A story of two winners
Academy Award-winners Denzel Washington (Glory and Training Day) and Russell Crowe (Gladiator) first acted opposite each other a dozen years ago in Virtuosity, a sci-fi crime thriller set in virtual reality. In the movie,
Now, the two have swapped sides of the law for American Gangster, with Crowe as the cop, and Washington as the crook. The film is based on the real-life exploits of Frank Lucas, a
Below, the two Oscar winners talk about their on-screen reunion.
You both have come a long way since you first worked together.
Crowe: (Sarcastically) Virtuosity, yes, a wonderful movie. That was just a momentary lapse, wasn’t it? We were both young then, young and innocent (laughs).
Can you talk a little about the theme of good versus evil as seen in the confrontation between your characters in American Gangster?
Crowe: That’s the delicate balance. I think that’s one of the fascinating things about the two characters, and about the story itself is that none of that’s clear. There’s not a clear, singular morality. When you get the opportunity to play that sort of character, which is nothing more than reality and humanity as it exists, it’s just a bit of fun. Richie’s an honest guy, but as his wife says in court, “You’re only honest in one area. You’re trying to buy yourself favors for all the other (expletive) that you do.” I think that just was an honest appraisal of who he was as a man at that time. But it also leaks into that area of discussing why people go bad in the first place or what the process of Frank Lucas was to become a drug dealer. If Frank had been befriended by somebody else, and educated in a different area, you might have a situation where there are universities named after him now. He’s a very smart guy, and he used the things he learned to the best of his ability to change his life and the life of his family at that time. But it just happened to be that Bumpy Johnson was his teacher. So, he did his course work on the street and earned his Ph.D. in criminality under Bumpy.
Why do you think there’s outrage over rappers making gangsta videos but not over actors making gangsta movies which glorify the same lifestyle?
Crowe: Wait, I think that what the question’s trying to get at is actually something pretty cool. He’s saying that when a guy sings a song about his life as a gangster on a record, people get down on him. But you and me, we make a movie about us in that same world, and we get praised for it from a creative point of view.
Crowe: Is it the criminality that people are getting upset with now about the music, where you’re literally singing the praises of gun worship, as opposed to a movie that plays out in front of you and a story that’s being told showing something that actually happened?
Crowe: There’s definitely a difference there.
Where does American Gangster fit in the pantheon of
Released by United International Pictures and distributed through Solar Entertainment Corp., American Gangster opens soon in theaters.
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