to be. At the same time, he's
also extremely collaborative and open to what happens in the moment,
from one take to the next. It's been fascinating watching how this
project has evolved from a story in his head to a real-life movie
with flesh and bone, especially how the old Joe character changed
once Bruce Willis got involved – and how my character changed
once Bruce Willis got involved. He really defined it. I mean, he has
to – he and I are the same person!”
Was Gordon-Levitt concerned about that?
“Well, that was always crucial: who was gonna play that part? But
Bruce is the perfect, perfect person to do it. He's someone I've
always admired, I've always liked his movies – both the big-time
action movies as well as something like 12 Monkeys or Pulp Fiction,
so it's an honour and also kind of flattering that I'm playing him as
a young man. It's also kind of inspiring, as an actor. I've never
done that before, y'know? It's always a big part of any acting job,
because that's what an acting job is. It's figuring things out –
who is this person? How do they talk, how do they walk, how do think,
how do they feel? And to have such an iconic figure like Bruce
defining that for me is a very particular challenge.”
Back to LA, and 2012, where Johnson
admits that his own challenge was the time travel element, some
details of which have now been pared back since the first assembly.
“It was hard,” he admits. “But the approach that I took to it
was really similar to the first Terminator movie, where time travel
sets up the premise and then gets out of the way. I really admire
movies like Primer, where it actually does engage with time travel.
Or even Back To The Future 2, which is zapping back and forth the
entire time! But for me, it was much easier on my brain to set up the
circumstances and then have the characters take over and try to
resolve this big problem that time travel has caused.”
He pauses. “For the most part, the
big, freeing thing was realising that time travel was never, ever
going to make sense. It just doesn't make sense. So my job was not to
make a version of time travel that does make sense but to somehow
fool the audience into not noticing that it doesn't make sense.
And that's what every successful time travel movie actually does.”
He laughs. “It's just a magic trick.”
* A version of this story appeared in Empire magazine...
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