eWoss Home
  
Make eWoss Your Homepage
Entertainment News
Television News
Movie News
Music News
Other Entertainment News

eWoss News
Breaking News Headlines
Top News Stories
U.S. National News
World News
Sports News
Business News
Entertainment News
Tech Industry News
Political News
Science News
Health News
Weird News

Movie News

Pitt plays dumb in Coens' 'Burn After Reading'

Saturday, September 06, 2008 12:43:10 PM
By DAVID GERMAIN

In this image provided by Carlo Allegri for Focus Features, the cast and crew from "Burn Before Reading," clockwise from first row left, directors Joel Cohen and Ethan Cohen, actors John Malkovich, Tilda Swinton,  Brad Pitt and Frances McDormand  pose for a cast photo during the International Film Festival in Toronto, Friday, Sept 5, 2008. (AP Photo/Carlo Allegri for Focus Features)  Actors Tilda Swinton, left, and Brad Pitt participate in a news conference for "Burn After Reading" during the Toronto International Film Festival at the Park Hyatt Hotel on Saturday, Sept. 6, 2008 in Toronto. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini)TORONTO (AP) - Brad Pitt has wanted to work with the Coen brothers for ages. Then he got wind of the birdbrain they had written for him to play.

"I've been knocking on the brothers' door for a few years, so I was really happy when they called me," Pitt told reporters at the Toronto International Film Festival on Saturday, a day after Joel and Ethan Coen's comedy "Burn After Reading" premiered there.

"Until I read the piece, and I was real upset," Pitt jokingly added.

Pitt's character, an ignoramus in way over his head on a blackmail scheme, is among a gaggle of boneheads caroming about in "Burn After Reading," whose cast includes his and the Coens' frequent collaborator George Clooney, plus John Malkovich, Tilda Swinton, Richard Jenkins and Joel Coen's wife, Frances McDormand.

Opening in theaters Friday, the movie casts Pitt and McDormand as fitness trainers who stumble on a disc containing classified documents and try to extort cash from the ex-CIA analyst (Malkovich) who was the origin of the leaked data.

Pitt plays the goof to the hilt, his character's inept attempts at cloak-and-dagger intrigue providing some of the movie's biggest laughs.

Actor Brad Pitt participates in a news conference for "Burn After Reading" during the Toronto International Film Festival at the Park Hyatt Hotel on Saturday, Sept. 6, 2008 in Toronto. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini)"The leading man role is usually the guy who's got the answers, figures things out and defuses the bomb within seconds and is always experienced. And all of that's pretty good for the ego sometimes. But it's more fun playing guys who make the wrong choices, have limited experience and make presumptions," Pitt said.

Wearing fitness club shorts and T-shirt, with his hair teased into a puffy tower with a blond streak, Pitt also toyed with his movie star looks in "Burn After Reading."

"We had kind of a competition going on the set as to who had the most ridiculous hair, and I think you may have won, Brad," co-star Swinton, whose character has a strange, swirled hairdo herself, said at a festival news conference alongside Pitt, the Coens and Malkovich.

"We were all going in for that Javier Bardem prize," Swinton said, referring to the odd page-boy hairdo Bardem wore in last year's Coen brothers crime thriller, "No Country for Old Men."

Actor Brad Pitt participates in a news conference for "Burn After Reading" during the Toronto International Film Festival at the Park Hyatt Hotel on Saturday, Sept. 6, 2008 in Toronto. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini)In an interview with The Associated Press a day earlier, the Coens said Pitt's hairdo was a happy accident. Ethan Coen said they had figured that as a gymnasium worker, the character might have a crew cut.

"Just by accident, Brad had done a commercial or photo shoot or something where his hair had been streaked, and he went in for a fitting for wardrobe for this with this kind of leftover hair, so we went, `Oh, how about that?'" Ethan Coen said.

Pitt has tended toward action and drama, including "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button," a tale due out late this year adapted from an F. Scott Fitzgerald story about a man who ages backward from old age toward infancy.

Aiming for laughs with "Burn After Reading" did not seem out of place to Pitt, though.

"I feel I've been doing comedies for years, but maybe they weren't so funny," Pitt said.

Pitt, who has worked with Clooney on "Ocean's Eleven" and its two sequels, was asked if he might work again with romantic partner Angelina Jolie. Their relationship began after they co-starred in the action hit "Mr. and Mrs. Smith."

"Angie and I, we're working together everyday, I can guarantee," Pitt said.


Other Movie News

'Four Christmases' finds $31.7M in holiday cheer 6:20AM CT
'Christmas Story' fans celebrate film's 25th year Nov 30 2008 6:33AM CT
Tykwer's 'The International' to open Berlin fest Nov 29 2008 1:41PM CT
Moore: Craig 'marvelous' as Bond Nov 27 2008 11:00PM CT
Bruce Willis settles dispute with Malaysia company Nov 27 2008 6:28AM CT
NM governor hosts star-studded dinner at mansion Nov 27 2008 1:57AM CT
For sale: A helmet, a hat, a lightsaber and more Nov 26 2008 3:29PM CT
What are the best Thanksgiving videos on the Web? Nov 26 2008 1:41PM CT
Judge orders Mel Gibson deposed in lawsuit Nov 26 2008 12:27PM CT
Fincher discusses Oscar hopeful `Benjamin Button' Nov 25 2008 4:29PM CT

  

© 2004-2007 eWoss.com. All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.