Why
Michael B. Jordan thought twice about 'Fahrenheit 451'
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[May 17, 2018]
By Eric Kelsey
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
Moral misgivings nearly made Michael B. Jordan, the star
of HBO's cinematic revival of Ray Bradbury's beloved
1953 novel "Fahrenheit 451," turn down the leading role
of a book burning fireman who hunts down a gang of
underground freethinkers.
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Jordan, one of Hollywood's growing class of top young black
stars, said the role of Montag, a character who does his job
with the severity and power of his flamethrower, weighed on him
in the current socially charged U.S. debates about the use of
police force, civil liberties and the treatment of minorities.
"I was hesitant about taking the project due to the
authoritarian nature of the character," the 31-year-old star of
"Creed" and "Black Panther" told Reuters ahead of the neo-noir's
television release on Saturday.
"Fahrenheit 451," which was first adapted by filmmaker Francois
Truffaut in 1966 and screened out of competition this year at
the Cannes Film Festival, tells the story of Montag and his
superior Captain Beatty, played by Michael Shannon, who work as
"firemen" enforcing laws against literature, art and history.
"Taking on the role of being an oppressor - that was something I
wasn't interested in doing at the moment," said Jordan, who
helped produce the film.
The story turns on Montag's sudden curiosity to what is inside
all the literature many are willing to die for.
Montag's crisis of conscience is what Jordan said assuaged his
unease about the role.
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"The message of this movie was bigger than my reservations on this
character," Jordan said. "This movie can do more good than my
perspective on the police brutality and the climate that was going
on in the real world. I felt art was more powerful at the moment."
Director Ramin Bahrani infuses Bradbury's creation with an
interactive state social media spectacle where public pressure is
doled out by emoji and a virtual assistant called Yuxie is a private
life companion.
"I don't necessarily see it as foreign to the future ... I really
see it as an alternate tomorrow," the filmmaker said.
Bahrani sets most of the film at night, accented by the glow of
colored fluorescent light while newscasts displayed on skyscrapers
propagandize Montag and Beatty's work.
"The goal is to have the audience feel that this could be happening
in our world today ... but have things be different enough to create
a new world," Bahrani said.
(Reporting by Eric Kelsey; Editing by Michael Perry)
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