A
Minute With:
Sean Penn on 'Gunman,' Haiti and superheroes
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[March 12, 2015]
By Piya Sinha-Roy
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
Sean Penn is not all gruff voice and intense gaze. He
can have a good laugh too, like when he envisions
himself as a superhero.
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For the thriller "The Gunman," opening in U.S. theaters on
March 20, the 54-year-old actor and activist talked to Reuters
about what motivates him in both the movies and the causes he
champions. Here are excerpts from the interview.
Q: What drew you to this story and the character of Jim?
A: It appealed to me in a way that a lot of action movies
haven't appealed to me, because the consequences of violence
were present throughout, and yet that didn't seem to create a
ponderous weight on the energy of the picture.
Q: How important was it to have the backdrop of
Democratic Republic of Congo?
A: What was important was that the epicenter of that
narrative drive had a history of suffering intervention, be it
political intervention or corporate intervention. And certainly
DRC has had both, and continues to.
There were also some real-life parallels related to the mining
interests that had happened there. That made it the appropriate
choice.
Q: Has being an actor made it difficult for your voice to
be heard for your activism work?
A: I've found it harder and easier. Criticism will come
more quickly, so will reverence. Generally, both are inaccurate,
but you know, I think that I approach work - whether it's
creative work, any work I do - very much as a functionary ...
it's really clinical on both.
Q: As Ambassador-at-Large for Haiti, what would you want
tackled urgently?
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A: I'd like to see politics redefine its quality of life for
people and for everybody to put their sword down and get to the
table, it's very tricky there. But I think if you want good things
to happen for a country like Haiti, then you need to provide the
circumstances where the Haitians can do that.
You need governance, but you also need a middle class, you need
agriculture, they need to be able to export. I think that's probably
the biggest issue, the job creation that could come with the kinds
of things that Haiti has all the potential in the world to export.
Q: What roles are you finding yourself drawn to? Any
superhero franchises in your future?
A: You asked me with a camera on this face and in this time
of my life if I would be a superhero? (laughs) Maybe, if there's a
very funny one.
Q: There's always the villain.
A: I don't know what I would be interested in doing next.
There are some good movies made on that (superhero) stuff, let a few
of them be made a year. But I'd like to see this business not drown
itself in superhero movies.
(Editing by Mary Milliken and Matthew Lewis)
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