| THE UNWANTED PROTEGE:
DANE COOK IN A SURPRISING ROLE AS MR. SMITH
Ironically
one of the reasons Demi Moore was initially interested in MR.
BROOKS was the chance to work with Costner – yet
their characters are usually playing cat-and-mouse. Instead,
she mainly interacts with Mr. Brooks’ unexpected new “protégé,” the
inept, out-of-his-league blackmailer, Mr. Smith, played with
riveting verve by Dane Cook. “Dane was really wonderful,” says
Moore. “It was great to see somebody bridge into something
that is such unfamiliar territory. He brings some of his comedic
qualities to the role and yet it’s not about that.”

Dane Cook
Cook,
who is one of today’s hottest stand-up comics, was
an unexpected choice for such a challenging dramatic role, but
it was a choice the filmmakers thought was worth the risk – especially
after he sent them a videotape of himself in character. “Dane
was definitely a wild card,” says Jim Wilson. “Nobody
knew quite what he would do with this character because he’s
never done anything even remotely like this. But when we all
saw his videotape, it was a revelation. He had simply nailed
it. I think people will be very surprised.”
Adds
Bruce Evans: “Dane is the real discovery of the movie.
He was able to go to the edge of craziness with Mr. Smith in
a very exciting way. When Dane showed up on the set I saw this
guy coming at me with the jacket and the beard and I thought ‘oh
my God, Mr. Smith lives.’ He came ready to work and completely
channeled the character.”
Cook
doggedly pursued the role because he was ready to break out
into something entirely new and different. As the photographer
and amateur voyeur who catches Mr. Brooks in the act of murder – and
tries to turn it into an opportunity to play out his own most
wicked fantasies – Cook knew he would be pushed in ways
he wanted to be pushed as an actor.
“I’m interested in breaking out into cinematic roles
of every size, shape and form, so this was really a chance for
me to start doing that,” Cook says. “When I got the
script, it was a definite page-turner. It was one of those things
where I was racing to figure out what would happen next.”
Cook
was freaked out by Mr. Brooks’ secrets, but also
is keenly aware that “anytime you’re in a room full
of people you know there’s going to be some who have not
just a few skeletons in the closet but a whole barnyard full
of them,” he says. “But that’s what is so compelling
about Mr. Brooks: you realize this guy could be your buddy. He
could be your boss. But, look what he really is underneath the
facade.”
Most
of all, Cook couldn’t resist the challenges of the
ordinary-seeming Mr. Smith, who misguidedly sees Mr. Brooks’ sickness
and compulsion to kill as merely a game and an adventure. “As
I was reading the lines of Mr. Smith, I found myself already
picturing how I would do it,” he recalls. “What excited
me about Mr. Smith is that he is unwittingly on a path of total
self-destruction. Every move he makes is the wrong step. I’m
a guy who likes to constantly keep myself on the right path so
it was really interesting for me to play someone who’s
so completely off the path.”
Once
on the set, as he began interacting with Kevin Costner and
Demi Moore, the character deepened even further for Cook. “In
stand-up comedy it’s all you, but in a movie like this,
you’re part of a storytelling puzzle,” he observes. “It
was interesting for me to work collectively with all these incredibly
talented people while figuring out where Mr. Smith’s story
fits into the overall picture.” He continues: “It
was especially great for me to experience Kevin’s passion
and creativity. He’s also a very funny dude. Even though
we were playing such despicable people, the experience we had
together was great.”
The
key to Mr. Smith for Cook was getting to the core of why he
latches onto Mr. Brooks as a mentor. “I think Mr. Smith
accidentally witnessed something and it was like, wait a minute,
this might be my calling, this might be who I am.
For
him, Mr. Brooks is like a hero. He has all the knowledge that
Mr. Smith wants,” says Cook. “Mr. Smith sees
himself as starting off on this great adventure of becoming a
killer. But what he doesn’t foresee, is how he’s
going to become a part of Mr. Brooks’ journey.”
Another
more practical challenge for Cook was having to act in the
same scenes as William Hurt playing Mr. Brooks’ alter-ego,
without ever reacting to this figment of the character’s
imagination. “It was very unusual because I was in a lot
of scenes with Marshall – and yet there isn’t one
moment of dialogue between us. It could get kind of eerie,” he
notes. “At one point, we were doing one of the scenes where
William and Kevin are going back and forth and I’m just
looking out the window in my own world. Well, suddenly William
leaned up and just brushed lightly against me. But because we’re
not supposed to exist in each other’s worlds, just that
little touch completely jolted me!”
NEXT
MR.
BROOKS’ IMAGINARY FRIEND – OR IS THAT FIEND?
WILLIAM HURT PORTRAYS MARSHALL
One of the most vital, and unusual, characters in MR.
BROOKS is Marshall, Mr. Brooks’ alter ego who exists
only in the most shadowy corners of his mind, and reveals
the wicked impulses that cause Mr. Brooks to murder strangers.
|