Comic hero Steve Carell gets wackier in ‘Get Smart’
Steve Carell has emerged as one of the most sought-after comedic actors in
Now, Carell topbills Warner Bros.’ new action comedy “Get Smart” as CONTROL agent Maxwell Smart who’s sent on his most dangerous and important mission: to thwart the latest plot for world domination by the evil crime syndicate known as KAOS.
It also happens to be Maxwell’s very first mission.
“I’d say it’s 80% comedy, 20% action, 15% heart, 35% romance, 10% adventure and probably less than 1% horror,” Carell describes the film. “Put that all together and you have more than 100%, which is more, really, than you can expect from any movie.”
Q: One of the greatest things about comic actors is their unique physicality and their unique vocal patterns. What do you think your mannerisms are as a comic actor?
Steve Carell: Wow. You know what? As soon as you start to talk about your own mannerisms you are screwed because if you’re aware of your own mannerisms, or even beyond that, like what makes any one thing funny to people, I really ascribe to the idea that if you start deconstructing it too much, it is immediately not funny. If you start over-thinking it or trying to figure out some sort of formula, it’s math. It’s not anything organic.
Q: Can you talk about your character, Maxwell Smart?
Carell: He starts as an analyst. He’s someone who aspires to be a spy but is now middle-aged and has not gotten to that point and has not been promoted. And, through a series of events that you see early in the movie, he is promoted to spy and at that point is able to incorporate all these things he’s been working on all along. The one thing that I loved about Maxwell is that he is not an idiot. He’s not a fumbling fool. He’s actually very proficient. In a fight he can handle himself. He can shoot a gun. He’s able to incorporate all these things he’s been working on all along. He’s clever. He gets out of situations – sometimes counter-intuitively, but he gets out of them. He’s not a fool. But he’s quirky. He’s very earnest.
Q: Can you talk about what it’s like to make an action movie?
Carell: Honestly, it could not have been more fun. It’s something you dream about as a kid. It is literally like playing in a sandbox for several weeks, and pretending. There are parts of the movie that Anne Hathaway and I are hanging off the sides of buildings and rappelling underneath a plane and having a fight on top of a moving SUV that is also on fire and about to smash into a train. All of these things are a far cry from anything I’ve ever done before. So, yeah. As you could imagine, it’s just so much fun.
Q: How far would you go before a stunt person would take over?
Carell: Probably the riskiest thing I did was being pulled behind a moving SUV down train tracks. That was a little scary. The stunt people are so good and they really make sure that you’re safe. I never felt that my life was in peril at any point. I think it plays as an action movie as well as a comedy.
Q: Do you want to talk about the number of gadgets that Maxwell Smart has?
Carell: Well, there’s the Cone of Silence but it’s absolutely unusable. The Shoe Phone makes an appearance and a lot of people are asking about the Shoe Phone because it doesn’t seem to fit with modern technology. And there’s a very clever way in which the shoe phone is integrated into the movie – very plausible and makes sense plot-wise. I have this little gadget which you see a tiny bit of in the scene in the airplane bathroom. It’s a tiny Swiss army knife that has several gadgets within it, including a crossbow, a flamethrower, and some other things that you find out along the way. So, the gadgets are alive and well.
Opening soon across the
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