Pop Culture

Russell Crowe Breaks Down His Most Iconic Characters

00:00

It’s a funny thing.

00:00

You know, you’re given the responsibility

00:03

to tell somebody’s story.

00:04

If it’s true, you gotta bust your balls for it.

00:07

He gotta go the extra mile.

00:09

This is somebody else’s life, you know,

00:11

and I feel that responsibility very heavily.

00:14

It’s funny, you’re making me very nostalgic,

00:17

just even talking about the sort of stuff.

00:18

Obviously, part of the process.

00:20

[upbeat music]

00:25

Romper Stomper.

00:27

You know, I read the script.

00:29

I found it very, very difficult subject matter to deal with.

00:32

Having grown up through the punk era,

00:34

you know, I’d seen guys who were punks

00:36

because of their music preference

00:39

or because of making a stand against corporate rock.

00:42

I’d seen some of those guys morph into neo-Nazis.

00:46

I think I did probably five, six physical auditions

00:50

for that before I was cast in the role.

00:52

Very short shoot, maybe 28 days.

00:54

So super-intense,

00:56

you have to get into character very quickly.

00:57

You’re working with a group of young guys,

01:00

and everybody’s a bit afraid of it.

01:01

You know, Jackie McKenzie was the principal female lead.

01:04

She didn’t know what she was getting into either.

01:06

You know, she’d come just out of film school,

01:08

but it was the quality of the idea that you could attack

01:11

such a heavy subject matter

01:13

that was just so compelling and so attractive.

01:15

What the fuck are you afraid of?

01:18

This is our place. No more running.

01:21

We stop them here.

01:26

You know, it ended up being

01:27

quite an incredible calling card for me.

01:30

It definitely went ahead of me and did its own work.

01:34

Sometimes to my detriment though,

01:37

I probably had at least a dozen conversations with directors

01:41

in Los Angeles who had somehow been told the story

01:45

that I was in fact, a skinhead who had been discovered

01:50

on the streets, dragged into the film world.

01:53

But that wasn’t the case at all.

01:56

The next choice that I made in terms of a commercial movie

02:00

was to play a gay rugby-playing plumber

02:03

in a movie called The Sum of Us.

02:05

I would just always like the idea

02:07

that somebody who is into Romper Stomper

02:09

for the wrong reasons, saw that I was in another film,

02:13

bought a ticket and now they’re sitting in The Sum of Us

02:16

wondering how the fuck they got there.

02:18

[upbeat music]

02:19

LA Confidential.

02:21

My process then was not to do smaller roles.

02:26

I was already doing roles where my name was above the title.

02:29

So I tried to stay in that pocket.

02:32

I got the call from Curtis Hanson.

02:35

He was really happy to find out

02:36

that I had in fact done American movies already,

02:39

which would give him potentially an easier point

02:42

of argument to the studio ’cause his idea

02:46

was to cast relative unknowns.

02:49

You know, he sent me the script,

02:51

and I read the James Elroy book LA Confidential.

02:53

And the thing that freaked me out was what I described

02:56

as physically the biggest man

02:58

in the Los Angeles Police Department.

03:00

I kind of got back on the phone with Curtis.

03:01

We hadn’t met yet. [chuckles] I said,

03:04

Man, I don’t know what impression you might’ve got

03:07

from the movies that you’ve seen, but you know,

03:10

I’m not really like a big bloke, man, you know.

03:12

His vibe on that was that everything that he required

03:15

in Bud White he’d seen in other work,

03:17

and that was immaterial to him.

03:21

Merry Christmas.

03:24

Merry Christmas to you, officer.

03:28

That obvious, huh?

03:30

It’s practically stamped on your forehead.

03:32

It was a weird situation

03:36

because the big overarching studio

03:37

and the studio directly making the movie,

03:41

didn’t like Curtis’s idea.

03:43

So I was flown in and I was put up at a hotel

03:47

in the time we were supposed to be rehearsing,

03:50

but you know, I’ve got friends in the business and stuff

03:52

and people would be telling me that Sean Penn

03:56

was going to be playing my role.

03:58

You know, I was talking to the director

04:00

and that was my character to play.

04:03

But at one point in time,

04:05

they stopped paying my hotel bill

04:10

and rental car bill, stopped providing me with per diem.

04:13

And I really didn’t have, you know,

04:15

a lot in my life at the time.

04:18

So I wasn’t able to pay for that level of hotel, et cetera.

04:21

And so it got pretty heavy and to the point where,

04:24

you know, there was a few times there

04:26

where I was going down the back stairs,

04:29

so the hotel manager wouldn’t stop me in the foyer

04:31

and ask me what was going on.

04:34

I could feel all of that stuff around me.

04:36

And the only thing I had to go on was the surety

04:40

of the director that he’d made his choice.

04:42

So I just went with that and I just kept turning up to work.

04:45

I think if there was ever a day where I got frustrated by it

04:48

and I hadn’t turned up to work,

04:50

that would have been the chink in the armor

04:52

that they would’ve used to shift me

04:55

out of the role, you know?

04:56

And the same process happened with Guy Pierce.

05:00

Why don’t you go after criminals for a change

05:01

instead of cops?

05:02

Stensland got we he deserved and so will you.

05:09

Curtis asked me about Guy.

05:11

He was a regular character on a soap opera

05:13

called Neighbors that I dropped in on

05:16

and did like a small character for two or three days.

05:19

And I had a girlfriend.

05:20

I eventually ended up marrying some many, many years later,

05:24

and I’m a very jealous person.

05:25

And we walked into this pub and Guy was there,

05:28

and he greeted her effusively and gave her a cuddle

05:32

and a kiss and I’m so standing there.

05:35

He hasn’t even acknowledged my existence

05:37

at this point in time. [chuckles]

05:40

So I waited ’til there was a lull in their conversation

05:42

and I stepped forward and I gave him a kiss,

05:45

and I behaved effusively like he was doing with Danielle

05:49

because why can’t I join in? [giggles]

05:53

And he didn’t do anything.

05:55

He acknowledged with his eyes, Sorry, mate.

05:57

That was a bit dicky of me to cut you

05:59

out of the conversation.

06:01

And later on, when I was talking to Curtis,

06:04

and I told him that story and I told him how

06:10

completely cool under fire Guy Pierce had been,

06:15

and I think that really fell into the part of Guy

06:20

that Curtis had thought he’d seen in the auditions.

06:24

And so that’s how we became that team in that movie.

06:28

[upbeat music]

06:29

The Insider.

06:31

At the time, definitely the most difficult job I’d done.

06:34

I got contacted by Michael Mann, you know,

06:37

and he asked me to fly down to Los Angeles and talk to him

06:40

and he sent me the script and I read it.

06:42

I couldn’t work out what character that he wanted me to play

06:44

because it was a script full of middle aged men.

06:46

I rang him first, I said,

06:47

I don’t get what character.

06:49

And he said, The guy, man, the lead guy, you know.

06:52

and I was like, That guy, he’s 50-something.

06:55

I’m 30 something.

06:56

Michael said, Look, just come and see me.

06:58

Come talk to me.

07:00

We had a very, very long conversation without any fences.

07:05

And we talked about this and that to do with society

07:07

and corporate malfeasance and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.

07:10

And it was a great chat, you know?

07:12

And I said to him, Look, I don’t get why you want me

07:17

to play this character. I’m not the age.

07:19

I don’t look anything like him.

07:22

Michael sorta came around from behind his desk and he said,

07:24

Listen, man, I didn’t fly down here

07:27

because of what you looked like.

07:30

And he put his hand on my chest, he said,

07:31

I flew down to meet you because of what you have in here,

07:36

and pushing that, you know, and it was like in that moment,

07:39

I was like, I’m gonna work with this guy,

07:40

[giggles] I’m gonna do anything he wants,

07:42

I’m going to climb any mountain.

07:44

So he really worked out who I was

07:46

’cause he fricking got a hook in me very deeply.

07:48

You know, Jeffrey is, you know, a nice fellow,

07:51

but he’s kind of an uncomfortable fellow.

07:52

And he had a very strange journey, you know,

07:55

where he begins in the Bronx and ends up

07:58

sort of working in Japan and doing all these things

08:02

that gave his voice, such a crazy, colorful array

08:08

because you know, now he’s working in the tobacco industry,

08:11

for example, and he’s working in Kentucky.

08:14

So as a scientist, he’s never used words

08:19

connected to the tobacco industry.

08:21

So when he says those words,

08:22

they have a pronounced Southern lilt,

08:25

but a lot of the time he has that Bronx base,

08:29

but the Bronx base is also infused with the fact

08:33

that he spoke Japanese for a number of years in his life.

08:37

So I’m looking at it going,

08:39

What the fuck do I do with this?

08:41

You know, it was a bit of a mind-blowing experience.

08:44

So what you’re saying is it isn’t enough

08:46

that you fired me for no good reason.

08:49

Now you questioned my integrity on top of the humiliation

08:53

of being fired, you threatened me, you threatened my family.

08:59

It never crossed my mind not to honor my agreement.

09:02

I will tell you, Mr. Sandifer and Brown and Williamson

09:05

to fuck me.

09:08

Fuck you.

09:09

Michael is such a perfectionist.

09:11

And he wants to really know what he has,

09:13

and what he’s going for and stuff.

09:15

So, you know, one example,

09:16

my very young hair would just not sit

09:19

like Jeffrey Wigand’s old hair, so we bleached it.

09:25

The color came back, we bleached it again.

09:27

Color came back.

09:28

I think we ended up bleaching it seven times

09:30

in a period of three weeks.

09:32

And then we started to shave the volume out of it, you know?

09:35

my young hair would just go [spits]

09:37

and it would be there the next day.

09:39

If we’re going to do it that way,

09:40

we would have to be shaving my head

09:42

in those areas every morning.

09:44

And still, no matter how much volume we cut out of my hair,

09:47

no matter how many under cuts and everything that we did,

09:50

one or two days later, it would go [whooshes air]

09:53

and it would find a way [laughs] to cover my head.

09:57

So we were standing there doing a screen test,

09:59

and I was so pleased to find out that Dante Spinotti,

10:03

who I’d met first on the Quick and the Dead

10:06

director of photography was on The Insider as well

10:08

’cause you know, I had a great relationship

10:09

with his camera crew guys

10:11

and I was really excited to know that it was him.

10:14

And I was standing there and possibly a little offensive,

10:17

[giggles] I said, It’s not working with the hair, man.

10:21

I’ve got to get a wig,

10:22

I’ve got to have like really shit hair.

10:24

I’ve got to have the hair like his, and pointed at Dante.

10:27

And Dante’s got lovely hair, but it was just,

10:30

it was the right age, you know?

10:32

And it was behaving in the way that Jeffrey’s hair behaved,

10:36

you know, so we got an incredible wig maker.

10:39

With the wig, it just made me feel like the character,

10:41

you know, and that was like a bit,

10:43

it was quite a big thing for me

10:44

because even when I’m doing The Insider,

10:46

I’m still really formulating who I am as a film actor.

10:50

It’s probably my what, 16th or 17th movie by then.

10:53

That really showed me that because of the visual nature

10:57

of film, if somebody says you’re gonna play a pirate,

11:02

get an eye patch, rent a parrot.

11:06

You might immediately feel more connected

11:07

to the character of a pirate if you do so.

11:10

I did not feel I could play that role

11:13

until I looked in the mirror and it looked like Jeffrey.

11:17

Now, other times I’ve done characters

11:19

where I feel I don’t necessarily need to be accurate,

11:22

but because his story was so real,

11:26

because it had such a deep, psychological effect

11:28

on him and his family.

11:30

And because it was such an important step

11:34

in the legal and cultural life of America,

11:37

I just felt this need to honor him

11:42

and be very careful about honoring him.

11:44

So I met a whole bunch of fantastic actors in that job.

11:49

To be surrounded by people like Al Pacino

11:50

and Christopher Plummer.

11:51

Somebody from the film company at the time

11:54

rang me to tell me that they were going to mount

11:58

an Academy Award campaign on my behalf.

12:01

And I said, Cool, so that’s like me and Al.

12:04

That’s fantastic.

12:05

And they said, Well, we’re gonna put our emphasis on you.

12:08

And we asked Mr. Pacino, and he said, Back the kid.

12:13

It’s a massive thing for him to have done.

12:16

You mentioned my name.

12:16

You haven’t talked to anybody about me.

12:18

Brian Williamson know I spoke.

12:20

How the hell do I know about Brian Williamson?

12:21

That was just after I talked to you.

12:23

I do not like coincidences.

12:24

Well, I don’t like paranoid accusation.

12:26

Time came up later in my career.

12:30

It was a movie Cinderella Man.

12:31

Paul Giamatti’s mum died during the course

12:35

of shooting Cinderella Man.

12:36

And I made her a promise on the phone

12:39

that Paul was such an incredible actor

12:43

that he would be nominated.

12:44

And the studio asked me what I wanted to do.

12:47

And I said, Back the kid,

12:50

and Paul Giamatti got an Academy Award nomination.

12:53

So The Insider is very, very important

12:55

for my growth as an actor

12:59

and also extremely important

13:05

for the way my career went just after that.

13:08

[upbeat music]

13:10

Cinderella Man.

13:11

I’d worked with Ron Howard on A Beautiful Mind,

13:14

and I gave him the script and he said,

13:17

Look, I understand why you want to do it.

13:19

He said, But I don’t understand why

13:20

I would want to direct it.

13:21

It’s like ground so many people have covered.

13:24

I said to him, Well, it’s just like

13:25

‘A Beautiful Mind, man.

13:27

The importance of this story is that it’s true.

13:31

This guy, this is what happened to him.

13:33

He was a boxer, he was unsuccessful.

13:36

He owned a cab company.

13:37

Well, if you own that cab company in Manhattan

13:40

and Wall Street crashes in 1929,

13:43

and people can’t afford to take cabs,

13:45

it’s possibly the only time in history

13:48

that owning a cab company in Manhattan

13:50

has been a negative thing.

13:51

But so, you know, Jim from going through his sporting career

13:55

and rising to a certain middle-class position sank and slid

13:59

all the way back to the bottom again,

14:01

and then out of pure desperation,

14:04

rose and became a champion.

14:05

And I just I’d fallen in love with that story

14:07

when I first read it, and it was super important to me.

14:11

And I think I was very passionate with Ron

14:13

describing why it was important.

14:16

So he came on board and, you know,

14:18

it’s just one of the nature of the film.

14:20

If he hadn’t have come on board,

14:21

I probably don’t make that film in the cycle of things

14:24

if we had to start from scratch and find another director,

14:26

it probably reshapes, you know?

14:28

I had a run of bad luck

14:32

and this time around, I know what I’m fighting for.

14:35

Oh yeah. What’s that, Jimmy?

14:39

Milk.

14:39

You know, through the course of the process of that,

14:41

it was like a physically extremely tough role.

14:46

I’ve actually done more difficult physical roles since,

14:50

but at that time, the preparation for that film

14:53

and if I could show you a list

14:54

of what we were doing on a daily basis, it was heavy stuff.

14:59

And, you know, Ron is very serious director,

15:01

and he brought Angelo Dundee,

15:04

who trained 15 world champions into my life.

15:08

And Angelo constructed the energy in the training camp.

15:14

And I mean, sometimes you just get so lucky.

15:18

Having Angelo Dundee with all of his wisdoms and experiences

15:23

come into my life as a mentor, and you know,

15:25

I only knew him alive for eight years,

15:28

but what a joyful person he was.

15:30

What an inspirational person, you know?

15:33

Occasionally I would sort of just say to him,

15:34

I don’t know how I’m gonna do this.

15:36

He just had a way of making you believe.

15:40

So it required an immense amount of discipline

15:43

to play that character.

15:45

You know, I was so into that world,

15:47

so into that place.

15:48

When I made the decision that because I’m playing a boxer,

15:52

at a certain point in time,

15:53

I would have a prosthetic nose and a certain point in time,

15:56

I would have cauliflower prosthetic ears.

15:59

Also because of the black and white photographs

16:01

I’d seen a Jim Braddock,

16:02

he had very kind of wing nut eaters, you know,

16:05

poking up from the side of the head.

16:06

So we had these pieces made,

16:09

which pushed my ears out like that.

16:12

And Ron Howard came to see me and he’s like,

16:16

So as a guy who grew up with ears like that,

16:23

I’m just wondering if we need to make that,

16:26

kind of decision. Do we need to be that accurate?

16:29

I kinda saw what their problem was later on

16:31

when they sort of were trying to market the movie.

16:34

Every image, you know, even if it was a romantic image,

16:37

and they were focusing on the love story

16:39

between my character and Renee’s character,

16:43

[chuckles] I got the nose, I got the ears.

16:46

[chuckles]

16:47

[upbeat music]

16:50

Gladiator.

16:51

After I’d finished The Insider,

16:53

Ridley and Michael had a conversation.

16:55

I went to meet Ridley.

16:56

I looked like absolute shit.

16:57

I don’t see how he could possibly have seen me

17:00

as a Roman general, but we really got on.

17:02

He had gigantic ideas and I kinda thought

17:05

most of them were impossible really,

17:07

and it certainly wasn’t on the page.

17:09

There was no script that we could be enthused about.

17:12

But what I was was enthused about was the simple idea.

17:15

It’s 184 A.D. or 180 A.D.

17:16

You’re a Roman general,

17:18

and you’re being directed by Ridley Scott, you know?

17:20

So that drove my motivation a lot.

17:22

It was very difficult putting on those clothes and going,

17:27

Oh yeah, off we go, I’m a Roman general.

17:30

And I know that Joaquin Phoenix had the same problem

17:33

’cause we talked about it, you know?

17:34

The heights to those characters had to go to, you know,

17:37

and it’s very different because at that stage,

17:40

if you’re wearing clothes like that,

17:42

you’re probably doing a comedy or a piss take.

17:46

Sword and sandal things had been

17:48

out of vogue for a long time.

17:50

That whole idea was constructed around the sincerity

17:56

of the core journey of man’s vengeance

18:00

for the death of his wife and child.

18:02

[suspenseful music]

18:08

My name is Maximus Decimus Meridius

18:11

commander of the armies of the North,

18:13

general with the Felix legions,

18:16

loyal servant to the true emperor, Marcus Aurelius.

18:21

Father to a murdered son,

18:23

husband to a murdered wife, and I will have my vengeance

18:28

in this life or the next.

18:29

It’s funny though.

18:30

You see the backstage or behind the scenes footage

18:33

and everybody’s just goofing around and being silly.

18:36

And you know, the reason you do that

18:38

is you’re saving all your serious shit

18:41

for after the guy says action.

18:42

You know, most people, the complexities of film are such

18:47

that you have to have everything organized

18:49

to the nth degree.

18:50

You’re scheduling, you’re purchasing, you’re crewing.

18:53

All of these things have to be worked out,

18:55

and particularly with your art department and you know,

18:59

your set dressers and everything.

19:00

So everybody knows what they’re doing.

19:02

That’s the way you make a film.

19:04

However, we were making a movie

19:07

that grew as we made the movie

19:10

and little things became big ideas.

19:15

And we were being fluid within that gigantic

19:19

hundred plus million dollar budget shape,

19:22

which is all about schedules and disciplines

19:25

and being exact about things even down to

19:28

this one conversation I had with Ridley, where I said,

19:32

I wanted to decapitate a guy [chuckles]

19:36

at the end of this fight sequence.

19:37

And he said, Well, look, I can’t just add a decapitation.

19:43

That’s a pretty heavy thing.

19:44

I’m gonna to have to discuss it

19:45

with the studio and everything.

19:46

And I said, Look, this is the way the choreography

19:49

goes at the moment, and I showed him, I said,

19:50

This is what I want to change it to.

19:52

And I showed him and he could see that it was more dynamic

19:55

and more part of the character.

19:58

And the last move of that sequence was [spits]

20:01

this decapitation, you know,

20:03

and he literally smoking a cigar.

20:05

He said, what I’ve had to say, he’s watched it, you know,

20:08

a couple of puffs and a cigar.

20:09

And he calls out to his first assistant director,

20:12

and he goes, Terry, how many heads have we got left?

20:17

[giggles]

20:20

[sword clanking]

20:20

[air whooshes]

20:24

But working with Ridley,

20:25

I always liken it to working

20:27

with some great Renaissance painter,

20:29

just the way he sees the world

20:31

and that level of artistry he converts onto the screen.

20:37

I’ve ended up making five movies with Ridley,

20:40

and every single one of those experiences

20:43

has gotta be in my top 10 of films that I’ve made.

20:46

[upbeat music]

20:47

Robin Hood.

20:50

Actually, my first step on Robin Hood,

20:53

when the idea came up was grab every Robin Hood book

20:56

that I could, big bag of them.

20:57

And I got on a boat in Northern Queensland,

21:00

and just started to read.

21:02

So I just wanted to know what the mythology was,

21:04

as much of it I could find out and what it occurred to me,

21:07

and what I brought up with Ridley was

21:08

that we all have a reshaped view of Robin Hood,

21:12

which comes from Victorian times.

21:14

But in fact, this legend started

21:18

many, many hundreds of years before then.

21:20

We started looking at the facts

21:23

of the currently understood myths

21:27

and the realities of history timeline,

21:30

and always in stories of Robin Hood in a modern era,

21:33

King Richard comes into the story.

21:36

He’s been away on crusade and he comes into the story

21:41

at the end of the story to sorta save the day, you know,

21:44

confirm that Robin is a good man.

21:47

The Sheriff of Nottingham was incorrect

21:49

and blah, blah, blah.

21:50

But what we discovered is that, you know,

21:52

apart from a few months earlier in his life,

21:56

King Richard was French.

21:57

He didn’t make it back to England.

21:58

He went on crusades and he died in France.

22:01

That was our first hook.

22:02

It’s like, okay, everybody else is expecting

22:04

a Robin Hood where King Richard comes in

22:09

at the end of save the day.

22:11

Our Robin Hood begins with the death of King Richard,

22:13

who died putting a castle to siege in France.

22:16

And of course I got to work

22:18

with the magnificent Cate Blanchett, or Love Blanchett,

22:22

as I called her on that film

22:24

and found out that, you know,

22:25

not only is she a wonderful actress,

22:28

she’s spectacular company as well.

22:31

I’m ashamed of you.

22:33

Hello, Marion. I’ve come to save ya.

22:37

I remember standing on that set in the born wood,

22:39

the same place that we’d shot certain parts of Gladiator,

22:43

and I’m looking up the hill at this French castle

22:46

that the art department have built on top of the hill.

22:49

And I’m looking around me, hundreds of arches,

22:51

and we have 180 horses galloping down the beach.

22:54

This is probably the last physical production of this scale

22:58

that I ever get to do.

23:00

You know, things were changing so rapidly,

23:01

and it’s proven to be that way.

23:03

Now sure, I’ve been on big budget films,

23:06

but not in that kinda scale

23:09

where everything’s built, you know?

23:11

[upbeat music]

23:15

Look, the idea of this script was kind of nauseating

23:18

when I first read it.

23:19

I really didn’t think I wanted to have anything

23:21

to do with it, but then, you know,

23:23

somebody asked me actually,

23:24

Why are you not gonna do it?

23:26

And it’s like, ’cause it’s really scary.

23:29

[chuckles] And it scares me

23:31

that this is actually something that does happen.

23:36

This individual, this character is acting

23:39

on such a basis of a lack of humanity, a lack of empathy,

23:44

and he is imploding and he’s going to take her with him.

23:47

[Woman] Ma’am, are you okay?

23:49

[Brunette Lady] I’m pretty sure the guy

23:50

in that truck’s following me.

23:51

He’s road ragin’.

23:52

[eerie music]

23:53

[Man] Why don’t you just chill, man? Go your own way.

23:57

[eerie music]

23:58

[explosion]

23:59

[screams] You know, one of the things

24:01

that was really important to me with this

24:02

is that we don’t at any stage try to justify his actions

24:07

or his thought process because most of us

24:09

will go through this sort of thing and be, you know,

24:11

it’s just the ups and downs

24:14

and the foibles and quirks of life.

24:16

But this particular man has decided

24:20

that all of this adds up to his right

24:26

to destroy and terrorize.

24:29

And we’ve seen that kind of personality at play.

24:33

I mean, 20 years ago,

24:35

I would have in my mind kind of written this off

24:38

as some kind of anomaly, you know,

24:41

but that’s the thing that kept playing on my mind,

24:44

you know, school shootings and shootings in nightclubs,

24:47

but it is the same thought process.

24:50

And therefore it became more important to me.

24:54

And it was particularly based on my conversations

24:56

with Derek and his perspective as a filmmaker,

25:01

I knew that this movie ends up not being just about thrills

25:06

and crashes and violence.

25:07

This movie ends up being a direct commentary

25:12

on the state of American society, Western society today.

25:17

So it went from being the thing I was most scared of

25:22

to the thing I just felt most responsible to have to do.

25:28

So GQ and those of you that have tuned in

25:33

that’s the end of that.

25:34

I’ve been boring your tits off for quite some time now

25:37

talking about some of my iconic characters,

25:40

iconic being somebody else’s definition.

25:43

And I’m just the putz who has to say it.

25:46

But anyway, I hope you got something out of it.

25:48

Enjoy yourself, and thank you, GQ.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

The New Friday Night Lights Reboot Will Never Recapture the Magic of the Original Series
‘Below Deck Down Under’ Season 3 Updates: Filming Location & Full Cast Revealed, Including 3 Rumored Returning Stars & 7 New Crew Members | below deck down under, Bravo, Casting, EG, evergreen, Peacock, Television | Just Jared: Celebrity News and Gossip
Cynthia Erivo & Partner Lena Waithe Attend ‘Wicked’ After Party Together in London | Cynthia Erivo, Lena Waithe | Just Jared: Celebrity News and Gossip
Barnes & Noble’s Book of the Year is….
Fan-Made VR Mod for PC Version of ‘Silent Hill 2’ Remake Now Available [Video]